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: Messaging/Collaboration (Page 7 of 9)

eTech: Magical Mystery Tour

I’m off on an adventure tomorrow morning, flying to San Diego again, this time for the O’Reilly Emerging Technology Conference, where I’ll be reporting for Conferenza and posting to this blog. I’m looking forward to running into some old friends, and to an exciting program. The “magic” theme this year should be fascinating, based on the descriptions of some sessions I’ve highlighted below.

Etechlogo200

What technologies are “poised to blast off into the realm of magic?” O’Reilly asks, as it launches its sixth annual eTech event. [It will be the third one I’ve reported on, by the way.] The goal is to “balance pie-in-the-sky theorizing with practical, real-world information and conversation,” says the firm. The format consists of tutorials, breakout sessions, keynotes, and that most revered form of interaction — hallway conversations! — which “will hopefully spark enough unconventional thinking to change how you see your world.” Etechtheme400

The dates are Monday, March 26 through Thursday, March 29, and the venue is the Manchester Grand Hyatt right on the harbor in downtown San Diego. The promise, says O’Reilly, is for you to be able to learn which areas of technology have sufficiently advanced to the level of magic. So, I’m joining more than 1200 technologists, CTOs, hackers, researchers, thinkers, strategists, entrepreneurs, business developers, and VCs that are expected to participate in this year’s event. Grandhyatt I know from years past that the attendees at eTech are top notch — many leading developers, trendsetters, founders, and VCs (definitely a lot names you’d recognize). The strength of eTech, according to O’Reilly, is how it “taps into the creative spirit of all attendees, sparking provocative encounters and productive inspiration that continue long after the conference ends” — and I agree based on personal experience. In addition to the variety of sessions and extra-curricular activities, eTech has an exhibit hall featuring a focused group of about 14 exhibitors and sponsors.

eTech Sessions That Especially Sound Good
So, what are some the talks I’ve flagged out? On the first full day, Tuesday, I plan to catch as many of these as I can (some overlap each other, unfortunately):
• Building a “Web-Scale Computing” Architecture to Meet the Variable Demands of Today’s Business (Amazon Web Services)
• Making Offline Web Applications a Reality (Zimbra)
• Movie Magic: Coming Soon to the Real World Near You (Apple Computer)
• Flickr for Office Docs – Content Syndication through ThinkFree Doc Exchange
• RSS Beyond Blogging – Connecting Applications With Feeds (nSoftware)
• Digital Disney: the Mainstreaming of Web 2.0
• Successful Open Communities on the Internet (Wikia)
• Extreme Productivity in the Enterprise: The User is the Developer is the User (BEA)
• The Myths of Innovation
• Virtualizing the Datacenter with Project Blackbox (Sun)

Then, on Wednesday, we start getting heavier into that magic thing:

• The Coming Age of Magic (ThingM) – Excerpt: “The desktop metaphor is dead … Interaction design is significantly trailing the capabilities of the technology because of how difficult it is to explain what all this new stuff does … The desktop metaphor was useful for twenty years as a way to structure and explain information-processing technology. I propose “magic” as a metaphor for structuring interactions with embedded information processing technology …”

• The Role of Ubiquitous Web 2.0 Technologies in Everyday Life (Danah Boyd) – Excerpt: “While the ‘radical’ practices of young people and the organizational fetishes of technologists are certainly a curiosity to be examined, the real shift is happening in the lives of everyday people without an ounce of reflexivity …”

• Patterns: From Fabrics to Fabrication – Excerpt: “Today, the re-emergence of craft is part of the DIY movement that is discovering new tools for personal fabrication.

And here’s my vote for best named session:
• Scalability: Set Amazon’s Servers on Fire, Not Yours (SmugMug) – Excerpt: “With companies like SmugMug, Flickr, and YouTube growing by leaps and bounds, storage is a vital but expensive ingredient. Building, scaling, and managing large storage installations is cash — and labor –intensive. Amazon provides a simple API that exposes their internal storage architecture at utility prices. Suddenly, anything is possible. Unlimited, always-on storage everywhere in the world.”

• Sufficiently Advanced Magic (MIT Media Lab) – Excerpt: “…magicians and scientists often play on the same borders of the unknown. Magicians, however, do not have to kowtow to the constraints of reality as technologists do … If technology is man’s search to express control over his environment, scientists should look to magicians for inspiration and guidance as to what has engaged people for millennia … they continue to be successful by adapting their techniques and presentations in order to affect people profoundly.”

• Engaging with Web 2.0 Outside the Browser (Adobe) – Excerpt: “Web 2.0 is more than a social networking phenomenon. It’s a renaissance in web development … Rich Internet applications (RIAs), which break out from the traditional page-based web paradigm and currently run in the web browser, will soon be able to run on the desktop, both on and offline, with the ability to access local data and use web services to present an integrated and unique user experience … best practices and techniques that leverage existing web development skills to build and deploy Web 2.0 applications that bridge the Web and desktop … a new application model for content delivery and collaboration … how HTML, JavaScript, PDF, and Flash are coming together in a new project, code-named Apollo.”

• Pipes: A Tool for Remixing the Web (Yahoo!) – Excerpt: “Developers can use Pipes to combine data sources and user input into mashups without having to write code.”

• Web Scale Computing (Amazon Web Services) – Excerpt: “Web 2.0 business models are about competing on ideas, not on resources. Yet over 70% of most startup development effort goes into undifferentiated “heavy lifting”! … Using AWS, developers can build software applications leveraging the same robust, scalable, and reliable technology that powers Amazon’s retail business … 200,000 developers have registered on Amazon’s developer site to create applications based on these services.”

• Ajax Unplugged: Architecture and Tips for Taking Your Applications Offline (Zimbra) – Excerpt: “Looking back, 2006 may have been the year of Ajax … But despite its game-changing hype, Ajax is limited in its usefulness, it only helps people when connected to the Web. Surprisingly enough, people want access to their applications even when they aren’t connected to the Internet …”

And…drum roll…my vote for the funnest sounding session at eTech:
• 1/2 Baked (panel: 500 Hats, Feedburner, First Round Capital, August Capital) – Excerpt: “Half-Baked Dot Com is a participatory exercise in entrepreneurial improv theatre conducted by five teams of startup addicts and judged by an estranged panel of venture capitalists…or several crackpots and D-list bloggers, whomever shows up first … Half-Baked is the latest Web 2.0 craze that’s sweeping the un-conference circuit. Show up early and bring your A-game if you’d like to participate, otherwise bring your camera to record the heinous crime perpetrated on an audience who paid good money to attend this event.”

Finally, on Thursday, I’m seeing several more sessions that I’d like to catch — if I can hang around that long before hittin’ the waves:
• Apollo: Bringing Rich Internet Applications to the Desktop (Adobe)
• Silicon is Invading Medicine (Andy Kessler)
• Lessons Learned in Scaling and Building Social Systems (Yahoo!)
• Web 20-20: Architectural Patterns and Models for the New Internet (Adobe)
• Your Web App as a Text Adventure (Stikkit)
• Web Feed Workflows – Getting the Right Information, to the Right People at the Right Time (Attensa)

Let me know your thoughts about the sessions above, questions you’d like answered, etc. Watch for my blog posts and Flickr pix, too. And, by all means, if you’ll be at eTech yourself, please look me up!

Some of the Great People I Met at DEMOfall 2006…

At least the ones I got cards from so I could remember 🙂 …and these are in no particular order:

• Yuvinder Kochar, CTO, The Washington Post Company
• Frank Kelcz, CEO, Moore, Clayton & Co. (MCC Media Group, London)
• Don Gallagher, Senior Director-Audience Development, NetworkWorld
• Brian Dear, Founder & Chairman, Eventful.com, San Diego
• Karl Harris, VP Engineering, Flurry.com
• Joe Lichtenberg, VP Marketing & Biz Dev, Eluma
• Jennifer McLean, Senior Media Specialist, Percepture, Lake Hiawatha, NJ
• Jennifer Bingham, Account Executive, Davis-Marrin Communications, San Diego
• Mark Suster, CEO, Koral
• Jon Levine, Principal UI Designer, Koral
• Rob Crumpler, CEO, BuzzLogic
• Thadeus Eby, Director of Sales, BuzzLogic
• Robert Schettino, CMO, BuzzLogic
• Andrea Roesch, Senior Partner, Tier One Partners
• Jamie Pogrel, Account Manager, PR@vantage
• Scott Ritchie, Cofounder & VP Biz Dev, PixSense
• Yael Elish, CEO & Cofounder, eSnips
• Ellen Skugstad, Director of Marketing, Pluggd.com
• Marc Della Torre, Biz Dev, Jajah
• Buzz Bruggeman, Cofounder, ActiveWords
• Duncan Greatwood, CEO, PostPath
• Adam Marsh, CEO, PrefPass
• Gregor Berkowitz, President, MOTO Development Group
• Chris Dury, VP Marketing, ScanR
• Stefanie Pierce Weaver, The Kauffman Foundation
• Paula Dunne, President, Contos Dunne Communications
• Daniel Terdiman, Staff Writer, CNet.com

A few others I’d met previously, but got a chance to speak with further this time included:
• Becky Sniffen, Principal, MC2 Communications
• Don Thorson, VP Marketing & Biz Dev, Jajah
• Aaron Fulkerson, VP Platform, Mindtouch
• Renee Blodgett, President, Blodgett Communications
• Amy Wohl, Amy Wohl’s Opinions
• Rafe Needleman, Editor at Large, CNet.com
• Dan Farber, VP Editorial at CNet, and Editor in Chief at ZDNet

Great chatting with all of you!

Tag:

Second Morning at DEMOfall

The rapid-fire presentations continue here on Wednesday morning. Here are some of the highlights:

PrefPass (which gets the award for most tongue-tying name to pronounce) frees you from having to fill out online registration forms (!!). These things aren’t just a hassle, said CEO Adam Marsh, they’re a security problem. Prefpasslogo His company’s solution means “personalization without registration.” Once you enable the service at the company’s site (very quick), it’s a simple, one-click process to indicate your interest in a site without identifying who you are. PrefPass is essentially a portable, user-managed identity.

A company called Imaginestics had a pretty amazing demo of their visual-search site, 3D-seek.com (note: only works in IE currently). It lets you doodle to find, say, a part like a bracket. 3dseeklogo It’s a shaped-based search engine, which has obvious applications in finding manufactured parts. As Demo says, “If a picture is worth a thousand words, a doodle may well be worth that many keywords.” This search technology could be applied to many other industries as well, and who knows what possibilities in the consumer world.

Heard of virtualization? Most likely that would be server virtualization, which was championed by a Demo alum by the name of VMware, which has done pretty well for itself. Well, now get ready for application virtualization, from a company named Trigence, recently funded with $8 million from three VC firms. Trigencelogo Its gig is taking virtualization up a layer, separating it from the OS and allowing it to run in a new operating environment. The firm’s technology involves what they call an “application capsule,” which isolates an app into a known good state, said CEO David Roth. Their software essentially encapsulates the app from its underlying operating system and infrastructure. “And we get amazing performance,” said Roth, “typically less than 2% difference.” Demo says of Trigence: “Expect this company to follow a trajectory that maps to the meteroric rise of VMware, and to take that trip faster.”

PostPath demoed a Linux-based email and collaboration server that’s a drop-in alternative to Microsoft Exchange. It’s fully compatible. “Anything that works with Exchange will work with it,” said CEO Duncan Greatwood. Postpathlogo And because it’s an open source system, it allows use of such technologies as Zimbra open source messaging and collaboration. “It lets Web 2.0 become a business reality,” said Greatwood. The most impressive part of this live demo, though, was seeing Greatwood take down his PostPath server, then do a restore in a minute or so, which would have taken hours with an Exchange server.

The last cool thing this morning was Widgetbox. Bloggers take note! Now you have an online directory of free web widgets for your blogs or other web pages, and they work with TypePad, WordPress, Blogger, MySpace, and most any other blog, sidebar, or website. Widgetboxlogo No plugins needed. Widgets — which are live, dynamic content — used to be hard to find and hard to use, said CEO Ed Anuff. Now the process is easy, since Widgetbox organizes them into a marketplace, where you can quickly find what you need and grab it. What’s more, developers (there were 5000 in the beta) now have a way to get their widgets out to a large and growing market.

Tags: , , , , ,

VaporStream ‘Recordless’ Email Alternative Will Raise Controversy

A new chapter in the continuing question of email privacy — if there is such a thing — opens today, as the aptly named Void Communications announces its new VaporSteam service at the DEMOfall conference in San Diego. [The event kicks off tonight in San Diego and I’m headed there soon. See my previous posts about it.] Vaporstreamlogo The company says its technology is the “world’s first recordless electronic communications system.” The announcement from Void, based in NYC, says “VaporStream electronic messages never create or leave a record” and that it is “providing employees with an alternative electronic communications system.”

How does it work? Using your existing e-mail address, Void says its technology automatically separates the sender’s and receiver’s names and the date from the body of the message, never allowing them to be seen together: “VaporStream messages cannot be printed, cut and pasted, forwarded or saved, helping promote open and collaborative communications. Once read, VaporStream stream messages are gone forever.” The instant a VaporStream stream message is sent, the company says, it is placed in a temporary storage buffer space. “When the recipient logs in to read their message, the message is removed from the buffer space. By the time the recipient opens it, the complete stream message no longer exists on the server or any other computer.”

Anyone can go to the company’s web site and sign up for the service at $39.95 per year. It is Web-based, meaning that no hardware or software purchases are required. The company also says that VaporStream is completely immune to spam and viruses.

But this technology raises all kinds of questions. The most glaring of which being: How will the bad guys (take your pick: money launderers, terrorists, corporate wrong-doers, et al) be prevented from using this technology? The answer, I guess, is they will not. And what will — or can — the regulatory bodies that dictate archiving of business email, such as the SEC, do about it? How would companies control the risks associated with their employees using this form of electronic communications? Would they simply leave the decision up to the individual? That does not seem likely. Companies own their own corporate messaging systems, and therefore have every right to monitor, control, archive, save, search, and retrieve from it whatever and however they want.

Void Communications seems to be bucking a big trend toward the archiving of email by signaling they will actually try to sell their concept to business. To wit: “Companies seeking a reprieve from the risks and costs inherent in their e-mail system can benefit from using VaporStream stream messaging. As the first secure, recordless complement to e-mail on the market, VaporStream is an attractive method for communicating confidentially in the corporate environment.”

Trouble is, it goes in the face of existing laws that are pressuring companies to archive everything. The laws are so stringent that many companies even disallow the use of IM in the workplace, especially those in highly regulated industries such as financial services — simply because it’s too hard for them to control, retain (archive), and search, because it’s outside the corporate email system. Now this to contend with? How many companies might flat-out ban this as well?

Allowing individual employees to determine what will or will not be a business record goes against what a large percentage of companies (I think it’s fair to say the majority of well-informed companies) are doing these days with electronic messaging: archiving everything. This is as opposed to say, only saving all corporate emails for 30 days and flushing the system. Why? Because managing your own records, knowing what you have and being able to quickly search it, is better that having someone external to your company produce that “smoking gun” email from some other computer or server somewhere that implicates your company or one of its officers or employees in wrongdoing, somewhere down the line. Remember, once an email is sent, there’s no controlling where it ends up and gets saved, forwarded, backed up, or archived. Thus the point: archive everything and be able to search it quickly, or you’re living dangerously. The email archiving market is one of the hottest growth segments in IT today, in the range of 35% CAGR. Storage is cheap, and archiving systems are becoming much simpler and easier to implement.

But Void seems to be taking the approach that will allow individual employees to determine whether or not an email should be preserved or maintained in the first place. Here’s what they say: “With VaporStream, electronic communications policies can be as simple as: If you need a record, e-mail it. If you don’t, use VaporStream.”

Would that it were that simple.

Here’s more on the company’s FAQ page. Two of the benefits the company cites elsewhere on its web site are these: “Guaranteed Confidentiality: VaporStream is the first recordless electronic communications system that protects companies from the risks and costs associated with e-mail. Simply put, it keeps confidential information confidential.” And “Saves Companies Money: From e-mail discovery services to e-mail analysis services to e-mail storage. Since no record is produced using VaporStream, corporate networks are saved from congestion and other potential hazards. It also limits the risk and liability inherent in e-mail communications.”

That last sentence is interesting. Yes, if an employee is thinking about doing something less than above board, he or she will simply think, “Oh, why risk jail? Let me just VaporStream this baby…”

We haven’t heard the last of this controversy.

Tags: , ,

« Older posts Newer posts »