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August 2007

August 31, 2007

Office 2.0 Un-Conference

NB!: Even if you are registered for Office 2.0, you have to separately register for the un-conference.

Next Wednesday I'm co-hosting an open event as part of the Office 2.0 conference.  Ismael Ghalimi:

The Office 2.0 Conference will be preceded by an Unconference (aka Open Space) kindly organized by Kaliya Hamlin, Identity Woman, and Ross Mayfied, Socialtext CEO. The unconference is open to all conference attendees, as well as the general public. It will take place on September 5th, 2007, from 9:00AM to 5:00PM in the Impressionist room at the St. Regis Hotel, San Francisco, CA. Registration is now open.

A $20 registration fee will be collected at the entrance (payment by cash or check). Coffee and snacks will be served during the event, but plans for lunch will be made on the fly by attendees, in pure unconference style. The hotel can only accommodate about 75 people, therefore registrations should be made as soon as possible.

While we don't know what will happen, the topical focus of Office 2.0 could lead to some very interesting topics.

August 30, 2007

Microsoft Acquires Parlano, Enterprise 2.0 Group Chat pre-integrated with Socialtext

Microsoft acquired enterprise group chat provider Parlano today for undisclosed terms.  Parlano's MindAlign product has made significant headway in financial services and I first encountered them deployed at Dresdner KlienwortSocialtext offers pre-integration with MindAlign, which will be incorporated into Microsoft Office Communications Server and Microsoft Office Communicator, Microsoft’s server and client software for presence, instant messaging, conferencing and VoIP.  We see this news as a further complement to our SocialPoint offering which integrates Socialtext best-of-breed wiki with Sharepoint.

Congratulations to CEO Nick Fera and the good folks at Parlano.  Don Dodge shares how his team at Microsoft brought them in.  There are interesting competitive implications for this acquisition for Cisco, among others.  Early adopters of such technology will probably equate it with industrial strength IRC, and get how vital this kind of tool can be collaboration.

August 21, 2007

BarCampBlock Sponsor Roll

Please help BarCampBlock thank our 100 sponsors who made this event free and possible.  Visit them, thank them and cross-post this sponsor roll to give them some link love.

  1. 30 Boxes
  2. 500 Hats
  3. Atlassian
  4. BayCHI
  5. BlogWorld Expo
  6. Bode Media
  7. Brian Solis
  8. bub.blicio.us
  9. CastTV
  10. CenterNetworks
  11. Cerado Haystack
  12. Charles River Ventures
  13. Chocolate Dividends
  14. Citizen Agency
  15. CommunityNext
  16. DCM
  17. DeWitt Clinton
  18. DFJ
  19. DIGG
  20. EchoSign
  21. Edgeio
  22. Eventbrite
  23. Facebook
  24. FirstRound
  25. FutureWorks 
  26. Get Satisfaction
  27. GigaOM
  28. Google
  29. Hikkup
  30. HP
  31. IBM
  32. IDEO
  33. IFTF
  34. Ignite PR
  35. Independents Hall
  36. Inovis
  37. Intellitics
  38. Intuix LLC
  39. Jaiku
  40. Jajah
  41. JanRain
  42. Jeff Clavier
  43. Joe Hewitt
  44. Joyent
  45. JPG Magazine
  46. JS-Kit
  47. Koders
  48. Krasimira Nikolova
  49. Laughing Squid
  50. Leverage Software
  51. LinkedIn
  52. Lumeno.us
  53. Ma.gnolia
  54. Meraki
  55. Mind Science
  56. Move Digital
  57. Mozes
  58. Mozilla
  59. MyStrands
  60. Ning
  61. Node 101
  62. Omidyar Network
  63. Open Publishing
  64. Oracle
  65. O'Reilly Publishing
  66. OrganicStats
  67. Orkut
  68. P’unk Avenue
  69. Palomar Ventures
  70. Pandora
  71. PBWiki
  72. Pete Prodoehl
  73. Plasq

August 20, 2007

BarCampBlock Learnings

At BarCamp, I think participants gain one thing overall.  A belief in sharing.  It is a real barn raising.  From event organization, volunteers pitching in, neighbors opening their doors, donors fulfilling need, speakers coming out of the woodwork, sociable hallways and sidewalks -- and mostly people sharing concepts and code for anyone to build upon.  The underlying culture of the Valley, the part that powers our engines of growth and creative destruction, was definitively in downtown Palo Alto this weekend.  You could hear echos of the research parks, events, bars and homebrew computer clubs that used to get people out of their garages to build something new, together.

BarCampBlock successfully scaled participation to a new level.  Thanks to the people who opened their doors (Socialtext, IDEO, IFTF, Edgeio, SearchSpark, EchoSign, Princeton Review and Riviera Partners all donated, and a deal cut with Blue Chalk Cafe) -- we had room for ~1,000 participants and ~20 concurrent sessions.  We had over 100 sponsors and a great way of thanking them is copying and posting the Sponsor Roll

The block concept was borne out of a simple need to expand beyond the Socialtext office.  We are lucky to have some great outdoor areas around the office that gives it a campus feel, but when we hosted Dcamp using the adjacent Princeton Review space, we knew we were at a limit of 300.  We ended up with space sponsors no more than two blocks away in three directions.  Blocking the street off would have been a lot of bureaucracy (permit, insurance, fire, police) and only helped for hallway space unless you added the cost of tenting. 

The end vision of this could be taking over an entire downtown.  But to do so would require several things, starting with more advance planning than two weeks, a better assembly area, grid and wiki use.

One thing we explored was having different spaces host different themes (e.g. a design camp at IDEO, future camp at IFTF). We decided that even if the core location wasn't themeless it could hurt the highly valued cross-pollenization and not to try the experiment this time.  But I think it could help with the mental model of the space for participants and help the law of two feet.  While we allowed for ample time between sessions (15 min), the law of two feet says you are responsible for your own experience and if you aren't getting what you want out of a session to go find a conversation elsewhere.  I don't think people did this unless it was within Socialtext.  IFTF, for example, had four rooms and very different topics at a given time.  Having a theme for a satellite space I actually believe would work against homogeneity, attract more participants, enable space hosts to be more involved, but you would need time directed at main space activities.

As a main space activity I'm less a fan of is DemoCamp, because it works against the law of two feet.  It asks all participants to have dedicated attention to 5 minute structured demos.  My preference is for these demos to be regular sessions (with clear warnings if they will be commercial instead of conversational).  Just like when we saw Flock, Pandora and other launches at the first BarCamp, the best part of it was the conversations that validated demos and feedback for presenters.  That said, BarCamp has become such a big thing that having DemoCamp as an escape valve for product pitches may be good. 

Also, unfortunately, the Blue Chalk space had bad audio dynamics that amplified when someone was having a conversation instead of listening to the demos.  The space was good for the party and saved us for session capacity, but without booking well in advance we didn't have many other options.  I am unabashedly a fan of having a big party, bringing everyone together without their laptops, and outdoors would be even better, but when planning you need to, again, give people the ability to opt out -- and find a quiet place to go hack (we kept a Socialtext office open, but it was a little distant to be ideal).

Capacity estimation is a very big problem.  Eventbrite was a good tool for registration, but perhaps we could make it more granular (day 1, evening 1, day 2, etc.) and start registration earlier.  When you go from 200 to 1,000 people registered in a week, that really effects your ability to reserve the right spaces.

Signage, courtesy of Yahoo!, absolutely rocked.  But given what we all do for a living or interest, there is a mashup for blockmobs that needs to be made: A living map that lets you view, fast forward and rewind the schedule and geotagged twits/jaikus/wiki pages.  It also needs a mobile version for the live stream.  This isn't the most important thing, but it sure would be neat.  It is hard aggregate and visualize such a dynamic physical and conversational space.

Having a Kid space was absolutely great.  I brought my son by Sunday and it both gave him an experience and I had mine.  I noticed Jyri's Jaiku that the kid space was empty when we walked by it on Sunday, which reminded me of how many people participated in Reboot in Denmark with their families.  Some of it is the culture of Northern Europe, but they went beyond the affordance of a room with toys.  Everyone was in a way watching out for the little ones.  BarCamps are hard on families, taking that time away on a weekend should be recognized as lost potential.  I would strongly suggest for a BarCamp of any decent scale to create a KidCamp -- a themed camp for not just kids, but families.  Let not only babysitting self-organize, but let people bring group activities for kids, give lectures storytime and have talks on parenting.

Lastly, to make it downtown-scale, you should involve local businesses.  For example, Fraiche Yogurt offered 20% off and got more than business in return.  If you scale this up to 5,000 people, which I think is possible, regardless of the appealing demographics, you suddenly have leverage in where they go to work out favorable terms with local venues and services.  You could also benefit from cooperation with the city manager's office, get a common insurance policy and enable more creative things.

But there I go again exploring how to make it even bigger.  Liz Henry has some fantastic and practical notes on organizing BarCampBlock.  And I have to say it is absolutely amazing to work with Chris Messina, Tara Hunt, Liz Henry, Tantek as organizers and core volunteers like Tara Anderson.  While I may have co-founded BarCamp by simply being a good neighbor, it is amazing how Chris and Tara have turned it into a global phenomenon.  I can't thank people enough, and haven't even written about the content of the event yet, but can say I look forward to the next one.

August 17, 2007

Social Graph and Privacy

Perhaps the most interesting conversation I hope to have at BarCamp this weekend is on these thoughts on the social graph problem, by Brad Fitzpatrick with contribution by David Recordon.  Dave, btw, is stuffing bottles for BarCamp as we speak and I just met him for the first time today.  So I might go add him as a on Facebook or somewhere and maybe as a friend a whole bunch of places later.  You know the drill.

A long time ago we talked about standards for social networking.  We had Marc Canter beating the FOAF bongo and all knew when Social Networking needed openess before it closed.  Not just when we moved en mass from Ryze to Friendster to Tribe to Orkut and the 500+ YASNS that followed, but started straddling social tools. There is no doubt about the user need for portability with identity and relationships (although faceted), and significant commercial need for building networks and marketing to them.  Such incentives concern me.

I've been trying to think through ways the proposed system could be gamed.  Basically, so long as you still have to opt into each graph, control the facet of your identity you are expressing, and opt-in to each relationship in each context -- most of the privacy concerns could be controlled.  There are security threats that need many eyes on the problem. A standard to code towards and a clearinghouse for data will undoubtedly unleash constructive innovation. 

Perhaps it is the apps that ride the graph themselves that are the concern. You probably already understand how an app, lets say through Facebook, can be designed for extreme virality with little social consideration.  But how an app traverses an opted-in graph is of less concern as each SNS or graph has incentives to limit this and the proposed standard limits scope to identity and relationships, not profile data. 

The one concern I can come up with, and it could be addressed, is the power given to third party developers.  If you are a developer as described, you could find out what graphs a given identity is a part of.  It isn't clear if a developer gets access to relationships post-opt-in towards the developer on a per user basis.

Like I said, I'm looking forward to the conversation.  The concept is fascinating and it is better to have more eyes on the opportunity.

It's those incentives that scare me, along with new potential for relationship theft.  It may just be part of the world that's coming, but consider how it could play out.  A Fakester or two attracts you and your friends.  Then joins another social network that has a completely different social context.  It isn't just if you opt into the graph.  It may not even matter entirely because enough edges are around you.

 

Pibb Web Chat with IRC for Barcamp

For BarCamp, we are using a web based chat program called Pibb.  It's made by the good folks at JanRain, who have done some amazing work on OpenID.  Using this identity backbone, they also created a fun site called Jyte for asserting and voting on claims.  But the thing I'm really stoked about how they integrated IRC through a bot.  For years we've begged for a simple web based client for IRC, partially because nobody knows what IRC stands for or what client to download or how to set them up. 

You can read about this on their blog.  If you want to find something to volunteer for, do it the good old way with IRC #barcamp, or go sign-in with your OpenID and jump into the Barcamp channel.

No, I didn't say IRC 2.0.

And on the fourth and fifth day

Facebook flaked on sponsoring BarCamp, amazes me, but if we get a few more $300 donations we should be okay. If you know any company that contribute, please reach out to them to be a BarCamp Sponsor.  Merkai is doing a great job on the solar wifi.  Providing bandwidth for the Blue Chalk Cafe is the next challenge. 

With 800 people, we may be a bit short on space during the day, mostly because a lot of the meeting rooms are small.  We could have 20 concurrent sessions, so that and geography will make a lot of the ad hoc coordination happen in real time and it could be challenging.  The weather be good, so there will be lots of hallway conversations outdoors.

We also need people to step up and be volunteers.  Go find a place on the wiki or pop into #barcamp on IRC.

UPDATE: MindScience.org stepped up to cover half of the party expense!

we need approximately $2k more...

August 15, 2007

Mobile Enterprise 2.0

Stephen Johnston, my old friend and customer at Nokia, has an extensive post on mobility and Enterprise 2.0.  He provides an overview of the category, survey of existing developments, case for Nokia to participate and builds an argument for open and collaborative development.  Of course, I'll just extract the section on wikis and collective intelligence:

Amazon is often held up as the first example of a service provider that lets users benefit from collective intelligence through their collaborative filtering engine. So, why would this not also work in areas other than books? For example, "intelligent" CRM software could scan the salesperson's customer responses, and suggests appropriate product offerings based on large numbers of other interactions, potentially also outside the company. (Actually, maybe it does already, it’s been a while since I worked in the industry). Most sales people are inherently mobile, and providing lightweight usable tools that expose this collective intelligence at the right time and in the right context, could be a very valuable offering to mobile users.

Wikis are great at capturing user-created intelligence and are rapidly becoming mainstream in the enterprise space, but if you’ve ever tried using one of today’s wikis from your mobile, you’ll appreciate the inherent problems here. Socialtext have been making moves in this regard, but here is a standard chicken-and-egg problem – limited demand resulting in limited development time, begetting limited offerings. UI and synchronization are the key issues to solve. As noted above, services requring smart and big browsers face an uphill struggle on the mobile. Today’s wikis often suggest side-by-side version control review, and require a big screen to see the differences. Synchronization is a key conceptual challenge with mobile, since they generally are not always on. Wikis rely on having one version of the truth – two people making changes to the same item when offline then syncing later makes would vex Schrödinger himself.

Today project managers in Nokia that I work with will generally just create an empty wiki space as they start a new project. This example is being played out across the corporate landscape, and could well disrupt collaboration applications that are built on the assumption that the designers – cut off from the action – know what’s right for each project. Here Nokia’s interests are well aligned with the wiki companies and web services companies in general – do away with the need for a PC and keep the smarts in the cloud. Once bottom up “architectures of participation” are in place, powerful learnings can then be harnessed - enterprise-focused social networking tools (Ryze, Tribe, LinkedIn) are able to unearth links, activities and dependencies around the organization which traditional hierarchies and organizational structures miss.

There are plenty of ways that mobiles could be used as both in-the-field data gatherers, providing relelvant context, or being the mobile manager’s tool of choice for viewing and interacting with the wisdom of the crowds who have gone before.

If you haven't tried Miki the mobile wiki, log on with your Socialtext hosted credentials at http://mi.ki with your mobile web browser.

August 14, 2007

And on the third day...

It's time to put the Bar back in BarCamp. We nailed down the Blue Chalk Cafe for both the party Saturday and as a conference space during the day.   This was a big relief given that we have 520 registrants so far.  Also, I'll have final confirmation tonight, but it looks like Facebook is stepping up to sponsor the party.  T-shirts came in today.  And Merkai is in the office next door setting up solar wifi.  Right now it looks pretty good if the cash sponsorships keep pace with registrations.

MuleSource Adopts CPAL

MuleSource announced today that they are adopting the Common Public Attribution License (CPAL) for its products, the third such company to do so.  On InfoWorld's Open Source blog, CEO Dave Rosenberg provides a great Q&A on his licensing decision and article in BusinessWeek.  Also see Matt Asay's commentary.

If you are considering adopting CPAL, do check out Dan Bricklin's guide and related blog post.

Well done Dave.

August 12, 2007

And on the second day...

Since my last post, BarCampBlock has raised $2,700 (Slideshare, Laughing Squid, Mohr Davidow Ventures, JS-Kit, Charles River Ventures, TechSmith, GigaOM, LinkedIn and Scripting News), doubling the cash contribution.  Good thing too, the number of participants has practically tripled, is rising, might end up doubling from here to 800 -- and everyone will needs the basics of food, shelter, wifi, stickers and t-shirts.  Thanks again to in-kind contributors Google (meal), Yahoo (signage) and Meraki (solar wifi!).

Part of what is great about BarCamp is it is Open as in Door.  To pull this off we need three things:

  1. At least two significant in-kind sponsors to step up and cover a meal and the party.  Scoble made a great suggestion for HP to Open the Garage.  We have more space that we can expand into on the blocks (btw, we do not have a permit to block off the street) and party locations bidding.
  2. More cash donors.  Remember this is a non-profit event, but scaling needs support.
  3. Participants must register with Eventbright.  And show up!  Don't let food go to waste.  And note that if you don't come to BarCamp Saturday morning, you don't get to come to the party that night.

Now the fun stuff.  Here's what I can't predict, but hope happens at BarCamp:

  • Some new startups launch that we've never seen before
  • A new adhoc standard is created
  • Some new open source hack
  • A group of people remembers we are about to elect a President and does something about it
  • Someone meets an either humble or out-of-place VC and gets to do their thing
  • A bunch of people get jobs and even more find causes to volunteer for
  • We all remember it is sharing that made the Valley great

August 10, 2007

BarCamp Block Party

Ok, holy smokes, next weekend's BarCamp Block Party could be absolutely huge.  The map of confirmed BarCampBlockLocations has room for over 500 participants.  Please sign up now so we can get a good estimate for attendees for meals and parties (wiki/Upcoming/Facebook).

Also, we are looking for feedback on the idea of it becoming a BarCampOree.

BarCampOree is a thematic approach for BarCampBlock that we are considering for having different BarCampBlockSessions grouped by both location and theme.  We are soliciting feedback on this idea from participants and providers of BarCampBlockLocations.  Here's the general idea:

* DesignCamp at IDEO
* FutureCamp at IFTF
* OpenSourceCamp at Socialtext 2
* EnterpriseCamp at Socialtext 1
* OfficeCamp at Intalio
* ConsumerCamp at Edgeio

We are still looking for cash ($300 limit) and in-kind sponsors.  So far we have Socialtext, Strategiclee, Web 2.0 Expo, TechCrunch, Yahoo, GoogleLumeno.us, Timbuk2 Designs, Leverage Software, Citizen Agency, CommunityNext, BayCHI and Ma.gnolia. Also, it looks like we may have a solar powered wifi mesh that covers half of Downtown Palo Alto.

We created the first BarCamp in just seven days, an that's about how much we have left.  Please blog this , or volunteer.

UPDATE:  Mike Arrington blogged it, and reflects:

Two years ago I attended the first Bar Camp, which was held at Social Text’s offices in Palo alto. It was just a few weeks after starting TechCrunch, and nearly everyone I met there is now a friend. It was held just before all the craziness happened with the web, and the people who were starting companies weren’t expecting much of a return - they were doing it out of passion.

Pandora and TechMeme launched at the event, and we got our first glimpse of Flock. My notes on the event are here and here.

Since the original event there have been over 150 Bar Camps held around the world. 10,000 or so people have attended at least one of them.

UPDATE: Slideshare just offered to sponsor in comments, and I updated the wiki accordingly

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  • Ross Mayfield is the Chairman, President & Co-founder of Socialtext, the first wiki company and leading provider of Enterprise 2.0 solutions,
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