The eighth annual Defrag event is about to fire up in Denver, and I’m here once more — for my eighth year in a row! Really looking forward to another amazing, mine-expanding program. Watch for more here, and of course at @GraemeThickins throughout the next two days.
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One of our largest locally sponsored tech events here in Minneapolis is the MobCon Conference, dubbed “Where Mobile Minds Connect.” The third annual version was held November 13th & 14th, 2014, at the Hyatt in downtown Minneapolis. The event is put on by MentorMate, a large mobile development firm that was recently acquired by Taylor Corp. Sponsors for this year’s MobCon included many local firms, among them such bigcos as Target Corp and USBank.
The highlights for me were three speakers:
In a post today in the Wall Street Journal “Speakeasy” blog (which covers media, entertainment, celebrity, and the arts), the latest music video from Weird Al Yankovic was featured. It’s hilarious!! Take a look there on that post (length is 4:34)… I'll wait.
What’s cool is that the video has a Minnesota connection. It turns out Yankovic and his longtime coproducer
tapped TruScribe to make it — starting some ten months ago. TruScribe is headquartered in Madison WI, but also has an office in downtown St. Paul. (In addition, it maintains international operations through many key European partnerships.) Andrew Herkert, who’s VP of sales and a cofounder, heads the St. Paul office and helped launch the company while a student at the University of St. Thomas about five years ago. TruScribe has grown significantly since then.
An excerpt from the WSJ post:
The song, from Yankovic’s new album “Mandatory Fun,” is in the style of Crosby, Stills & Nash… (it) features Yankovic harmonizing with himself on lyrics constructed of corporate jargon, like “operationalize our strategies” and “leverage our core competencies,” while the animated whiteboard video depicts a live-action hand that is drawing illustrations to go with the words.
“I wanted to do a song about all the ridiculous double-speak and meaningless buzzwords that I’ve been hearing in office environments my entire life,” Yankovic says by email. “I just thought it would be ironic to juxtapose that with the song stylings of CSN, whose music pretty much symbolizes the antithesis of corporate America.”
I laughed out loud at one comment on the post (from a guy named David): “Weird Al hits all the right points. Anyone who has written a press release should hang their heads in shame.”
TruScribe is getting a ton of praise today (including from Al himself), as you can see on its Twitter account.
And here’s a great blog post TruScribe published today, Weird Al is making fun of you! And us, too.
TruScribe’s technology is called “Scribology,” and the company has built an impressive client list. 
I had the pleasure of meeting cofounder Andrew Herkert at the most recent University of St. Thomas “Fowler Business Concept Challenge” (a student competition), where we were judges on the same team. Here’s what he had to say about the news today:
“Weird Al is a creative powerhouse, with a decades-long influence on pop culture, and that makes it an honor that we were selected as vendor for his whiteboard-animation project. The TruScribe team is optimistic this is just the beginning of a deeper relationship with the media industry. … I have high praise for Jay Levey of Imaginary Productions for catalyzing the vision for this video. Jay is Al’s business partner and manager/agent/fellow visionary — they’ve worked together for many, many years. In fact, Jay discovered Al some 30 years ago.”
TruScribe is another great example of Minnesota creativity and technology innovation! Okay, Wisconsin claims them as well. We hate to admit it — but, yes, occasionally, cheeseheads can be creative, too… 🙂
I attended the Glue Conference May 21-22 in Broomfield, CO, and a pre-event on May 20 called API Strategy & Practice. It was my sixth Glue in a row, since the event began in 2009. It's been a very popular developer event, and has grown each year — now attracting approximately 650 attendees. There were 70 speakers, selected from some 500 who applied. I've written extensively about each of the six Glue Conferences I've attended. This year, I reported for ProgrammableWeb for the first time. (More about that site below.)
Here are my seven posts from #Gluecon 2014, in chronological order of the particular sessions that I wrote about:
• Developers at Roundtable Ask, ‘Are APIs Copyrightable?’ (863 words)
• ‘API First’ Isn’t Just for Startups Anymore (529 words)
• How to Secure Your REST API the Right Way (411 words)
• 10 Reasons Why Developers Hate Your API (918 words)
• Reverb, Apigee Announce Swagger 2.0 Workgroup (720 words)
• As APIs Proliferate, Can Search Scale to Keep Up? (388 words)
• API Design Should Be About ‘Interactive’ and ‘Tinkering’ (600 words)
I also shot a bunch of photos at the event, as I always do. Here's my Flickr set of Gluecon 2014.
About ProgrammableWeb: As the world's leading source of news and information about Internet-based application programming interfaces (APIs), ProgrammableWeb is known as the Web's defacto journal of the
API economy. Since it was founded in 2005, ProgrammableWeb (now based in San Francisco) has been chronicling the daily evolution of the global API economy while amassing the Web's most relied-on directory when it comes to discovering and searching for APIs to use in Web and mobile applications. In 2014, Gartner identified ProgrammableWeb as one of several “Cool Vendors” in Information Innovation. It is also the most widely-cited source of data related to APIs in the mainstream media, conferences, whitepapers, and other forms of research. ProgrammableWeb is where you can keep-up with what's new and interesting in a world where the Web is a programmable platform. When it says "the Web is a platform," it is referring to how Web-based and mobile apps are enabled by Internet-based APIs. For example, the way in which the developers of many location-aware apps are able to incorporate Google Maps into their wares with just a few lines of code (using the Google Maps API). Read more about ProgrammableWeb here.
At the Glue Conference May 21-22 in Broomfield, CO, StrongLoop announced it is greatly simplifying data synch and replication for mobile apps requiring APIs and connectivity to enterprise data sources.
The company's LoopBack open-source API framework, written in Node.js, is used to connect devices to enterprise data sources. This new functionality is available for Oracle, SQL Server, MongoDB, PostgreSQL, MySQL and more.
Almost all enterprise mobile apps that are data-driven require offline sync capabilities. Until now, developers first had to figure out how to locally store a subset of the application's data. Secondly, they had to implement a mechanism that could keep the data synchronized on both the client and server. For the first time, developers can now easily synchronize to and from various databases without requiring constant network connectivity. LoopBack's replication also handles the complexity of moving data between devices, device to server, and server to server. This upgrade to LoopBack means developers can now focus on the front end versus the mechanics of how to replicate data between disparate databases, whether they be in the cloud or the data center.
I interviewed Al Tsang, CTO of StrongLoop, after he gave his talk at Gluecon, which was entitled, "Isomorphic JavaScript in Action: Using HTML5, Node.js, and LoopBack for Offline Synch." (Apologies for accidentally clipping off his last sentence. The company was founded in 2013, is based in San Mateo CA, and is backed by investors including Ignition Partners and Shasta Ventures. It is the leading contributor to the latest Node.js v0.12 release. Also apologies for the sound quality. Forgot my good mic!)


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