You need to be wearing Google goggles to think this is a good idea

Ben Werdmuller April 4, 2012 | Comments (1)

Today, Google released this video of Google Glass, an augmented reality project:

Beautiful, right? It’s a virtual assistant that sticks with you wherever you go.

Exciting features debuted in the video include:

  • Automatic geo-tracking of both you and your friends.
  • Seamless photo-taking and live video broadcasting from anywhere you can put your head.
  • A head-up display that occupies some of the visual channel.
  • Everything you see – your visual reality – is augmented through a single company.
  • You are continuously recording information about the people around you as well as yourself.

Okay, I confess: by beautiful, I meant scary. Leaving aside the implications of having our ambient information spoon-fed to us rather than discerned through inference and discovery, this project opens an ethical can of worms, and asks important questions about Silicon Valley’s attitude towards other peoples’ privacy.

Indeed, traditionally, this isn’t a can of worms that Silicon Valley has been very good at dealing with. Android phones encourage you to link your friends’ accounts together, joining their Facebook details to their Google details, for example. There hasn’t been a strong line between information that is yours, information about you that you’re happy to share, and information that you’re gathering about other people. It seems clear to me that people should know what they’re sharing about themselves, should have to opt in to do so, and should not be able to share personal information about other people without those people opting in. That doesn’t seem to be an opinion that Silicon Valley shares with me. Most free services are a Katamari-like information-gathering free-for-all.

I’m a fan of many, many things that Google does, and kudos to the product team that’s putting Google Glass together. It’s a very significant achievement. But from a social perspective, there’s a lot of work still to be done.

Check out our entry for the Knight News Challenge!

Ben Werdmuller March 26, 2012 | Leave a comment

We’re a part of the Knight News Challenge:

1. What do you propose to do?

Speed up, simplify, economical sending and sharing of large video files from anywhere to aid journalists and others.

2. Is anyone doing something like this now and how is your project different?

Slow or expensive methods of video delivery exist, but latakoo is fast and inexpensive. We speedily send, share, download, and transcode large video files and provide public and private distribution.

Check out our full Knight News Challenge profile and – if you like our idea – click the “heart”.

Every visit and show of support helps. Thank you!

Community ownership and social networks as markets

Ben Werdmuller March 24, 2012 | Comments (2)

Johannes Ernst just put me to shame by writing this blog post while sitting next to me at Elgg Camp San Francisco:

[...] But there’s a stronger undertone from speaker after speaker talking about their projects. It’s about how the community wants and needs to own and control their social network (instead of just merely having a little section inside a worldwide social network). And how the community wouldn’t be as strong if they couldn’t. About the community needing to evolve the communication tools in parallel to how the community evolves. About how it is almost impossible to “work together” with others on a general-purpose site like Facebook, and how even high school students automatically switch to their school social network when attempting to get something done.

You can read the whole post here.

I spoke a little about ensuring the longevity of communities, which is something I’ve begun to think about in a general context: if you’ve established a community site and attracted a solid social network of people, how do you ensure that the community remains vibrant in six months, or three years, or a decade from now? How do you make sure, to put it bluntly, that maintaining a community remains worth your time?

In the same way that a community site augments the social experience for a network of people, I’m interested in explicit market features that augment the online social experience. For example, open source communities like the Elgg community itself: what if the Elgg ecosystem could crowdfund features and plugins?

This also speaks to community ownership. Why monetize a community using AdSense – content piped in from third parties outside the community, which may or may not be relevant but certainly are less passionate about the community’s topic – when you could empower the community to do this for itself? Why not allow online communities to be truly self-sustainable?

It’s been an interesting day, and I’m looking forward to talking to people afterwards. I’ve set up a collaborative latakoo How I Fly site here, for participants to collaboratively share video footage of the event.

Back from SXSW. What an incredible week!

Ben Werdmuller March 17, 2012 | Comments (1)

It’s been an amazing week, both for me and for latakoo. I’ve only just flopped back into my apartment in Berkeley, but here are some links:

On the official Box blog, Box and latakoo make video uploads faster than ever:

What does scale is anything that improves your productivity by saving time, especially when it comes to uploading videos. That’s why we’re excited to announce a new integration with video management provider latakoo. latakoo employs a one-click utility to shrink and convey large HD and SD video files in minutes instead of hours. Available today, latakoo subscribers can push their videos to Box faster than ever.

Then, CBS Radio News featured us in this week’s Reporters Notebook (MP3 link).

Steve Kline had an HD camera on our stand at SXSW, so we recorded lots of video of passers-by and uploaded it to our SXSW How I Fly video portal. How I Fly is a beta service that allows anyone to run their own collaborative video portal. (Like running your own YouTube or Vimeo.)

Speaking of which, here’s one of my SXSW contributions, sent using latakoo’s integration with YouTube (uploading to YouTube with latakoo is up to 37 times faster than uploading straight from YouTube’s own website):

The lesson I’m trying to drive home? latakoo makes video simple, no matter what you’re trying to do with it. And people are taking notice.

Twitter Bootstrap is rocking my world

Ben Werdmuller March 9, 2012 | Leave a comment

We’re working on a new feature for latakoo, which will allow you to create your own niche video-sharing networks. Cool, right?

What’s even cooler is that the interface is based on Bootstrap 2, a UI framework for Twitter. We’re using it as a bedrock so that the page adapts to the form factor of the user’s device: if you’re on a desktop, you’ll get the full two-column experience, while a mobile device will see things in a compact single column with menu options hidden behind a dropdown.

It’s been very fast, and the framework is extremely robust. I know there have been complaints about it being overused, but to be honest, that’s because it’s excellent. (We’re not keeping the default colors or styles, mind you, which I know a lot of people are.)

Interested in the video portals? Stay tuned.

ElggCamp San Francisco

Ben Werdmuller March 7, 2012 | Comments (1)

Evolution of the Elgg logoA long time (almost three years) ago now, I worked on an open source project called Elgg, which I also co-founded. It was vastly more popular than we had anticipated – from a small start in education, the community pulled it in all kinds of amazing directions – but after almost six years working on it, I decided to move onto other things. It’s currently being run by Brett Profitt, who I have a lot of respect for. Elgg is still widely used as a social platform for niche communities, social intranets, learning platforms and all kinds of things, not least because the community continues to inject it with new life (and new features).

When Brett let me know about ElggCamp San Francisco, I was delighted. It looks great: the attendee list is already impressive, and tickets are cheap – possibly the best-value event about online communities you’ll attend in the vicinity of Silicon Valley, both in terms of price and the professional experience that’ll be under one roof. I’m looking forward to both the talks and the networking afterwards, and if Brett and co are half as professional as they have been with managing Elgg itself, it will be a great day. Buy tickets here.

Meanwhile, latakoo, my current company, is making video management dramatically easier. We’ll be at SXSW Interactive. Find us on Stand 308 at the trade show next week, or book some office hours to talk to me one-on-one.

Elgg logo credits: the top two were by me, the learning landscape logo was by Sonia Virdi, and the bottom was by Pete Harris. You can tell when we brought real designers in.

Let’s meet at SXSW

Ben Werdmuller March 5, 2012 | Leave a comment

It’s that time of year again: I’ll be at the SXSW Interactive festival next week. From March 12th through the 15th, latakoo will be on stand #308, talking about what we’re doing – and for much of the time, so will I. Come say hi!

Of course, there’s far more to SXSW than the trade show and the talks, and I’ll be attending as many events as I can. If you’re in the area, I’d love to meet. If you’d like to talk latakoo, online video, the open, social web or open source, I’m using Ohours to meet up with people on Sunday the 11th.

A geek’s guide to writing

Ben Werdmuller March 2, 2012 | Comments (1)

NOT one of THOSEI’ve had this idea for a story for years. We live in a world where truth is curated for us, everything we do can be tracked and used to infer things about what we’re going to do next, and identity is defined by what we broadcast. What happens when we no longer fit into the narrative?

This year, I’m writing it. It’s called Profiled, and I’ll be releasing it in installments later this year, alongside a blog about taking a lean startup approach to writing a novel. You can sign up for free here. (And yes, these posts and the signup form are my minimum viable product.)

I can’t tell you too much about my actual writing thought process, because I don’t know what to say. I’m getting into the story, which is probably a good sign, but there’s no getting away from the fact that I’ve never done this before. I need professional advice and editing. More on that another time.

Nor can I talk authoritatively about how to write in terms of the structure of language or narrative. Instead, I thought I’d tell you a little about my setup:

Sitting down to write

Years of Internet work (and obsessive Twitter checking) have left me with a very short attention span. I’m shockingly easy to distract.

For a while I was using Dr Evil’s Write Or Die, a little Adobe Air app that forces you to write a certain number of words in a pre-defined timeframe. Plug in 500 words and 25 minutes, and you’re off, racing against the timer. The app punishes you if you pause significantly. If you’re feeling particularly masochistic, it’ll even start to delete your work, word by word.

I wrote my first published short story this way, but this is a very stressful way to write a longer piece. Also, Adobe Air is unholy. So for Profiled, I’ve been experimenting with the same methodology I use in my day job: the Pomodoro Technique.

I give my Pomodoro session a brief title based on what I intend to write about (although I don’t hold myself to it), hit “OK”, and write until the timer goes off. Pomodoro gives me five minutes’ break, and then I start again. It’s a great way to write regularly and sustainably.

Keeping track of my writing

I’ve got both LibreOffice and Microsoft Office on my computer, as well as TextWrangler, OmmWriter and a number of other editors. But what really works for me is Scrivener.

I’ve got to admit that I was skeptical about all the hype around Scrivener, but it just works. It’s got a distraction-free text editor, it allows me to rearrange portions of my story as I see fit, and is unrepentantly geeky in the way that it stores my writing. It’s like dealing with a well-designed Git client for creative writing. If you’ve been hesitating over the “buy” button, I can confirm that it’s worth every penny.

(Side note: I did once start a poetry anthology as an open source Github repository. It turns out, though, that I’m not a poet. I’d be very interested in collaborating with poets on something similar though.)

The whole thing – like virtually all of my documents – is backed up on Dropbox (I’m a paying user), which allows me to keep track of versions and sync across any of my devices. Cloud services have changed the way I use my computers, and that’s no different here.

Research

Inevitably, almost all my research has been on the web. I’ve never been someone who keeps bookmarks, or leaves a bunch of tabs open overnight. My browser windows never stay open for more than a few hours. So when I do want to keep something, I need another approach.

Obviously, I use Evernote. It’s magic: notes, bookmarks, images and audio notes are all synced across my devices, available to me offline and easily searchable. The Chrome plugin is seamless. I wouldn’t use anything else.

Not-promotion

This has been my biggest struggle. I’m used to the instant gratification of social media, and there’s nothing instantly gratifying about writing long-form pieces. I previously shared a taster, but this was from my first draft – it’s likely to change significantly before I’m done. Should I have shared it at all? Probably not. In fact, I’m not convinced that my extended social media use is good for me at all – but that’s a subject for another post.

For now, my plan is to hold back and write, while gauging interest in the project. I’d love your input, both on the software I’m using above, and the themes that I’m incorporating into the story. But it won’t be ready til it’s ready.

In the meantime, you should definitely subscribe to updates here.

10 rules for startups

Ben Werdmuller | Comments (1)

  1. The user isn’t the product being sold. The user is the customer.
  2. Startups become big by empowering their customers with great products and services that allow them to do things that were previously difficult or impossible.
  3. A company is a group of people with a shared goal.
  4. Everyone deserves a chance to make progress on meaningful work.
  5. Stay hungry. Stay foolish.
  6. You aren’t Steve Jobs, so don’t be a jerk.
  7. Meetings are toxic, but necessary. Manage them in a constructive way.
  8. Everything is a conversation.
  9. Everyone must bring something to the table. There is no room for “ideas guys”.
  10. Businesses make money.

Using bandwidth effectively

Ben Werdmuller March 1, 2012 | Leave a comment

I wrote a post over on the latakoo blog about using bandwidth resources judiciously:

Too many apps and services treat bandwidth as an unconstrained, ubiquitous resource. We think that’s wrong, for a number of reasons.

So early on in latakoo’s development, we decided to compress video before sending it to the cloud. We harnessed the fact that computers are faster and more powerful than they’ve ever been, and decided to trade a more difficult development process for a much easier user experience. It’s possible to make video sizes much smaller while protecting quality, and as a result, that 2Gb uncompressed HD file could be sent in minutes over a 3G connection, without significantly affecting your bandwidth bill.

You can read the whole post over here.

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