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Peer to Patent Project Live

I previously wrote about New York Law School professor Beth Noveck’s experiment to create a Wikipedia-like system that allows outside peer reviewers participate in the patent examination / review process.  

Why?  It’s really simple: the US Patent Office is overwhelmed, it has very few examiners with deep knowledge of tax law, especially of “creative technics” – just like it feels outdated in technology, software issues.  Add to this the explosion in the number of patent applications “leaving examiners only 20 hours on average to comb through a complex application, research past inventions, and decide whether a patent should be granted.”

In an unlikely cooperation of Government, technology giants like IBM & HP and Academia, the  Peer to Patent Project  launched last Friday.   The new system already has a “competitor”, in the form of a private initiative, Wikipatents.com.

It’s great to see wikis put to good use thumbs_up

Details on CNet.

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When a Spreadsheet is NOT a Spreadsheet

Looks are deceiving.  Several  sources  reported that Smartsheet, the web-based “spreadsheet creation” service, has raised $2.69 million in a Series A-4 of funding, led by Madrona Venture Group.  The true part is that they received funding – congratulations – but what everyone got wrong is calling it a spreadsheet service.  It is not.

 

Smartsheet is in the business of collaborative  task management & tracking, and they came up with a simple idea: why not use an interface that just about all computer-users are familiar with: the spreadsheet.  Clearly more users are familiar with the look-and-feel of spreadsheets than with task management / project management systems.  I think it’s a great approach – no wonder Smartsheet won two awards at the recent Under the Radar Office 2.0 event. 

Another Under the Radar participant, and one I happen to like chose a similar approach: Wrike allows users manage projects without having to use project management software – it’s all done via email.  Interestingly, everyone got this one – nobody’s calling Wrike an email system, just because they manage projects via email. smile_wink.    By the same token, Smartsheet is not a spreadsheet service – for online spreadsheets you’d have to try EditGrid, Zoho Sheet or Google Docs & Spreadsheets.

This paradigm shift – ignoring the more complicated UI of special systems and using widely popular, familiar systems to carry out more complicated tasks – is not unknown even “heavy” enterprise software: a prime example is SAP’s Duet: accessing ERP functions via Office apps.

 

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Google Blinked. Gotta Love the Logo

Gotta love this logo on ValleyWag… full story of the Google vs. eBay match is on TechCrunch, TechDirt, InfoWorld.

 

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Build Applications Without Coding in Zoho Creator 2.0

Yesterday TechMeme featured an interesting  discussion on Why (some) journalists should learn (some) code. Matt Waite, the reporter makes his case about data analysis and presentation being important parts of journalism today.  He offers up small chunks of script, then explains them in plain English.  Of course the problem is, you still need to know the code, the translation is one-way, from script to English, you can’t built an application the other way around… or .. can you?

Well, almost.  That’s the problem the newly released version of Zoho Creator tackles.  Creator, a database / custom application generator tool has been available for quite a while, Zoho claims there are over 30,000 applications built by users.  Here’s a comparative review by Ismael Ghalimi at ITRedux.  The key new features in Release 2.0:

  • Completely revamped User Interface –  Now you can create your app by simple dragging & dropping elements.
  • Script Builder: Create code without knowing code.  Add advanced processing logic by dragging chunks of script from a list of easy-to-understand functions.
  • Simply embed your Input Forms and Data Views in web-sites, blogs and other Zoho Applications

This video provides a short overview on using Zoho Creator.  This longer, 8-minute version focuses on how to build scripts.

 

Here’s a good example of Christopher Conway, Professor of Literature, a non-techie in his own words building a course database in Zoho Creator – and that was in the “old” release.  Getting back to the journalism question above: yes, it is useful if you can build simple database application, but you really no longer have to learn coding anymore.  Don’t take my word for it: go ahead, play with it. smile_wink

(Update: See Thomas’s first impressions here.)

 

Finally, a little bonus to my readers: I have a few free tickets to give away to Zoho’s Yacht Party at the Enterprise 2.0 Conference in Boston next week.  If you’d like to attend, please register here using promo code 7410.  When the promo code no longer works, tickets are sold out.

 

Related posts:  Wired, Mashable, ZDNet, Web Worker Daily, ConnectedInternet.

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Staying on TechMeme?

About two months ago following Jeff Nolan’s trail I discovered a fresh, challenging, thoughtful new blog, Techfold. I’m glad to see that Rod, the “mystery” author listened to me (and others) and revealed his identity.  His blog is still in my reader (is it, Google?) for it’s good content.

Today Rod is lamenting whether he got de-listed by TechMeme.  I don’t know if you can get “listed” or “de-listed”.  Gabe protects his secret sauce, acknowledging that there is a “seed” group of blogs his algorithm follows, but also adding TechMeme discovers a lot of new sources.   Like I said, I don’t know.  Robert Scoble recently called TechMeme: the anti-linking engine.  This post is an unabashed experiment to see if we can push Techfold onto TechMeme. fingerscrossed

 

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Laptops Are Crippling Us

Who buys a desktop anymore? Laptops outsell desktops, they are almost as powerful, more flexible, are with us at home, at work, on the road, in the air, in bed, in the hot tub ( see update at the bottom), and finally they don’t look ugly at home. I haven’t had a desktop for 8 years now.

And now I am about to take a huge step back… going against a trend. Why? It’s simple: laptops are unhealthy. Well, that’s an understatement. They are crippling us. It’s really simple, says the Harvard Medical School:

“When the keyboard is in the proper position for the wrist, the screen is not in an adequate position for the neck and vice versa. Using a laptop is a trade off between poor neck/head posture and poor hand/wrist posture.”

“In “A”, the laptop is too high and distant, with the user’s arms raised and outstretched, resulting in unnecessary fatigue in the shoulders, neck, back, forearms and hands. In “B”, the user has the laptop in the lap, which facilitates good arm position, but the user’s head is dropped, causing muscle tension in the back, neck, shoulders and chest. In “C”, the laptop is on a “standard” surface that is too low and close for comfortable viewing, and too high for upper body comfort. Notice that the hands are higher than the elbows, the wrists are resting on the edge of the worksurface, and the low back is not supported. This position increases risk for injury to the neck, back, elbows, and wrists.” – explains Working Well Ergonomics

There’s only one way a laptop can be ergonomically correct: by raising the screen (i.e. the entire laptop) on a stand / docking station and using an external keyboard at a proper position. I’ve seriously considered doing just that.

But all that gadgetry is quite expensive and I’d still be limited to a 15.4″screen (anything bigger is a brick to carry), while standalone wide-screen LCD’s are much larger, crisper, and really inexpensive today… so I am about to buy a desktop system basically for the screen.

Have you tried buying a flat screen recently? Not all models are ergonomic (in fact most aren’t) and it’s close to impossible to find out online – you have to touch it live. You get data like analog / digital, all the inputs, aspect ratio, brightness, contrast ratio, response time, and the like, but hardly any site selling LCD monitors tells you if they are vertically adjustable. That should be priority #1. As LCD screens become fashion objects, they are getting lower and lower – many stand so low, that they are hardly any higher than a laptop screen. That’s ridiculous. Look at the chart above – clearly, the only ergonomic screens are those with variable height (unless you want to put your old Encyclopedia Britannica to good use as a screen stand).

Of course I won’t be glued to my desk all the time, so I will still have to fall back to the laptop. This is where the Web comes to help. In the past, switching from my default computer required a bit of preparation: moving my Outlook.pst files and several other essentials, updating settings, old programs ..etc. Since I ditched most of my desktop applications and am using a combination of Gmail and Zoho apps, this is no longer an issue – I’m no longer tied to any physical computer, both my data and applications are identical, no matter where I access them. So, in a somewhat roundabout way, Office 2.0 improves my healthsmile_wink

Ergonomic desktops, here I come!

P.S. I was contemplating all this when I found BL Ochmans post. Thanks for collecting all the information!

HolidayUpdate: OK, that hot-tub usage above isn’t that rare after all. I barely posted this and now I am reading Robert Scoble typing away from the beach at Cabo while his wife is at the spa! Robert, get off your computer! There are things like .. the sun, the ocean, the hot tub, the pool to enjoy (hm should I mention the poolside bar?)

Update (7/23):  What you put your computer on also matters. See desk buying advice at Web Worker Daily.

Update (8/6/08): Gotta love this by Assaf:

You see, the most expensive piece of hardware to maintain is the one I run: eyes, back, fingers. It’s very, very, expensive to repair, and it requires a lot of downtime. So that’s the first TCO on my mind when purchasing a new computer.

Update (810/08): Opinion: Why laptops will kick desktop PCs to the curb

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So is There a Tech Talent Shortage or Not?

I keep on hearing Silicon Valley startup CEO’s complain on how difficult it is to hire tech talent – that is unless you’re Google. smile_wink

Then I met this guy at a networking event who’s been looking for a job for a while, and in his view it’s not that easy… so who’s right?  Here’s his resume intro:

Eleven years experience developing  computer security products for leading technology companies including McAfee and Commerce One, including advanced computer security research projects funded by DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Project Agency) and NSA (National Security Agency. Primary projects included intrusion detection, PKI, and secured operating systems and software.  Fluent and literate in English and Mandarin.

I thought this was a hot summary, and the rest of his resume is full of terms I don’t even understand …  so why isn’t he hired yet?  Is there a tech talent shortage in the Valley or not?

Update: Oh, I know: he hasn’t yet realized that the blog is the new resume. smile_tongue

 

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Technical Support the G-way and the Z-way

This post will sound like a commercial… and in a way it is.  I rarely do this.  I am an Advisor to Zoho, and obviously biased, but I am not a “product pusher” and when I write about Zoho I typically do it in the context of a “bigger picture”.  This one was hard to resist though. 

Krish, a Zoho Notebook user recently lost two hours of work. That’s obviously bad – but the Zoho support team was working on recovering his information within hours, and they added the auto-save feature to NoteBook within days.  When I first discovered Zoho a good year ago, I wrote about their responsiveness, and I’m glad to see it hasn’t changed since then.

Remember, this is for a single incident of a single user – contrast it to Google’s ho-hum approach when a hundred or so users lost the entire content of their Gmail account, or the fact that the Google Apps account chaos which renders Apps useless for certain early users (those who signed up at the pre-launch beta stage) is not even expected to be fixed until Q3 2007.

Feature-comparisons aside, customer service is one of the key reasons why I believe the Office 2.0, Productivity 2.0 (?) market is not a winner-takes-all: there will always be room for smaller players who provide fast, personalized support.

 

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Gift Giving Patented?

This has to be a joke.   I don’t have time to elaborate, running to a media round-table now.  But I think I’ll file a patent for driving a car to get to a meeting….

 

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The Zooomr Saga Continues

I miss Zooomr. It’s down again, after coming back from a 2-week “hiatus”, all you get at www.zooomr.com is “500 – Internal Server Error”.

Zooomr is:

  • a great product loaded with features – when it works
  • an amazing community that many startups would kill for
  • a dream of a 19-year old programmer joined by a hobbyist/pro-photographer
  • a poorly managed (actually not managed) business / service

I could go on, but instead go and read Robert Scoble’s update. For the second time in days, his post is becoming “Zooomr Central”. Zoho, the company that bailed them out a few days ago has just offered additional help. But I’m starting to wonder if what they really need at this point is even more servers, or simply DBA expertise. Talk about expertise, Founder and Sole Programmer Kristopher Tate is alone. Now, that’s not very reassuring for a real company, but it has been a major source of sympathy to Zooomr. Yes, there is a part-time *CEO*, but frankly, being MIA in the deepest of the crisis, then playing DJ on Ustream.tv for a day, then giving drunk answers online hasn’t earned a lot of credit to him or to Zooomr.

Robert is right: Zooomr is on borrowed time, and it’s not just because of the loaned Sun server. They need funding, but that’s not enough. They need technical help, but also business leadership. Or Kris gets hired and Thomas can go back to his day-job. But I would really regret that – like I said, I miss Zooomr.

P.S. On second thought, why am I complaining about Zooomr’s outage when Technorati spends the day sleeping offline.

Computer Not Working 3“>

Update (7/25)Sleeping on the job.

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