Back

We got home late last night and after a cuppa headed off to bed for what was the most comfortable nights sleep I’ve had in two weeks. I have over 2000 unread items in Google Reader (I’ve been cropping it 25 items at a time using the iPhone offline Reader client, Byline) and heaps more … Continue reading “Back”

We got home late last night and after a cuppa headed off to bed for what was the most comfortable nights sleep I’ve had in two weeks.

I have over 2000 unread items in Google Reader (I’ve been cropping it 25 items at a time using the iPhone offline Reader client, Byline) and heaps more Starred for later consideration so I’ll be busy every evening churning out some thoughts based on them. Byline, by the way, is an essential tool if you like reading blogs and can make use of the offline reading (yes, it’s also an offline web browser). And yes, it would be even better if you could dial up the number of articles it downloaded (say, 100?) and when you Star an item it should ask you for a ‘tag’ or reason why you starred it. But even with this, it’s a fabulous application that has never crashed (though Google has sent it some odd errors) and always delivers. Bravo!

Today however is set for preparing for the new job tomorrow (when I’ve been wearing very casual clothes for the last two weeks it’s a bit of an adjustment). And dropping off pressies and saying Hi to family.

Being out of the loop for two weeks feels like being cut off completely. And yes, though I was able to read headlines and skim the odd article, it’s a weird feeling when every part of your daily feed comes through a tiny handheld and your ‘edit/upload’ capabilities are severely curtailed due to the tools you have. I empathise a little with Manfred Macx, the protagonist at the start of Accelerando, when he loses his identity a little when his glasses and backup memory are stolen. I’m not yet at the stage where I’m backing up memories (4 months per Terabyte) but bloggers often put things in their blogs (public or private) which are meant as reminders. We tag them for easy retrieval. I’ve certainly used the blogs I run to capture ‘state’ by writing private posts which indicate the mood I was in, the things that were happening around me.

Right now, I’m off to grab my laptop from the secure storage 🙂

Venture Altruists

I first read the term in Charles Stross’ Accelerando ( which is quite good though horribly dated now ) and it reminded me of one of the first group activities we had on board the ship; the emergency drill. In theory you move without fuss or panic to the muster stations and don your life-jacket. … Continue reading “Venture Altruists”

I first read the term in Charles Stross’ Accelerando ( which is quite good though horribly dated now ) and it reminded me of one of the first group activities we had on board the ship; the emergency drill.

In theory you move without fuss or panic to the muster stations and don your life-jacket. The person behind you is meant to check you’ve put the damn thing on correctly (because if not you’ll vanish beneath the waves when you hit the water leaving an otherwise perfectly functional life-jacket bobbing about up top. You then do it for them. The network of trust this created means you get a benefit from helping others.

In my TA days, this was called the Buddy-Buddy system. Keeping your squad alive meant they’d be around to save your neck later (and presumably not just by drawing fire as an additional target).

There’s a lot to be said for the concept of the venture altruist ( or the altrupreneur ) especially when you consider the enthusiasm shown at the local Open Coffee Club meetings in Belfast. BOCC is still in the state of talking about stuff and not yet really at the state of doing stuff. I’d like to change that by encouraging everyone to consider being a venture altruist fir a while.

Altrupreneurs share. It’s not about being there first, it’s not about NDAs, it’s not even about waiting until you are ready. It’s about throwing something interesting into the melting pot.

Ideas are almost worthless without implementation – I don’t recall where I got this from but a ideas and implementations can be ranked from $1 to $1000. Take the values and multiply them. A $1000 idea if given a $1 implementation doesn’t make anyone happy. A $1 idea can also disappoint even if given a $1000 implementation. You really need to give a $1000 idea a $1000 implementation to see real results ( though this leaves plenty if room for $100 ideas and $100 implementations).

Altrupreneurs, the people you might find at any Open Coffee meeting, will be willing to do more than just listen and give opinions. Their contacts and expertise is worth a lot more than a cheque from a venture capitalist They’re the people to ask about hosting space for your startup, the people who’ll loan you a desk while you bootstrap your company, who aren’t afraid to pick up the tab or who will work to find sponsorship for a crazy pitch they just heard.

Treat the crazy pitch like your buddy and help him check his lifejacket so he can keep his head above water.

CoWorking: profit or non-profit

LaunchPad CoWorking An interview with Jerome Chang, founder of Blankspaces: Spike: You’re also using a for-profit business model (as is LaunchPad Coworking). How did you decide on this model? Did you take any heat for it? Jerome: I’m all for pushing collaboration and communities — if profit is what it takes to generate more participants … Continue reading “CoWorking: profit or non-profit”

LaunchPad CoWorking
An interview with Jerome Chang, founder of Blankspaces:

Spike: You’re also using a for-profit business model (as is LaunchPad Coworking). How did you decide on this model? Did you take any heat for it?
Jerome: I’m all for pushing collaboration and communities — if profit is what it takes to generate more participants and advance the cultural movement, then profit it is. Between the time and effort, money, and liability, we should be rewarded for that contribution and exposure. Besides, I didn’t know about coworking at all until I’d already started construction, so I was not “influenced” by the altruism.

I’m becoming more and more convinced that a Co-Working site needs to be a ‘company’ as opposed to a ‘charity’.

I’ve seen lots of non-profits fall by the wayside due to the founders needing to move on and it’s hard to find people with the right mentality to take over. I’ve seen non-profits founder because without the extra edge of needing to make a profit (and reaping benefits thereof) the good will can vanish.

I’m well aware that people working at a non-profit can draw salaries and that the non-profit moniker has been used in order to attract attention while the ‘workers’ draw insanely large salaries. I guess I’m not comfortable hiding behind the tax benefits of a non-profit while engaged in something that is creating things ‘for profit’.

But let’s run with the current school of thought. That CoWorkingBelfast will be a non-profit organisation.

That said – if I have anything to do with it, CoWorkingBelfast will have to be a shining light and not just a damp squib. I want it to be excellent, a model place to work and not just a set of desks in a dreary room above a bank. It has to make enough money to survive and prosper and not just be a half-empty space which has to resort to arcane marketing schemes disguised as trade shows in order to generate a bit of coin.

Part of the Co-Working Belfast ethos should, in my opinion, to create ‘industry culture’ in Northern Ireland. That’s got to be more than just creating a web portal (and how many of those have sprung up in the last year or so) but the creation of a lasting legacy, a tradition of fostering creativity in the technology sector. CoWorking is not about technology itself – it’s about connecting people where they were not previously connected.

Part of the culture of CoWorking Belfast should not only be the opportunities and connections which are brought about by proximity but also the potential for fostering tomorrow’s industry (you know, the people who will be paying taxes when you and I are in a home for the elderly). I have a plan which consists of nothing more than a couple of pledges, a holding page on a web site and a monthly bill which I’ll work to find sponsorship for – which will be wholly dedicated to finding people with energy, be they young in body or just young in mind, and giving them a place to work and express their creativity as well as providing mentoring (by using and abusing the people housed in the CoWorking building) – more on this later.

Through this meandering post I’m convincing myself that CoWorkingBelfast can be a no-profit. What do you think?

Ideas

David from 37Signals writes: So somebody else built a successful business on that idea you had three years ago. What does that mean? That if you would just have pursued that idea, you would now automatically be enjoying their spoils? Sorry to burst your bubble, but I really don’t think so. Ideas on their own … Continue reading “Ideas”

David from 37Signals writes:

So somebody else built a successful business on that idea you had three years ago. What does that mean? That if you would just have pursued that idea, you would now automatically be enjoying their spoils? Sorry to burst your bubble, but I really don’t think so.

Ideas on their own are just not that important. It’s incredibly rare that someone comes up with an idea so unique, so protectable that the success story writes itself. Most ideas are nothing without execution.

I think this says something else.

If you have a good idea, pursue it. Don’t just write it down and think about doing it in the future. Go do something about it now. It might be hard but nothing worthwhile was ever easy.

The Changing of the Guards

Gentlemen, he said, I don’t need your organization, I’ve shined your shoes, I’ve moved your mountains and marked your cards But Eden is burning, either brace yourself for elimination Or else your hearts must have the courage for the changing of the guards. I’ve been a Bob Dylan fan for as long as I can … Continue reading “The Changing of the Guards”

Gentlemen, he said,
I don’t need your organization, I’ve shined your shoes,
I’ve moved your mountains and marked your cards
But Eden is burning, either brace yourself for elimination
Or else your hearts must have the courage for the changing of the guards.

I’ve been a Bob Dylan fan for as long as I can remember. Somewhere my father has a recording of me as a three year old singing “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door” which is probably as creepy and morbid as you can get. And in First Year in Rathmore we had to do a music project – of our favourite soloist and favourite group. The other kids picked Madness or whatever was popular at the time. I picked Bob Dylan and the Beatles.

I’m feeling butterflies. I don’t know why. Part of it must be because I sense my time with $BIG_CO is going to end soon and part because I feel something exciting is going to be happening. I was speaking with some NI ex-pats in the realms of digital content, online services and gaming this week.

I’ve shined your shoes, moved your mountains, mark your cards. Brace yourself, for the Changing of the Guards.

Coworking Microsupport

Microfinance see Microcredit. –noun the lending of very small amounts of money at low interest, esp. to a start-up company or self-employed person. The problem with Microfinance and Microcredit is that, at the end of the day, someone ends up owing someone else money. And that’s a shaky way to get started in anything. The … Continue reading “Coworking Microsupport”

Microfinance

see Microcredit. –noun
the lending of very small amounts of money at low interest, esp. to a start-up company or self-employed person.

The problem with Microfinance and Microcredit is that, at the end of the day, someone ends up owing someone else money. And that’s a shaky way to get started in anything.

The concept of Microfinance for small businesses in return for equity in the business has already been successfully applied via Paul Graham’s Ycombinator.

Y Combinator does seed funding for startups. Seed funding is the earliest stage of venture funding. It pays your expenses while you’re getting started.
We make small investments (rarely more than $20,000) in return for small stakes in the companies we fund (usually 2-10%).
What happens at Y Combinator? The most important thing we do is work with startups on their ideas. We’re hackers ourselves, and we’ve spent a lot of time figuring out how to make things people want. So we can usually see fairly quickly the direction in which a small idea should be expanded, or the point at which to begin attacking a large but vague one.

This seems to me to be a different slant on the pre-Bubble concept of ‘code for pizza’. I knew a couple of smart guys back pre-2000 who worked full time for companies in return for pizza and promises while in receipt of unemployment benefit – they were doing the right thing after all – making a real concerted effort to get off the unemployment line by trying to be employable. None of them are gazillionaires right now (which shows the benefits of contracts over promises).

While Northern Ireland has had the concept of the incubator for years (the first one I visited was the Fujitsu/University of Ulster funded incubator where I met the guys who were ‘Osarius’ who have now all moved on to bigger and better things), it was definitely in a larger scale. There were desks, offices, stationery. That’s not the sector I’m interested in.

With the work being done for the co-working space in Northern Ireland, it is my intent to fund a desk or two and provide some desktop computers (intel iMacs) in order to foster some idea of Microsupport for potential startup companies. It’s not about funding their pizza or foozball lifestyles because people who want to get things done will find a way – this is operational expenditure. The hard part for this sector is the capital expenditure. By providing up to date hardware and taking advantage of the bountiful free time that ‘young people’ have, I think there could be an excellent environment created in the co-working space to foster new and cool innovations coming out of Belfast. David Rice wrote that the co-working initiative is designed to espouse this single concept:

Bringing silicon valley thinking to Belfast by creating a cutting edge work space for digital and creative workers.

It’s my aim that one of the rooms in the upstairs be allocated to ‘incubation’ for a few potential movers and shakers out there who need that extra bit of support to get started. I don’t care whether they want to become movie makers, software engineers, web developers or digital artists – as long as they don’t just sit around surfing the web, it’s got to be better than nothing. I’ve not really talked about this with David, Andy or anyone else central to CoworkingBelfast so they may throw their hands up and tell me to piss off – but this is the concept. Most of the individuals involved in CoWorking Belfast are young men who probably would have loved to have a co-working space available to them especially with some up to date hardware starting up.

What would Co-Working Belfast get out of it? Another raison d’etre. Karma. Kudos. Reputation. And the feeling of doing the right thing. Maybe if they’re a success they’ll help fund the next iteration of CoWorking Belfast or whatever the new fad of the day is.

There are other similar methods of support out there which have a similar model but are not the same and therefore I think this brings a certain uniqueness. For example, Google’s Summer of Code provides a $5000 stipend for student developers for summer (around 3 months) of work on open source projects. Google funds around 400 students each summer this way (putting the bill at around $2 million) but then they are Google and have infinite money. There are also business incubation services in Northern Ireland available through InvestNI but the pitch is for the slightly later stage when the individuals know what they’re doing and need the incubation from hatchling to maturity.

To extend the metaphor, I’m talking about supporting the egg itself – until the egg cracks. It’s never been easier to start up a business and become the next Twitter, Youtube, Big Word Project or 37Signals and it is these kinds of business that we should be fostering. I think that the people involved in starting the co-working space in Belfast are best qualified to determine who uses the ‘hatchery’.

The co-working space itself won’t make Belfast like Silicon Valley by it’s presence, but by it’s vision.

Recession coming, solution = Entrepreneurship

John F. Kennedy writes about the recession of the Irish economy Enterprise and entrepreneurship are the antidote for unemployment and recession. Encourage people to use computers and broadband to beat the recession, they can work for anyone from anywhere. They can create businesses based on anything from selling stuff on eBay to using their intelligence … Continue reading “Recession coming, solution = Entrepreneurship”

John F. Kennedy writes about the recession of the Irish economy

Enterprise and entrepreneurship are the antidote for unemployment and recession. Encourage people to use computers and broadband to beat the recession, they can work for anyone from anywhere. They can create businesses based on anything from selling stuff on eBay to using their intelligence to write, provide consultancy services or develop technology. This is the way out. Failure to provide them with the tools is economic sabotage. Let’s hope intelligence prevails.

Yes!

This sort of thinking is what Momentum and the Digital Circle[1] should be working on. It’s not necessarily about supporting the existing economy but by providing grass roots access to technology to take advantage of nascent knowledge workers.

I just don’t see us taking advantage of it. And we’d have to work hard to create value in this ‘credit crunch restricted’ world. That said, while the property market is in the doldrums, there are investors with cash in their portfolios looking for technologies to invest in.

To this end we need strategies like Co-Working Belfast or my as-yet-stillborn New Workspace to provide the most basic substrate for people to find places to work and collaborate. Just getting the space organised would make a big step – the rest is then up to the individuals with experienced mentors providing the introductions. How about a system of half a dozen mini-Ycombinators?

Anyway. You’re a taxpayer. Think about it.

[1] For a laugh, see digitalcircle.org without the www. Anyone see a problem?

DE-clutter

Back in January, I read these hints…er….laws on how to simply your life. My life isn’t as simple as that. My ‘clutter’ is virtual. It’s the procrastination that prevents me from being productive all the time. I don’t mind being productive – most of the things I consider to be productive I actually enjoy – … Continue reading “DE-clutter”

Back in January, I read these hints…er….laws on how to simply your life.

My life isn’t as simple as that.

My ‘clutter’ is virtual. It’s the procrastination that prevents me from being productive all the time. I don’t mind being productive – most of the things I consider to be productive I actually enjoy – I like being productive! It gives me a buzz.

This weekend I decided to end procrastination. I had to work hard, having the kids and with HerIndoors out and about, and every spare moment I did things that were productive, or pretended well to be.

  • Cleared down Google Reader. Yes, this is learning. I locked my ‘unproductive” blogs into one folder and concentrated on the productive ones.
  • Wrote some more Cocoa. Still nowhere near porting my Random app to the iPhone which is the current project. And no-one to talk to (due to NDA).
  • Filled in an Application for a job I really want. It ticks all the boxes. All of them. All I need to do now is convince a host of people I’m the man for the job.
  • Cleared down some ‘crap’ folders I had lingering around. You know – clear down the desktop by dumping everything in one folder and hoping Spotlight will do it’s magic. It’s been working great so far.
  • Read another chapter of a book I’ve been reading for 4 months. Glasshouse by Charles Stross. For some reason it took me nearly two months to read the first 50 pages, then I sped through most of it and now I’m struggling to read the last 50. No reflection on the writing, though I’m not mad keen on posthuman fantasies (which doesn’t explain why I’m really liking the Culture series), but curious nonetheless.
  • Cleaned the house and put on 4 washes. Sorted through clothes. I now have underwear! Woohoo!

It’s hard work staying busy. I’ll sleep tonight.

(On a side note, Tracy from SoulAmbition noted that they provide a free no-obligation first session of their life coaching! I’ve never been to a life-coach though I’ve heard great recommendations of them. Would a session fill me with confidence or leave me reeling at the great truths I’d been hiding even from myself?)

Start Small.

DHH writes that it doesn’t have to be all or nothing with a startup: Startup mythology demands that to create something great, you need superhuman sacrifices. You need to work for no pay, you need to put in 120 hours/week, you need to preferably sleep under the desk and live off pizza as a sole … Continue reading “Start Small.”

DHH writes that it doesn’t have to be all or nothing with a startup:

Startup mythology demands that to create something great, you need superhuman sacrifices. You need to work for no pay, you need to put in 120 hours/week, you need to preferably sleep under the desk and live off pizza as a sole form of nutrient. As a result, you need to abandon your family and risk life without insurance.

So don’t despair, just start small. Reserve a couple of nights per week, a Sunday morning here, and a day from vacation time there. It’s never been cheaper or faster to build a web startup, it’s never been more possible to do it as a side-business.

Things I said today to a colleague…

(when he asked why I was learning to write code) If you want something done, do it yourself! Ideas are worthless without execution Related posts: Implementation and Execution RubyCocoa – to_i and to_s London, City of the Future RubyCocoa (and SyncServices)

(when he asked why I was learning to write code)

  1. If you want something done, do it yourself!
  2. Ideas are worthless without execution