Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Learning about Adobe AIR in Atlanta...

I'm at the Fox Theatre in my hometown of Atlanta today checking out the Adobe AIR Bus Tour Summer 07. It's nice to be at the first event nationwide.

I'm attending at the behest of a friend who thinks it going to be the "next big thing." I'm skeptical. I fear yet another proprietary attempt to empower developers to craft unique custom web interfaces to provide desktop functionality as a layer over web technologies, and that's not a compliment.

These types of things, especially when looking at the black box nature of opaque Flash SFW files, do their best to ignore those things that make the web work, i.e. stateless URL-addressed resources. The reality of Adobe AIR remains to be seen...

P.S. It would have been nice if Adobe had consulted me to ensure that this event was more convenient for me. I mean, I actually had to leave my home and cross the street to attend. Adobe Please! '-)

Tuesday, August 14, 2007 10:34:11 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [3]  | 
 Saturday, March 17, 2007

Live Pictures from Podcamp Atlanta 2007

Amber Rhea at Podcamp Atlanta 2007

I'm definitely not a real-time blogger, but I can take pictures.  It's actually very cool as people are taking pictures and uploading them as the conference is running and they are showing them on the overhead from time to time.

Here you can see my Podcamp Atlanta 2007 pictures on Flickr.  And you can see other people's Podcamp Atlanta pictures:

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Saturday, March 17, 2007 9:21:56 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [5]  | 
 Friday, March 16, 2007

Announcing The Atlanta Web Entrepreneurs

The Atlanta Web Entrepreneurs Logo

Last night was the third meeting of the Atlanta Web Entrepreneurs, a Meetup group that I started this past December. Although the first two meetings in January and February were "just getting started" outings, this was the first event that made me think "Hey, we can really pull off something great here!" And that is why I finally decide to go ahead and blog about it [1].

I've been in Atlanta for most of my life and the positive, community-oriented, grassroots entrepreneurial tech culture thriving in San Francisco and Boston and has been all but none-existent in the modern era. Atlanta has been a Fortune 1000 town [2]; its high tech community has either chased big business dollars or been of the "get rich quick" dotbomb variety [3], or both. And those who prostrate to major corporations or indenture to venture capitalists are rarely of the "rising tide float all boats" ethos interested in the types of business communities I've yearned to be involved in.

Most readers of this blog know that web technologies have evolved to the point anyone with reasonable intelligence and enough passion can create a successful online business; no deep technical knowledge and only a tiny amount of startup capital required. That level of empowerment has unleashed latent entrepreneurial aspirations worldwide. The new-style online businesses people are creating may or may not be a jackpot like YouTube has been for its founders, but they can provide a great living for those involved.

And that excites me. But what really excites me more is, with events like SoCon07, Podcamp Atlanta, and others it's evident the community-oriented entrepreneurial web ethos that I've so longed has finally arrived in Atlanta!

I won't take any credit for Atlantans new interest in building agile online businesses as none would be deserved. But I will say I'm now doing what I can to help catalyze this transformation of Atlanta's entrepreneurial web landscape in hopes to see as supportive an ecosystem emerge as those found in the aforementioned Boston and San Francisco.

Wish us luck!

Footnotes

  1. For a rundown of our third meeting, see my next post at PaperbackSwap founder speaks to Atlanta Web Entrepreneurs.
  2. Atlanta's Fortune 1000 include Home Depot, UPS, Coca Cola, BellSouth (now of AT&T), Delta Airlines, Southern Company, SunTrust, Genuine Parts, and Cox Communications to name a few.
  3. Atlanta's notable exceptions to the dotbomb moniker have been Mindspring/Earthlink, JBoss, and Internet Security Systems.

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Friday, March 16, 2007 1:27:50 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [6]  | 
 Thursday, March 15, 2007

I'm going to Podcamp Atlanta!

Amber Rhea pitching Podcamp Atlanta to the Atlanta PHP User Group as Robert Swarthout looks on.

Well, yes as I've already said, I'm not a super-timely blogger. I should have blogged this long ago, but ah well.

Anyway, Amber Rhea of The Georgia Podcast Network organized a Podcamp here in Atlanta for this weekend March 16-18 2007 at Emory University. An as of yesterday when I asked, Amber said that she had 185 people registered!  Wow.  Another event like SoCon07; I can't wait!

But this one is going to be special for me as I get to hold my first discussion on Saturday about User-Centered URL Design. What's that got to do with Podcasting, you ask?  I'm not sure either, but Amber assurred me that attendees would be interested. :-)

But seriously, podcasters has many of the same issues to address that everyone publishing on the web should consider including usable URLs for their audio files as well as the website that hosts them. I look forward to some likely discussions!

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Thursday, March 15, 2007 1:19:30 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Energy in Atlanta: Finally at SoCon07!

I've never really blogged before about Atlanta because (except for this) I've never felt there was much interesting happening here, at least not from the perspective of things that interest me to blog about.  But that's finally changing!

I've been in Atlanta for most of my life, and my professional career has spanned exactly 20 years next month. I've also been in the entrepreneurial high-tech side of things but for the most part have always felt on the outside looking in. Sure there has been a lot of high-tech companies focused on serving our fortune 500 crowd, and there are tons of real estate entrepreneurs. However, I've never felt like there have been others interested in developer and web-related startups like I have always been. That is until now!

SoCon07 Entrepreneur Breakout moderated by Jeff Haynie with Michael Mealling asking a question a Josh Watts of Blue Violin in the immediate foreground

Several weeks ago (okay, I've never been a timely blogger...) I attended an unconference called SoCon07 put on by Sherry Heyl, Leonard Witt, Jeff Haynie, Josh Hallett, James Harris, and Jonas Luster (if I missed or overcredited anyone, I apologize in advance.)

The event was actually incredible. Held in the nether regions of Atlanta (okay, that's OTP a few miles) at Kennesaw State University. There were somewhere over 200 people in attendance, and the Friday night before there was a dinner held for any interested attendees. It was incredibly rewarding to get to meet so many other bright and passionate people interested in web-oriented startups and/or social media here in my good ole' hometown of Atlanta, GA!

I'm going to shout out for a handful of other people I've met recently who were at SoCon07. Someone I had met socially last year, Grayson Daughters of The Spacey Gracy Review/blog and Producer and one of the Personalities for the TrueGritz satire site was busy doin her thang.

And then there was Amber Rhea and Rusty Tanton of the Georgia Podcast Network as well as the organizers of PodCamp Atlanta.

And of course my good friend Eric Winter of Webicus. As well as many others I just met and whom I hope to soon get to know better.

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Tuesday, March 13, 2007 1:03:00 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  |