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

Tag: Graeme Thickins (Page 46 of 55)

Subscribe to My ‘Blidget’

Actually, I’d rather you subscribe to my RSS feed. But, what the heck, subscribe to this, too! Just click on the blue bar near the top of my sidebar to the right. It lets you add a widget of my blog headlines to your own blog or web site, courtesy of Widgetbox. Blidgetgraphic I saw this company debut at DEMO last year. They thought widgets were gonna be big….and they were right! The company’s been going great guns since then, becoming an amazing source of every kind of widget imaginable. They partnered with Typepad to introduce this “blidget” (blog+widget) concept. Mine looks like this:


Get

For some reason, my photo was showing up in it fine at first, but then it wasn’t. Are you seeing it on my blidget? The one I chose, naturally, is the infamous hat & lei photo of me above in my header, shot while partyin’ on Maui about 10 years ago…

Blogs as ‘New Media’: The Evolution Continues

Wow, some real interesting things are happening out there in Blogland lately! Specifically, new developments that keep raising questions about disclosure and the independence of bloggers. Marshall Kirkpatrick did a TechCrunch post yesterday about Microsoft hiring two respected industry guys (one an analyst, the other a tech journalist), to start blogging for the company. And it drew a hailstorm of comments — accusations of selling out to The Man, etc. But the question about ethics and disclosure isn’t just about big-company bloggers these days. Robert Scoble, who started the whole employee-evangelist blogging phenomenon at Microsoft, has been under attack at the small startup company he now blogs and “vlogs” for, PodTech. A post on his Scobleizer blog a while back drew a very heavy, sometimes downright nasty discussion about disclosure, specifically relating to Robert’s coverage of clients of PodTech’s. [Some of PodTech’s clients it calls “sponsors” and are identified as such on its web site. Robert also has one sponsor for his personal blog, which he says is Seagate.] His post on this topic was in response to Valleywag calling him out on being a shill. Scoble straightens out Valleywag on the details, but admits he doesn’t always give enough disclosure. He resolves to be more careful in the future. Dan Farber at ZDnet also weighed in on the flap.

But the arguments about what consitutes sufficient disclosure will surely continue. Who decides? The evolution to new media is not without its bumps. Traditional journalism has a code of ethics that takes up a whole book at some media outlets such as the NY Times (which hasn’t prevented some notable lapses by certain reporters and editors there in recent times). But bloggers now, more and more, seem to be getting held to higher standards — especially those of the so-called independents that are widely read. Those who have accepted high-profile positions at big-name companies don’t have disclosure issues, however. We all know who’s paying them, and simply apply that filter.

One great blog to read that covers this issue like no other — blogs versus mainstream media — is Mark Glaser’s MediaShift, which is hosted by PBS.org. I’ve written about it previosuly. You’ll find his coverage of the recent “WeMedia” conference interesting as well.

The battle for influence goes on. In the minds of most web users today, that influence now exists collectively in blogs, or at least in certain blogs that are respected and deemed to have influence over others. No question that blogs as a medium are gaining fast on traditional media. And don’t doubt for a second that corporate communicators and their bosses aren’t getting this, bigtime.

What makes a blog influential? How does one measure that? How much of it is quantitative vs. qualitative?

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.

Redlipsanim

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.”

Krugleallyoucaneat

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.]

Minnegoog_1

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)!

Some of the Awesome People I Met at DEMO 07

Now that I’ve been back from DEMO for a week, it’s time to go through my humongous stack of cards again and say-hey to all great people I met at this very upbeat event. I’ve been sorting through all these cards on my desk today….

Once again, the whole conference came off very well — the logistics, the networking, the program, everything was great (even if the weather was a little iffy at first). Though it’s always hard to break away to attend these things, I’m really, really glad I did and would wholeheartedly recommend DEMO conferences to anyone in this business, whether you’re new to it or not.

Graemesdesk

Normally, I’d have done this “people post” a little sooner, but it’s been the busiest post-conference week I can remember for a while. It seems the startup business is booming everywhere, and I’m hustling to follow up with a lot of blogging and consulting work, now that I’m a free-agent again! On top of that, I still have some blog posts I’d like to do on companies I met last week…which will make this a record in the elapsed time between the conference ending and my final posts. But there were just so many interesting companies and stories at DEMO 07, I really could blog about it for weeks.

DEMO remains the best venue to see all the new innovative ideas coming out in the tech business, year in and year out — actually twice a year. And it proves that innovation can come from anywhere — even, I’m out to prove, Minnesota (if not this time). In that regard, I volunteered to help Chris Shipley connect with promising startups here in my adopted home state in the future. I’m hoping she can do one of her “Innovation Day” meetup events sometime soon in the Twin Cities, and hear pitches from a bunch of our local startups. Though we didn’t have a Minnesota-based company presenting this time, there was one from our neighboring state of Wisconsin — Jyngle, which gets my vote for one of the best, most memorable brand names to come out at DEMO 07. These things are important, people, when you have to stand out and be remembered amidst the information-overload of 68 startups all hyping their wares! (Just a taste of what such startups will face out in the real world.) Smart companies take the time to get this naming thing right. Now if Jyngle could just have a memorable tagline to go with its cool name. As Guy Kawasaki says, you have to “make mantra” — meaning boil down to a few words how you make a difference in the world. Again, not easy, but if you can’t do it, how do you expect your users or buyers to “get” what you’re doing? Without mantra, you can just slowly drown in all the hype of the marketplace. I would describe mantra as “messaging on steroids.” [Hey, Guy — there ya go. As a marketing/branding/messgaging dude, that would be my three-word-mantra wrapup/takeaway of your great talk in Minneapolis a few weeks ago.]

I don’t mean to pick on Jyngle — they’re hardly alone in this. And Business Week liked their service enough to include it in a post-DEMO story. But I sit here looking at their cards again and see a huge missed opportunity — no tagline, no mantra ringing through to me (pardon the pun). Sure, when you go to their site, you see the words “Mobile Group Messaging for the Real World” — but that doesn’t do it for me. Now, a tagline like “Message Your Group, Fast” sure would. What’s cool is the Jyngle service lets you do this group-messaging with either voice or text.

Time savings — it’s ALL about saving time today. That’s a major investment theme of one of the smartest, most successful guys in tech investing, Roger McNamee of Elevation Partners. He wasn’t at this DEMO, nor was his partner Bono (though there was a sighting of the latter at the last DEMO, which turned out to be the most masterful PR trick of that event). So, here’s a lesson for startups: when Roger (the Man) McNamee talks about stuff like this, listen!

But I digress. How did I get off on this tangent? Such is blogging. Back to the people I met. First, I’ll list some of the people I already knew but renewed friendships with (no particular order, just as I kinda ran into ’em). I’ll start with the former Minnesota people I talked about in my opening-reception post, noting where they are now…

• Steve Larsen, CEO, Krugle Inc., Menlo Park, CA
• Beth Temple, CMO, Magnify.net, NYC
• Charles Wilson, consultant to Mission Research (SalesWorks), Lancaster, PA
• Charles Beeler, General Partner, El Dorado Ventures, Menlo Park
• Hany Nada, Managing Director, Granite Global Ventures, Menlo Park
And these other friends I saw again, some of them just a few weeks prior at BlogHaus and CES:
• Robert Scoble, PodTech
• John Furrier, PodTech
• Shel Israel, co-author with Scoble on “Naked Conversations”
• Stewart Alsop, Alsop Louie Partners
• Renee Blodgett, DEMO PR guru, Blodgett Communications
• Julie O’Grady, another DEMO PR guru, here for Boorah
• Gary Bolles, Conferenza
• Dan Farber, VP Editorial, ZDnet
• Rafe Needleman, Editor, CNET
• Brian Ziel, PR guru, Seagate
• Becky Sniffen, who handles PR for DEMO
• Chris Shipley, DEMO Executive Producer
Plus all these new peope I met, at least the ones I got cards from:
• Christine Herron, Director of Investments, Omidyar Network (whose tagline
I love: “Every individual has the power to make a difference”)
• Tom Sly, Manager of New Business Development, Google (a newly minted Harvard MBA;
I told him he was the second Google guy I’d met a conference…the other was Larry Page)
• Aydin Senkut, President, Felicis Ventures, San Francisco (an early Googler)
• Alan Kelley, Managing Director, SJF Ventures, NYC
• Luis Villalobos, Founder & Board Member, Tech Coast Angels
• Jeff Cohn, Investment Screening Director, Tech Coast Angels
• Laura Paglione, Director, Knowledge Management/Entrepreneurship, Kauffman Foundation
• Charlie Crystle, CEO, Mission Research (SalesWorks), Lancaster, PA
• Wendy Caswell, CEO, ZINK Imaging, Waltham, MA
• Wim Sweldens, VP, Alcatel-Lucent Ventures, Murray Hill, NJ
• Andrew Horwitz, Senior Director, Market Development, Seagate
• Rhonda Shantz, Senior Director, Consumer Communications, Symantec
• Mike Bradshaw, Partner, Connect Public Relations, Provo, UT (for Symantec)
• Esteban Sardera, CEO, PairUp, San Francisco
• David Jennings, Cofounder & COO, Yodio, Bellevue, WA
• Katie Perry, Marketing, Jyngle, Milwaukee, WI
• Tom McGannon, Founder & VP Operations, Nexo, Palo Alto, CA
• Gina Jorasch, VP Marketing, Nexo
• Benjamin Levy, VP Marketing, Vringo, Beit Shemesh, Israel
• David Goldfarb, CTO, Vringo
• Michael Bates, CEO, iqzone, Scottsdale, AZ
• James Feguson, President, iqzone
• Eric Moyer, CEO/Cofounder, Boorah, Palo Alto, CA
• Ramsay Hoguet, Founder, MyDesignIn, Marblehead, MA
• Eric Sirkin, President/Cofounder, BUZ Interactive, Palo Alto
• Tamara Stone, Partner, Rainmaker Communications, Mountain View, CA (for BUZ Interactive)
• Brian Smiga, CEO, Preclick, Atlantic Highlands, NJ
• Tony Davis, CEO, TeleFlip, Santa Monica, CA
• Christian Gammill, VP Product Marketing, TeleFlip
• Julie Mathis, VP, CarryOn PR, Los Angeles (for TeleFlip)
• Brian Solis, Founder, FutureWorks Inc., San Jose, CA
• Marc Orchant, Blogger and Storyteller (the ‘Office Evolution’ blog/ZDnet), Albuquerque, NM
• Sue Orchant, artist
• Victoria Barrett, Associate Editor, Forbes Magazine

And, finally, here are some people I would have liked to meet but somehow didn’t, including the first two guys listed who were attending from a Minnesota company (how’d I miss them?):
• Mark Dunn, CTO, MakeMusic, Eden Prairie, MN
• John Paulson, CEO, MakeMusic, Eden Prairie, MN
• Marshall Kirkpatrick, Splashcast
• Michael Arrington, TechCrunch
• Oliver Starr, MobileCrunch
• Katie Fehrenbacher, GigaOM
• Barry Bonds (yes, that one), who appeared for Bling Software

That’s it for now on DEMO. More soon on some other things I saw there that I liked…

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