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  • Ben 7:18 pm on November 3, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Berlin Wall, berlinwall, fotw, TwitPaint,   

    TwitPaint – Paint the Berlin Wall Contest With Your Graffiti 

    As you may or may not know, the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall is on Nov. 9. This historic event was preceded by years of sadness, and in protest many citizens on the western side of the wall painted graffiti. Presumably because they had the time and would not be chased down and questioned by secret police for doing this. To commemorate the anniversary, TwitPaint and DeutschLern Net are holding a “Paint the Berlin Wall Contest.”


    Paint the Berlin Wall on Twitpaint

    >Paint some graffiti on the berlin wall to protest in spirit. on twitter. instantly. Click Here.

    Want to see some of the best entries in the contest so far? Check out the best graffiti on the Berlin Wall.

    __________________________Deutsch______________________
    Wie Sie vielleicht nicht wissen, ist der 20. Jahrestag des Falls der Berliner Mauer am 9. November. Dieses historische Ereignis wurde von der Trauer Jahre voraus, und aus Protest viele Bürgerinnen und Bürger auf beiden Seiten die Wand gemalt Graffiti. Um dies zu feiern, TwitPaint im Besitz einer “Paint Contest der Berliner Mauer.”

    Paint einigen Graffiti auf der Berliner Mauer nach Ost Deutschland im Geiste zu protestieren. auf Twitter. sofort. Klicken Sie hier.

    Willst du einige der besten Einsendungen des Wettbewerbs finden Sie so weit? Schauen Sie sich die besten Graffiti an der Berliner Mauer.

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  • Ben 6:49 pm on September 28, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: How To, Idea to Software, Idea to Web Service, technical co founder, web2py, y-combinator   

    How Does a Business Person Turn a Software Idea Into a Start-Up? 

    As someone who continues to have ideas and is interested in making them a reality, I am extremely curious to know the different ways that this can be accomplished. After having done some research on my own I have come up with three real options…

    1. Pay a Programmer / Developer to Build a Solution



    2. Find a Technical Co-Founder



    3. Learn to Do it Yourself

    Each one of these paths has its own merits and downfalls, so lets examine them a little bit further.

    1. Pay a Programmer / Developer to Build a Solution

    This is a great option if you have the cash, but if you are like me and just graduated from college it is not that easy. Of course any Mr. Moneybags can buy the appropriately skilled engineers and have their idea built into a working prototype but that is not a good use of time or money.

    Ultimately, two thirds of all software development costs are maintenance, and software development is also never done (until proven unprofitable or in the non-profit sector, useless.) If you have a solution built to your needs and handed off, 99% of the time you will have to pay much more money to have them come and provide periodic updates and additions that are really devalued if they don’t have a personal stake in the product. So in reality, that only leaves us with two choices:

    2. Find a Technical Co-Founder

    This is by far the best choice, although arguably the most difficult. There is a great post that is several years old in the Y-Combinator Hacker News that talks about this, but it links to a dead blog post. The resolution I have come to is that there are a few key things to look out for, but essentially networking and personal connections are the best way to go about it. You can not post a job listing for a co-founder, it will not work.

    You can however, get out to the various networking events in the Bay Area and other Tech Hubs and talk to like-minded people. My finding is that the people at these events have similar goals to you if not the same, and can likely recommend someone or at least point you in the right direction. I may or may not be in the middle of doing this right now for my own idea.

    3. Learn to Do it Yourself

    As Paul Graham, god of start-up wisdom has said: “…if you want to invest two years in something that will help you succeed in business, the evidence suggests you’d do better to learn how to hack than get an MBA.” I think this is certainly true. As daunting of a challenge as it may seem, the proliferation of the internet and its very nature of allowing you to teach yourself have made this much easier than in any other technical industry. You can use the internet to teach you how to make new stuff for the internet — I love this concept. No more chicken in the egg.

    Tools like Web2Py can really speed this along for people with a little bit of a technical understanding. If you are really a beginner then it would probably make sense to visit the section of your local bookstore that contains programming books and begin from the very basics with some light CSS and XHTML, then step it up. I have a firm grasp of CSS and XHTML but am a total beginner with python.
    At this point, it is a split for me between options 2 and 3. I believe the best course would be to find a technical co-founder through networking and simultaneously learn what it would take to do it myself.

    Update: I am learning to program myself. Period. Thanks again to Paul Graham and his great article on what makes a Great Hacker. He points out that in order to have good taste, you have to understand what it is you are tasting. How are you going to know how to find a good programmer, if you don’t know what it takes to be one?

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  • Ben 4:57 am on September 20, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Code Camp, Code Camp 09, Silicon Valley, Silicon Valley Code Camp   

    Silicon Valley Code Camp — Coming Right Up 

    If you are in the Silicon Valley area and you are interested in software development or web services in general, join me and my dad (aint that great?) at the Silicon Valley Code Camp on October 3rd and 4th at Foothill College.

    See you there...

    See you there...






    It’s gonna be a great event, I’ll be mingling and mixing it up with everyone so come on over and hear my dad’s talk about taking your Code to Complete Product and Brand.

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  • Ben 9:57 pm on September 8, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: PubSubHubBub, RealTimeWeb, RSSCloud,   

    RSSCloud and PubSubHubBub – What’s Up? 

    RSSCloud and PubSubHubBub are two ways of accomplishing one very simple goal:

    RSSCloud and PubSubHubBub basically enable RSS Feeds to update in real time instead of periodically — and RSS Feeds are already installed on all modern blogs and content management systems on the web.

    What does this mean?

    Do you know how Twitter works in Real Time?  Whenever a person you follow posts an update to twitter it is immediately “pushed” to simultaneously update in every place where you might read it in “Real Time”.

    This means that every blog on the internet is now capable of updating RSS Feed readers in real time, and has the potential to give everybody access to the content contained on the entire internet at the speed of a Twitter update.

    From the technical side it means that instead of your feed reader having to periodically “poll” the content source to find any new updates, the content source has the power to host the update “in the cloud” and make it available almost instantaneously to anyone who may want to read / consume the content.

    This is a huge paradigm shift in the flow of the internet and it will be extremely interesting to see how developers build new services to take advantage of this fact…

    I don’t know about you but I just installed the RSSCloud WordPress Plugin and I am pretty excited. =)

    Update:

    Here is a more detailed description from the RSSCloud website:

    Three sided-cloud Permalink to this headline.

    There are three sides to the cloud:

    1. The authoring tool. I edit and update a feed. It contains a <cloud> element that says how a subscriber should request to notification of updates.
    2. The cloud. It is notified of an update, and then in turn notifies all subscribers.
    3. The subscriber. A feed reader, aggregator, whatever — that subscribes to feeds that may or may not be part of a cloud.
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