Archive for February, 2008

You can

This video makes me cry every time…

I Can Only Imagine: Dick & Rick Hoyt

Check out how hard he’s running at the finish.

On the other hand, if I ever decide to try my hand at a full Ironman please, one of you, just slap me and remind me of this…

Sian Welch & Wendy Ingraham - The Crawl - 1997

It’s real Ministry of Silly Walks stuff. And, for 4th place. Seriously!

That’s one of the great things about Ironman though - the winners get good applause, but the loudest cheers are always for those that come in later in the evening.

PS I finished my race at Tauranga in 6hr 04min, thanks for asking. It was a long day for sure, but it gets better and better the longer ago it was. :-)

Next steps

Over the last 10 months I’ve been working 3 days a week at Xero helping out with product strategy and developing internal processes as we’ve grown quickly.

One of the things I’ve focused on is establishing a measurement culture and making sure we’re making product decisions for the right reasons. It’s great to see these things starting to happen.

I’ve enjoyed being able to help shape a new company as it moves from startup to becoming established in the market.

But, now it’s time for something different …

Next week I’m in the US for ETech. I’ve kept the week after that free, so hopefully I’ll meet some interesting people over there who will help me fill those days. If you’re going to be there please feel free to drop me an email.

After that I’m planning to spread my time around a few different things, including working with some of the other companies I’ve invested in. I’ll look forward to writing some more about those here over the next few months.

So, exciting times!

Go on the Fleet

Last week we (meaning the 28,000-odd members of MyFootballClub.co.uk) completed the takeover of Ebbsfleet United FC:

Yahoo News: Web fans complete takeover of lowly English club

With that out of the way we new owners have quickly gotten on with business, including picking new strips for next season (following the takeover Nike have kindly offered to be the kit sponsor!)

Here are my selections:

Home

Away

The team are currently 9th on the Blue Square Premier Football Conference table, just outside of a promotion playoffs spot. So, they’re only four winning seasons away from the Premiership!

Could be fun. :-)

$44.6 billion

I have to smile at the way the price that Microsoft are offering to pay for Yahoo is often rounded down to a straight $44 billion when it’s reported.

For example, last week on ReadWriteWeb: Plan B for Microsoft

It’s actually $44.6 billion. That “.6″ is $600 million, so not exactly trivial.

In fact it’s more than News Corp paid for MySpace or (at least at current exchange rates) Fairfax paid for Trade Me.

I guess at some point you just get numb to the number of zeros?

Please wait

Via ProjectX here is a neat little tool you can use to create animated “loading” graphics in just a few clicks.

Like these…

Ajax Loader #1

Ajax Loader #3

Ajax Loader #2

Solace in the Wind

I spotted this down by Te Papa this morning:

As Jeff says:

“They’ve added a new statue on the Wellington waterfront.

Cool, but weird.”

Sometimes “they” do some really good stuff, don’t you think. :-)

Hadyn Green has some more photos here.

Our Information State Highway

We have some friends from the UK staying with us at the moment, so I’m in the habit of making excuses for our infrastructure.

To anybody who has driven on the motorways overseas what we call “State Highway 1″ is a bit of a joke.

Seriously … one winding lane each way with no median barrier?

And where are all of the cars?

Likewise, what we call broadband really isn’t.

The international speakers who were here for Webstock last week were too polite to complain about it in front of us, but you can tell what they really thought by reading their twitters.

How embarrassing.

Full credit to Jeremy Wells from one of his ‘Unauthorised History of New Zealand’ episodes for the title of this post.

Couchspuderati

Juha invented a fun new word …

Happy Freeview camper despite niggles

:-)

Webstock was fun

Once again the organisers managed to put together a great line up of speakers. I’m not sure how they convince these people to travel half way around the world to come and talk to us, but good on them for doing it.

Actually, that’s not true at all. It’s obvious how they do it. They treat the speakers like rock stars, fuss over seemingly little details, and go the extra mile to create a great experience for everybody who attends - right down to the t-shirts, bags and name tags. It works! Even people who attend lots of conferences seem to love it.

I did wonder what I was going to talk to Sam about in our fireside chat. In the end it seemed to go okay (thanks to those who sent in questions). Everybody there seemed happy to sit back and take it in at the end of a long first day. I’ll post a link here to the video when it’s available for those of you who were not able to make it on the day.

With that out of the way I enjoyed the second day much more.

The highlights for me, to name just a few (with links to review from LukeW where available):

Nat Torkington was thought provoking as ever. I have to apologise (on behalf of my laptop) for messing with the ye olde font he used - but in the end it added an extra dimension to his presentation on future trends. I especially liked this quote, on the explosion in the amount of data available nowdays:

“Needles have stayed the same size, but the haystack is growing exponentially”

Cal Henderson from Flickr. A lot of the tool and techniques he talked about were familiar to those of us lucky enough to have worked at Trade Me, so it’s good to have a second example to point to when talking to developers about how to manage this sort of thing.

Tom Cotes, who gave the best explanations I’ve heard to date for why it’s important to think outside of your own little sandbox. Succeeding online means thinking about how to take advantages of the network rather than just simply trying to build the best website.

Dan Cederholm. Dan is originally from Vermont just like Ben & Jerrys Ice Cream. Once you know about that about him, his approach to design and (as he talked about in his session) “craftpersonship”, makes a lot more sense. He had a lot of practical advice too - it’s nice to come away from a presentation with half a dozen things that you can apply immediately to the things you’re working on. Thanks Dan. :-)

Damian Conway and Kathy Sierra both lived up to their top billing and were a nice way to finish things off.

And the winner? Well, according to Walter, Nat was the only speaker to mention all of Twitter, Flickr, LOLcats and the iPhone. So he wins. :-)

My only complaint was that the streamed sessions either side of lunch on the second day meant that there were a number of interesting speakers who I didn’t get to see. I guess we have to wait until the videos are available to remedy that.

UPDATE: audio and video of many of the presentations are now available.

So, all in all, a fun couple of days.

How, we wonder, will they top that at the next Webstock in 2010?

PS if you’re suffering withdrawal symptoms, you might like this video of Steve Krug (who surely must be on the invite list for next time?)

We’re not normal

This week web folk from around the country will head to Wellington for Webstock (shouldn’t it really be Webstock 2.0?) to hear a great line-up of speakers coming here from around the world (some of them are here already).

So, it’s timely to remind ourselves just what an unusual bunch we are.

Here are some browser stats the Webstock organisers recently published on their blog:

Firefox Internet Explorer Safari
61%
21%
13%

And, here are the equivalent numbers for Trade Me in January:

Firefox Internet Explorer Safari
17%
79%
<3%

Spot the difference?

We’re not normal, but if we put our mind to it we can empathise, surely?

PS I use Firefox on my chunky Mac, so if I’m throwing stones here I’m throwing them at myself first. :-)

Registration Revolution

If you do any traveling and you haven’t yet discovered TripIt.com I strongly encourage you to check it out.

(You also need to go and subscribe to Joel Spolsky’s RSS feed. He wrote about this at the end of last week, and if you’re reading my blog and not following his articles then you clearly have things in the wrong order).

All you need to do is find a booking confirmation email from an airline, hotel or rental car company and forward it via email to plans@tripit.com. They will convert your email into a simple itinerary page for your trip and send you back a link. If you have other bookings to include in the same itinerary, simply forward them on.

No more searching through your inbox to find all of these confirmation emails before your trip, which is good.

But, what’s really great in my opinion is that they have revolutionised the registration process. In fact they have eliminated the registration process altogether. By making the first interaction email based there is no need to fill in a cumbersome form on the website - entering you email address twice to make sure you don’t have any typos, choosing a password (which we all know usually means entering the same password you use on more or less every site), waiting for a confirmation email and then clicking on the link to validate that your email address is actually yours, etc etc. All of that is history.

I really like this idea - replacing a complex process with a simple email - and I think it could probably be used in lots of different situations.

Are there other websites ballsy enough to replace their entire registration page and process with an email address?

Are there any other examples of email-as-interface that you’ve seen out there? If so, I’m keen to hear about them.

You can always ask for forgiveness

Credit: Jessica Hagy

Foo Baa La La La, Redux

I’m still in serious sleep debt after a great weekend at Kiwi Foo Camp (a.k.a. Baa Camp) in Warkworth.

This was my second Foo Camp (my first was this same event last year). Once again it was a surprising mix of people and ideas. Between the wine, warewolf, cricket, banjo, and guitar hero there was just enough time for some excellent presentations and sessions - the ones I attended covered everything from pitching tech stories to media, to electric cars, to shareware, to teaching kids to program … and lots in between.

We even managed to stop en route for an indoor ski, which was bizarre but a lot of fun (imagine a giant fridge sitting on the side of a hill on the outskirts of Auckland and you start to get the idea).

So, in place of more words here are some photos from Flickr and some links:

There were 160 people attending this year, including some familiar faces from last year and some new interesting people …

The un-schedule was all over the spectrum …

And lots of interesting ideas changed hands ….

Those lucky enough to bring a tent managed to avoid the synchronized snoring in the whare …

On Saturday morning Kim Hill interviewed some of the attendees (you can listen to the podcast if you missed it) …

On Saturday night Mike and I thought we had the warewolf sussed …

Garth had our back …

But, it’s always the person you never expect …

Well, okay, not ALWAYS …

Later in the evening some of the villagers just preferred to stay asleep …

At the same time these guys were having a lot of fun with fire (and taking some great timelapse photos)…

As was John the next morning…

Russell caught the eye of the scouts from the Indian 20/20 leagues …

And Mauricio made himself comfortable in the commentary position …

Those are NOT beer goggles …

And, at the end of it all, a bunch of happy campers …

But, don’t just take my word for it. Here is what some other attendees thought:

Meanwhile, the Kiwi Foo Camp wikipedia post needs to be updated if anybody has some time to spare.

Lossless

What format is your digital music?

Most of mine are MP3s encoded at 256 kbps. That was a somewhat random choice made at the time that I ripped the bulk of my CDs a couple of years back.

Most … but not all, as I recently discovered when trying to move some of the music onto my Mac laptop. I found (more accurately: was reminded) that some of the albums were encoded in a lossless WMA format, which was pretty useless when it came to importing them into iTunes, so a converter was required [1].

On the surface the various digital music formats are a simple trade off between sound quality and file size.

At the top end (maximum quality, largest file size) are the so-called lossless encryption methods - as described in this Steven Levy article. The one I used was supplied with Windows Media Player and so created WMA files, but I notice that there is an alternative Apple Lossless format available within iTunes. I don’t expect either of these are commonly used.

All other alternative formats use some form of compression to create smaller files. MP3 is just one of those - although clearly the format of choice for the vast majority of people.

This is where it starts to get somewhat mysterious, even for people like myself who like to think they are somewhat technical. How much better is a 128 kbps MP3 vs. a 256 kbps MP3? Surely at some point you reach the limit of the CD you’re ripping from? How good does your stereo and speakers need to be in order to even hear the difference? Perhaps a reader will be able to enlighten us all on some of these things.

It does also beg the question as to why we’re compressing music at all.

There is a great story (a myth as it turns out [2], but let’s not let that get in the way) about how they chose the compression ratio when putting together the technical specifications for CDs so that the discs were as small as possible but still able to fit the entire length of Beethoven’s 9th Symphony. The result was a sampling frequency of 44.1 kHz.

That was 1981 and made sense because they were constrained by the capacity of the physical disc.

Likewise in 1994 the first computer I bought had a 200 MB hard drive, which was only just big enough to fit a few albums of MP3 files.

But today that constraint is well and truly gone. Disk space is now abundant. I can fit many more songs than I own on an iPod. Yet despite that we still compromise quality to keep file sizes down, which seems a bit odd.

Along the same lines …

Do you take photos at the highest resolution your digital camera allows?

The highlight of 2007 for me was the arrival of baby #2 in April. This provided a perfect excuse to splash out on a new digital camera, which came complete with 10 mega pixels (an embarrassing abundance, surely?)

However, after using it for a couple of days (and thankfully before the baby arrived) I was surprised to discover that by default the camera was set to a resolution much lower than the maximum it supported.

Why? I can only assume it was because the memory card that came supplied with the camera was so small that it would fill up almost immediately at the maximum resolution. But I had also splashed out on a bigger card, which had room for hundreds of images, so that constraint didn’t apply [3].

Thinking about this reminded me of my own baby photos, which are easily recognised as coming from the mid-1970s due to their square shape and rounded corners (not to mention the funny looking clothing that all the grown-ups are wearing!) By the time my younger brother and sisters came along the technology had moved on and so all of their photos are the more modern 6″x 4″ size.

I realised that the same will be true for my own kids too.

Technology moves on quickly, but we users are not always so quick to adjust to those things that are the constraints.

So, please, encode your music at the highest quality your software allows and make sure that your camera is set to the highest resolution [4].

You’ll be glad you did in a few years time.

Notes:

[1] If you run into similar problems I can recommend an excellent free utility called Switch which allows you to convert a WMA file into an MP3, albeit at the expense of the tags identifying the artist, album etc.

[2] As Kees Immink, one of the engineers who worked on the original CD specification explains, the choice of 44.1 kHz was really the only choice available to the engineers due to the recording equipment available at the time, and the size of the discs themselves was more of a management/marketing decision than an engineering one - they wanted them to be the same size as a cassette tape (as it turns out the engineers had the final say - the discs are 0.5 cm larger than cassette tapes at their widest point, providing CDs with significant additional surface area).

[3] This is another excellent example of software designers not thinking about the “Pit of Success”. Ideally the camera would have prompted me when I inserted the larger memory card for the first time to suggest I increase the resolution settings. Or, even better, the camera would come with a sufficiently large card in the first place!

[4] In case this suggestion seems to contradict my theme of less I should point out that I’m not suggesting more music or more photos just higher bits rates and resolutions.

As with anything, removing one constraint just highlights another.

In the past the constraint with photography was always the number of photos you could take - especially going back to the days of 24 frames per roll of film (younger readers, please ask your parents to explain this crazy concept). With a digital camera and lots of memory that’s no longer an issue. But, it occurs to me that the new constraint now is finding the great photos amongst the 1000s that you can so quickly and easily rattle off

(This, by the way, is a problem that technology might be able to solve - tools like Flickr’s Interestingness have started to do this automatically for a larger set of photos. Imagine if you could do something similar for the photos on an individual hard drive. There’s gold in them hills I reckon!)

If you take the time to delete the average photos you’ll enjoy the really good ones much more. Likewise with music - take some time to delete the tracks you don’t like from the albums you rip. Your ’skip’ button will thank you for it.

So, perhaps the new constraint is time?


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Rowan Simpson
PO Box 3210
Wellington, 6140
New Zealand

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