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Accelerating the “Aha” Moment

September 12, 2008 By Steve Borsch

Defrag conference logoDefrag is the first conference focused solely on the tools and technologies that are leveraging the “social” aspect of software to accelerate the “aha” moment. Defrag is not a version number. Rather it’s a gathering place for the growing community of implementers, users, builders and thinkers that are working on the next wave of software innovation.

Minnov8’s own Graeme Thickins has attended Defrag in the past and said to me a few weeks ago as I contemplated attending, “You will LOVE this conference! The attendees are the cream-of-the-crop” and I’ve since learned that people like Doc Searls, David Weinberger, Clay Shirky and others I follow make Defrag one of their must-attend events. 

Eric Norlin, one of the three organizers of the conference, is a former Minnesotan and has extended a $300 discount to Minnov8 readers. Register here and put in the code “m8“.

Filed Under: Events

Minnesota High Tech Association Tekne Awards

September 12, 2008 By Steve Borsch

Minnesota High Tech Association logoEach year the Tekne Awards shine a spotlight on Minnesota’s technology industry.  Drawing over 1,000 attendees, including our state’s most influential businesses, political leaders and individuals, the Tekne Awards honor advancement in technology areas including advanced manufacturing, information and medical technologies, and biological sciences.  Join us as we come together as a technology community to celebrate innovation in Minnesota’s tech-based economy by recognizing Tekne Award finalists and recipients!…  [Read More…]

Filed Under: Events

uTead: Social Network for College Admissions

September 3, 2008 By Steve Borsch

Today’s high school students are the always-on, always-connected, digital generation and have no time for inefficient or paper-based communications, or especially ones that don’t leverage their peers who are involved in the same things they happen to be.

uTead, a name derived from universal Tool for education advancement, is an online service that facilitates the college admissions process and is a social network specifically for prospective students, enables them to connect with university representatives, high school counselors, and their peers, while also providing completely new ways for colleges and universities to interact with today’s tech-savvy generation.

I talked with co-founder Erik Eliason today, about how the Minnesota Cup Student Entrepreneur award winning uTead was started, what led them to create it, and where they’re headed now that it has launched in beta (as of yesterday, Sept. 2nd)….  [Read More…]

Filed Under: Emerging MN Companies, Startups & Developers

The Uptake: Paying Attention to Important Stories

August 30, 2008 By Steve Borsch

The Uptake home page imageIf you’re hanging around this Labor Day weekend anticipating all of the Republican National Convention (RNC) stories of protests and convention intrigue that’ll be covered by the local and national media next week, you need to be aware of the stories unfolding right now, covered by The Uptake using Qik, live streaming mobile phone video.

The UpTake is a media and technology services organization dedicated to advancing democracy through citizen journalism (more here) and I’ve only connected with Chuck Olsen (of Minnesota Stories vlogging fame and blogger at blogumentary), but while at Costco this afternoon I looked at the Twitter client on my iPhone and saw that “@Chuckumentary” (Olsen’s Twitter name) was heading over to 951 Iglehart Ave in St. Paul since the fifth raid was underway and 10 police were on site…and he was going to try and cover it live.

I proceeded to watch him interview the woman you see at the bottom of the screengrab. She talked about the warrant (issued for the wrong side of the duplex) and that police entered that side and broke through the attic to perform a search at the other address….  [Read More…]

Filed Under: Internet & Web

OnePlace: Manage, Share, Collaborate & Execute

August 24, 2008 By Steve Borsch

In a time when energy prices are accelerating, threats from terrorism and epidemics (e.g., avian flu) are driving companies and individuals to better anticipate and manage risk, and the people with whom collaboration is critical might be in the next town or half a world away, the timing for an easy to use, fast and intuitive collaboration suite seems perfect.

A successful entrepreneur and chief technologist (he was formerly CTO of HighJump Software), CEO Steve Kickert‘s Riverock Technologies is soon to launch OnePlace, an online collaboration (and personal organizational) tool that has a good shot at being a hub positioned directly in the sweet spot of what’s needed.  …  [Read More…]

Filed Under: Startups & Developers

FCC Broadband Ruling & MN Task Force

August 22, 2008 By Steve Borsch

Minnesota Ultra High Speed Broadband Task Force image

If you’re reading Minnov8 you use, understand and undoubtedly rely upon the internet and your broadband connection. You may also be building a business or revenue stream upon the internet-as-a-platform for innovation, and as such you absolutely must stay close to net neutrality, FCC rulings and, most importantly, what our Minnesota Ultra High-Speed Broadband Task Force is doing to meet their legislative mandate (the task force site is now live and definitely worth checking out).

Ironically in a day when early adopters, influencers and the Minnesota tech cognescenti long ago embraced RSS as an efficient means of staying informed easily, the task force site doesn’t even have a feed, but instead asks you to sign up for an “e-newsletter” (how quaint….but I digress).

Thankfully I follow the task force member representing Twin Cities interests, Mike O’Connor, and the UrbanBroadbandUsers blog via his RSS feed, and I was pleased to have a heads-up on the first meeting minutes (PDF) and, especially, his compiled links on today’s feed:

  • CLICK HERE for the FCC document.
  • CLICK HERE for Susan Crawford’s commentary
  • CLICK HERE for Harold Feld’s commentary
  • CLICK HERE for Larry Lessig’s letter to the FCC commending them on their decision.

If you do nothing else this weekend but invest even a half an hour reading these, you’ll have a pretty good handle on the issue, the importance of this August 1st ruling by the FCC, and why this matters to you if the internet is at all central to your life or you see it as important to your business or Minnesota’s future.

Filed Under: Internet & Society

CommunityEngine: Open Source Social Network Application

August 18, 2008 By Garrick Van Buren

Earlier this summer, Bruno Bornsztein released the code behind his niché social-networking sites Curbly, Uncooped as an open-source project called: CommunityEngine.

CommunityEngine is a complete, white-label social network app wrapped up as a Ruby on Rails plugin making it easy to integrate forums, blogs, and user profiles into an existing web application or a stand-alone application. Like many weblog engines, the look and feel of each CommunityEngine can be completely customized.

“I envision somebody doing a theme that makes [CommunityEngine] act more like a social network, a theme that makes it act more like a blog, a theme that makes it act more like a group blog, or a newspaper. So you can pick and choose.” – Bruno Bornsztein

One of the first community contributions to the CommunityEngine code was l18n internationalization support, promptly encouraging a number of non-US-based CommunityEngine-based sites.

“The biggest benefit [to open-sourcing CommunityEngine] is making the code-base stronger…I can now launch a Curbly site in Spanish. I’ve been wanting to do that for a long time.” – Bruno Bornsztein

For more about CommunityEngine listen to my podcast conversation with Bruno.

Filed Under: MN Entrepreneurs, Open Source

Minneapolis Alt.Net User Group Formed

August 14, 2008 By Steve Borsch

Minneapolis is getting a new affinity group of .Net developers called Alt.Net. Jamie Thingelstad just gave me a heads-up to his post about this group, knowing that some Minnov8 readers might like to attend.

What is “Alt.Net”. From their site:

At it’s purest, the driving force behind the ALT.NET developer community may be described simply as “The pursuit of happiness.” While Microsoft has provided developers with a powerful framework and a bunch of very good tools and packages to build upon, it often feels like too much effort was put into a “one-size-fits-all” design philosophy that can make it complex, tedious, or just plain impossible to do things that don’t follow Microsoft’s prescribed approach.

With other development platforms and languages offering so much choice (Java and it’s many quality open source offerings) and elegance (Ruby on Rails with its “beautiful” code and “convention over configuration” philosophy), .NET developers longed to craft cleaner, more elegant solutions without having to leave a framework that has so much to offer.

ALT.NET is about following your own beliefs about application design, and using the .NET platform to support your ideas, rather than retro-fitting your ideas to the platform.

Jamie had his eye caught by the logo, reminiscent of the old Grain Belt sign that used to caste its shadow over Hennepin Avenue. The moment I hit Jamie’s blog and then Alt.Net’s site, it caught mine too.

As a kid, we used to go down and pick up my grandparents from the Great Northern Railroad depot (my Grandpa worked for the railroad for 44 years and had lifetime free travel on it) and that sign was the first thing I recognized and, of course, Grain Belt was my first beer at 15, so fun logo for your site guys!

Filed Under: Developer Hub, Events

Best Buy Shakes Up VC Liaison Group

August 11, 2008 By Graeme Thickins

The longtime head of the group within Best Buy Co. that served as liaison to the venture capital community is out, replaced by two senior VPs. Martin Nyman told me his position was eliminated June 30. He had been with the company for approximately seven years, with a recent title of Director-Global Innovation Network. At one time, Nyman had a staff of four, but that group was cut in April 2006 as part of a headquarters staff reduction.

A source inside the company described the recent moves as “the usual restructuring.” I was told that all VC-related activities are now under Rick Rommel, SVP-Emerging Business. Rommel reports to Kal Patel, whose title is EVP-Emerging Business. Also within Patel’s organization, I learned, is a second SVP-Emerging Business, Neil McPhail. My source tells me McPhail’s responsibilities are “less direct VC-related, although there is some overlap.” His main responsibilities relate to the stores and to the company’s “growth accelerator” initiative.

Yet another group within Best Buy is one that deals directly with the company’s own VC funding investments. That function has been headed for some time by Kuk Yi (first name pronounced “cook”), and is a part of the Finance function, specifically the Treasurer’s office. Yi also has a “dotted line” reporting relationship to Patel, I was told.

Late in March of 2008, a story broke via the blogosphere that Best Buy was forming a new VC fund of its own — actually two funds — which I later learned was an initiative headed by Kuk Yi, and it was seeking to hire Principals and Associates for those VC funds (as many as four positions). Here’s a blog post I did about the blog buzz and speculation going on at that time. The local Business Journal weekly broke the story in the Twin Cities media on March 28, picking up on the earliest blog reports.

No Action Since March?
The most surprising thing I learned from my sources recently is that no one has yet been hired for any of these positions. So, the question remains: just what is Best Buy doing in regard to formalizing its own venture investing function? And what changes, if any, can be expected in the liaison activity with the VC community at large, based on Nyman’s departure?

One thing is certain: Marti Nyman leaves Best Buy with a wealth of relationships with scores of VCs, including many of the most successful ones in Silicon Valley, where he spent much of his time. While assessing his next move, Nyman is doing business development consulting with a Twin Cities-based technology startup that had previously raised $5 million in venture capital and, he says, is on the verge of achieving significant adoption of its technology.

Filed Under: Startups & Developers, Tech Investors Tagged With: Best Buy

ComicTwit: Putting the “wit” in “Twitter”

August 7, 2008 By Steve Borsch

Minnov8 contributor, Phil Wilson, has launched a new Twitter app just for the fun of it.  ComicTwit, a name derived from the combination of ‘comic wit’ and ‘Twitter’, launched “live and in full-screen beta!” late today. “I was looking for a way to inject more fun into micro-blogging. I like to say ComicTwit will put the ‘wit” in Twitter,” says Wilson.

Twitter’ers are invited to compose a joke, anecdote, or one liner at www.ComicTwit.com and submit it. After moderation, the “tWIT” rolls into a queue which posts to Twitter and an on-site archive so people can see all ComicTwit’s posted. “Right now we’re posting to Twitter about once an hour. Hopefully that will always leave our followers wanting more…one of the cardinal rules of comedy, ya know,” Wilson says.

The challenge will be to come up comedy in just 140 characters. “One-liners are easy. Jokes are another story, one that has to be told in very few words.” Though it doesn’t have to be original, fresh comedy is great. “Why not try out your new stuff before your next appearance on Conan…or at lunch with your peeps. If not, just make us laugh.”

Invitations went out to a select group of Tweeple (Wilson’s name for Twitter microbloggers….NOT mine!) including me, late Thursday afternoon. Wilson noted, “This is really a labor of love and we are all about the beta. We’ll see how much creativity is out there in the Twitterverse and see how the application handles it. I’ve got a ton of folks to thank for making it happen especially Steve Borsch and Johnee Bee.”

In addition to writing for Minnov8, Phil runs RemainComm, a media consultancy and blog. He is also the co-founder of Localtone Systems, designing and implementing user generated and controlled music applications including Localtone Radio. For those of us who know Phil Wilson well, I should end this post with one, little factoid: ComicTwit is the perfect and logical creation from the mind of a guy we all affectionately know as a truly world-class smart-ass!

Filed Under: Startups & Developers

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