Free and open communication leading to hubs? Hmm
There's a PhD student here that modeled out communication in networks.
Some VC funds have Wikipedia pages..
Like Mayfield...
Others don't. I won't say anything more about this so as not to interfere with the sanctity of Wikipedia.
Privacy or Attention?
Line of thought from Esther .... Are we looking for privacy or attention?
Do we want to solve the identity problem because we want to broadcast ourselves with clarity or to lock our identities up?
Blogging ID Mashup
I'll be blogging intermittently from the conference. Jon Palfrey hit the nail right on the head right away.
How do you make all this stuff real?
Second life. ID meta systems.
Social network identity.
Avatars.
How do you make digital identity something important, useful, empowering?
The Catholic Church: Finding new ways to make itself less relevent...everyday
So, they're going to change up some of the wording of the English Mass, according to the NY Times, so that its closer to the original Latin.
Because... to be honest, that's been a real issue effecting me. When I say to the priest (the few times I ever go) "And also with you," I'm thinking that's just not right. "And with your spirit" just has so a so much better ring to it. Because, God forbid we should relate to the priest as another person instead of focusing in on his spirit.
Its good to know that when 75% of American Catholics believe the Church should ordain married men, the Church is focused on translating English so that its closer to Latin.
So here's a question... Which happens first? Married men in the church, a female president, or the first Met pitching a no-hitter?
Enough of what I think, let me tell you what I think...
I was talking to someone in the elevator yesterday and someone else chimed in with a "That happened to me, too... that's so funny."
I turned to her and said, "Oh, I'm sorry, I don't allow comments."
Data Crisis: The Top 10 Data Pools That Need to be Open
Web 2.0 is fueled by data. Mashups don't mashup technologies, they mash together information. The more data you have, the more interesting the applications can be.
Unfortunately, we are suffering a data crisis. To be honest, there really isn't much data out there that is open that is useful to the average person, and I think that's why some Web 2.0 applications are having trouble getting traction in the mainstream.
There are still too many closed pools of data out there, and opening them up would make for some interesting new services.
Here's my The Top 10 Data Pools That Need to Be Open
1) Medical records - There's really just no excuse for this. Its my body. Any information that any doctor gets off of it should be owned by me and accessable online. I should be able to chart my cholestorol levels, weight, etc, going back to when I was born.
2) Credit card purchase history - Three months? This is silly. Not only should credit cards have my total history available to me online, but there should be APIs on it, too, so that financial data services can help me analyze my spending. I wouldn't mind if they did item level breakdowns or started pumping in SKUs, too, so I can reorder things, but that's probably just a pipe dream. Still, I think retailers would benefit a lot from giving the CC companies more data on each purchase. This also solves the Amazon purchase history problem as well.
3) Elias Sports Bureau - Why is there no consumer version of this? If I want to look up Frank Tanana's home record on Wednesdays, I should be able to do that in an ad supported site.
4) Public transportation - If I leave now, am I going to catch the R train or just miss it?
5) Friend behavior - First off, who are my friends, really. I hope whoever succeeds at doing MyWare can help me figure out who I actually talk to the most across the phone, IM, email, MySpace comments, etc. Then, I'd like to be able to see at least the aggregate of what they're up to. Are they all swarming around the same local news article? This is not a database that needs to be opened... its one that needs to be created and then opened, with permissions of course.
6) Local item availability - Does the local hardware store carry sun protectant stuff for vinyl convertible tops? No? Who has this item within a 5 block radius? Searching Best Buy's inventory is cool, but knowing where I can cheap dental floss would be even better.
7) Web traffic - Most of the tools for measuring other people's web traffic are pretty crappy and never work. Why don't we call just join a collective and share that data amongst ourselves? Maybe SiteMeter needs to have a site where you can search by website like Alexa to get the traffic and do comparative analytics.
8)
9)
10)
nextNY Community Conversation: Startup 101
Tuesday night, 50 young entreprenuers and potential entreprenuers gathered at Manatt Phelps and Phillips to hear about what it takes to start a business from people who have either done it before or supported those who had.
We had a great lineup of experienced NYC tech leaders taking part in the roundtable discussion:
Jason McCabe Calacanis, CEO, Weblogs, Inc., An AOL Company
Ian Landsman, Userscape Software
Jackie Reed, Business Consultant, Administaff
Peter Semmelhack, Founder, Antennae Software, BugLabs
Michael Volpatt, Partner, Larkin/Volpatt Communications
Albert Wenger, President of del.icio.us through Yahoo! acquisition
It was really a strong turnout by the up and coming NYC tech crowd and I think we all walked away with a lot of food for thought from the speakers. Seems like nextNY is turning a momentum corner here as we start to contribute more back to our participants and trying to identify what people feel like they need to be successful.
You'll see us do more of these Community Conversation events in the future and if you're a young member of the NYC tech community, please join us. Help us run future events or just generate ideas.
I'll also echo our desire to have a more balanced representation in our community... so all if you NYC geek girls, join us!
Thanks to all who participated!
Reactions to the event:
Umair's Rage Against the Machine
From Umair... We should really all chip in and get him this for his neverending crusade on behalf of us edgedwellers.
"Let me make that more concrete: Media is deeply personal, social, cultural, human, creative - "
Ok.. just stop right there and think about that for a second. Sink in? Good.
"...and so it's economics aren't those of simple technological scale, because, more often than not, technological scale kills those things (think Clear Channel roboDJs). The real opportunity is in leveraging the new forms at the edges of the firms - markets, networks, communities - to explode just how personal, social, cultural, human and creative media can be......If there's a single lesson those industries yield today, it's that that entire way of thinking about business is deeply out of touch with the new world of consumption. And ultimately, that's the flaw at the heart of the Googleverse - consumers play almost exactly the same role in it that they did, suprisingly, in the industrial economy.
NB: No, I'm not saying that "empowered" consumers will begin composing sonatas and producing movies to rival Kiarostami's . Rather, I'm pointing out that the economics of cultural industries change when consumers connect, and we should see greater (returns to) creativity; not necessarily because consumers make them, but maybe only because consumers are better at helping choose them."
Read the whole thing here...
It really deserves this quote:
"I know you're out there. I can feel you now. I know that you're afraid. You're afraid of us. You're afraid of change. I don't know the future. I didn't come here to tell you how this is going to end. I came here to tell you how it's going to begin. I'm going to hang up this phone, and I'm going to show these people what you don't want them to see. I'm going to show them a world without you. I'm going to show them a world without rules or controls, without borders or boundaries. A world where anything is possible. Where we go from there is a choice I leave to you."
Great Comment on Blogging ROI
let us think back about the good old mail. Maybe it can help us to think about the problem from a different angle. Yes, mail!
Do you know the ROI of your mail account? Does your company know the ROI? Sure, it does know the costs. Even IBM and Microsoft cant tell you the real value of mailing. You cant calculate the ROI of mailing systems. Nobody ever could. Even if its a 30 years old technique!
Why? You cant live without mail. Everybody has mailing systems now. 20 years ago some rare users had mailsystems. But know everybody communicates with each other by mail.
So, its not about ROI, its about communication infrastructure(!). The costs of infrastructure systems can be huge. Think about the transportation infrastructure (via highways, via railroad, via air). Very expensive, but if you havent invest into that, your economy will suffer badly. Its a vital factor!
As you need transportation systems for your economic goods, you need your communication infrastructure. If everybody uses mail today and suddenly tomorrow they use blogs to communicate you have to invest in your communication infrastructure once again as years ago into your mailing systems. But if you ask about the ROI you never will get into blogging :-) Therefore you will cut your future communication channel. You will suffer from the lack of investments in this area.
Bug Tracking for Consumers
When businesses are paying $20K site licenses for mission critical data applications, and something goes wrong, they e-mail, they call... you hear from them and its not very difficult for your support staff to track bugs in the system.
But what about consumers?
When is the last time you used a consumer app that you weren't "testing" and something was a little bit buggy, so you e-mailed the company with the details of the problem?
Ok, for us tech geeks, maybe that was just this morning, but for most people, they just move on and ignore it. That presents a difficult problem for designers of consumer facing apps who need to know how their system is working and where its not.
Consumers don't generally want to e-mail for support, but they might flag things. The funny thing is, even though they aren't willing to commit much in terms of communicaion, they definitely want communication back. They want to know that someone is working on something. Maybe every app should make their trouble ticket list public and searchable, and include how many other people flagged an item.
Anyone from Kiko, Google Cal, 30 Boxes, etc, etc. Want to Help Us?
The folks at nextNY have been talking about building a New York City tech calendar of all the events, from Meetups to Drinkups to Mashups. We think it would be a great service to the community.
The problem is that there isn't any calendaring software that actually has a calendar and allows for anyone to post to it without an account or password.
We'd like to avoid mashing up two services... like posting in Upcoming and subscribing to a feed in Gcal to publish it in calendar form.
It would be really easy for someone like Kiko or 30 Boxes just to allow someone to create a calendar and allow public posting with some sort of approval or notification... sort of like a cross between a wiki and a calendar.
It would be ideal of we could also subscribe to RSS feeds of other tech events.
It sort of strikes me as odd that all of these Web 2.0 calendars would put limitations on the most basic calander element itself--posting.
If anyone knows someone at a Web 2.0 calendar company and can get them to create something where anyone can just come and post and display a calendar somewhere, let me know! We'd like to help pull something together that is of great benefit to the local community here.
Glorious Weekend
Kaz Matsui gets traded to the Arena Baseball League... umm... I mean the Rockies, along with 4.5 million Pepsi points.
The Mets take four from the D'Backs as the Yanks lose four to the A's.
My fastpitch softball team mercies the other team twice, winning their seventh game in a row.
I got to hangout at the boathouse all day Saturday and yesterday afternoon.
And a bunch of my friends showed up to hangout at the rooftop of Bar 13 on Friday.
Not to mention getting to hangout with my favorite blogger through most of it.
Ahh... yes, it was a good weekend...




