(ad from SFGate.com)
Update (11/20): Napster is using sex to sell, too. (hat tip: OM Malik)
Tags: Ads, Ad, Advertising, Commercial, Commercials
Connecting the dots ...
(ad from SFGate.com)
Update (11/20): Napster is using sex to sell, too. (hat tip: OM Malik)
Tags: Ads, Ad, Advertising, Commercial, Commercials
I’ve been long proposing to fight splogs by economic means, not just technology – glad to see the idea gain popularity. See Steve Rubel’s post.
Tags: Blogs, Blogging, Blog Spam, Spam, Technorati, IceRocket, BlogSpot, Google, AdSense, Newsweek, Splog, Splogs
Update: this is an old post, describing an obsolete solution. Please read How to Use Picasa on Multiple Computers – The Updated Definitive Guide instead.
A while ago I wrote about Google’s otherwise excellent Picasa photo management program, complaining that all your editing, labeling, captioning information gets lost when you move / copy your photos to another computer.
That’s because Picasa does not store such information in the photo files itself, rather uses a set of system files. This is actually a good concept, you can experiment and safely revert back to the original – as long as you view / process pics only within Picasa. However, with thousands of photos, who would not want a backup? That’s when the nightmare starts .. which files / directories should be copied? Yes, I know … I should be on Flickr.. call me old-fashioned, I prefer to have a local copy of my images.
Well, unbelievably, Microsoft comes to help with this Google application:-) Since they recently acquired Foldershare, it is now a freely dowloadable application. Install it, then set up the following directories to be auto-synchronized between your computers:
This will synchronize not only your photos, but all the edit / label ..etc information between any number of computers, over a local network or the Internet. Btw, the program can be used to sync. any filetypes, not just your photos.
My Feed reader showed a promising title: The 11 Biggest Mistakes Small Business Bloggers Make. Hm … I normally prefer to read full feeds,
but the title looks promising, let’s read it. Click, load, here we are:
Business Blog Consulting. But wait … this is just a pitch
to take the reader to his other site, where after registration one can
actually download the article.
Well, Rich, you just taught me
what the 12th biggest mistake bloggers make is: writing teaser
posts and sending your readers to a site without warning them it’s by
registration only:-(
Tags: Blogs, Blogging, Publishing
(updated)
No, I don’t speak Swedish … but it’s cute:-) More on it later… The recent controversy around Shai Agassi’s remarks about Open Source prompted Marten Mickos, CEO of MySQL to come forward with his own prospective.
But first things first, what was the controversy? “SAP Slams Open Source” – quoted CIO Today. SAP’s very own Jeff Nolan found himself in a rather invonvenient situation (at least initially) of having to distance himself from Shai’s perceived message: “I wasn’t at the Churchill Club event so I can’t comment on the context of Shai’s comments, but I do not agree with them if they are as represented in this article.”
In his speech at the Churchill Club Shai supposedly strongly came out against Open Source and equated it to “IP Socialism”. Hm…having grown up in a communist country I certainly don’t like the way it sounds… although if we look at what he actually said in the second half of this very statement, it actually makes sense: “IP socialism is worst thing that can happen to any IP-based society…If there is no way to defend IP, then there is no reason to invest in IP. “ Remember, this comes from the guy that invests over $1B in R&D. Jeff later listened to the full podcast of the session and realized the quotes were taken out of context. See more details and a link to Shai’s own blog at ZDNet.
My two cents: the traditional Enterprise Software model (mega $ licence fees, complex and costly implementations, expensive maintainence, questionable ROI) is not sustainable. Enterprise Software companies and their whole ecosystem (Implementation partners, 3–rd party plug-ins, etc) are experiencing Pricing and Innovation pressure not just from Open Source, but the increasingly adopted On-Demand model. One can’t really expect a SAP / Oracle ..etc Executive to be truly, entirely happy about the changes being forced upon them. That said, they can try to be obstructionists, or realize the world is changing with or without them – might as well go for the ride, take the challenge / opportunity to invent new business models and survive/thrive in the New World.
Marten makes the point that SAP is the latter group: “ SAP is the first and most significant ERP vendor to publicly, officially and in actuality embrace open source. SAP was the first enterprise ERP vendor to ship on Linux. SAP has an investment in Zend, the PHP company, and a strategic partnership with MySQL. By its actions, SAP is one of the great supporters of open source.”
On legacy software companies in general: “ At the end of the day, deeds count more than words. If you support open source, you will be supported by the millions in the open source community who are working hard to shape the future of the software industry. “
I fully agree with Marten’s views … but there’s one area where I’d take a step further: “ Perhaps open source can commoditize the infrastructure components and make applications more affordable.” Not just infrastructure, IMHO. Applications are next.
SugarCRM is a pioneer in commoditizing the application (CRM) market … yet they got outwitted themselves by their own ecosystem. The trend is unstoppable, even outside Open Source. A closed-source, on-demand company, 24SevenOffice offers its innnovative, fully integrated Web-based SMB suite for about a third of NetSuite’s prices, in fact they undercut Open-Source SugarCRM themselves, when comparing the On-demand version of their product.
As for the incoming tidal wave of Open Source Applications: CRM is just the beginning, the low-hanging fruit… there are literally hundreds of business-grade Open Source applications, ranging from accounting, manufacturing, purchasing, all the way to complete ERP-like solutions, or industry-specific point solutions, like patient management for health care, restaurant management .. etc. One of the reasons why they are not used widely is that they are “trapped in the land of the Nerds” (out-of-context quote by Joe Kraus of JotSpot at the recent SDForum Collaboration SIG event, but I just could not resist using it). Really. Most Open Source apps are difficult to implement, one has to be a real techie to navigate through the maze.
This is where companies like SQLFusion can help small businesses: by providing an easy way to create their web-presence, then offering a pipeline of pre-packaged Open Source applications that can be installed, used, kept up-to-date by a single click of the mouse they bring open source apps within reach of millions who otherwise would not have the expertise to use them. (disclaimer: I am affiliated with SQLFusion)
Update (11/16) Other points of view:
SAP talks smack about open source
Bigamous contrition and open source faux pas
And now SAP looooves open source?
Update 2 (11/19) I’ve received inquiries about the title – it is explained in Marten’s article I linked to. Btw, it looks like Scandinavian style is in fashion.
Update 3 (11/29) Water into Wine: Monetizing Open Source via On Demand – great article by Rightnow CEO Greg Gianforte, obviously describing his company, but also a perfect fit to SQLFusion’s business model described in the last paragraph about. I love it, thanks, Greg! 🙂
Update 4 (5/10) The Stalwart woke up, blew the dust off of a half-a-year-old speech by Shai Agassi, and starts the Open Source as IP Socialism debate again. (hat tip: Jeff Nolan) Nothing new, why today? Anyway, perfect timing, anyone interested in the subject should come to the Who Pays For Software? New and Old Business Models event tomorrow, where Open Source will definitely be in the focus of a star-panel.
I’ll be moderating another SVASE VC Breakfast Club session on Thursday, November 17th. It’s an informal round-table where up to 10 entrepreneurs get to deliver a pitch, then answer questions and get critiqued by a VC Partner. We’ve had VC’s from Draper Fisher, Hummer Winblad, Kleiner Perkins, Mayfield, Mohr Davidow, Emergence Capital …etc.
Thursday’s featured VC is Shanda Bhales, General Partner, El Dorado Ventures. Event Information and registration is here.
These sessions are an incredible opportunity for Entrepreneurs, most of whom would probably have a hard time getting through the door to a VC Partners. Since I’ve been through quite a few of these sessions, both as Entrepreneur and Moderator, let me share a few thoughts:
See you on Thursday … and now I get to show off my cool new Zvents button:
Tags: Venture Capital, VC Breakfast, Funding, Startups, SVASE
Axel Schultze of BlueRoads started his “Executive Blog” joining the ever-growing Club of CEO Bloggers. Welcome, Axel, to the Blogosphere 🙂
Update (11/15) with perfect timing, here are two post on the subject of CEO Blogging:
Tags: CEO, CEO Bloggers, CEO Blogging
I can’t possibly phrase it better than Dave did ….
Tags: Politics, Humor, California, Terminator, Schwarzenegger
Today I noticed from the log that someone read a Google-translated Italian version of my post on the latest TechCrunch BBQ. That gave me the idea of running a little test to see how Google translates it back to English. I think the first sentence is hilarious – not sure Michael would like it though .. think about it … 200 people at an Atherton home, with narcotics 🙂
Anyway, the links above point to the original and the Italian translation, and here’s the version Googlated back to English:
Third Bbq Di TechCrunch
The history of TechCrunch is really narcotic.The Arrington microphone has begun blog in june with the riesaminazione and delineation mission “ obsessively a every commerce, recently launch product and service of fotoricettore 2,0″. From june, the blog it has been developed to neighbor 5.500 6733 readers of Feedburner, a Rank di Technorati of 566 and rendered it to the list of main the 100 of CNET. In september one has moved from, affittata a house with a great courtyard in Atherton that hour has been transformato in “in the place being” in Silicon Valley, accommodating hardly the third BBQ of TechCrunch .
The event was an explosion. Here it is a good graceful collection of the demos of the new product – Philippe adds some of itscomment .
Many bloggers have written to this purpose, much more in order not to add, hardly some of my impressions. That was my first event of TechCrunch and the intensity of the 200 approximately crowds was one tip that it overwhelms in the beginning… in a positive sense: -) the demos they were really moving, but these reunions are moreover approximately reunion people and with the tightened demo-program, one has had to make one hard choice between watching demos or the mixture in the courtyard.
I have made my job and I have made a list of the aziende/gente that definitively I would wish to come to contact of – yeah, to right… test in order to make it in one crowd of two hundred, in the dusk. In this regulation the social interaction is more accidental, less that you know the greater part of the participants, you communicates with whom hits in, forgets to try anyone in the crowd. Task that making to print the name-modifications has facilitated more designated introductions. In effects the microphone has been able to ask hardly the hosts to obtain created to you and to carry to their own modifications the next time. Distortion of speed, I have generated hardly one new acronym, the BYONT party: -)
Of new to the demos for a minute: too many cold prodotti/servizi… where I obtain the moment to try them all outside? One of my personal favorites is zvents and is tried in order to try Goowy, poich
Recently I wrote about MapStats
that replaced the previously used Gvisit button on my blog (see right
sidebar). Well, it just got better, now offering in– and
outbound link tracking.
The service allows you to track all links clicked on your site by just
adding some JavaScript to your site. It provides a breakdown on a
per day/week/month/year basis, and if you look up info on a link,
it gives you a breakdown on that link, on what page it was clicked from
and what link text was used. They also track unique clicks
and total clicks. Demo available here.
The
company behind MapStats, BlogFlux has some other goodies, e.g. a Google
Page Rank display, pinger, Button Maker. Worth checking it
out!
Tags: Visitor Map, Google Maps, mash-up, Google mash-up, Blogs, Blogging, MapStats, BlogFlux, Link Tracker, LinkLog, ButtonMaker
Publisher / Editor of CloudAve and Enterprise Irregulars.
I do most of my business blogging there, with occasional asides here. More...
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