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Archive for September, 2008

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29 Sep

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Rendez-vous with Whales. Just a few hundred of these giants survive along the coasts of North America, but their numbers are growing in southern seas. One whale repeatedly swam within inches of photographer Brian Skerry and assistant Mauricio Handler (pictured) as they dived off the Auckland Islands. “It looked at me with great curiosity,” Handler says. “No aggression.” Source : http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/10/right-whales/skerry-photography?pid=MT

29 Sep

"Rendez-vous with Whales. Just a few hundred of these giants survive along the coasts of North America, but their numbers are growing in southern seas. One whale repeatedly swam within inches of photographer Brian Skerry and assistant Mauricio Handler (pictured) as they dived off the Auckland Islands. "It looked at me with great curiosity," Handler says. "No aggression." Source : http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/10/right-whales/skerry-photography?pid=MT"
 
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By~~~M.Karez

29 Sep

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29 Sep

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Microsoft to back jQuery library – InfoWorld

29 Sep

SYS-CON Media

Microsoft to back jQuery library
InfoWorld - 4 hours ago
By Paul Krill Microsoft plans to incorporate the jQuery JavaScript library into its Visual Studio platform, according to several blogs published on Sunday.
Microsoft JQuery adoption is an open source tipping point ZDNet
Microsoft taps JQuery for Visual Studio CNET News
eWeek - IT Business Edge - InformationWeek - DaniWeb
all 18 news articles
 
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Shareholder value creates a recession, passion creates revenues

29 Sep
Alexander van Elsas via Alexander van Elsas's Weblog on new media & technologies and their effect on social behavior shared by 4 people


The past week I’ve been in Silicon Valley to meet a lot of people and to launch a new service. I talked to people working at the big companies there, but also with guys that were literally starting a new business out of a garage (haven’t we heard that before ;-) ). The contrast could not have been bigger.

In the big companies the usual pattern appears. A recession is about to hit, revenues are dropping and the pressure on shareholder value is increasing fast. Shareholder value has quickly become the best excuse for companies to stop thinking ahead and stick their heads into the sand. Shareholders must be complete idiots if their short term value is maximized to a level that it endangers the long term sustainability of the company.  And yet we see this pattern recurring time after time. In order to maximize shareholder value companies stop innovation, cut down costs, maximize revenues and become financially driven organizations.

Managing finance becomes the most important asset. Excessive rewarding plans for top managers govern the direction of the company, and the devastating effect of that is something we can now see with the current financial crisis. Companies that once generated revenue and were able to innovate at the same time turn into a efficiency maximizing process killing off anything remotely creative as that negatively influences the short term bottom line. So we can prepare for lay offs and forget about exiting new stuff coming out of those companies for quite a while. Needless to say that in any business this is usually devastating in the long run.

With the exit of innovation comes the exodus of those that could start change. Don’t get me wrong on this. I think financials are important for a company. But they should be seen as a byproduct. Run the company with passion for your customers and in most cases revenues are generated as a side effect.  Rolf Skyberg has written an excellent post on a similar theme, called “Leadership doesn’t mean optimizing ROI”. Read the article, it’s excellent. Here is an excerpt.

Choosing projects based on projected ROI is a dangerously simplistic way of running your business.
If you take a look at the actual acronym: “ROI” return on investment, it seems like a perfectly logical way of directing your business activity. After all, who wouldn’t want to invest in the things that bring them the greatest returns?

The unfortunate simplification in action is that “return” is generally taken to mean revenue or cashflow, which is but one of the important aspects of running a business.

The problem here is that while revenue can be easily counted, recorded, multiplied and divided; other intangible dimensions cannot be. How do you quantify “trust”? How do you measure “excitement”?

What would an ROI of 20% on trust actually mean? Because the intangibles cannot easily be typed into Excel, they can’t be utilized on pivot charts, or factored into equations.

And because MBA’s live and die by Excel, anything you can’t count, doesn’t count.

A few miles away the world seems quite different. In Palo Alto the air is filled with creativity and entrepreneurship. Talented people get together, think out new ideas and start new companies on the fly. With or without funding, in small offices, homes or even garages. These people think and breath opportunity. They are passionate about an idea, and nothing is holding them back. Not even a recession in the makings. For them raising funding is a side effect for the fact that they are building a business.

If you think about it, Palo Alto seems in some ways a bit like Florence around 1500. Florence was a meeting place for the most talented people known. Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Machiavelli, Dante, Donatello, the list goes on and on. They were all there at one time or another, challenging each other, taking science, art, poetry,  and culture to an unprecedented level. Surrounding them were rich families, the Medici being the most important, that accelerated this cultural process by financing it, gaining both power and respect.

I don’t know if the Silicon valley of today contains the same brilliant people as Florence did then, time will have to tell.  The environment can trigger great things. But there may be differences too. Where the cultural revolution of Florence had huge impact on the world, it remains to be seen if the Valley can pull of something similar. And it seems to me that passion in Silicon valley is sometimes traded for shares, option plans and new gigs. I heard of several startups having to deal with experienced developers leaving at critical stages for something else. Experience is hard to find and those that have it can get a job anywhere. It results in less attachment and less passion in my opinion.

Why is it that when companies start they are full of entrepreneurial spirit, but when they reach their success it becomes “corporate” and quickly loses its entrepreneurial nature? At some point shareholder value becomes more important than passion. That’s when the company changes from a leader into a follower. At that time managers become more important than employees. Thousands of management books are written about how to get big companies more innovative and flexible. It really isn’t that hard. Make sure there are more passionate people on board than managers and you will do just fine. When that balance is disturbed shareholder value takes over and the financial manager seizes the company. Passion is replaced by predictability.

With the current financial crisis in the USA reaching a new high it will likely have effect on both large companies and small entrepreneurs. There will be less money to invest, less risks to be taken. But I think Howard Lindzon is right when he says:

Unlike Jason who started a bad business (Mahalo.ugh) at the top and now is scared and panicking to his e-mail list, use this recession to build the business of your dreams off the panicked and overleveraged. Don’t feel guilty. Don’t go to the mall and piss your money away. Buy a laptop, tune in to some great VC’s and stock market blogs, roll up your sleeves and take your best shot.

If you are thinking of building a new startup, be sure that you do it with passion. It will be the difference between a good and a great company.

Posted in Florence, Howard Lindzon, passion, recession, Shareholder value, Silicon Valley   Tagged: Florence, Howard Lindzon, passion, recession, Shareholder value, Silicon Valley   
 
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93% of Americans Expect Companies to Have Social Media Presence

29 Sep

A new study is showing that 93% of Americans expect companies to have a presence in social media. 85% say companies should interact with consumers via social media, according to the data released by Cone, Inc.

Specifically, those surveyed believe:

  • Companies should use social networks to solve my problems (43%)
  • Companies should solicit feedback on their products and services (41%)
  • Companies should develop new ways for consumers to interact with their brand (37%)
  • Companies should market to consumers (25%)

Men are twice as likely to interact with companies via social media than women. 33% will interact one or more times a week while only 17% of women will.

Two-thirds of households with 3 people or more and those making $75,000 or more feel a stronger connection to brands they interact with online.

What do you think about this survey? Does it change the way you think about social media as an advertising medium? Share your thoughts in the comments.

Related Reading:
Facebook Traffic Up 50% Over Last Year; myYearbook on the Rise
Could Social Media Be the Google Killer?
Moms See Search as Task-Oriented; Websites as Entertainment
Social Networking Taking Market Share from Dating, Adult Entertainment Sites
Less is More: What Social Media and Electronics Can Teach the Establishment

 
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Why The Flow Of Innovation Has Reversed

29 Sep
brad via Union Square Ventures: A New York Venture Capital Fund Focused on Early Stage & Startup Investing shared by 4 people

I had a beer recently with Dave McClure of 500 Hats. As is always the case when I get together with Dave, we had a long, rambling and enjoyable conversation about how the Web is changing the way businesses get built.

At some point, I said that the vector of innovation has changed. It used to be that innovation started with NASA, flowed to the military, then to the enterprise, and finally to the consumer. Today, it is the reverse. All of the most interesting stuff is being built first for consumers and is tricking back to the enterprise. I suggested that one reason this is happening is that the success of a web service is more often determined by its social engineering than its electrical engineering.

Dave immediately said he’d give me three months to blog that before he did. I thought that was generous even for me who doesn’t blog easily or often. But just to be sure I make the deadline, here is the post.

The basic insight that the flow of innovation has reversed has been out there as a meme for a while. Fred wrote about it and referenced Esther Dyson’s Release 1.0 article. I took a shot at why it was happening; I focused on changes in the way services are built and their complexity. The conversation that Dave and I had was more about how critical the user interface is in consumer facing web services and how that might influence the flow of innovation.

We have marveled more than once on this blog about the remarkable efficiency of Craigslist. That service is essentially a very lightweight governance system that manages an enormous collection of users who contribute all of the content and much of the oversight that makes the service work. It is because Craig and Jim focus on managing the efforts of their users instead of doing the work of those users that Craigslist is so phenomenally efficient. Many of the most interesting web services are like Craigslist, at their core, lightweight governance systems. Facebook and Twitter come to mind.

Even services that do more than mediate communications among their users often depend on users contributing data through their engagement with the service before they can provide value back to those users. Wesabe can only help users understand their spending and suggest ways to do more with less because users share their spending data with the service. Del.icio.us depends on users tagging the Web in order to be able to help users discover sites, services and memes on the web. Last.fm only works because users share their listening behavior with the service.

In the old days, electrical engineers focused on getting computers to work not on getting people to engage with the systems built on top of those computers. The folks that built enterprise software were vaguely aware that their systems had to be accessible to the humans that used them but they had a huge advantage. The people who used them did so as part of their job, they were trained to use them and fired if they could not figure them out.

Today, no one tells you to use Facebook. There are no employer sponsored training sessions on the use of del.icio.us. The burden is on the designer of the system to meet a need, entertain, or inform their users. They also have to seduce those users, hiding complexity, revealing one layer at time, always enticing, never intimidating, until the user one day finds they are intimately familiar with power and the pleasures of the service.

Designing a system that does that is not an electrical engineering problem. It is a social engineering problem. The best social engineers are working today on consumer facing web services. They understand that there is enormous potential leverage in those services. The creators of these services recognize that services like theirs will ultimately disrupt the economics of many, if not most, parts of the global economy in much the same way that Craigslist collapsed the multi-billion dollar classified industry into a fabulously profitable multi-million dollar web service.

So that, it seems to me, is one more reason the flow of innovation has reversed.

 
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TagScanner Renames and Tags Your Digital Music [Featured Windows Download]

29 Sep
Gina Trapani via Lifehacker shared by 13 people


Windows only: Rename the thousands of MP3 files in your digital music library and add or edit tags, lyrics, and album art in one fell swoop with free utility TagScanner. Not only can TagScanner clean up the artist, album, song title, and track number information for your digital music files, it can rename your songs based on a pattern you define (like %artist% - %title%), it can make music playlists, and search online databases like freedb and Amazon to automatically tag music missing information. It includes a built-in player as well so you can listen to tracks while you edit. We've recommended Media Monkey to whip your music's metadata into shape, but TagScanner looks like a solid alternative. TagScanner is a free download for Windows only.


 
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Microsoft Gets a Clue, Adopts jQuery

29 Sep

Could Microsoft be learning the way things work on the web? That big software company in Redmond will include JavaScript framework jQuery in its development environment. At the same time, Nokia announced that it will use jQuery for its mobile-browser development. That’s two more big companies to join Google, Amazon and thousands of other sites using jQuery.

Microsoft has long struggled to keep up with advances in JavaScript. In July the company announced an Ajax roadmap, which looked like Microsoft was going to eventually re-create all the features already in popular frameworks. Instead, Microsoft is going to incorporate someone else’s code, and it’s open source code at that.

How’s this for cool–Intellisense support for jQuery in ASP.NET:
Intellisense code includes jQuery

This is a great move by Microsoft to avoid creating its own jQuery-like framework. The company that seems to always require others to change is adapting to the way things already are on the web. It couldn’t have made a better choice in jQuery, which is a fast, nimble framework, two adjectives not often used to describe anything related to MS web development.

Scott Hanselman has a good overview of how jQuery/ASP.NET code looks. If you aren’t a .NET developer, but you’d like to use jQuery, check out my jQuery tutorial.

[Screenshot by Scott Hanselman]

See also:

 
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