Author Archive

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

Trapped like a bug

What with being busy with work and play I hardly have enough time reading the backlog of New Yorker articles I get referred to via blogs. How people manage to be subscribed to the New Yorker, have a television and maybe even read a newspaper is beyond me.

Anyway, this week I read this great article on elevators: “Up And Then Down”. One part in it was particularly enlightening:

Helplessness may exacerbate claustrophobia. […] In most elevators, at least in any built or installed since the early nineties, the door-close button doesn’t work. It is there mainly to make you think it works. […] Once you know this, it can be illuminating to watch people compulsively press the door-close button. That the door eventually closes reinforces their belief in the button’s power. It’s a little like prayer.

This explains many interactions I have had with elevators over the course of my life where this button never worked and where I always wanted it to work, immediately. I hadn’t really considered this explanation blaming it mostly on shoddy engineering or interface design—which it of course also is.

About the culture of riding an elevator and the politeness norms, I think most of those are lost on the Dutch. But that’s another story.

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

Cell Phone Development

Fascinating story about Jan Chipchase, user anthropologists at Nokia in the New York Times. A man with the dream job for for anybody interested in human centered design and travel. Younghee Jung has a complementary blogpost detailing their experiences in and Chongqing, Dharavi, Jacarezinho and Buduburam

Fixed identity

A key point in the story is how cellular phone numbers provide a fixed piece of identity for people in societies where many things are usually unclear and people are on the move.

Having a call-back number, Chipchase likes to say, is having a fixed identity point, which, inside of populations that are constantly on the move — displaced by war, floods, drought or faltering economies — can be immensely valuable both as a means of keeping in touch with home communities and as a business tool.

This is pointed out as a good thing enabling people in developing countries to have the same Just In Time moments as we here have been used to for a while. We generally use them to organize meetings more efficiently and it increases our effectivity and up to dateness.
The kind of information people lower on the pyramid need to exchange is usually much more vital and so of a larger relative worth. Access to that information leads to direct and large increases in their income, wellbeing and general control of their lives. The article is packed with examples and numbers.

Virtualized SIM

Many people use their fixed identity as an enabler for transactions, but for certain transactions a requirement could be the ability to shed your identity easily, take a new name and move shop to a different place.

For instance for the prostitutes advertised in cell phone booths around the world from the article:

The prostitute ads in the Brazilian phone booth? Those are just names, probably fake names, coupled with real cellphone numbers — lending to Chipchase’s theory that in an increasingly transitory world, the cellphone is becoming the one fixed piece of our identity.

Those people do not want a fixed identity that is traceable to a single account. A combination of the anonymity of the pay phone and the freedom of the cellular phone may be useful. Maybe not only for illicit purposes, but also for people who do not want to be tied to a single telco or need some other increased flexibility.

Innovations that help people take on multiple mobile identities are already springing up with multi-band multi-SIM phones, not only for business travellers but also used by residents of developing countries where plans have large disparities for different use cases.

This makes you wonder if the whole concept of the SIM-card, the modern day passport of the mobile citizen could not be completely virtualized. Instead of a phone with multiple SIMs inside, it could contain a virtual SIM driver that communicates with a server and retrieves appropriate SIM images as needed by usage, location an cost efficiency.

Fortunately this is not going to be necessary because freedom is being effectuated by flat rate data plans and VOIP clients on various phones (see for instance Fring). But I’m still waiting for the moment that I can buy a generic device and get a simple plan to connect it to the cloud wherever, whenever.

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

Precedent

Ben Hammersley has opened a separate tumblelog where he posts stuff not suitable for his main line. His first batch of posts is pretty great with an eye opening account of Tibetan history.

Batizado Planeta Capoeira

And secondly the trailer for FIFA Street 3 which is a jaw dropping mix of tricking and street soccer. The site for the game: fifastreet3.com is a pretty impressive but mostly confusing and useless display of Flash, 3D and gaming.

I do that one hand backflip (macaco as it is called in capoeira) pretty well; hell I’m doing one on this picture, but I’ve never tried kicking a ball with it.

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Next

Last week was busy. I was home pretty much only to sleep and lived off train station junk food. Not the best life, but a lot of fun and cool things happened.

One of these was the Next Web conference, a great startup event where a lot of interesting people from the European and American startup scene were present. The conference was complicated for me slightly because Eelke and I volunteered to shoot a report of it for Frankwatching, one of the Netherlands’ leading Web 2.0 blogs.

The report is in Dutch but there are some choice bits of English interview in there, especially a Q&A with Robert Scoble which cuts pretty much to the essence of what he told us at The Next Web. It is up at Vimeo:

Frankwatching @ The Next Web 2008 from Eelke D. on Vimeo.

I’ve never done something like this before, but I’ve wanted to for a long time. This was a great opportunity. Suffice it to say that it was a lot of fun, very tiring and I learned a lot. I have a lot more respect for (video)journalists now.
I expect to do more with video in the future especially for travelblogging and ambient recording and I’m thinking of getting a Flip.

The Next Web was a great conference with a spectacular ambience fitting the growing European startup scene. I didn’t hear a lot of new stuff from many speakers. I like my speakers in depth, on the edge and interdisciplinary because I learn the most from those. But maybe that’s not everybody’s cup of tea.

Monday, March 31st, 2008

Tipit.to Pitch Contest for the Next Web

This week the Next Web conference is taking place in Amsterdam. There’s a contest where startups who want to attend can make a movie pitching their concept and the best ones get a free ticket.

We had a lot of fun making this movie:

Tipit.to Startup Pitch (English) from Alper ugun
This is a rough cut, we’ll put up a better version during the course of the week.

So if you like it and want to help us, you can vote for us at pitchstorm.tv. There’s a poll on the page but you can only vote after you register in the box on the top. The registration sends a confirmation mail which can take some time. Once you get that, you can login and cast your vote.

Thanks and see you at the Next Web!

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

Some starters in real estate

Since going solo I haven’t really been content with working at home. It’s hard to explain, because working at home costs me 0 minutes of travel to my office and I have all the facilities I would need for a good day of work: a great sound system, an espresso machine, and a well stocked fridge.

Still something was missing: a hard separation of the life/work boundary —knowing myself, who am I kidding?— and seeing other people during the day. Thus started the quest for an office. Eelke also freelancing and just back from Berlin wanted to split an office. With two people as a start and open to add more people and co-workers as space allows, this could be pretty cool.

I have been calling various people on and off for the last two months in the Delft area. Arranging office space is a full time job by itself. There aren’t many opportunities around here and we are quite picky which makes for a difficult search.

We don’t need much it has to be cheap, near or in city center, with internet, electricity, and a lock on the door. We don’t need most of the traditional office amenities, like a receptionist, telephone lines, decent furnishing, in house catering, and parking spaces. This should be easy, right?

Bacinol


Bacinol, picture by Didier Brouwers
Vizi Office
Interior of Bacinol, office of Vizi

There is an old industrial building at the skirts of city center called Bacinol which is a hotbed of young and creative entrepeneurs. Its lease is also very low which would have made it pretty awesome. Unfortunately and predictably it is completely full.

At the end of the year it is going to be demolished because of the construction of a railway tunnel. A part of the tenants are going to move to a building on the other end of city center at Hooikade 13. There is a severe lack of space in Delft for the kind of people that Bacinol caters for, tearing it down and replacing it by a building similar in size does not solve anything.

Creatieve Broedplaatsen

Last week there was a discussion at Bacinol about the need for creative spaces and the prospective offers there will be. There seems to be some stuff happening but most of it is bureaucratic and at least one year out, if not much more. One of the conclusions was that there is a great need for temporary (i.e. risky) lease constructions for the modern networked business that is happening now. Most of the people I talked to were too mired in bureaucracy or their own problems, that I’m not expecting any real solutions to come out of it.

Traditional corporate

IMG_7140.jpg

We also hit some of the traditional avenues just to see what prices are about like. Anything via conventional realtors in the city center is priced ridiculously. It boggles the mind and tells you how much of a markup you are paying on your services just to be able to visit posh city center offices.

There are corporate agglomeration buildings on various locations outside of town. Besides being outside of town, these building offer all the traditional office amenities we don’t need, are quite expensive and are pretty much all full as well.

gate

We hit one likely location in city center, which looked like it could have been interesting, but we were then snagged by an archaic Dutch arrangement for the lease of office space. Offices are usually let according to a 5+5 years contract. Which means you enter a contract to lease the space for five years and after those five years are over, you are allowed the option to lease it for another five years. Ejecting out of the contract befor the five years are over, is difficult. We could try to enter into a contract as a limited liability company and deflate that when we wanted out, but I think that is called bankrupcy fraud.
This is of course great for real estate owners who are practically guaranteed a solid lease for at least five years and it probably is also great for shopkeepers who want to stay in one place. It’s not so great for the here today gone tomorrow creative internet business we are in.

Alternatives

One of the alternatives we have not fully explored yet is to take office in an anti-squat building. This seems ideal from a space and cost perspective. We do not really need the long term security. Many people say an offer ‘is only valid until the end of the year’ which is plenty long as far as I’m concerned. I’m willing to take office somewhere for as short as six weeks.

We had such a brief lease the week before last when we spent two days Pascalle her old room which Eelke had furnished as a temporary office:

Temp office

For just two days it still had the vibe of an office, a goto place for work related stuff and an affirmation of the reasons we are looking for an office.

Kolk

The guy who lets out Bacinol has several other offices around town, where he caters to young starting technology companies. In fact he is just about the only person in Delft who does. I called him again an he’d just got an empty space of 18m2 at the end of the van Leeuwenhoeksingel (bordering the Zuidwal). This week I took a look at it and it seemed to fit our bill pretty well. A bit small, but it will do for now.

So we will probably sign the lease and move in next week.

Elsewhere

How is this situation elsewhere? I know space in Berlin is pretty cheap that you can get awesome office in the city center affordably. I hear that the UK is rife with archaic claptrap when it comes to regulations and lease agreements.
How are situations in let’s say Denmark or the US?

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

Plug your startup in Brussels

Tomorrow I will be getting up at 05:00 and drive to Bruxelles to attend the Plugg startup European Web 2.0 event.

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The program has no real big names and looks very European. I am hoping to be pleasantly surprised and to see what makes a European perspective. I’m most interested in the 2 minute pitches for the startup rally, so I will probably be reporting on those. In startups I’ll be looking for added value, originality and transnational ambition.

Saturday, March 15th, 2008

Blast from the past

There has been some controversy going on about the prohibitions on background processes for iPhone applications using the SDK.

Vx
Picture by Alper

This pretty much rules out a client such as the Jaiku mobile client which sends your status updates to a server and gets your buddies’ statuses. But yes there will be ton of useful applications nevertheless.

The single app model reminds me somewhat of my old Palm Vx which also had the concept of a single foreground app. It still is one of the most usable handheld devices I have used with loads of applications available for it. I used it intensively as the wear and tear on the picture probably shows.

Of course this was before the age of connectivity, so a background app could not have done much anyway and later versions of the Palm OS allowed for MP3 playback in the background while you were doing other things.

Palm is all but forgotten now, let’s see how the iPhone does.

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

Out of the ashes

You might have noticed that Four Starters have been somewhat quiet of late. Year’s end, various personal responsibilities and a confusion about focus all played a role in that.

Last year also marked the start of The Next Web weblog which is a Dutch based startup blog by the guys of Fleck and Wakoopa based in Amsterdam.

Four Starters had come to occupy much of the mission of a startup weblog mostly out of coincidence. Three quarters of our editors have always had a strong interest and some participation in startups. That and us being prolific bloggers, made us a de facto startup blog. This isn’t just true for startups, but many of us also have a strong interest in web development, microformats and photography.

Having pushed ourselves into the corner of startup blog, we felt halfway obliged to cater to the audience we got that way and writing this blog began to feel more and more like work. Especially because we wanted our writing to pass the high standards of quality we would like to read ourselves and not play the quantity/linkdump game some other blogs pass off as content.

Added to that is the fact that our part-time commitment cannot compete with more professional weblogs nor should it strive to do so. A weblog like The Next Web has a broad strategy and employs people to produce content for it.

Relaunch

So we have decided to go back to the core of Four Starters, which is a group of friends combining their English language blogs to write about stuff they think is cool or cool stuff they have done.

That way we will be writing about more different stuff more frequently and try to show our view and share our opinions on stuff on the internet. Because our interests are still aligned heavily with startups and events, expect to see more of that but also more about photography, programming, music, art and other topics (and I hope strong opinion).

Let us know what you think of this change of direction and what you would like us to write about. We have more than 150 subscribers and we feel we’re obliged something to you for the attention you are giving us.

The conversation sparked by the writing has always been one of the highpoints of this blog so anything which would continue that, would be great.

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

New Principles for a New Economy


Picture by Robert Gaal

Yes, I gave a talk with that title at Barcamp Amsterdam III. It sounds somewhet pretentious, but I do think that things are going to change massively in the next 2-5 years.

The whole thing is up at the Tipit.to blog and I will probably give this talk at Barcamp Gent on March 29th.

An excerpt:

Free does not change everything, it has been around for a long time. Free combined with voluntary payment in the current conditions makes a lot of interesting things possible of which we are seeing only the beginning.

Read the whole thing