Author: spierzchala

  • Anyone want a potentially profitable conference idea?

    Sometimes, working for a company and being an “enemy” alien in the United States is a pain in the butt. It means that sometimes you have to write a blog post, read it again and say, “Well, that’s just plum crazy to post publicly!”.
    I came up with a great small conference/forum idea that I would like to run with. However, getting involved in or organizing such a project would see me get:

    • slammed by my company
    • thrown out of my job
    • thrown out my house
    • dragged to the 49th parallel and thrown back into Canada

    It is something I believe in, would pursue like a rabid dog, and would love to participate in, as a speaker or as a simple attendee.
    I would pay money if there was an event like this that was not driven by the companies in the field.
    If anyone, particularly independent conference organizers or small/medium-sized companies/consultancies/analyst firms, would like to take my idea and develop it, I would be grateful. I hate to see my one good idea from this week get wasted.

  • Travel, Experience, and a Case Against Inertia

    I like to go on business trips. My current role is one that does not allow me to go to many conferences, or attend workshops, or present to groups. I’ve stopped griping about it; it’s the way it is.
    However, I read Joi Ito all of the time, and I know that if I hadn’t wasted 10 years of my life, I might have as much geek cred, respect, knowledge, experience and sage wisdom to offer to groups.
    The same goes for Tim Bray. My fave Canadian Sun employee is going to be doing a lot of travelling this Spring/Summer. [here and here and here and here]
    What does this have to do with me? I am sitting in my attic, wondering what skills I could leverage to make people want to work with me. How do I make myself remarkable, wow!, cool, hip (or unhip)?
    I guess it all boils down to a question of timimg, connections, and other assorted things.

  • Browser Percentage — 30 Days (March 21, 2005)

    This is the Browser Percentage breakdown for The Newest Industry over past 30 days.
    Browser Percentage Graph -- March 21, 2005
    This is a part of an ongoing series inspired by the browser percentage graph at ongoing.
    The sudden shift upward on the part of Gecko and Safari browsers comes from the site being Scobelized on Saturday, March 19, 2005.

  • Explanation to connectivity outages

    Comcast came out this morning and found water in the splitter on the outside of the house.
    Your regularly scheduled program shall be much more regular now.

  • IAC/Ask a simple media play

    John Battelle agrees with me: the Ask/IAC deal is simply just another media deal. [here]

  • Thoughts about watching the New Tech Bubble

    It is interesting working in a post-bubble company, watching the companies on the edge of the newly expanding bubbles of search, Web services, blogging and social networking start to try and find ways to link and grow together.
    Ask, after buying Bloglines, gets acquired by IAC. Yahoo acquires Flickr. MSN has Spaces; Microsoft buys a file-sharing company; Microsoft has skunkworks projects at Start.com. Google just announced that they are looking for a UI developer to help revive and restore the flagging Blogger service.
    The question that arises in my mind is whether these mergers will allow these large companies to effectively control access to what we can and cannot do online.
    Now, I am not trying to be orwellian, I am just pointing out that there is likely to be a large amount of control and centralization in these outlets. In some cases, this will be good, providing us with services and features that were unattainable in the smaller company.
    On the Dark Side, the benefits could be subsumed in a flood of meaningless co-linked content for tickets, shopping, and other detritus that has yet to overwhelm the new personalized blogging/peer-to-peer/social-networking universe that has “suddenly” appeared since 2000.
    The cry of the Internet in 1995 was that anyone could have a Web page, have access to whatever content they wanted, and be in control of their online experience. Now that has come full-circle, after a detour through the swamp of commercialism and marketeering.
    With the acquisition of the “cool” and “innovative” companies by the “old” New Media companies, will these new memes simply get subsumed by commercialism and marketeering?

  • Interesting notes on hits..

    1. Search engines like the word Microsoft
    2. People like Microsoft and Dinosaur in the same phrase
    3. Putting the names “Dave Winer” or “Robert Scoble” in any post raises its visibility
  • IAC Buys ASK; Owns Bloglines

    John Battelle points to this.

    $2billion. Wow. Sure feels like another bubble.

    Was Ask REALLY worth that much?

    And yes, this means that Barry Diller effectively owns Bloglines.

    More here and here.

  • SCOBELIZED!

    I make a crack about wishing I got as many hits as Scoble.

    Scoble grants me a quick burst of pixie dust. [here]

    WHAMMO!

    Now, this may not seem like a lot, but I am very stringent with the filtering I do on my blog logs to make sure I am eliminating all the proxies, poseurs, micreants, bots and other vermin.

    Removing some of the filters produces stats like these:

    DATE           COUNT
    --------------------
    03/01/2005	371
    03/02/2005	357
    03/03/2005	249
    03/04/2005	361
    03/05/2005	325
    03/06/2005	275
    03/07/2005	219
    03/08/2005	258
    03/09/2005	274
    03/10/2005	289
    03/11/2005	215
    03/12/2005	190
    03/13/2005	204
    03/14/2005	265
    03/15/2005	239
    03/16/2005	333
    03/17/2005	380
    03/18/2005	365
    03/19/2005	481
    03/20/2005	718

    Thanks Scoble! But I was really after the contents of Joi Ito’s laptop bag!

  • Yahoo gets Flickr

    Worst kept secret on the net is now out — Yahoo! has purchased Flickr. [here and here]
    Guess I should get either a decent mobile phone or a digital camera…


    And I am so &*^*&^*&^ clueless that I didn’t even know that Flickr was

    1. Canadian
    2. From Vancouver

    Well, if I can’t cheer for the Canucks, it’s good to have someone else to cheer for.