I’m at TiEcon 2007, this may very well be the only conference that started on time: at 8:45 sharply. This took most participants by surprise, still busy getting breakfast outside. But before we know, Kaval Kaur, co-Founder of Virsa, a company acquired by enterprise software giant SAP is up on stage. She is a dynamic speaker, and a perfect inspiration for entrepreneurs or entrepreneur-wannabes in the crowd.
But … what’s happening? She is interrupted by a kid with a microphone in hand.
“Hi – are you looking for your parents?
No. I’m looking for funding.”
The “kid” turns out to be Anshul Samar, 13-year old CEO of Elementeo, a battle-game of .. chemical elements. (Gee, I barely knew what chemistry was at his age). Anshul looks like a 13-year old, but speaks like an adult. He knows what he wants: the goal is to achieve $1M in revenue by the time he finishes high middle school, which is next year. Watch out Ben Casnocha, you’re record is about to be broken!
. Elementeo is an exhibitor at TiEcon, they have a booth, and will attend the Entrepreneurs Bazaar. Something tells me they will soon be funded….
TiEcon 2007 barely started, but in the first 20 minutes it made an impact. A great start… now on to Tim O’Reilly and a list of distinguished speakers.
Update (5/18): I’m not the only one who found Anshul the highlight of TiEcon: read VentureBeat: Elementeo’s 13-year-old CEO, highlight of TiECON.
TiEcon has uploaded a video interview with Anshul.

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Registration is smooth, there’s hardly any wait. Hm.. am I too early… where is the crowd?
For half an hour or so I felt I was back at University at Software 2007 – in Professor Hasso Plattner’s class. That’s because his keynote was a compressed version of his recent SAPPHIRE 07 speech, which in turn was an “offsite class” for his Stanford students – literally so, he flew the entire class out to Atlanta. To make his point, he used the blackboard-metaphor, with chalked handwriting (and dressed in matching black
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David Hornik’s Lobby will surely try to capture the participatory, conversational essence of conferences, without the mandatory crap around it … and it will surely be subject to the 
Surprise #1: It’s early Sunday morning, and there’s a huge crowd! Wow!
Surprise #3: Web 2.0 needs connectivity, we all know that. Wireless works, albeit sloooowly. But…but: we need, power, too. I know, it’s my fault, should have carried extra batteries.. and there’s never enough power outlet for all attendees. But I haven’t been to any conference where’s not a single power outlet in the entire room. I’m sitting outside, next to a watercooler (which runs on power, so it led me to a spare outlet), trying to recharge my hungry laptop. I’m afraid starting tomorrow, there will be tough competition for these spots.
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I’ll be moderating another 
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