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Tag: DEMO (Page 19 of 19)

DEMO Opens With a Crowded Reception

[UPDATE: I must apologize for blanking on Hany Nada’s name the other night. These receptions can do that to one… 🙂 He didn’t have his name badge on, and being a visual person, guess it didn’t get filed away in my semi-solid-state memory. Hany’s the former Piper Jaffray Minneapolis guy I mentioned, and is now Managing Director of Granite Global Ventures in Menlo Park. Also ran into yet another former Twin Cities dude (during the sessions on Wednesday) who worked with Hany at Piper: Charles Beeler, General Partner at Eldorado Ventures in Menlo Park. It’s like a Minnesota reunion!]

The DEMO 07 conference kicked off at 6:00 pm Tuesday with about 700 people crowding into an indoor reception in the beautiful Desert Springs JW Marriott Resort lobby. It had been scheduled to be outdoors, but the weather was a bit cool, shall we say? And it had actually been raining lightly when most people were arriving in the late afternoon. So much for the warm, sunny California desert… 🙁 Thought I’d post some random shots as I wandered about schmoozing. Coolest thing was I ran into a lot of former Minnesota people! It was like old-home week…

Thecrowd

A view of the very crowded lobby area. The rest of the guests must have been really ticked that this mob took over the place! (Especially at the rates they’re paying.) It was really hard to move around, so creative ways had to be used to work the crowd. The key: strategically timed perimeter moves!

Robertscoble

Robert Scoble from PodTech (and of course his own Scobleizer blog) was in the middle of things with his now ever-present video camera. That’s Stewart Alsop at the right, the original founder of the DEMO conference, which has quite a history: this is the 17th annual winter DEMO, and the 25th DEMO conference, since a fall event was added in 1999. Chris Shipley, who’s been the producer for many years, was just off to the right, but I wasn’t able to get a shot of her. (Plenty of opportunities to shoot some on stage.)

Johnfbrians

John Furrier (right), the founder and CEO of pioneering new media firm PodTech, which cosponsored the great Bloghaus at CES. He’s with Brian Solis, founder of social-media PR agency FutureWorks, which has offices in Silicon Valley and Orange County and is working with many hot, new startups.

Charlessteveshel2

Here’s where the Minnesota people start showing up. Charles Wilson (left), longtime Internet guru who started his career in the Twin Cities, working with such success stories as the Allaire brothers, and now consulting with DEMO presenter Mission Research…Steve Larsen, now spending most of his time in Menlo Park as CEO of Krugle, a hot site for tech geeks (Scoble says Microsoft should buy Krugle to solve its search woes!)…and Shel Israel (not from MN), co-author with Scoble of “Naked Conversations”, who’s so popular, I couldn’t get him to stay still enough to pose for this shot! He’s also known as a coach of many successful DEMO presenting firms.

Stevelchristineh

Steve Larsen with Christine Herron, director of investments at the Omidyar Network, which I learned was his first investor at Krugle. She’s also on the board of advisors at Mission Research, the DEMO presenter mentioned above.

Mplsfolks

Another shot of the (former) Minnesota folks: Charles Wilson again at left…joined by Beth Temple, now CMO at DEMO presenter Magnify.net in NYC…Shel Israel (we let him stay even though he’s not from MN!)…a guy whose name I didn’t quite get, who was with Piper Jaffray in Minneapolis until he moved to the Bay Area eight years ago…and Steve Larsen at right.

Vringoguys

Finally, I snapped a pic of David Goldfarb, CTO of Vringo, and his colleague Benjamin Levy, VP of Marketing — here to present their new video ringtone technology. I told them they have the coolest looking business cards and web site I’ve seen so far.

Afterwards, it was off to dinner with Steve Larsen, Beth Temple, Charles Wilson, Shel Israel, and four of the good folks from Mission Research, known for its “GiftWorks” fundraising software, and here to introduce its new “SalesWorks” solution for small and SOHO businesses.

The Buildup to DEMO Intensifies

Well, it’s 24 hours and counting till the opening of DEMO ’07 tomorrow morning, and the bits are flying. (By the way, here’s the event schedule.) The blogs are lighting up, traffic tripled to yours truly yesterday, and the pre-announcement news releases are starting to hit my in-box. The first was from BUZ Interactive, which has designed a way to send personalized voicemails, mixed with music, to any mobile phone on the planet without having the phone ring. More news just arrived from ThePort.com, which has gone live with the download for its Blerts desktop RSS alerter (Windows only for now). [A quirk about some of the companies on the alphabetical DEMO presenters list — their service or product name is not what they’re listed under, so don’t look under “B”.]

Over at TechCrunch, I’m not surprised to see a post on Splashcast, a cool new Flash player to embed your channels on a website, since it’s where TechCrunch contributor Marshall Kirkpatrick has been working. (Though he, of course, did not write this post — Nick Gonzalez did.) Turns out Marshall has been blogging at the SplashCast web site for some time.

Meanwhile, Pete Cashmore at Mashable did a great post last night called Social Networking at DEMO – Standards Higher than Usual? It’s an excellent rundown of what we can expect in this category over the next two days at the conference.

Who will win the coveted DEMOgod awards? That we’ll learn at the closing media-panel dinner on Thursday evening. The panel will be moderated by Walt Mossberg of the Wall Street Journal, and will include Victoria Barret, associate editor of Forbes, Larry Magid, tech columnist and CBS News contributor, and Laetitia Mailhes, correspondent for Les Échos. For some insight into the DEMOgod phenomenon, check out a blog post from my old Conferenza colleague, Gary Bolles, about the recent Churchill Club event in San Francisco. I also note that Conferenza is now running some breathless blogging by Sam Perry out in chilly NYC at the AlwaysOn Media conference, which overlaps with DEMO.

More from the desert soon….

Conferences I Plan to Blog…

Just to update you, o faithful blog readers, I thought I’d mention what conferences I’ll be blogging from in coming weeks and months. First of all, I’m happy to report I’ve been accepted again as a press registrant at the DEMO 2007 event, which is January 30 – February 1. This will be about my fourth DEMO event. Demo07banner The venue this year was switched from Phoenix to Palm Desert, California, which should be a glorious locale at this time of year (especially when I’ll be escaping Minnesota winter!). I always look forward to this conference, not only because 70 of the hottest startups in the country pitch their businesses here, but because it attracts so much buzz and media attention, more than virtually any other event all year long. The media list is like a who’s who. As always, companies you’ll be reading about a year, two years, three years from now will first be heard from at DEMO. And I’ll do my best to report the highlights for you… [See categories to the right for my coverage of both DEMO events in 2006.]

Another event I’m thinking about covering (but not sure yet if I can break away) is the big momma of ’em all: CES …which used to stand for Consumer Electronics Show, but now wants to be so much more (see theme). Being a content guy, how could I not like this one? Haven’t been to Vegas in a while — caught an Interop show there a couple years ago, and of course attended many Comdex events back in the day. CES, by the way, may be big, but it still doesn’t draw as many people as Comdex did in its heydey. Nonetheless, the show is today the “world’s largest tradeshow for consumer technology and North America’s largest annual tradeshow of any kind.” Get this: it will feature 2700 exhibitors covering floorspace the equivalent of 35 football fields(!), and will have 140,000 attendees — 25,000 of them from other countries. Ces07logotheme Those attendees will include manufacturers, retailers, content providers and creators, broadband developers, wireless carriers, cable and satellite TV providers, installers, engineers, corporate buyers, government leaders, financial analysts and the media. [How could I not like pal-in’ around with those installers, huh? Cable guys attend this thing?? Maybe I should reconsider….] Anyway, there will be a ton of press at this one, and the bloggers will outnumber them — guaranteed. The combined total will easily be in the thousands. Robert Scoble, the well known author and former head blogger at Microsoft, who’s now VP of Media Development at Podtech, will even have his own suite where bloggers can hang out. Here’s what he said on his blog: “By the way, our BlogHaus at CES will be open to ANY blogger, not just those ‘blessed’ by Microsoft or some other company. You just need to have me put your name on the list so you can get up to our suite.” I did.

Finally, I’m looking out to March and thinking I’d love to blog ETech again. O’Reilly is my favorite publisher and conference producer. [You’ll note I recommend many of its books under the “Reading” subhead at the right. Disclosure: I do get free books from time to time, but only post those I really find of value.] Oreillyetechlogo I’ve really enjoyed reporting on this conference in the past, and love running into my old blog buddies there, like Doc Searls and David Weinberger. Sure, it’s a developer event. But, as I’ve said before, some of my best friends are developers…. 🙂 And this event draws an awesome, a-list of attendees, too, at all levels, and many other great bloggers. Anyway, it would be fun to capture it again for y’all, and I hope to get out to San Diego for it in late March. [Okay, it’s an excuse to hang out again at my favorite beach, too 🙂 … ]

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