April 18, 2008

What the youngsters are up to and why you need to care.

I unglued my nose from the Project X programming grindstone yesterday to spend 5 hours of quality iPod-enabled drive time to and from a freebie Microsoft event (ReMix08) and I'm glad I did. Not because I learned a more about Microsoft's Silverlight, although that was what this event was billed as.

ReMix08
Scott Guthrie's keynote was good - but I'd watched it in March from the comfort of my Aaron chair live from Mix08 and the only new thing I picked up was Microsoft has added a small but important (to MSFT) goal to SilverLight 2's to do list - being able to upscale code directly to WPF.

And unfortunately, Seema Ramchandani (the Microsoft program manager making sure Silverlight runs well on Macs as Windows boxes) who was supposed to dig deep into Silverlight 2's code took a detour into Presenter's Hell when her AV support people apparently forgot how to route video from a Mac between her morning and afternoon sessions.

What really impressed me was the panel discussion, "The Future of Social Networking".

I know, I know, you as a microISV or a developer working long long days think, "Why would I spend time on Twitter, Pownce, Facebook and get constantly interrupted, poked and distracted? What's the benefit unless I'm developing yet another social network that might turn into an $850 million impulse buy like Bebo did for AOL?"

While anyone who's been in this industry a while can see that social networking is well down the dot.bomb road, there is a hard core of realness there for microISVs and non-social networking startups: Internet-enabled social networking has changed how under-30 year olds live/think in a lot of the developed world. Those MySpace teenagers and Facebook college kids continue to get older: in 2.5 years, one half of the U.S. workforce will be under 30 years old.

MicroISVs and startups (except for Paul Graham's hatchlings and the like) tend to be in their 30's or older: they've had time to develop their technical skills, learn to despise bosses and get some experience in what is laughingly referred to as the Real World. They don't instinctively get what these youngsters (called customers) are into. But they need to: it won't be the wrinkly old execs that are going to find new software for their companies to buy, it's going to be some new hire who's going to check you out with their network first.

Same issue, different direction: how do you write a desktop app that won't get cracked or a SaaS that won't go out of fashion in a matter of weeks? You build it so that it has an organic social network inside of it that connects with the larger mosaic of social networks.

As Dave McClure of 500 Hats (no relation) pointed out yesterday at that panel, 'online social networking is about real needs and wants: getting laid, finding a job, making the right decisions'. (no relation, really)

While he drove the rest of the panels somewhat nuts, he had a good point: social networks like Facebook are all finding new ways of addressing intrinsic human needs in our physically increasingly unsafe, fragmented, segmented Real World.

MicroISVs who pride themselves in being tone deaf about social networking are missing more than a good non-coding distraction: they may be missing their future.

April 16, 2008

"So why no posts, Bob?"

My apologies. Between death-marching on Project X and various consulting engagements, my blog writing here has suffered. Never fear, I've been busy lining up more good guest posts on subjects near and dear to microISVer's hearts.

Speaking of consulting, I have to say that the spiritual food that's keeping me going (not to be confused with Soylent Green - ok, sick joke.) has been testimonials like these:

"On a lark, I reached out to Bob to take advantage of his consulting services. While we'd invested a ton of time thinking about how we built and marketed our product, I figured that getting a sharp outside perspective with Bob's background could be useful.

In the span of an hour and a half conversation, Bob suggested several "slap-ourselves-on-the-head-why-didn't-we-think-of-that" ideas that have dramatically changed the way we talk about our business. In addition, he suggested a brilliant way to monetize our business that had never occurred to us before. Never underestimate your ability to be so close to your own business that you can't see the right path.

If you have a chance to work with Bob Walsh for a few hours, take it!"


-Tony Wright, founder of RescueTime

December 28, 2007

Why Marc Andreessen is wrong.

Given that Christmas is the ultimate slow news day, the Great San Francisco Tiger Attack was the story heard around the world and the blogosphere. One of my favorite bloggers, Marc Andreessen, had a merry time with the story, painting a picture of bungling zoo administrators.

Nice story, but wrong.

A good friend of mine, Julia Gasperini, a longtime SF Zoo volunteer made these points in an email to me this morning:

  • From what I know through my hundreds of hours of visits at the zoo and filtering through all the media garbage it is pretty clear that "low walls" were not the problem here. That exhibit was built in 1940 and if that were the issue there would have been tigers jumping out for the past 60 years.
  • The tiger didn't jump on any of the zebras nearby or the many antelope and small deer-like animals in the enclosures near the Terrace Café.
  • It didn't go after any small children or anyone else that was present at the zoo. It went specifically after those 3 individuals.

I would have liked to make these points as comments to Marc's post, but I can't since he's turned off commenting. I was amazed: and here I thought Marc was a blogger.

December 18, 2007

A video primer on blogging.

I don't know if you've ever come across a Commoncraft video, but they're great 3 minute explanations of some part of the emerging digital world. Their latest: Why blogs are important is a hit. If you know someone who doesn't get this whole blogging thing, send them over here.

links for 2007-12-18

November 13, 2007

links for 2007-11-13

October 23, 2007

links for 2007-10-23

October 15, 2007

Blog Action Day

Action 125X125-1

Today is Blog Action Day: something north of 15,000 bloggers are posting today about the environment, the brainchild of one Australian web designer. Right now, "blog action day" is the top search at technorati.com; it will be interesting to see whether mainstream media embraces or ignores it. (update: with 1,264 stories in the last day found by Google News, I don't think MM is ignoring it).

The environment - specifically climate change - is a big issue. It deserves the kind of attention that having this many bloggers writing on the same day makes happen.

But there's another, more blog-centric, point to be made here as well: you, yes you, have the power to marshall attention as a blogger about issues that matter in your life, community, state, country and world. To the degree you can state that call for action clearly and connect with fellow bloggers, you can create your own Blog Action Day.

For me, that's what blogging is all about.

links for 2007-10-15

October 07, 2007

links for 2007-10-08

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