Jan 15

Submit your blog to Erica Lucci’s “Read Phoenix” site if you haven’t already. And then add this badge to the side bar of your blog:

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Simply copy that image and host it yourself or paste this code on your site:

<a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/readphx"><img id="ReadPhx" src="https://scrollinondubs.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/ReadPhxBadge.png" alt="Read stories from other Phoenix bloggers" /></a>

It links to a single feed that aggregates the posts of all the authors listed on Read Phoenix. Adding the badge exposes your readers to current posts from other authors in AZ. We’re always doing things to help knit the tech community better. This is a way to boost the visibility of other Phoenix authors and create a “web ring” that introduces your readers to them, and theirs to you. Here’s a post that explains how that feed is generated dynamically.

And if you’re in the Phoenix area and have no lunch plans tomorrow (Friday), come out to TempeNerds and talk shop with other local nerds.

Jan 11

Curious if anyone else has experienced this effect:

Twitter has almost completely supplanted my drive to make thoughtful, in-depth blog posts. Its low-friction, sound bite, instant gratification-ness style for interaction satisfies enough of what the lengthier public writing used to provide to where it’s now become the path of least resistance for meeting that need.

Let me first say I’m not hating on Twitter. It definitely has value as a communication tool and can be used in various beneficial ways (I just wrote about last month). And I understand a device like Twitter can’t be blamed for behavior anymore than a handgun can be blamed for violence. But at least in my situation it has undeniably sapped mental cycles in the way that a mindless primetime TV show being on in the background can suck me in and shut my brain off. I’ve got a theory on the dynamics of what’s happening here but before we examine the heist, let’s rewind and look at what the blog used to satisfy.

Pre-Twitter

For me in the past keeping a blog has served as:

  1. a reference for remembering links, random thoughts and non-intuitive things I had figured out
  2. an outlet for airing out observations and wacky ideas and getting input from others
  3. a shaming instrument to call companies out on injustices or crappy customer service experiences
  4. a self-promo tool for our company
  5. a way to give anyone who wants to connect with me more “surface area” to work with
  6. an exercise in persuasive writing
  7. a personal space to encourage deep or thoughtful exchange on complex topics that I find interesting

Those are the main reasons I have written and continue to write posts (albeit now at an anemic pace).

Post-Twitter

So what has changed with the introduction of Twitter as a communication medium? Very simply, Twitter solves every one of those above except for the last two. And it does so with less friction. We naturally gravitate to the solutions that require the minimal amount of effort while adequately satisfying our needs. Whereas before keeping the blog was the path of least resistance, Twitter has become that. The only problem is that #6 & #7 aren’t a part of this new path. Or well okay, let me restate that: it’s really difficult to say anything compelling or thoughtful in a 140-char message.

But if it’s “really difficult,” that’s a good thing right? A challenge. A hard path. Constraints breed creativity!

Wrong. In an increasingly-ADHD environment of rapid volleys of thousands of disparate and abrupt communication snippets, I would say the real constraint challenge now is focus and attention, not message length. There’s an addictive, caffeine-like quality to Twitter too where once you’re out there, you feel compelled to stay abreast of this distributed conversation that’s occurring. You begin to feel obligated to keep up with people with whom you didn’t before. While you’re surface area is now quadrupled, your depth in connection is reduced to paper-thin.

So what

Well this is all fine and obvious Sean. What do you propose?

Acknowledging that #6 & #7 are missing (or at best diluted) seems like the first step. You can get lulled into a routine and not realize the mechanics of what’s causing the behavior. Becoming conscious of the deficiency lets you recognize the issue so you can actively hunt for the source of it and make a correction. Personally I’ve discovered I don’t respond well to “push” tactics (ie. telling myself “Sean, you should really write more on the blog”). What I do respond well to is the “pull” of a vacuum when there’s something missing.

I don’t foresee my Twitter account going away but I now recognize that it’s displaced #1-5 from this blog. The upside of this discovery is that hopefully the posts that do appear here will now be skewed towards #6 & #7. For #1-5 if you are so inclined, you can follow me on Twitter.

What do you think? Have you experienced this same effect and if so, how do you compensate?

Dec 22

Long story short: it’s possible. Not officially supported, but possible. Here’s the blog post that lists the caveats to watch for and here’s a hi-def screencast that shows the setup process from start to finish:

This is significant because right now the main options for deploying JumpBoxes on Intel Macs are two commercial products: Parallels and Fusion.

Sun’s VirtualBox product is a cross-platform, open source alternative that now gives Intel Mac users a free deployment option. Please post any questions or comments regarding this topic on the JumpBox Blog post here. And if you like the screencast give us a to promote this capability.

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Dec 09

you don't want none of this.png

Not really. But these two services when used in conjunction with one another give you the data-mashing powers of Chuck Norris and a roll of digital duct tape that would make MacGyver jealous. Below is a video screencast tutorial on how to get started with the Yahoo Pipes and Dapper services. Dapper lets you essentially construct an API for any web site while Yahoo Pipes lets you consume that API and perform operations on the data to turn it into something more useful.

The problem we’ll solve in the next 18 min: there’s currently no easy way to subscribe to the 200+ local bloggers listed on Read Phoenix (short of visiting each blog and sub’ing the RSS feeds individually). In this tutorial we’ll build an app from start to finish that spiders the list of bloggers on that site, grabs the latest posts from each blog and provides a single, chronologically-sorted master feed of the most recent posts and filtering out auto-generated bookmark posts. Here’s the tutorial:



The assets for this tutorial can be found here:

  • Hi-def screencast
  • The Dap
  • The Pipe
  • The Feed
  • What kind of useful mashups could you imagine creating with these tools?

    Nov 22

    Twitter (like Facebook or any social media app) is what you make of it. It can be a massive time sink devolving into useless drivel with your friends (“hey I’m eating a sandwich”) or it can be a way to engage in relevant conversations with strangers. I’ve been using a persistent search via RSS to monitor Twitter dialogue for people having trouble installing various Open Source applications. This allows me to reach out to potential customers on their turf and provide them an introduction to our product by speaking in terms that are relevant to their immediate need. Our greatest challenge at JumpBox is how to spread awareness of our product to people who would never think to look for a virtual appliance to solve their problem. This technique gives me passive recon that allows me to build a bridge from our offering to their specific situation. Here’s how you can do it for your product or service:

    First think about the people you’re trying to reach- what is the pain you solve that these people might be complaining about? Are there key phrases or combinations of words that come up in conversation that identify them as qualified prospects for your product? Brainstorm a list of these terms or combination of terms and go to Twitter Search and test your terms:

    Picture 1.png

    You may need to play with the terms a bit but ideally you’ll find a handful of people like these who are expressing pain:


    *NOTE: Total time investment thus far = 1min. Once you determine that this is worth investing some time to connect with these people, you’ll need to create a Twitter account to be able to respond to them. I won’t go into how to do that (it’s extremely simple, visit twitter.com). If you already have a Twitter acct, I do recommend that you create a new one called “YourServiceRadar” or “YourProductRecon” rather than flood your current followers with what will be a bunch of unsolicited chatter about your product. I created one called “JumpBoxEars” for us.

    Now this would be useful in itself to conduct searches periodically and respond to people but that makes for a lot of new work. Us nerds are lazy and prefer to do less work whenever possible. Here’s how you turn this active search process into a passive lead generator:

    On that search results page there is an orange button in the upper right that will give you an RSS feed of those results in realtime.

    Picture 3.png

    Using this feature is like having an intern working for you around the clock clicking refresh on the search results and only telling you when he finds a new one. You’ll need to use an RSS reader (Bloglines and Google Reader are two popular free ones, many browsers now also have the ability to consume RSS). Subscribe to this RSS feed with whatever client you’re using and you’ll now get just the new results as they happen.

    Now all you need to do is scan through the newest results as they come to you and respond individually to the people you think you can help. You’re limited to 140 chars so you have to be very concise and couch your recommendation in pithy terms that make your product relevant to their situation. This is no time for marketing speak (there’s no room for it)- use plain english and connect with the person by matching their language (ie. if they say “sucks” you say “bummer”).

    Picture 5.png

    From their perspective you’re a good samaritan that was walking down the road, heard their problem and stopped to offer a helpful suggestion. If you’re into the Solution Selling methodology, this is key because they’ve admitted a need and that’s a critical moment where you have the invitation to intercede and solve it. This method of contact is about a kajillion times more effective than cold calling people out of the blue because you’re reaching out to help them with a problem they’ve expressed they have.

    But wait, it gets better. There’s an bonus viral benefit to you here. If you truly do provide a helpful bit of info to this person in need, he/she will respond to you and say thanks.

    Picture11.png

    Now you’ve just reached that person’s followers as well and have an unsolicited third-party endorsement and an amplified reach from your effort.

    Hrmmmm, so how could we get even more lazy at this point…. I had a 3 x 35 matrix of terms I wanted to monitor (“problem,” “install” and “setup” for every application we offer). Now I could setup 105 individual feeds but that seems like a lot of work. With a little digging I found the Twitter Search Operators page which is a simple reference for all the Boolean and other operators you can use in your searches. I was able to reduce that 3×35 matrix to 1x by writing this query for each:

    "wordpress" setup OR problem OR install

    There’s probably a nifty way to reduce it down to a single query with enough creativity but I wanted to have a feed for each app so they would be grouped rather than intermingled.

    UPDATE: I just found it’s possible to get an RSS feed of the replies to your recon twitter accoount. Click on the replies tab while logged in and you’ll see a link at the bottom for RSS. Because this is a password-protected feed you’ll not be able to use online readers like Google Reader and Bloglines. If you happen to be using Firefox, you’ll notice an orange RSS button in your address bar. Click it and enter your Twitter credentials and have it put the replies in your toolbar so you can easily check it. Initiating the conversation spreads awareness but you leave them hanging if you don’t followup on replies.

    So there you have it: near-realtime response to people who are suffering from problems that your products can solve. And a bonus reward when you do provide helpful info in that you get an endorsement from a trusted source that goes out to all of that person’s followers. This is all what you make of it. I invest about 10min each evening by scanning my TwitterRadar feed and responding to people I believe we can help. But if you invest a little time every day, it can provide a new fountain of pre-qualified leads for your salespeople and the opportunity to chime in when you know they need help. And even if the people you contact in the Twitterverse don’t become customers, they will at the very least be appreciative of your effort to offer assistance. And that kind of goodwill is priceless.

    So what are the key phrases in twitter conversations that could identify your potential customers who are currently in pain?

    Oct 22

    Friday night it was merely an idea. By Sunday night it was a prototype. And by Tuesday afternoon it was on the homepage of TechCrunch. How did we do it with Reserve Chute?

    This was a perfect storm where an old idea whose time had come collided with a group of capable, motivated people with the right skills in the right environment punctuated with just the right amount of Zoolander.

    People using SaaS applications love the convenience but face the possibility of losing access to their data -whether it be caused by the company going out of business overnight, hard drives and backups failing or simply by their internet connection being interrupted. Users want the peace of mind knowing that they have a local copy of their data and they want a brain-dead-simple way to achieve this for all their online applications. The tool we created this weekend offers this capability and makes it possible for any contributor to add extend the system and add hooks to make it work with new services.

    While the demo we showed on Sunday night is not publicly available yet, our small but stalwart group is already plotting a series of Wednesday night hack sessions at Gangplank to advance the project to a shippable first version targeted for release sometime around the Holidays. For now, if you use any web-based services and want to be able to automatically store a unified, local copy of your data across all your applications, sign up for the beta and be among the first to try out Reserve Chute!

    Other noteworthy projects that sprang to life this weekend:

  • Twitteratr
  • MyShelterHelper
  • And on another note, if you’re in Phoenix this evening come out to my talk on startup lessons at the Club eFactory in north Phoenix.

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    P.S. And yes that is a Karate Kid Cobra Kai t-shirt I’m wearing. Sweep the LEG!

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