Mobile Monday #7 — mobile value

September 3rd, 2008

Mobile Monday #7

Monday night I attended the seventh edition of Mobile Monday Amsterdam. Although I was only able to hear the last two speakers, I enjoyed my time at De Rode Hoed. It was especially nice to hear Yme Bosma of Hyves finally giving some openness about Hyves’ vision and upcoming plans for their mobile presence. After all, it is basically the only (sort of) ubiquitous platform we have here in the Netherlands, so they will most probably have a huge impact on what the near future of mobile will look like in this country.

Photo by Ralph Lemarechal. More photos here. Some other attendees who blogged about it are Kars Alfrink and Patrice Kerremans.

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Python Users Nederland meetup

August 29th, 2008

Tonight I attended a Python Users Nederland meetup. The first one in a while I was told. It was great to hangout with some fellow Pythoneers, so I can recommend anyone who feels slightly affiliated with Python to join the mailinglist and show up at the next meetup in a few months. Big thanks to Remco Wendt for making this happen.

UPDATE: Reinout van Rees posted a nice summary of the speeches and some photos.

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“Luck is where preparation meets opportunity”

August 26th, 2008

Just like I hardly ever remember jokes or movie scenes or song lyrics, I tend to forget about interesting quotes that I come by. For some reason this one is sticking with me for over a year now. It is from Carnegie Mellon University professor Randy Pausch’s well-known last lecture.

Today I discovered a quote by French chemist and microbiologist Louis Pasteur. Pasteur lived over a century before Pausch did, nevertheless the two quotes are akin: “La chance ne sourit qu’aux esprits bien préparés” or “Chance favors the prepared mind” in English.

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Rainy night in The Netherlands

August 4th, 2008

Rainy night in The Netherlands

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Early adopters vs. early majority

August 3rd, 2008

I don’t consider myself an early adopter. I am rarely the first to try-out new stuff, neither do I feel the urge to do so. I prefer to be part of the early majority over being an early adopter. Yet I pretend to be innovative when it comes to the web. Isn’t that a contradiction? I don’t think so.

My point is in a crucial difference between early adopters and majority. Early adopters will at least be moderately excited about anything new. This excitement can be very delusive. Most services need adoption by the majority before they can be truly successful. The majority doesn’t give a damn about something being new, as long as it’s not significantly adding value to their everyday lives and significantly worth the invested time and effort necessary to get that value. And I think they’re right. True innovation shouldn’t need the assumption of the web being at the very center of people’s lives. That’s because for most people it simply isn’t in that spot. Using the web is a relevant side note in their day to day life, similar to going to the supermarket, reading a magazine in the train to work or going for a stroll on Sunday afternoon. Nothing more—nothing less either.

An innovator should be very cautious for the innovators trap of overexcitement. Being too excited about new stuff to realize that most other people — people that you need to make your new stuff really work — do not share your excitement about the sheer fact that it is new stuff. To them it’s just stuff.

I don’t want to lose touch with this reality and cherish my membership of the early majority.

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The taste of a price tag

July 27th, 2008

Wine Flight

(…) researchers at Stanford and Caltech have demonstrated that people’s brains experience more pleasure when they think they are drinking a $45 wine instead of a $5 bottle - even when it’s the same stuff. The important aspect of these findings is that people aren’t rationalizing on a survey, i.e., reporting that a wine tastes better because they know it’s a lot more expensive. Rather, they are actually experiencing a tastier wine.

Via Neuromarketing. Photo by emurray.

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A visual history of Python

June 16th, 2008

For our latest project PromoBee I take great pleasure in working with Python on a daily basis. One tends to take its power and elegance for granted most of the time. A video like this makes you stop and appreciate the huge effort that has been put in to get the project at its current level. Awesome visualization.

Similar visualizations of other open source software projects can be found through code_swarm.

Via Robert Gaal.

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PromoBee launches in beta!

June 11th, 2008

After five months of hard work I am very proud to announce that tonight we released our latest product in beta. PromoBee (only Dutch for now, sorry) enables anyone who does PR for events to do his or her work more easily and with more overview. Make sure your events gain maximum publicity, while managing your relations optimally—a very rough and ugly translation of the one-sentence-pitch at the home page.

That’s it for now. Check back here soon for more on our latest baby.

And now it’s time to celebrate this huge milestone, cheers!

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Photos SocialStrategyTalk

May 27th, 2008

SocialStrategyTalk 1: Crowdsourcing
Jeff Howe @ SocialStrategyTalk
Main speaker Jeff Howe.
SocialStrategyTalk 1: CrowdsourcingSocialStrategyTalk 1: Crowdsourcing
Surprise surprise, they caught me on camera.

Photos by SocialStrategyTalk.

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A day of networking events

May 23rd, 2008

Today started with a cup of OpenCoffee and ended with a talk on crowdsourcing at SocialStrategyTalk. I can definitely recommend both events to anyone interested in online media, technology or trends. Good mix of people and no entrance fee, so also suitable for poor bootstrapping entrepreneurs like me.

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