May 08, 2008

Vyew Update

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In 2006 I wrote about Vyew and asked the obvious question: “Does the world need another web conferencing product?” I guess the answer is "yes" because the company is now profitable and has 100,000 registered users.

Vyew combines real-time (synchronous) conferencing and desktop sharing with always-on (asynchronous) collaboration such as highlighting, drawing, text and sidebar comments and sticky notes. This allows groups to have a live meeting and also carry on a contextual forum discussion over time at their convenience. It's a browser-only cross-platform tool without the need for any client installation. You can upload any form of digital content (files, images, audio, video, etc.) into the Vyew space for collaboration and learning. Also, Flash learning objects that were originally for individual use can be turned into collaborative learning objects inside Vyew.

Vyew is useful in situations that requires collaboration, review and approval. For example, graphic and industrial designers, architects, marketing, PR and legal professionals, event planners, etc. can upload drawings, brochures, news releases, contracts, audio, and video files to Vyew where the content can be accessed and annotated from anywhere with no need to install Vyew or the software that created the content. If you need such a tool, check it out here because this is a Reality Check success story.

January 20, 2008

Reality Check: Triggit

Triggit is a WYSIWYG web application for integrating third-party elements into websites. It enables people to drag and drop advertisements, Flickr pictures, and YouTube videos directly into their site without any skills in web programming. Triggit is free to use, and works on any site that accepts JavaScript. It does not require any downloads, access to FTP, or APIs. Installation involves pasting one small piece of code in the site.

Triggit’s goal is to serve as a feature-rich tool whereby publishers can quickly and easily integrate all manner of widgets, content, advertising units, APIs and data from third party sites. In doing so, it operates as a distribution arm for companies seeking to spread the reach of their advertisements, widgets, content, and data on the web. By making it easier for web publishers to integrate these objects into their websites, Triggit helps to expand the ability of these companies to reach larger online audiences and add new revenue streams.


January 14, 2008

Guest Post: “We Got Out of Kenya, But What About the People Who Live There?”

Saturday, January 12, 2008

I write this after a good night’s sleep—the first I’ve had since December 29. That was the day that incumbent Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki announced victory in the country’s elections and was sworn in as a nation listened, paralyzed with shock. Moments later, the radio system went dead. When broadcast resumed, it was to report riots, lootings, a rising death count, and huge numbers of people displaced as violent tribe-against-tribe attacks became an outlet for the betrayal and hopelessness so many Kenyans felt.

My son, Matt, age twelve, and I had arrived in Kenya two weeks before the election. It was my second visit; his first. We had come to Kenya to spend time at an orphanage, the Lewa Children’s Home in Eldoret, and then to visit Eregi, a rural town that is both a hub of micro-entrepreneurship and the regional base of Village Enterprise Fund, a micro-granting organization I’ve supported for several years.

In the weeks before the election—peaceful, festive weeks, marked by political optimism and the cheer of the holiday season—Matt and I enjoyed a brief acclimation in Nairobi before getting hands-on at the orphanage. As we prepared to travel to Eregi on December 28, the day following the election, we heard the first rumblings of trouble. Gasoline was suddenly in short supply because deliveries were halted “to keep people in their precincts until the count is complete.” We also heard of boxes stuffed with pro-Kibaki ballots, and of a surprising rate of voter turnout (115%) in several areas that favored Kibaki.

But we didn’t feel concerned. Our Kenyan friends, educated, savvy people with a strong sense of responsibility for our well-being, scoffed at some reports, dismissed others as rumors, and never doubted a fair outcome to an election they believed would deliver both a new president and meaningful benefits to the Kenyan people. We headed west, excited about our plans for a six-day tour of rural microfinance projects and enjoying the winding, sunset-lit drive to Eregi.

Things did not turn out as planned. On December 29, as our host family and millions of their countrymen stood by their radios in disbelief, Kibaki’s office announced victory and delivered a cold, hasty swearing-in that sealed the country’s fate for the five-year term to come.

The repercussions began almost immediately in the slums of Kibera, the beaches of Mombasa, and countless cities and towns across the country. Riots, stabbings, lootings, and the torching of an Eldoret church where some fifty people, including children, sought refuge from the violence raging outside devastated the Kenya that we knew and loved. A friend texted me a rushed message saying that he was one of 20,000 people being emergency evacuated from Eldoret by the Army. He was one of some 250,000 people left homeless by riots or transported to neutral areas that offered some hope of safety.

Kenya was suddenly paralyzed by a cut-off fuel supply, very limited availability of phone credits, lack of cash access, and danger on the streets. In our village, we fell asleep—or tried to—to the sound of rage echoing through the valleys and awoke to escalating reports of resource limitation and approaching danger.

In the end, we got out. It wasn’t easy. We drove to Uganda, got within sight of safety, but then turned back because of gunfire at the border. I pleaded with a charter pilot—begging him to meet us at the Kakamega landing strip. He was just a short way away, airlifting British and German aid workers out of Eldoret, but he feared potential danger at the small and unprotected strip. With an abrupt “click,” he ended our call. Our host family pulled out every stop to negotiate a safe route to Kisumu, the nearest main airport, where we held paid airline reservations. Nothing, not even police escort, felt safe enough.

In the end, we found a helicopter pilot willing to take the leap of faith that he could find our landing site (a soccer field at a remote village school), that it would be clear, large and safe enough for him to land, that he would be able to get enough fuel for the flight and that we would, indeed, pay him after banking returned to normalcy. Fortunately, at this point, I was pretty damn persuasive, and the airlift service, Everett Aviation, was pretty damn wonderful. The sight and sound of that helicopter’s landing and our friends waving goodbye are forever etched in my mind.

But that’s just our story. It matters less than the stories of countless people who now must reshape their lives to the devastating changes they face in Kenya today.

Allow me to provide some examples. First, there’s Carol, a willowy, confident young woman who serves as an interpreter for her extended family, many whom have been afflicted by congenital blindness and deafness. She uses a sign language that has evolved over generations, and with it she helps her siblings run a home-based knitting business that produces sweaters, hats, and other clothing items for babies and children. Carol planned to enter university in Nairobi this spring with the dream of studying special education. Her family’s sustenance, and her educational options will be affected by Kenya’s sudden plummet from stability, and these developments weigh heavily on her mind.

Next, there’s Brian, a teacher, twenty-five years old, passionate about the chemistry, physics and biology. He teaches at a prestigious boarding school in Central Kenya. Brian’s gift for bringing science to life made him a favorite teacher at this school, and he dreamed of inspiring one of his students to create or invent something that truly changes the world. Handsome, articulate, and creative, Brian comes from a minority tribe that factored prominently in the recent ethnic conflict.

The danger of going back to Central Kenya at this heated time left him asking: “Should I risk my safety and well-being to return to my job and students?” When I last spoke with him, the fear of violence had swayed him toward staying in his family’s home rather than resuming teaching. He was devastated not to be there when his students returned to school.

Then, there’s Winnie, who worked at hotel in Nairobi. She worked any shift she could during the brief days we stayed with her, being such a constant presence at the reception desk that I suspected she had an identical twin. Gracious and poised, she covered nights and days and never had less than a radiant smile to welcome her guests. Winnie lost her job yesterday. Her hotel is now nearly vacant—what businessperson or traveler would visit Nairobi now?—and along with twenty nine others who were let go, she now must try to find another job. But where? With tourism at a standstill, corporations re-evaluating their Kenyan presence, and much day-to-day commerce frozen as people await resolution of major political issues, where will employment come from?

Finally there’s Phyllis. She runs a dairy, a boarding school, and an orphanage. She depends on a steady stream of volunteers, culled from an international network she’s developed over decades, to assist her with teaching and caregiving. All of her recent volunteers have been evacuated from Kenya and those scheduled to arrive have cancelled their plans. Many of her teachers and students fear returning to hard-hit Eldoret, an epicenter of recent tribal conflict. Charitable funding once focused on her orphanage is now being distributed to a broader set of needs and emergencies.

How will she make ends meet, keep her children learning, and attract enough support to sustain her programs now that Kenya is a “high risk” country? Or her son Martin, a young father and former professional athlete, whose business—combining sports management, active tourism, and development of Kenyan athletic talent—was on track for profitability in 2008. What will become of his enterprise and the programs he has carefully developed over the past four years?

These stories are not isolated cases. Each of them represents untold thousands of individuals, people whose life course and opportunities have been slammed against a new, harsh reality: a country suddenly unstable and untrusted, a dream of African progress and promise gone awry. Tourism has screeched to a halt. Companies considering investment or manufacturing opportunities in East Africa report taking their development plans elsewhere. Step by step, layer by layer, these decisions will affect every man woman and child in Kenya, likely for years to come.

What can be done? The question is haunting and the answer evasive. And conditions are likely to worsen as the polarized “sides” of this political divide prepare their showdown—angry and in deadlock.

Answers are not likely to come at a policy level. But perhaps there is some hope at a “people” level. Microfinance organizations such as Kiva and MicroPlace have ways of reaching small business people in Kenya. Heifer International and Village Enterprise Fund, two agencies with established infrastructure in Kenya, will continue their entrepreneurial support there. Countless other organizations will have ways to provide support; if you know of any, I encourage you to share their contact information here.

In a crisis like this, in a country like Kenya, any small token of support can work wonders. Even if you don’t support Kenya with your wallet, support it in your heart. Think of the highly-educated, industrious people of Kenya, half of whom are twenty years of age or younger, and of the hopes, security, and actual prospects that they have lost in the last two weeks. Imagine yourself, or your child, in a similar situation, and ask yourself what you would do. And what you would want others to do to help you through this time.

Whether you send a prayer or a wish or an even more tangible form of support, put yourself in their shoes. Use the freedom that you have—so similar to that which the people of Kenya truly believed was theirs—to wish the people of Kenya the safety and strength to survive what is likely to be a very hard times ahead.

Ellen Petry Leanse
Menlo Park, California

December 21, 2007

Reality Check: Spokeo

Spokeo finds information about your friends—long-lost or not—and then tracks their online activities as they make updates. These friends don’t have to “invite” you, approve your friend “request,” or be a member of Spokeo. Spokeo is able to, for example, monitor their Facebook notes and shares, YouTube videos, Amazon wishlists, Flickr and PhotoBucket photos, Pandora favorites, MySpace updates, Twitter tweets, personal websites, and blogs.

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The Spokeo process begins with providing your address book; your name and password at social-networking sites; or the URL of your friends’ profile, photo album, website, or blog. Spokeo then creates a “buddy list” of all the friends that it finds and displays them using a “reader-like” interface. The number next to each buddy’s name indicates how many new entries Spokeo has found. When you click on buddies, you can see the details of their photos, videos, music, shopping lists, websites, and blogs. The sites and services that Spokeo supports are:

Amazon
Bebo
Blogger
Buzznet
dailymotion
deviantART
Digg
Facebook Notes & Shares
Flickr
Fotolog
Friendster
Hi5
imeem
Last.fm
LinkedIn
LiveJournal
MySpace
Netlog
Pandora
PhotoBucket
Picasa
PictureTrail
Slide
Stumbleupon
Twitter
Veoh
Vox
WebShots
Windows Live Spaces
Xanga
Yahoo! Videos
Yelp
YouTube

Disclosure: I am an advisor to Spokeo.


October 08, 2007

Reality Check: Jajah Buttons

Jajah is a VOIP phone service that doesn’t require a download or headset. It enables you to make VOIP calls from any phone to any phone. The company recently introduced “Jajah buttons.” This product enables people to call you at no charge (or very low cost) by clicking on a button in places such as email signatures, blogs, websites, MySpace page, and Facebook profiles.

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The key features of Jajah Buttons include:

  • Customize the color, size, and style of the buttons.

  • Keep your number confidential.

  • Control who can call you and at what times.

  • Block unwanted callers.

This is a way for you to enable customers, relatives, and friends to call you very easily. Think of it as an “800 number for the rest of us.” A great use is also eBay auctions, but that got tricky right away. :-)



I am on the board of advisors of Jajah.

October 04, 2007

Reality Check: FeedHub

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I subscribe to over sixty feeds, and they generate 1,000 posts per day. If you subscribe to multiple RSS feeds, you’re probably overwhelmed by the amount of posts like I am. FeedHub reduces the number of posts to those that are most relevant to your interests.

To start, you export your feeds to an OPML file and upload it to the FeedHub site. FeedHub creates one individualized feed by watching your click-through behavior—that is, what you read and what you ignore. You can also provide explicit negative instructions by telling FeedHub to hide similar stories or to drop a source.

Explicit positive feedback includes actions you’ve taken such as sharing, tagging, and including a link in your blog. FeedHub also utilizes implicit information like the post’s popularity in del.icio.us and Digg. At the end of this process, your FeedHub feed appears in your current feedreader such as NetNewsWire, Blogline, or Google Reader.

Technically, FeedHub condenses your reading preferences into “memes” that describe the factors used to create your FeedHub feed. You can edit and add memes to tweak the content. Over time FeedHub learns more about your preferences and creates a better and better feed.

To try Feedhub, click here.


I am on the advisory board of FeedHub.

September 17, 2007

Reality Check: Popurls

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Popurls is a site that aggregates feeds from the likes of Digg, del.icio.us, Reddit, Flickr, Stumbleupon, Slashdot, Google News, ifilm, BoingBoing, Fark, etc (see very partial list in picture). This enables you to see, on one page, what much of the Internet is buzzing about—think of it as an Internet “dashboard.”

There is a fair degree of customization: color scheme, story previews, type of feeds (media or text), quantity of articles from each feed, and the order of the feeds. Feed readers provide similar functionality, but in a less compact manner.


September 06, 2007

Reality Check: Coghead Business Essentials

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Coghead enables businesses to create, customize and/or use real, multi-user business apps in an easy, cost-effective way. Since Coghead is 100% web-based, employees, customers and business partners can use the apps from anywhere there’s an Internet connection.

To help people get started, Coghead has just announced “Business Essentials”—a suite of simple, pre-built applications that every small business needs. Business Essentials includes Company Directory, Basic Project Manager, Lead Manager, Recruiting Manager, PTO (Paid Time Off) Tracker, Asset Tracker, and dashboard applications that enables you to manage your business.

All the apps work together (like cogs), and you can customize them to suit your business. You can try Business Essentials here for free for thirty days. After thirty days, the cost is $49/mo for 5 users and $10/mo per user thereafter.


Disclosure: I am an advisor to Coghead.

August 30, 2007

You Know You're Old When:

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Last night a cute blonde girl bought me a drink. However, she knew me because she’s my kids’ summer camp counselor. This incident got me thinking about how you know you’re old—today is my 53rd birthday. So I decided to start a list: You know you’re old when…

  1. A cute blonde buys you a drink, and she’s your kids’ summer camp counselor.

  2. You have to leave the place where she bought you the drink because the music is too loud for your tinnitus.

  3. You leave by jumping in your filthy minivan.

  4. You stop on the way home to buy baby-bottle liners.

  5. You cancel your babysitter at summer camp because you’re too tired to go out at 9:00 pm.

  6. The only CDs that you buy are from Starbucks. (My wife thought of this one.)

Please add your ideas to this list so that we may commiserate!


You know you’re old when you feel like that you should answer your Facebook birthday wishes (over 100) and then Facebook smacks you down.

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August 20, 2007

Reality Check: LicketyShip

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LicketyShip provides courier-service shipping. Its prices are comparable to, and often less than, companies like FedEx, UPS, and DHL. Basically, LicketyShip acts as a aggregator of multiple couriers: it’s researched couriers’ reputations and prices for you.

When you want to ship something, go to LicketyShip’s site to enter what you need delivered, where, and when, and it helps you select the best courier. Then you place an order with a credit card. You can even track your delivery just like with the big boys/girls.

Maybe you don’t have anything to ship right now, but from a purely marketing perspective, you should check out the company’s testimonial page featuring K&L Wine Merchants and the Los Angeles Times. Compare this to the usual bull shiitake that companies write to “prove” their worth. And you have to admit that the name is clever: “Lickety” for speed, “Ship” for what it does.


July 28, 2007

Reality Check: Slidecasting by Slideshare.net

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Slidecasting by SlideShare.net enables you to synchronize PowerPoint slides and audio files. To create a slidecast, you upload slides to SlideShare.net. The audio file is hosted anywhere on the web. Then you link the slides and audio by using an online synchronization tool. When you play the slidecast, the audio is streamed from its location and plays with the slides. The service is completely free.

Here’s a good example of a finished slidecast—not exactly a business example, but very cute. And here’s presentation guru Garr Reynolds using it too.



Disclosure: I am an advisor to Slideshare.net.


June 20, 2007

Reality Check: Pixilu and Guy 2.0

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Pixilu Imaging Inc. provides professional retouching services as an online service. You upload digital photos and Pixilu’s graphic artists review each photo and perform color correction, acne removal, facial lines reduction, teeth whitening, and enhanced red-eye correction. The cost varies from $1.49 to $9.99 per photo.

I submitted my picture to the service, and this is the “after” picture from the $9.99-level process. You can see what the artist did at this mouseover page.


March 10, 2007

Reality Check: MatchActivity

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It’s Saturday night in California, and if you’re reading my blog, you need help. MatchActivity is a new dating site that enables people to find others who are interested in attending a particular event or activity.

For example, these are men and women listing activities within fifty miles of Palo Alto. Activities that are shown on the guest search page are public, but you can also post activities privately to your approved buddies.

There is a time element to MatchActivity—for example, a concert on a particular day—as opposed to searching through online profiles. The theory is that a call-to-action for an upcoming event is an effective point of differentiation.


December 14, 2006

Reality Check: Airspun

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I love vertical-markets companies and recently learned of one. Airspun, Inc. offers commercial radio airtime to bands and songwriters for the purpose of showcasing their music to genre-targeted radio listeners around the world.

Here’s how it works: Bands browse sixty-second airtime slots on radio stations by genre and city. After booking their slot (at prices ranging from $12 to $200), they download sixty-second audio templates to create “Artist Showcase” spots that are downloaded by the radio stations for broadcast airplay.

Bands also get an online referral page linking to wherever their music is sold online. Each spot features a brief announcement of the song and band name, followed by about forty-five seconds of the showcased song, and an Airspun end-tag asking listeners to visit the Airspun.com site to find the featured artist and vote or provide feedback on the music.

FYI, these are some stats on radio station spots: Approximately 10,000 commercial stations in the U.S. X 10 spots/hour X 24 hours = 2.4 million ad spots per day X 365 days/year = 876 million spots/year in the U.S. Also, there are approximately 40,000 radio stations in the rest of the world.



November 13, 2006

Reality Check: cFares

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Garage is an investor in a discount travel company called cFares. First, here’s some background info about the travel business: A large portion of airfare expenditures flow through the GDS systems (ie: Sabre, Amadeus, and Galileo). “First generation online travel sites” such as Travelocity, Expedia, and Orbitz rely on available inventory within the GDS supply.

Newer “meta search” entrants such as Kayak and Sidestep go beyond ticket supplies in the GDS systems by also searching directly through the databases of airlines in order to get an expanded array of better prices and tickets. (Airlines do not put all their inventory in the GDS systems—they keep some for their own sites as a way of incenting consumers to come to them directly).

cFares.com also has access to the GDS systems and direct access to airline’s published inventories, but according to the company it stands apart from these other sites for three reasons:

  1. cFares is the first and only online travel site with exclusive relationships that gives it access to the $20 billion of consolidator “net” airfares. Consolidators are travel wholesalers who commit to buy large blocks of inventory from the airlines at volume (also called “net”) discounts. They are restricted from selling directly to consumers and have historically only offered these fares to travel agents.

    Also, while consolidators have inventory in one system (usually paper or a local computer), they have to access the GDS systems to determine whether a specific fare is actually available. As a result of these technical and business model impediments, consolidator “net” fares have not been brought online. cFares is the first online travel service that has developed technology to allow consumers to find and book these fares—often hundreds of dollars less than found elsewhere—directly and in real time.

  2. cFares offers something called “dynamic rebates.” cFares’s proprietary technology allows airlines to know what is happening at the point of sale and lower their prices dynamically to win a specific customer—for example, when they have lots of empty seats on a specific flight. cFares customers get a custom-designed price in real-time and receive the savings from cFares in the form of a rebate to their credit card after they submit their flight confirmation number.

  3. cFares has a unique name-your-own-price service called cAgent. Unlike other name-your-price services, which involve “buying blind,” cAgent provides total transparency so that consumers know the airline, itinerary, and price before they have to pay. Travelers can pick a specific flight and then set up a persistent search for a fare that they are willing to pay. cAgent will seek out that fare and can hold it for twenty-four hours before the customer has to pay. Since airfares typically fluctuate several times during the day, cAgent snags the fare on the downturn.

cFares’s business model is a combination of Costco and Walmart. Anyone can search the site to see what fares are available. People who sign up for free gold memberships can purchase any of cFares low, publicly available fares—this is comparable to the Walmart model.

However, in order to get direct access to cFares’s “net” wholesale airfares, one-of-a-kind deals, and cAgent, consumers must become Platinum members at a cost of $50/year. This is the Costco model where a membership-driven retailer brings consistently low wholesale prices directly to the consumer. With cFares this membership pays for itself in at most two trips.

cFares is offering a special deal for readers of my blog. If you enter “guysblog1” into the coupon code field, you will be able to sign up for the Platinum membership at 50% off. This offer expires on Wednesday at 6:00 pm Pacific time.


November 02, 2006

Reality Check: RAZZ Mixer

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RAZZ, Inc. recently introduced the RAZZ Mixer. It enables people to create personalized audio recordings to post on web pages. This is a Flash-based application consisting of a voice recorder, music uploader, and special effects sound board with hundreds of pre-recorded sounds.

Users “mix” recordings for posting onto social-networking sites and blogs. These recordings serve the purpose of welcoming people to a profile page as well as to “RAZZ” friends by posting a recording in comment fields.

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The RAZZ mixer is here here. There are many samples that are ready for posting here. People can also listen to a mix by clicking on a direct link; for example, here. Finally, this is what the RAZZ player looks like; click on “PLAY” to hear how a DJ can promote a musical event. Notice the three key elements of a RAZZ mix: music clips, special effects, and the DJ’s voice.

Garage is an investor, and I am on the board of directors of RAZZ.


October 11, 2006

Reality Check: Coghead

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Coghead provides a web-based application that allows tech-savvy businesspeople (that is, non-programmers) to create and deliver their own web-based applications. Essentially, it’s bringing the “do-it-yourself” trend to software—hopefully disrupting tradition and changing the way software is created and used. It can help fill the large, unmet need for small, specialized applications because packaged software is too inflexible and custom development is too expensive and slow.

Coghead’s website is both an application authoring tool and an application delivery service. At Coghead’s website people can create an application using simple-to-learn methods (or pick a pre-built app from Coghead’s application gallery) and then invite co-workers to use the application. All anyone needs is a browser and an Internet connection. The key selling points are:

  • There’s no need to purchase new hardware or software.

  • Users can access applications anywhere they have Internet access.

  • Coghead applications are inherently multi-users.

  • Data and application are managed centrally and off-site.

These days lots of people complain about needing custom applications to do their jobs better, but not being able to get them because IT is busy with other things or because custom application development is just too expensive. Coghead aims to empower the people closest to the need to create and deliver business applications in hours.

Coghead advances the state-of-the-art in a couple of other areas as well. First, Coghead allows you to create applications with meaty business logic. “Business logic” used to be the domain of enterprise applications like SAP and Oracle. Coghead has included an intuitive ‘process builder’ that lets people put real business logic in their apps.

Second, Coghead provides rich web services integration. When you create an application in Coghead, it automatically generates a web services interface for that application. It also provides the capability to integrate external web services from other applications. All this means that Coghead is a sweet platform for creating mash-ups—applications that integrate with other web services like Google Maps or stock market feeds.

Coghead is just now rolling out their public beta and they already have several thousand people on the waiting list. Click here if you’d like to sign up for the public beta.

Full disclosure: I am on the advisory board of Coghead.



October 03, 2006

Reality Check: Fanpop

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Fanpop is a network of social portals where communities of fans can discover and share content and participate in discussions around their favorite topics of interest.

Rather than visiting multiple websites and forums or hunting and pecking through search results, passionate users bring the best content together in one place. Fans can submit, organize, and rate digital content such as videos, articles, sites, and blogs for topics.

This saves people the time and trouble of having to scour the web for quality content that other knowledgeable fans have already discovered. The underlying belief is that people that are fanatical about something tend to be the best and most reliable source of information for that specific something.

The site combines a little bit of everything: polls, social bookmarking, social network, news, and forums. The site has multiple portals, so that Fanpop can keep topics somewhat contained since a fifty-year old mother of three who is a fan of knitting, luxury travel, and parenting is unlikely to go into the Britney Spears, geeks or Being a Man spots and vice versa.

Here is a list of ten spots that illustrate how the site is used:

  1. France Spot :-)

  2. The Viral Videos Spot

  3. Startups and Entrepreneurship Spot

  4. Cooking Spot

  5. Web 2.0 Spot

  6. “Lost” Spot

  7. Geeks Spot

  8. Smart phones and mobile devices

  9. Apple Spot

  10. Blogging Spot

Maybe some fans (if I have any left) will start a forum called the “G spot.”



August 06, 2006

Reality Check: Veotag

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Veotag, Inc. enables people to place navigation tags in video and audio files. For example, if a speaker uses the top-ten format, you can tag where each section begins.

Listeners/viewers can then click on tags to navigate the digital content. Think of this as adding a table of contents to audio or video. Search engines can index these tags, so digital content will show up in search results. Here are several samples to illustrate the concept.

Here’s an example of a Google search that returns a link that, when followed, takes you inside a video. Search for “SwiftKids Dora” at Google or click on this link.


May 12, 2006

Reality Check: Vyew

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If most venture capitalists weren’t liars, we’d tell you that if we had the opportunity to fund Google, we would have passed. Seriously, who would have thought the world needed another search engine in 1995?

Fast forward to 2006. Does the world need another web conferencing product? Maybe. Check out Vyew.

Vyew is a free browser-based conferencing and “always-on” collaboration platform that provides instant visual communication without the need for client downloads or installations.

Vyew’s multimedia workspace enables real-time shared viewing of presentations, files, photos, and one’s desktop. Included are tools for whiteboarding, annotating, text chatting, and phone conferencing.  

With Vyew’s “always-on” configuration, users can leave, permit others to enter and make revisions, and return–knowing that all content and annotations will remain intact.  
 
Vyew has a growing set of plug-ins, such as Yahoo maps, Google search, diagram tools, notepad, games, and photo slideshows.
 
Key Features:
- Free
- Instant meeting: No client to download
- “Always-on” collaborative sessions
- Share and whiteboard PowerPoint, Word, Excel, and JPG, etc. files.
- Desktop sharing with one-click screen capture
- Remote storage
- Download photos from Yahoo!, Kodak, and Flickr to create multimedia slideshows

Please vote about Vyew.

Please rank this posting.

May 04, 2006

Reality Check: Jajah

I must say that the "reality check" on Goowy worked better than I anticipated. Here's another product to look at called Jajah.

Jajah is a VOIP company. It enables you to make long distance calls for about $.02/minute. Some people's initial reaction will be, "I can already do this with Skype."

I don't think so. Jajah enables you to make a VOIP call from any phone to any phone. The call is initiated through the Jajah web site, but once initiated, the caller's and callee's computer are not utilized.

You can, for example, initiate the call for your cell phone, turn off your computer, jump in your car, and drive off. (You can't do that with a Skype phone in a Wifi network.)

Key points:

  • There is nothing to download and install.
  • No one needs to get an additional phone number--eg, you talk on your existing cell phone (or landline phone) to your parents in China on their existing cell phone (or landline phone).
  • Your computer is not used as a node in a P2P network.
  • You don't call an access number and get called back.

Please vote and leave comments.

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May 02, 2006

Reality Check: Goowy

I'm going to add a new kind of posting. Sometimes I need a "reality check" on products or services--that is, I'd like to know what other people think of something I've found. (After all, what someone fifty-one years old thinks is cool, might not be cool.)

Here's the first one:

http://www.goowy.com/

This is a free product/service that integrates (ala AppleWorks back in the eighties) instant messaging from AOL, MSN, Yahoo, and ICQ plus email, calendar, contacts, games, and file storage.

Please send your comments. You can also vote here:

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