Author Archive

iCal: where’s the map field?

// February 2nd, 2009 // 0 Comments // Other news, Products



iCal: where’s the map field?

Originally uploaded by thatjonesboy

I really don’t like Apple’s iCal. If it weren’t so tightly integrated to OS X and the iPhone I would prefer not to use it. It has so many weird interface things going it’s actually quite hard to use. It’s well below par when measured against most Apple apps.

It’s not only the unconventional interface that lets it down. It also lacks a few features that I’d consider a no-brainer.

For instance, as of this month even iPhoto supports mapping through Google Maps, so why, in this day and age, can’t iCal lookup an address when I enter it in the location field and provide a map?

iPhoto ’09 face recognition: when tech and magic blur

// January 29th, 2009 // 0 Comments // software

Even I — hard-nosed, sceptical war-of-information-technology veteran that I am — still get excited about new technology sometimes. Sometimes, the application of a new technology to my everyday life is so good that it seems like science fiction or like magic.

Face recognition technology is not that new — it’s been around in various shapes and forms for decades — but the processing power and memory available in a personal computer in recent years has allowed face recognition to filter in from the mainframes in the Pentagon to the Mac on your desk.

Riya - Visual Search

A couple of years ago I got quite excited by the work Tara Hunt was doing for Riya.com, which originally used recognition algorithms to build collections of people and words in a big aggregated database of photos. Since then Riya’s switched to recognition-powered shopping search, which I find less cool (but I guess it’s more likely to pay the bills). And there’s more… (more…)

What can Hip Hop teach us about social media?

// January 27th, 2009 // 0 Comments // Social Media

Quite a bit, actually. Mark Pollard is a web strategy guy for an advertising agency. Yes, I know, that’s an unusual position for someone who is experienced and intelligent. He has an abundance of both, so let’s assume the agency accidentally hired the wrong man.

7 things you can learn from hip hop – Ignite Sydney  

View more presentations or upload your own. (tags: ignitesydney media)

So there we have it:

  1. Pay your dues
  2. Understand influence
  3. Keep it real
  4. (Non-physical) beef OK
  5. Pass the mic
  6. Let people self-regulate
  7. Get off the computer
Pardon me, must get off the computer…

Meet the “kiss-ass” team at Atomeet

// January 14th, 2009 // 0 Comments // Fun

Meet the “kiss-ass” team at Atomeet

Originally uploaded by thatjonesboy

I think they mean “kick-ass”. But hey, I speak absolutely no French, so I can hardly criticize. Or maybe they really do kiss ass…

Happy whatever season

// December 23rd, 2008 // 0 Comments // Other news

The interweb doesn’t really go away over the holiday period and this year more than ever we’ll be glued to our RSS readers and Twitter clients, addicted to watching the world economy slip further into the yawning chasm of the econolypse.

I certainly won’t be sending anyone any Christmas cards this year and the trend of sending Flash-based cheesy online greeting cards was embarrassingly naff almost before it got started.

Instead, let’s have some fun at religion’s expense with this great episode of Mr. Deity and the Dress Rehearsal- Season 2, Ep 10. Crackle won’t let me embed the video player in this post, which is mildly annoying, but hey, if they don’t need the additional pageviews…

Anyway, it’s definitely worth the clickthru so in the meantime, hope you have a happy whatever season. Hope we both still have a job and a share portfolio come New Year’s Day.

Pollenizer: feels like coming home

// December 19th, 2008 // 0 Comments // Me



Kiva Gift Certificate from Pollenizer

Originally uploaded by thatjonesboy

I never had a second to really blog about it but a week ago I accepted an offer to join Pollenizer full-time after subcontracting to them on various projects over 2008.

The last few days have been absolutely insanely busy for all of us, but somehow, on top of all the other madness Mick and Phil at Pollenizer found time to thank me and wish me a merry Christmas with the perfect gift.

It’s a big increase on my current Kiva portfolio and I will set aside some time on the 25th to allocate some new loans to teh ppl. Everybody wins when Pollenizer sends you a gift.

Of course, this does nothing to change the fact that I’m outta here the moment a proper job comes along… kidding!

Proper job: no social media access on the office network, no install permissions on the machine, it’s not a Mac, trying to find a printer and connect to it, internal mail groups with 200 subscribers and nobody reading, conference rooms as welcoming as the bottom drawer of the freezer, hunting for your VPN dongle and crawling access for out-of-hours work, having your boss pinch the best bits of your powerpoint and taking all the credit for the idea, heavy-lifting colleagues out of C20th ways of thinking about business, clients and suppliers and partners all talking relationships when what they really mean is date rape, standing around a sad crappy factory-made birthday cake rush-bought by someone’s PA every Friday morning as if it means we care about the three people whose birthdays happened a few days ago, introducing yourself to someone at friday after-work drinks and then realising you’ve been working on the same project for months…

…no thanks!

I feel like I was raised by the white man but I’m with my own tribe now.

Thanks Pollenizer for welcoming me home!

You took 12 trips to 11 cities in 2008. And you don’t care.

// December 19th, 2008 // 0 Comments // Other news

More pretty, shiny pointlessness from Dopplr. Please guys, is there a real-world problem you can solve for me? My social network profile pages are already cluttered with more shiny widgets than anyone has the attention span for.

Peace on earth, good reading to all men

// December 12th, 2008 // 0 Comments // people

In addition to world peace, an actual reduction in global carbon emissions in 2009 (versus a promise to do better) and an end to the Econolypse, here’s a list of things that would surprise and delight me.

Just in case you’ve enjoyed Doing Words this year sooo much that you’d like to show me some lurv.

Wishing you peace, love, and good reading.

How do you get users to upload their profile picture?

// December 11th, 2008 // 0 Comments // Social Media

Please make the scary man go away!
Please make the scary man go away!

Ever since My Yahoo! introduced personalised content to the web, product strategists like me have been struggling with getting more than 10% of our users to actually use the personalisation features available.

Personalisation matters to a product like My Yahoo! because it’s intended to give the company a far richer understanding of the user’s preferences for content, allowing closer targeting for marketers.

Personalisation matters even more to any social media business, because observing user behaviour has taught me that new visitors often judge the ‘interestingness’ of the product according to how personalised user profiles are. A classic case is MySpace – user experience as ugly as the wrong end of a bulldog but users love it because they can see right away that real people like them – warts and all – use it.

The toughest part of profile personalisation is getting users to add an avatar – an image of themselves (whether that be an actual photo or representational graphic) to their profile page. Privacy fears often take hold when you ask people to post their photo on the interweb.

Socialmedian.com has a great idea for encouraging users to change their profile picture – make the default picture something unbearably horrible.

Far-right Republicans aside, this image is certain to prompt people to reach, shaky-handed, for the webcam.

Thanks to Social Media Today for the tip.

On the importance of owning your web platform

// December 9th, 2008 // 0 Comments // platform, Startup, strategy

 

Who cares how the platform works? This is the subtext to a lot of web startup business plans I see
“Who cares how the platform works”? This is the subtext to a lot of web startup business plans I see. At this point, you’ve lost me.

For web businesses, web platforms are not like phone connections and photocopy paper, they are tightly woven into the fabric of every aspect of your company

But first, big props to Balsamiq, the mockup tool I used to do the image above. It costs $79, comes in Mac, Windows, and Linux versions, or you can use it from within ConfluenceJIRA and XWiki wikis if you use one of those to manage your product process. It’s the best quick mockup tool I’ve ever used – quicker even than pencil and paper, and after about a month of use, it’s an essential part of my paper prototyping and developer briefing toolkit. Product people: if you have a customer or business process owner who’s always bugging you, give them this to use and tell them if they can sketch it, you’ll build it. It’s so easy to use even the dumbest marketing manager can figure it out. It’ll teach them more about web development than a week of workshops and you can get some real work done in the meantime. More about Balsamiq later.

If you’re starting a trucking company, you need at least one guy who knows about trucks. If you’re going to franchise a network of muffin bakeries, better get yourself someone who can make great muffins. Have a guess what kind of skills you need to have before you decide to open a scuba school… give yourself a gold star.

Late last week I met with a potential client (yay, I love potential clients, sometimes even more than actual clients.) The potential client shall remain nameless to protect their identity.

We met. They stepped me through an impressive and well thought-out introduction to the business, all the way through a detailed business plan, laboriously detailed spreadsheets listing costs to be incurred in the first three years, introduced the entire executive team and… uh oh…

…there was no Chief Technology Officer on the executive team. There was no budget line for recruiting a top-line team of web developers, product manager, interaction designer and customer service manager. They were planning to outsource the whole lot.

Common mistake, but critical mistake nonetheless.

Let me be absolutely clear on this: if you are a web business, you need to own your own web platform. You need to have the people responsible for the web platform represented at director level in your company, aligned with your business goals and sufficiently motivated to bring onboard a web platform team of the highest calibre.

If you’re starting a trucking company, you need at least one person who knows about trucks. If you’re going to franchise a network of muffin bakeries, better get yourself someone who can make great muffins. Have a guess what kind of skills you need to have before you decide to open a scuba school… give yourself a gold star.

In other words, web businesses are usually not businesses-that-happen-to-have-websites. When you outsource a web platform you not only incur additional cost and add to your relationship-management burden, you miss out on all the intellectual property of actually running the business.

For instance, if you discover a better way of helping customers choose and add something to a shopping cart, you can act on that learning lesson more quickly if you own the team that implements it, and crucially you keep the IP on not just the business process but the platform code used to build it, which lets you get better and faster at making other improvements in the future.

If you’re a web business, how well your web platform works defines the success or failure of almost every metric of your business: converting consumers to customers, average revenue per customer, customer churn, competitive moves, and most crucially of all, time-to-iterate. Name a big, successful web business that is still on an outsourced platform.

It’s OK to be the founding team and not have a senior technology guru there with you from day one, just as it’s OK to not have your CFO or even your CEO hired yet. But recognise that you will need that person, and you will need that person to hire a team, and that team, while it may use off the shelf and SAAS and hosted components to build your web platform, will ultimately deliver something unique that your competitors can never hope to imitate; something your suitors will pay an arm and a leg to get to… the experience that comes from building and  operating a successful web platform.