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: Tech-Surf-Blog (Page 2 of 14)

Time for “Life 3.0” in the Valley?

Back in late 2002, in the doldrum years after the Tech Crash, my friend Rich Karlgaard (the Publisher of FORBES) became compelled to start writing a book about a phenomenon he’d been observing in Silicon Valley. People were leaving in droves — entrepreneurs and other business people, tech workers of every stripe. Good people, successful people, and so many of them disallusioned. Life20cover They’d had it with the expensive living and the rat race up and down the 101, and they were determined to find a better life elsewhere. It’s a great book — called “Life 2.0” — and it’s on my recommended reading list in the right sidebar. He came to Minnesota to interview me when he first began writing it.

Well, hold on, but another book could be in the offing here, from somebody, based on what we read yesterday from two leading Valley-based technology bloggers. First, Michael Arrington launched this bomb on Tech Crunch: Silicon Valley Could Use A Downturn Right About Now…the most telling sentence of which was this: “Times are good, money is flowing, and Silicon Valley sucks.” Here’s another excerpt, his concluding paragraph:

I left Silicon Valley at the peak of the insanity last time around, and I was pleasantly surprised when I returned in 2005 to see so much goodwill and community surrounding innovation. Now, it’s just like the old days again, and Silicon Valley is no longer any fun. In fact, it’s turned downright nasty. It may be time for some of us to leave for a while and watch the craziness from the outside again. In a few years, things will be beautiful again. The big money will be slumbering away, and the marketing departments will be a distant memory. We can focus, once again, on the technology. And the burgers and beer.

The post had 210 comments(!) at last count, so it’s obviously hitting a nerve. But, as if that wasn’t enough, Robert Scoble then chimes in essentially seconding the motion. I like Robert — he’s one of the nicest, most likeable, down-to-earth guys you will ever meet in this business. (And his wife, Maryam, is a real sweetheart, too.) So, when Robert talks, I listen. I respect what he says. Well, yesterday, he further enlightened all us unwashed masses of Valley outsiders with what it’s really like to be an insider there these days. And it does not sound particularly pleasant. His post was titled Why I’m in a malaise…, and here’s an excerpt:

I too look wistfully back at the days when we had almost the entire Social Software industry in one little coffee shop back in 2002 — none of whom were talking about making billions of dollars. Back then it was more like the Homebrew Computer Society, where geeks came to show off their stuff (and everyone was pretty much not getting paid anyway so of course we were doing it just for the love of it).

It seems to me that both Robert and Michael are tired of the grind — the relentless parade of me-too companies and legions of PR people and VCs trying to get their attention, and the hellish treadmill they’re on producing content day after day, night after night. You can only do that for so long before you get burned out — and it seems both of them have reached that point.

Then again, who knows, maybe they just need a vacation? What I do know is that I wouldn’t want either of their jobs. Sure, I’m a blogger, but these guys are hardly your typical bloggers anymore. They’re both part of serious, money-making publishing businesses (Robert also being a VP at PodTech), and both inextricably caught up in the big-money world of tech VC. Now it seems they’re both wondering, “Is this all there is?” And it begs the question: is this crazy Web 2.0 startup world getting closer and closer to a bubble burst?

Makes me glad I live in Minnesota, where things are a great deal more sane. And I know Rich Karlgaard would be the first to agree with me.

UPDATE: To add book link.

They May Not Be Evil, But Their Tagline Is Hellish

Google has finally done it — come up with a tagline. No, I’m not talking about the motto (“Don’t Be Evil”), or the mission statement (“to organize the world’s information”). As Danny Sullivan reports today on his blog, SearchEngineLand, the company has gone and uncorked the phrase to end all phrases. Saywhat Okay, are you ready for it? Are you sure? Okay, drumroll, it’s…..“Search, Ads & Apps” !! No, I’m not kidding — that is it, friends. I know this really tugs on your emotions. But, please, try to control yourselves … from tearing up with brand euphoria.

I’ve always maintained that writing a tagline is like writing poetry. It may be the highest form of advertising writing there is. (And Google, we’re told, is an advertising company!) But this one, I’m sorry. This is no tagline — it’s a three-part laundry list. Okay, Google, great — you do all these things. Got it. Three of ’em. Check. Like we didn’t know that?

This is like Coke saying “Water, Sugar, and Fizz.” Or Nike: “Soles, Laces, and Uppers.” How about Apple? “Pixels, Pods, and Jobs.”

Got any more? Hey, this is fun….play along.

Widgets…Gadgets…Wadgets?

Could another Web 2.0 technology fusion be on the horizon? As in, widget meets advertising, new love affair blossoms? That would seem to be the gist of the latest online advertising development, with Google now saying it will do a full launch this summer of its Gadget Ads. Wadgetgraphic It didn’t take the 800-pound gorilla long to figure out that advertisers were coveting all the space that content publishers have been devoting to widgets. Many of these advertisers would naturally like to push their wares inside little embedded, interactive pieces of web real estate, too. It’s not just about getting a click-through; these things offer great branding possibilities as well.

Steve Rubel reported yesterday about this latest move on his Micropersuasion blog under the headline, Google Widgetsense Is a Reality. He based his post on a piece Niall Kennedy did a bit earlier, called Google Gadgets Are Now an AdSense Unit. That, in turn, was based on news broken at an event by Tameka Kee of Online Media Daily: Google Tests ‘Gadget Ads’. And it was all later breathlessly reported by Pete Cashmore at Mashable thusly: Gadget Ads!. Got all that? Such is the blogosphere — and all that reporting happened in a matter of a few hours!

Just a few weeks ago, in a guest post I did on Read/Write Web from the Web 2.0 Expo in SF, entitled Widgetsphere: New Playground For Marketers, I raised this question of where does a widget stop and an ad begin? Well, it appears the line is growing fuzzier as we speak. Capitalism marches on!

UPDATE: To accurately label Google as an 800-pound gorilla, not an 80-pound one. 🙂

Walt & Kara’s ‘AllThingsD.com’ Party

Well, it wasn’t a part of Web 2.0 Expo, but while I was here, I wanted to catch a big wing-ding last night at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View: Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher’s launch party for their new Wall Street Journal AllThingsD.com web site. So, we bolted from Moscone West about 7:00 pm, with Aaron Fulkerson of MindTouch at the wheel. It looked like a Volvo, this car he rented, but I think it was actually a rocket ship. Either that or Aaron has received some serious tutoring in Formula One racing in his day. Tha man pushed it. But then we were running quite late for this gig. It was wild ride down the 101, white knuckles all the way (mine). Somehow we got there safe and sound, after almost losing it on a really sharp turn on the freeway exit, while he was telling me he once saw Steve Miller perform at the ampitheater close by. Anyway, it was great event, and we were glad we made the trip. Quite crowded — I’d say a few hundred people, luminaries everywhere. Couldn’t figure out why I was invited… 🙂 Here are some pix, first a few shot in the computer display area, including some with Aaron.

Comphistmuseum1

Comphistmuseum2

Comphistmuseum3

Comphistmuseum4

And here’s a shot of Walt (center) and his assistant Katie Boehret (far left), along with a couple other scenes in the lobby area of the venue, which is really quite nice (my first time there). But they don’t do justice to how crowded this party was…

Katiewaltcrowd

Allthingsdcrowd_2

Allthingsdcrowd2_2

Finally, after a couple glasses of some really great Pinot, I grabbed this shot of the whole AllThingD team. Everyone was there to celebrate all their hard work getting the site ready for its imminent launch. The second shot below is of Katie Boehret chatting with a guy from the Participatory Culture Foundation (sorry, forgot his name), whose mission is to build an open and democratic television platform. The third shot is of two guys from Google who work in new biz dev — Tom Sly, whom I met at Demo ’07, and Ronny Conway, son of legendary Silicon Valley angel, Ron Conway. Told him I’d met his dad, way back when. (Way to make a guy feel old, Ronny!) Fun guys! And the best shot I saved for last, of me doing my pose.pngth-famous-person shot with Kara Swisher. It was a fun time! Just wish I’d have thought to hit up Kara for a press pass to their next D Conference, coming up in May…. 🙂 Man, would I love to blog that baby.

Allthingsdteam_2

Katieb_2

Tomronniegoogle_2

Graemekara

ETech: My Review for Conferenza

Well, ETech was a wrap Thursday afternoon, so Friday morning I was up early trying to net it out so I could file a story to my editor at Conferenza, Gary Bolles, who’s based in San Francisco. I last saw Gary at Demo ’07, and am looking forward to seeing him again in SF in mid-April at Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher’s “D” Launch Party. Gary’s the cofounder of Conferenza, and the site’s URL is now http://conferenzablog.typepad.com. The link for my story is here.

Update: To include the specific Conferenza link for my ETech recap.

« Older posts Newer posts »