Save your business.

From a post on Enterprise Ireland’s forum “We’re a small software consultancy in business since Q3 2006; we’ve recently lost our main customer (they’ve pulled out of Ireland), upon whom we were dependent for about 90% of our revenue; we’re a small team made up exclusively of engineers; in advance of winding the operation up, … Continue reading “Save your business.”

From a post on Enterprise Ireland’s forum

“We’re a small software consultancy in business since Q3 2006; we’ve recently lost our main customer (they’ve pulled out of Ireland), upon whom we were dependent for about 90% of our revenue; we’re a small team made up exclusively of engineers; in advance of winding the operation up, I would like to explore our options with regard to getting new business; we have deep familiarity with many technologies, mainly in the enterprise computing area and I think it would be a shame to go back to the day jobs, considering we have a very strong team and can compete on cost and results with just about any comparable firm, but alas we have no sales function to speak of.”

Contrast this with a famous Joel Spolsky quote:

Watching non-programmers trying to run software companies is like watching someone who doesn’t know how to surf trying to surf.
“It’s ok! I have great advisors standing on the shore telling me what to do!” they say, and then fall off the board, again and again. The standard cry of the MBA who believes that management is a generic function.

The cult of the MBA likes to believe that you can run organizations that do things that you don’t understand.”

Now, I’m not promoting the use of the MBA as any yardstick of competency but I can both agree and disagree with Joel in the same quote based on the first paragraph from the Enterprise Ireland forum.

This small software consultancy has found itself up the creek without a paddle because they didn’t have someone smart in the ways of business at the helm. They may have had the best programmers they could source but their business is going down the toilet because they didn’t think of the business eventualities. They maybe didn’t think that their client would depart the country and this highlights two things to me:

  1. Don’t Assume Anything: The directors of the company were not directing. They were just managing. A director needs to be anticipating the direction of the company from the minutiae right up to the ten-thousand-foot view. They should have been expecting the worst. In my own experience, I’ve always considered what would happen if Mac-Sys had a credible competitor and it’s done us well. Now, with the Belfast Apple Store only weeks away, Mac-Sys will have another potential challenge. I think they will be okay due to other things they have in place but the reality of a competitor or a change in business has to be fully realised.
  2. Remove your Cataracts: The directors of the company are concerned because their client is leaving Ireland and they’re looking for alternatives. The most immediate thing that springs to mind is why their product is localised to Ireland? Can’t their client use their product elsewhere? Government agencies are always encouraging local companies to export – in this case there’s already a market. What about competitors? Can the product be re-purposed? Rather than winding up the company and posting on a local forum, they should get everyone who is able to walk out on the street looking for new software gigs).

This is why the person running a company, even a software company, needs to be a business person. She can be a programmer as well but she needs to understand the business world and take the unpredictability of business into account. It’s not the just the cult of the MBA who expects people to run organisations they don’t understand, Joel is taking for granted that the person running the software company is a programmer and therefore can understand business as well. While that may be great for him with his established pedigree, it’s not going to be the case for every person. Some people are lucky enough to be able to see with both sets of eyes: that of a programmer and a director. Some can’t. If you can’t you need to recognise this and stop running the company.

I was told a story a couple of years ago about a business that was kept running via multiple handouts from the directors and it wasn’t until the directors themselves were bankrupted that they thought to involve the workers in their own destiny. He was honest with the workers. He had no money left. And with only days to payday, he had to shut up shop unless they could do something. And do something is what they did. They worked on getting new customers, convinced them to pay within seven days and, most importantly, kept every promise they made.

Joel is fond of telling us that a great company needs great infrastructure and that the programmers may find themselves in the minority in a software company. Management is part of that infrastructure. Experienced programmers have been telling me over the last year that programming isn’t hard but you’ll hear an analogue from experienced business managers.

A software company certainly needs competent programmers – individuals who can work together to create a compelling product right from the sketch on the back of a napkin through to the version 1.0 and bug fixes. Without them you have no product. But without someone with a bit of business ken, you’ve no market.

Duplicate Names on AppStore?

Erica Sadun writes: “The two people currently selling “Voice Notes” on the store are not me. I’ve sent them both C&D letters (my first ever). My version is still “pending”. … It may be generic, but I have prior art plus a year’s headstart on the iPhone. I just want them to rename it, that’s … Continue reading “Duplicate Names on AppStore?”

Erica Sadun writes:

“The two people currently selling “Voice Notes” on the store are not me. I’ve sent them both C&D letters (my first ever). My version is still “pending”.

It may be generic, but I have prior art plus a year’s headstart on the iPhone. I just want them to rename it, that’s all.”

This surprised me.

Prior art extends to Copyright, not Trademarks.
Considering that Erica’s application is still not released, then it cannot be said that she is using “Voice Notes” as a Trademark (to be a trade mark, you have to be using it to trade, for selling).
Plus she’s just admitted that the name is generic and the name “Voice Notes” has been used umpteen times in the computer software marketplace by 37 Signals, Microsoft, Apple and others.

Erica has no rights here at all. It’ll remain to be seen whether the application vendors on the App Store take up her offer of them renaming it after receiving Cease and Desist letters. In fact, the other two vendors have more entitlement and could well serve C&D letters to her when she does release her application as they have priorly traded using the name.

IANAL, usual caveats apply.

Scoble says: iPhone 3G “worth the hell”

Robert Scoble writes: After playing with it today I’ve got to agree. This is the company that can give you a crappy camera. No video. Charge you more than other devices. Make you wait hours in line. Take hours to get your credit card approved, your iPhones activated. And, at the end of it all, … Continue reading “Scoble says: iPhone 3G “worth the hell””

Robert Scoble writes:

After playing with it today I’ve got to agree. This is the company that can give you a crappy camera. No video. Charge you more than other devices. Make you wait hours in line. Take hours to get your credit card approved, your iPhones activated. And, at the end of it all, make you feel good.

I’ve been comparing the iPhone 3G to my Nokia N82 and N95 and my Microsoft Mobile-powered Samsung Blackjack II cell phones and, again, the iPhone kicks ass.

I’d have to agree, the iPhone 3G does kick ass. Is it considerably better than iPhone 2G? No. It’s not really but the upgrade was a no brainer for existing iPhone users in the UK – it was like getting an iPod touch for free mid-contract. My old iPhone is sitting, SIM-free, for use as a development machine and part time iPod touch for the time being.

Issues for the future though – I drained my battery in much less than a day. I was using 3G and GPS a lot so that’s to be expected but between 10 am and 4 pm, the iPhone battery became seriously depleted. I’m glad I have a Solar powered FreeLoader.

Someone is leaving blogging. Now Sports…

Jason Calacanis writes: To be sure, I am going to miss blogging. I am going to miss the relationships with my fellow bloggers. I am going to miss the readers. I am going to miss the great friends that I have made over this time. I am going to miss all the good times that … Continue reading “Someone is leaving blogging. Now Sports…”

Jason Calacanis writes:

To be sure, I am going to miss blogging. I am going to miss the relationships with my fellow bloggers. I am going to miss the readers. I am going to miss the great friends that I have made over this time. I am going to miss all the good times that we have had together. But most of all, I am going to miss the comments.*

I unsubbed from most of Jason’s feeds because there was too much spam for his various properties.

Dave Winer said he’d stop blogging a while back and I’m in the same mood with this announcement.

Big deal. Just stop. There doesn’t need to be a song and dance about it, there doesn’t need to be a ‘retirement party’. As more and more of the A-list move to not blog or rely on soundbite feeds (like Friendfeed, ident.ca and whatever the flavour of the month is), we’re going to see less and less content from them. I’ve commented on this several times in relation to Robert Scoble’s blog – since he started jumping from service to service and seems to be more concerned with building his ‘followers’, there’s been a lot less content on his main blog. Is he retiring too or is this the natural order of things.

A few month ago, Jason and Robert were squabbling about who could get the most followers. It became cool to hoard followers like rare baseball cards and to plead for more, just a few more, to reach some arbitrarily determined level. Now, suddenly it’s not cool to have thousands of people trying to talk to you (or more relevantly, when twenty thousand people realise they’ve been ignored, it ain’t pretty).

What’s Jason doing? He’s moving to an email list and restricting the membership to 750. Man – something old is new again. If you really want to get back to your roots, get below the Dunbar Number in the number of people you interact with. Yup, knock it down to 150.

There’s a real opportunity for New Media Amateurs to gain some ground by providing the content that is missing. More and more, my feeds are becoming advertising or reviews as the old guard simply run out of steam. More and more established blogs are putting out less and less (as evidenced by the feeds I consume which used to get a backlog of a thousand posts if left for a week. These days it would take 3 weeks to get to that level.

HTC Touch Diamond

Earlier this week I promised a bake-off between the HTC Touch Diamond and the iPhone 3G but I’m sorry to say that I’m going to have to cry defeat. The Diamond is a lovely piece of hardware. It’s a ‘candy bar’ phone, very compact, sold-feeling, well put-together and with a gorgeous high resolution screen. The … Continue reading “HTC Touch Diamond”

Earlier this week I promised a bake-off between the HTC Touch Diamond and the iPhone 3G but I’m sorry to say that I’m going to have to cry defeat.

The Diamond is a lovely piece of hardware. It’s a ‘candy bar’ phone, very compact, sold-feeling, well put-together and with a gorgeous high resolution screen.

The TouchFLO software is very nice. It’s beautiful. It’s high-contrast, it’s touch-enhanced and the text ad email reading applications really make use of the screen. Others had said it was slow but the version we had was quite fluid. It was later that things bogged down.

It becomes apparent that the TouchFLO interface is just a veneer on the Windows Mobile software below which, if it had some sort of consistency wouldn’t be so bad.

HerIndoors was getting rid of her First Generation iPhone and getting into a Diamond because she wanted the best phone and it’s certainly the best looking phone out there. Phones, much like shoes and bags, are a fashion accessory. But after using it for 24 hours, she tearfully admitted that she hated it and wanted to go back to using the iPhone. Her reasons:

  • So slow when launching applications.
  • Not pretty once you get past TouchFLO
  • It needed the stylus because the menus were so small.
  • You needed to read a manual to use it.

Some things worked really well. As I mentioned, TouchFLO is really nice. And the camera in the Diamond really is very good, providing decent enough resolution, great autofocus and, in the end, some pretty great shots.

Muddling through and using MarkSpace’s MissingSync software we managed to get contacts and photos synchronised (though Music was a problem) and she set about using it. The browser in TouchFLO is not as fast and responsible as MobileSafari so that when you’re actually using the device, sure, it’s a 3G phone and downloading the information fine, but it’s too slow to navigate around.

Setting the date and time as well was a chore. Scrolling through a huge list to get to the United Kingdom just got us to another list. And if your ‘scroll swipes’ hit it wrong then you’d end up selecting another country at random and the process had to start again. There was no way to skip to ‘U’ which there might have been on a phone with a keypad. This isn’t a condemnation of ‘touch’ phones but of an underlying operating system that is designed for keypads.

The speed issue was considerable. Every application took a lot longer than the iPhone equivalent to load and you quickly got glimpses beyond the sleek TouchFLO interface and into the murky world of Windows Mobile. With every tap on the screen you could expect a pregnant pause as the tap was translated to the underlying hardware and the results computed. We’re talking about maybe the difference between half a second and 1.5 seconds but in a device like a phone, a sluggish interface is very noticeable.

Also, the inconsistency between hitting the TouchFLO OK buttons at the bottom of the screen and the Windows Mobile OK button at the top left of the screen made it all more confusing as I was scanning my eyes around trying to figure out where the next OK needed tapping. And, it uses a resistance based screen (not capacitance) which, as I understand it, means it works with a stylus and fingernail but not too well with fingers. That would explain some of the scrolling issues.

These may seem to be relatively minor things but when they add up, it was simply too much. As I mentioned, the hardware is beautiful and we can hope that HTC does something similar with an Android phone later this year. On paper, this phone is a lot better than the iPhone. In execution it is incredibly flawed. This may, on the other hand, suit someone who has low expectations on the usability of a phone, who is used to Windows Mobile (though TouchFLO isn’t anything like Windows Mobile and draws the ire of HTC critics who claim the company is breaking the standard interface.).

So, when she sat down and I suggested we do the bake-off between the Diamond and my new iPhone 3G, she refused and asked me to reformat the device to remove all of her details because it was going back. Boom, that’s that. I don’t blame her because, frankly, I found the whole experience to be a chore and it may be a real shame that I’m now spoiled and expect a UI for my phone that’s simple enough to use without a manual and is responsive to my touch. The HTC Touch Diamond is now repacked back in the box to be exiled back to the supplier.

This is what the 12th July…

…means to me. photo posted from my iPhone Related posts: BarCamp Belfast 08 mini review The trip to OCC BBQ, part 1 This month is going to be bumper…. Digital Society & Satellite Applications – 12th June – Belfast

…means to me.

photo posted from my iPhone

GPS Works

And it’s more entertaining than my TomTom (and maps seem more up to date too) photo posted from my iPhone Related posts: iPad The Third Generation of Personal Computers WiFi iPad gets GPS through iPhone Personal Hotspot Punditry Works

And it’s more entertaining than my TomTom (and maps seem more up to date too)

photo posted from my iPhone

3G iPhone

I picked up my iPhone 3G this morning. There’s been mixed reports of how people got on with most people managing to get something. As a rule it seems to be that O2 Retail stores got 30-50 iPhones with about a quarter of them 16 GB models. O2 Franchise stores seemed to get less than … Continue reading “3G iPhone”

I picked up my iPhone 3G this morning. There’s been mixed reports of how people got on with most people managing to get something. As a rule it seems to be that O2 Retail stores got 30-50 iPhones with about a quarter of them 16 GB models. O2 Franchise stores seemed to get less than 10 iPhones. And Carphone Warehouse didn’t get any at all.

I’m not going to bore anyone with unboxing, just relevant detail.

  • Swapping over the SIM made everything work really easily.
  • The old iPhone, without SIM, is essentially an iPod touch. You don’t need another SIM.
  • Syncing the OS2.0 units takes a long time. A lot longer than the OS1.0 units.
  • The black back picks up fingerprints easily. Buy a case. Why risk it.
  • There were no white units in stock anywhere.
  • O2 staff have infinite patience.
  • 3G is as fast as my home WiFi.
  • GPS works. Though not so well on the ground floor of a 2-storey building.

Did you get yours?

Gruesome

There are some applications which, frankly, should have been stopped at the door. These are PalmOS apps. They should have stayed there. Go here for more gruesome discoveries. Related posts: Developing for iPhone? MoMoBelfast and the Apps Show and Tell The iApp Pricing Dilemma This month is going to be bumper….

There are some applications which, frankly, should have been stopped at the door.

These are PalmOS apps. They should have stayed there.

Go here for more gruesome discoveries.