Reflections & analysis about innovation, technology, startups, investing, healthcare, and more .... with a focus on Minnesota, Land of 10,000 Lakes. Blogging continuously since 2005.

Category: IT/Software (Page 49 of 58)

Yahoo! Kisses Krugle

This just in…news on Valentine’s Day about a company I follow named Krugle, of code-search fame. Seems they’ve chosen this hallowed day to announce they’ve been tapped to supply search functionality for the Yahoo! Developer Network. This is a centralized resource that offers open APIs and Web Services to make it easy for developers to extend and build on Yahoo!’s products and services.

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The Yahoo! Developer Network hosts the publicly-available code and documentation for Yahoo!-owned properties, and provides tutorials, code samples, and other resources for developers. With this partnership, developers can now take advantage of Krugle’s code search engine and interface when they’re working with Yahoo! APIs and data — specifically, to find, save, and share code written in six languages: ActionScript, JavaScript, .NET, PHP, Python, and Ruby.

A kewl thing about Krugle is it also provides users with contextual information as they browse the code, such as associated documentation and dependencies, bug reports, commentary, and user-tagged code and search results, which they can then easily share with their colleagues.

“One of the reasons for Yahoo!’s success has been the company’s strong belief in opening up its products for third-party developers,” according to my old buddy Steve Larsen, who’s the CEO of Krugle, based in Menlo Park, CA. Stevelarsen_1 “By publishing open APIs and helpful documentation, they create an active and engaged community and encourage developers to create applications which utilize Yahoo!’s technology in new and innovative ways. With this partnership, Krugle will make it easier than ever to leverage the true potential of Yahoo!’s open APIs and Web Services.”

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To check out Krugle code search on the Yahoo! Developer Network, just go to http://developer.yahoo.com.

One other thing I like about Krugle: not only the management, but the investors and advisors behind this outfit are pretty darn awesome, too.

Minne-GOOG?

Google has Minnesota in its future — or certainly should. So says my neighbor Ed Kohler, who blogs at TechnologyEvangelist.com. (He’s literally just a couple miles from my place in Bloomington, MN.) He just put up a spectacular pitch for why Google should buy the soon-to-close Ford plant property in St. Paul for a data center site. Ed, you are the man! Talk about a compelling case. Wow, would this ever put Minnesota back on the map as a major computing center. [It really was once. Seriously.]

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The University of Minnesota even brought the “Gopher” search and retrieval protocol to the Internet in 1991. How many of you remember that? I’ll bet Larry, Sergey, and Eric do…

Other states are, of course, all over Google to locate facilities inside their borders. But we can surely make a better case than North Carolina, with all the recent flap going on there regarding the outrageous tax incentives secretly offered to Google. We wouldn’t need to bribe them — we actually have something they could really, really want.

Last year, Larry Page threw a bone to Ann Arbor, Michigan — where he went to undergraduate school — by opening an ad sales office there. I learned about that when I discovered the Ann Arbor SPARK blog suddenly started running me as a “guest blog” one day last year. [Thanks, guys. Never even been there, but happy to help!] Landing that Google office was a coup — well, a morale booster, anyway — for a state that’s in dire need to create jobs to get their economy back on track. But it’s small potatoes compared to what a data center on this jewel of a property on the Mississippi could mean in economic terms, for both Google and Minnesota.

This piece of land is literally a one of a kind. Ford’s been there 83 years! Henry himself purportedly chose the place. I mean, Google — your own hydroelectric dam??? The possibilities for this property, to so many varied interests, are mind boggling. One of those eventual outcomes, of course, would be more high-rise condos. But who the hell wants those? The neighboring residents of Highland Park surely don’t! The battles between forces opposing potential developers for that property are just starting to heat up. And, unfortunately, that could drag on for years. How nice it would be for a big monster player like Google to come in and shorten that process considerably… 🙂

Why, as Ed so eloquently argues, shouldn’t Google take a serious look at the state that brought us such Internet legends as Gopher and the Allaire brothers? [In fact, I’m gonna ping my friends Jeremy and JJ right now and send them this link, so they can weigh in on this, too!]

So, the gauntlet has been tossed. Are you listening, Governor Pawlenty? …and whoever else is actually taking leadership in this state for real economic development. Ed’s laid out the case for the “Minne-GOOG” data center. Now let’s see if our guys have the cajones to pick up the ball and take a run at selling it to Larry, Sergey, and Eric….

Go, Gopher(s)!

DEMO, I Miss Ya!

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Okay, I especially miss your weather! Palm Desert was sooo nice…I recall fondly as I gaze at some quick photos I took, like this one of the palms and the mountains, while I busily hustled between conference sessions and networking opportunites at DEMO…..

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Then I had the misfortune, late last Friday, of returning to Minnesota — just as the coldest temps in seven years were moving in! I’m talking several days in a row where it never even got above zero, all day long (!!)…and lows overnight all this time have consistently been down between minus 10 and minus 20 F.

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This is insane! I should be in California. I have a place at the beach I can work from for cryin’ out loud! Trouble is, most of my client base is here in the Twin Cities. And yes, friends, I am now officially back out blogging and stirring up trouble consulting, fulltime. Wish me well! [Or should I say: startups beware! Graeme’s on the prowl again… 🙂 ]

But note to self after the past week: “Expand your client base, Graeme. Sign up one or more California-based clients — soon! — before you turn into a block of ice.”

Ideas and leads for those client relationships gladly accepted, o valued blog readers (especially you California ones). Graeme’s for hire! Whether for new-media consulting, marketing strategy, messaging and communications, content development….and, well, you get the idea.

Now, let me get back to thawing out my feet!

[By the way, I have to mention some very cool link-love I got from my DEMO attendance and coverage last week. These two were especially nice: the post Brian Solis, of PR2.0 fame, did on the opening DEMO party….and DEMOletter’s Complete DEMO 07 Coverage, which appeared soon after the event. On the opening day, I even made it onto TechMeme’s home page at one point, thanks either to Katie Fehrenbacher of GigaOm linking to me, or Gabe Rivera doing so — haven’t figured that one out yet.]

DEMO: Mission Research CEO: ‘Hosted Apps So 1999’

With Prince due to perform at halftime on Sunday’s Super Bowl telecast, I guess DEMO presenter Charlie Crystle picked a timely line to get his point across. Charlie, of ChiliSoft fame, is now CEO of Mission Research, located in “that hotbed of technology,” as he says: Lancaster, PA. But I gathered that Charlie and his colleagues like it there just fine. Life’s quieter, no big city problems, less turnover of people, etc. Besides, as he said in kicking off his on-stage demo, his company is about “applications for the rest of America, not the Silicon Valley crowd.” Take that, you early-adopter, techco-weenie Crackberry freaks.

Mission Research is well known for its GiftWorks fundraising software for non-profits, which it debuted a couple years ago at DEMO. It used this year’s event to tell the world about its next big thing: SalesWorks customer management software system for small and SOHO businesses. Salesworkslogo

The point Charlie was making in his “so 1999” reference was this: in-house software is preferred over outsourced services by a majority of this market. These smaller players are more leary than you think about trusting their valuable data to any hosted platform located off in Timbuktu somewhere — platforms that we all know can, and do, go down. [Did you hear about the big problem with Google Analytics today, by the way? Oucherooo….]

Now, don’t tell this to Mark Benioff, but I know from my involvement in marketing to small and midsized businesses (“SMBs”) that surveys do back up Charlie on this one. There’s a very large market out there for easy-to-use apps with dead-simple UIs designed for the small outfits that just don’t have IT people on staff. They want the software on their own machines, thank you very much — or, more specifically, they want their data on their own machines. (And they should want it backed up, too, preferably offsite.) What’s interesting, though, is the SalesWorks platform actually features the best of both worlds. It’s a hybrid that “boasts the power and safety of desktop applications integrated smartly and safely with web-based functionality,” the company says. It integrates with a variety of online services — for e-commerce, geo, and online marketing, for example — and, most significantly for 3.6 million small businesses out there, Intuit’s Quickbooks.

SalesWorks is described by the company as “customer management software that anyone can use and everyone can afford.” A beta version can be downloaded here.

Below, I’ve pasted in some screen shots of the SalesWorks software, showing the simple, clean interface, and some of its features, such as mapping of your contacts and options for doing customer mailings.

Charlie is an interesting guy, and a damn good musician, too, by the way (he played guitar at the famous DEMO jam session, along with guys like Don Clark of the Wall Street Journal). He also has a blog, separate from his company’s blog, where he talked recently about the SalesWorks launch.

I think Charlie’s really onto something with this product, and has a great experience base to build from in GiftWorks. There are obvious similarities to extend this functionality to small businesses (not all small businesses, but certainly many). There’s no doubt the SMB/SOHO market is huge and growing. But its massiveness and amorphousness (is that a word?) are precisley what make it such a challenge from a marketing standpoint. I think SalesWorks will succeed only if it secures distribution partnerships with big players that reach this broad demographic of mom-and-pops and businesses of less than, say, 50 employees. These big partners have the clout and marketing muscle to take this to the small business masses. But Charlie knows that, and has a plan to achieve it. And he has a great bunch of people on his board of advisors, too.

I would not bet against the man.

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DEMO: DARTdevices Makes Pigs Fly

Think ubiquitous interoperability across all your devices will happen only when pigs fly? Well, DARTdevices showed us just now that pigs can do that! Dartpigsfly We’re talking intelligence that lets any device discover, access, and share apps with any other DART-enabled device. No installing software or drivers. This is a company with funding from Motorola Ventures that’s all about virtualizing devices. Now to convince the device OEMs to adopt the technology, and our lives are bound to get simpler….

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