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SXSW: January parties to heat things up

13 Dec

Interactive

SXSW Interactive ’06 was a really happening time with loads of great speakers and panels (but you already knew that). There were lots of opportunities to hang out and meet new people folks making things happen on the web. I’m guessing many more will make the trek to Austin this year after favorable reviews and what’s sure to be an even hotter year for web startups – post GooTube and all.

So, just after Christmas we’ll roll into a new season with CES, followed by a will-rock Macworld, and then the SXSW party in SF. Thanks to Brian for the heads up on the SF party and congrats to him for having his panel selected: “ValleySpeak for the Rest of Us: Developing Apps Outside InternetVille.” (all panels here)

March 9th feels like soon. The 2007 sessions are stacked deep with great speakers, designers, bloggers, and of course web app haXors.

SXSW is getting rolling early with events in Chicago, Austin, SF, and NYC. The San Francisco party is sure to have a full house. Now would be a great time to have that SF “landing pad” I advocate in order. Failing that coming together, I need to find a place to stay!

2006 marked the first-ever SXSW / Western Connections reception in San Francisco. We are back for a second go-round in 2007. Join the SXSW Interactive crew on Monday, January 15 as we network with some of the most interesting and most creative geeks in the Bay Area. Time and location of event to be announced shortly. If you are a San Francisco-based geek and you’d like an invite to this event, email inter at sxsw dot com.

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Bill Burcham Gordita Google Reader

8 Nov

I’ve been using Google Reader as my primary news reader for what must be about a month now. Thankfully, news of enhancements made the TechMeme cut. Based on very positive blogger reviews, I decided to give it a shot (just two weeks after paying for NewFire – argh!) Besides some oddities with hanging in Firefox v.2, GReader been working great — but this isn’t a review of Google Reader. I just wanted to point out some work that a local buddy, Bill Burcham, has released: Gordita. It solves that little problem a linking out to del.icio.us (a Yahoo! service now) from within an embedded GReader news item. Pukka won’t get you outta this pickle.

To address the lack of Google Reader integration, I’ve created yet another bookmarklet generator. This one generates a Google Reader Del.icio.us Tagging bookmarklet — a Gordita.

Now I just need to grab the nightly build of FF 2.0 to the tagging window to pop-over instead of behind the browser window.

Read: Bill Burcham’s memeRocket :: Gordita = del.icio.us Tagging for Google Reader

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Needed: Bay Area Landing Pad, for non-Valley startups

17 Sep

I’ve been getting the distinct feeling from Flickr, bloggers, and Techcrunch that I’m really missing out on the boom by not living in or at least being in the Bay Area more often.

Being in San Francisco this week for The Future of Web Apps Summit (FoWA), reminded me that there is no getting around Teh Valley corridor being the nexus of the current Web boom. Nothing compares to the perfect storm this strip of land embodies. While it’s certainly fun to visit and hang with friends, it’s possibly critical for startups to be here often for the people + events + capital + spirit of innovation + mostly friendly competition.



So what’s a Bay Area outsider without ability or interest to re-locate to do?

Bay Area connections could be a defining factor in your in your quest to change the world. But being based of town, many will find themselves too busy for travel and cultivation of meaningful relationships. That could mean missing out on the strategic relationships of which startups are made. In my experience, few people or startups prosper in isolation.

The fact is that many of us are building great ideas on the Web from elsewhere. In far-flung towns, the challenge can often be finding the people with true zeal for the web – ” I really LOVE THE WEB.”  So, we travel west for conferences, *camps, fostering friendships, and often strategic partners and sales prospects. If you’re doing the small teams, less capital approach to startups, the excessive cost of frequent travel is a great way to zap your cash reserves.

So, if you’re not inclined to move house, commit to the elevated, err insane cost of living, or are adamant about maintaining roots in your home town, follow along with me for a minute and consider a possible solution.

While attending STIRR following the first day of FoWA, I ran into fellow Texans, Jim Young and Charles Ribaudo of Jambo Networks. While they are both Dallas-based, much of their team is virtual. Charles and I hit on the idea of a San Francisco co-op, work / crash spot for out-of-town startups. For the price of last minute airline tickets and hotels on a regular basis, you could almost afford to pay for Bay Area housing; so why not re-direct a fraction of those funds to “membership” in a space that would be more than a place to sleep?!

A hoteling office + bunk room setup much like Teh Space pops to mind.

What is needed?

  • connected BANC rental agent
  • space for 4-6 startup companies and their bedouin members
  • desks
  • bandwidth
  • furniture
  • cleaning service (expecting messy / too-busy dev types in here)
  • web service for booking stays among members

While pulling this “bedouin space” together could get a bit messy (multiple startups of – let’s be honest – uncertain longevity and leases to start),let’s first consider potential benefits:

  • productivity and comfort for 3-day Bay Area trips
  • semi-permanent base for startup activities
  • a transitional plan for startups planning to re-locate to SF
  • $avings on hotels
  • accessible for last-minute trips
  • much better work environment for productivity and all-night prep/code sessions

A bonus imo, would be the camaraderie of members, serendipity of cross-pollination, and likely new business relationships.

This is an invitation to dialog. Who else among the bedouin web-workers would be interested in hammering on this? Comment here or contact me. I’ll pull together a Skype channel with interested parties for ongoing chatter and planning.

Thanks for Om Malik’s recent blogging on bedouin web workers, Brian, FactoryJoe’s work on CoWorking, and evhead‘s FoWA presentation for inspiration to “just start writing.”

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Worry More About Kicking Ass Than Your Business Model

14 Sep

[This is a post I found sitting idle in my editor since FOWA! I like it so I'm pushing it out - however late. heh.]

As Matt pointed out in his FoWA presentation, just get out there and build something great. This is the best time in history to do something great with people you and I “scratching an itch” with

- Cheap hardware

- Cheap bandwidth

- Virtual developer teams

- Trac / SVN / Wikis

- Campfire / Skype / VOIP

[Too bad for Oracle, SUN, and the shrink-wrap guys. You got left at the station this time around]

As Matt also pointed out, to FoWA attendees, we are all better positioned that billions of other people in the world! (maybe 99.9%) to execute ideas here and now. Maybe as part of this privilege we really owe to other less-fortunate earthlings.

For you this may mean turning in your cube-farm resignation, hanging up on your clients, or leaving behind an executive position to pursue those ideas percolating in your mind. Just maybe you’ll hit on something; lacking fear of failure, surrounded by many skilled and wise web workers, your startup could evolve in a sustainable business. And successful business creates wealth, expands your local economy, and occasionally create an entirely new ecosystem of opportunity beyond your wildest dreams.

I’m more amazed (perhaps than I should be) by the young stars of web apps and startups; inspiring legions of traditionally trained wage slaves and students to dive into the “web arts” (Rails, XHMTL/CSS, PHP, and design). For some this will mean an escape from low-wage jobs in developing countries while for others, graduating from retail and service sector jobs paying slave wages – like college was for our parent’s generation.

We all have innate skills, gift and potential but will wear different hats in life. Let’s go get ‘em.

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Going to “Future of Web Apps” in SF

12 Sep

Picture 1-4

I’m sitting in the ABQ airport now en route to San Francisco for a conference; enjoying free WiFi – unlike those other pesky airports. This is my first Carson Workshops event and by all accounts and the speakers lined up, I’m hoping for engaging event. With many web app attendees types having been exposed, err inculcated in the unconference  / *camp / DevHouse movements over the last year – this should be a good time with hallway conversation more the rule and than something we used to squeeze in at conferences.

At 3:00 pm today I had mostly given up on the thought of attending. Thanks to Brian, I was able to book my conference ticket, a Southwest flight, find a spare couch off Market, and tell my wife I was heading west for a few days. At least I don’t golf all day on Saturdays.

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WordPress.com painless Blogger import

24 Mar

I’ve been working with some clients needing hosted blog service. It seems they often get started on their own using Blogger.com but soon find the template editing for basic changes to templates is over their heads. Since I’ve never used blogger and it doesn’t appear to have evolved since Google acquired it :(   I’m prone to suggest WordPress and the hosted service if it makes sense.

The import tool is really killer. It took less than a couple of minutes to import the blogger account complete with comments. And thanks to AJAX niceties, you actually see the progress. While this is not an earth-shattering revelation, I thought it would be help to mention to folks searching for info about migrating to WordPress.com



Kudos to team Automattic. I’ve got high hopes for services they’ll be releasing.



Wordpress Import Blogger

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Going to Austin for SXSW and BarCamp!

10 Mar

Barcampaustin Logo

Time to get the party started in Austin. SXSW comes at a great time in the annual cycle and this time around (for once in many moons), the right point in the economic cycle. The trees, market, and next stage of the Interweb are budding and it’s about time! BarCamp Austin will add an additional dimension to those headed to the Hill Country of Texas.

For me, after attending some un-conferences like BarCamp Dallas and CocoaDevHouse recently, I know there are many people excited about opportunities to build great new products and services. It’s feeling like Boom 2.0, as I like to say, has arrived.

For some that means a frenzied time of VC pitches and dealmaking but to me, it’s more than that. It’s a time for individuals to claw their way out of cube farms and safe harbors since the dot com bust. Whether the boom lasts 12 months or 60, now’s the time to spread those wings. I’m hoping to meet lots of equally inspired folks over the next several days and to soak up the enthusiasm from those already setting the example with new ventures, and services.

Now, how to split my time between BarCamp, SXSW, and after hours events. Hrmm. Be sure and tune into to the BackChannel on #barcamp on Freenode.net.

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Here’s a Golden Ticket [for Backpack] – Thanks Jason!

2 May

Backpack

Seeing an email from Jason Fried in my inbox on Saturday was an unexpected surprise! Tiger on Friday and Backpack to try out pre-launch the next day?! WOW!

They requested that no screenshots be posted prior to tomorrow’s release so you’ll have to take my word for it: Perfecto. If it weren’t for a trade show this week, I’d be transitioning my Next Actions and such to it in full force. That will have to wait. It’s Wiki, it’s blog like with page-by-page sharing control… and much more.

In sum, I’m learning to love Backpack and suggest you try it starting tomorrow.

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O’Reilly Radar > Getting Apps Done / 37signals Backpack

28 Apr

Waiting day by day from 37signals news on Backpack… finally a date for public consumption!! It’s next Tuesay they’re taking off the wraps (or so they hint). A few “golden tickets” went out today. See a somewhat overview here. Personally, I think SMS alerts to mobile devices will be killer. Hopefully I be putting Backpack through the paces with Tiger come Tuesday. All new GTD hacks are on hold. No new phones, palm, or 3×5 wallets.

For anyone totally lost by this rambling, better stick to USA Today and cable TV. This is my personal reality distortion field.

Thanks for Radar, O’Reilly!! I’ve been enjoying your ever-expanding coverage of geekdom via their Radar blog. Read on: O’Reilly Radar > Getting Apps Done (c.f. Getting Things Done):

Watching 37Signals building out their Backpack app-to-be and Danny O’Brien and Merlin Mann organizing up a storm for their rumored ;-) Productivity Hacks book for O’Reilly, I’m continually struck by the similarity of approach.

Technorati Tags: gtd, osx

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OS X Tiger & iSync v2.0 update

12 Apr

I was fooled by Apple’s promotion of the Nokia 6600 on the iSync page back in December. I even opted for it over the 6630 which was known not to be supported under iSync. As it turns out, I got the newer firmware (v.5.2.7) which didn’t work for reasons Apple and Nokia have been unable or unwilling to explain to me. So, for the past 4 months I’ve used a $350 handset with only a subset of my 1000 or so business and personal contacts. With Tiger on pre-order at Amazon, I’m hoping this problem will be resolved. I’m curious why the Nokia 6630 is not in Apple’s list of supported devices. Is it not a SyncML device?

Apple lists the following Nokia handsets as supported in iSync v.2.0 (Tiger release)

Nokia 3650

Nokia 3660

Nokia 3600

Nokia 3620

Nokia 6260

Nokia 6600

Nokia 6620

Nokia 6670

Nokia 7610

Nokia 7650

Nokia N-Gage

Nokia N-Gage QD

Apple – Mac OS X – iSync – Devices

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