Update: Michael Tanne Profile at Wink

•December 24, 2007 • Leave a Comment

Wink People Search has changed the URL to personal profiles. This was mostly precipitated due to the effects of some spammers and Google’s reaction to Wink pages. So now you will find my personal Wink page at Michael Tanne. You can also see my Wink Widget in the right hand column of this blog.

People can get personal profiles at Wink and link to their various places online. We invite you to check it out.

Cheers,
Michael Tanne

My Wink Profile

•June 29, 2007 • 2 Comments

If you are trying to find me on the Internet, it’s best to come to my Wink profile at Michael Tanne. From there you can see all my places – LinkedIn, MySpace, Facebook, Flickr, etc.

Check it out!

The Ideal Application of Microsoft Surface: DesktopTD

•May 31, 2007 • Leave a Comment



Microsoft Surface and DesktopTD

Originally uploaded by mtanne

I saw the news about Microsoft Surface, and immediately understood the ideal application of this amazing technology: Desktop Tower Defense!

Social Applications

•December 15, 2005 • 3 Comments

Social News

News is traditionally written and edited by professional writers and editors. But the social version of news is written, or submitted by the users themselves. Then others who like the story can add their voice, often with comments and usually with endorsements of some kind. Slashdot is one of the most successful and long standing social news sites frequented by techies. Newcomer Digg has grown quickly. Users submit stories they find on the Web and others who read the stories “digg” them adding votes until the stories make the front page.

TagCamp Redux

•November 2, 2005 • Leave a Comment

Wow. TagCamp was great. Everyone just jumped in and got behind it and made it happen. What a really amazing group of people.

People who haven’t attended events like this ask “what are these meet-ups like?” I’ve heard people speculate that they are parties (If you mistake the “bar” in barcamp as a reference to drinking, it’s probably not for you), geekfests, business conferences (ugh!), simply another manifestation of Bubble 2.0, etc.

Well here’s what it was like:
At TagCamp we had a peak of about 140 people. More than half of those, by show of hands, came from out of town, which was really cool, given that the event wasn’t technically more than a wiki until the first person arrived Friday. What faith.

There were technical sessions throughout the event – by individuals who prepared to share thoughts, proposals, findings, etc. For example Nitin Borwankar presented Tag Schemas and Danah Boyd presented “socio-cultural aspects of tagging”. These were informal – i.e. if you had something to say, you just added you name and title of your presentation to the wiki – yet thoughtful. Sometimes you had standing room only, other times there were 8 or 10 people in an intimate discussion over some technical detail of an approach to tagging.

What was just as valuable was the mixing and exchange going on in the common areas. There’s no substitute for face to face interaction to get to know people and connect. It was great to hang out with thoughtful people, whose blogs you’ve enjoyed reading, but hadn’t gotten to know in person. Some people got together and actually coded up stuff – like some cool improvements to the Tagcamp.org website itself. People took notes, blogged, and hung out. The last person didn’t go to sleep until after 4 am Friday, and we were back at it just after 9 am Saturday.

TagCamp ran pretty spontaneously. There was some pre-production, thanks to Susie Wyshak who really did have to do quite a bit of logistics to make it happen, and Rohit Khare who provided physical space. But the rest ran itself: the agenda, the publicity, t-shirts, schedule, speakers, equipment, clean-up, was all done by volunteers. One of the coolest moments was when Red Bull themselves showed up with ice cold Red Bull for us – on them. I guess they know how much Red Bull is consumed by folks like us.

People have already made plans to continue to work on a number of projects together. We’ve agreed to post info online, so anyone interested in jumping in is welcome.

So why have things like TagCamp?
Okay, so I don’t speak for everyone, just making a few observations, and perhaps some speculation.

1. The subject area is interesting. With foocamp and barcamp it’s open source, collaboration, new technology, new ideas, etc. In the case of TagCamp, there’s clearly something happening with tags. At first Chris Messina and I worried that tags were to specific to hold an event only about them. We thought if even 20 or 30 people got together it would be fun and there’d be something interesting to learn. However, it was proved to us that there was much more enthusiasm for the idea than we’d anticipated. Tags are an interesting way to represent information, that is democratic, personal, and spontaneous. And numerous applications are emerging. So people want to explore the subject.

2. There’s a positive sense of openess in the community. People are genuinely willing to share and exchange not just ideas, but code and models. Perhaps there’s a selfish motivation for some, but I tend to think it’s more of a cultural phenomenom. The benefits of sharing are visible, and we don’t mind sharing back. Most of our projects, whether as businesses or research projects or pet projects, rely on open source software, and many of us have open-sourced some or all of our own work.

3. Some costs of doing business have come way down. Hiring good people hasn’t gotten less expensive. But the software and the gear and the bandwidth are significantly less expensive than in the past. That means that talent is the key resource, and that a few talented people can do an awful lot with a little – which just feeds point two above.

4. Techies keep innovating. Many people have weighed in on “What Web 2.0 is”. I think I’ll leave detailed response on that subject for others, but will say this: Between 2000 and 2004, the financial markets (e.g. sources of venture capital, revenue, and options for liquidity) were limited, and therefore it was tougher to start things. As conditions improved, especially for consumer Internet services, things started to emerge, and it gradually began to be called “Web 2.0″. But I think the innovation was always moving forward, because techies just like building things. Sometimes the markets favor them and they have more resources and rewards for building things – but they’d build things anyway. The pace just changes, because the synergy of lots of people having the resources to build things stimulates further creation, and more risk taking – leaving a job to start something, for example – if there is some anticipated reward.

5. Sharing is not just the subject matter, but also the method. A lot of the projects themselves are about sharing and are community generated. Social networks, blogging, podcasting, wikis, tagging, etc. And the tools we use are themselves collaborative – blogs, wikis, Flickr, open source. So it makes sense that a lot of people who are actively involved in these kinds of projects would respond to a collaborative approach to meeting and working together. It would be kind of strange if a bunch of people who were building, say a social network service, by day, wouldn’t be open to meet and collaborate with others.

6. A need to coordinate. If a bunch of people are working on things that have to connect to one another there needs to be some agreement. This can come in the form of industry standards, market domination, or ad hoc collaboration, depending on the forces at play. Most of us who are not in the position to assert standards by virtue of dominant market position (nor particularly like it when others do), or don’t have enough time or patience for the usual standards-body approach, favor getting something small and simple started and having those who have the most to gain or lose take an active voice. It’s also far easier to get something simple going. Some examples are RSS, microformats, opml, etc.

Bottom line: TagCamp was fun, and I got to make some new friends and increased my respect for others. I plan to continuing to work with others on some tag projects, and hope nothing spoils the really cool attitude people have right now, so we can keep having things like tagcamp. Thanks everyone for making it so much fun!

Cheers,

Michael

Tags: , ,

Hello world!

•August 27, 2005 • 1 Comment

Hello world. So , this is my first post at WordPress.com.  I have a blog at my company, but it’s not public yet since the company is in stealth.

I enjoy reading numerous blogs, but just haven’t felt like writing myself unless I had something worth reading. We’ll see how it goes.

In the meantime, I’m thrilled to see Matt Mullenweg and crew launch the WordPress.com service. He suggested I try it out, so I am. Thanks Matt.

Here’s a photo from Barcamp, taken by Jake Appelbaum (aka ioerror)

Barcamp shot - photo: Jake Applebaum