Wednesday, 27 June 2007

Essential Web 2007

I attended Library House's Essential Web 2007 event today which combined Web early stage company pitches with panels of investors in a discussion forum.

The first session was a combination of search companies; Migoa.com, extate, Quintura, Trexy and ID companies; Garlik.com and the todeka project.

Most of the search companies Google-bashed saying the most well known search company can't do everything, particular as the amount of Web data continues to grow exponentially. Vertical and visual search provides a better quality of search more specific to the individual's search choice according to the companies presenting.

The panel asked whether Google could simply replicate what they are doing to take them out of the market. The overall response was at present, Google is not competing with vertical search companies because at a very local level its crawler technology can't mine complicated estate agent sites, for example.

The ID companies talked about privacy issues and whether there is value in our personal identities online.

The todeka project seemed immediately engaging as it enables Digital ID certification and Digital Life Management. You can prove who you say you are online with an ID certificate and manage your ID to only put the details you want to on the Web. Garlik lets you trawl the internet to find out how many personal details you have posted online for all to see, which I'm sure will surprise most people.

With everyone willing to put their most intimate details on sites like Facebook, will the consumer care about this? The discussion concluded this will happen only when people realise their identities and tastes are valuable to advertisers. When this will occur is open to debate and mass adoption of ID certification won't kick off anytime soon.

Panelists included: Saul Klein, venture partner, Index Ventures; Graham Sadd, CEO, PAOGA; David Soskin, CEO, Cheapflights and Howzat Media.

Thursday, 21 June 2007

Tech news links 21/06/07

BBC's Bill Thompson on future of social networking - mentions Photosynth and its potential future impact as well as looking at Facebook v MySpace

Tech story of the week - speculation that Murdoch might swap MySpace for a stake in Yahoo! comment from Bobbie Johnson

Report on Techtalk 2007 hosted by Connect Yorkshire yesterday - I attended this event. Most interesting talk by far was Steve Garnet from Salesforce.com who said software is dead, long live software as a service. Well he would, wouldn't he.

Mobiles more important than sex according to teens in survey reported at the Register - those digital natives eh!

Thursday, 31 May 2007

Tech news links 31/05/07

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Thursday, 17 May 2007

Home is where the work is




Silicon.com is conducting a home working experiment tomorrow with the whole editorial team working from home for a day.

Amongst most technology companies I encounter homeworking seems to be standard practice now. Employers have realised that people are more productive when not in the office being interrupted all the time and are more than happy to invest in Blackberry's etc.

While at Skype, our whole global PR team worked from homes dotted around the UK and US. We used Skype for free calls to one another, multi-person conferences/instant messaging and a Wiki to access documents/share information via any Web connection. I have to say the whole company walked the walk.

I was talking to employees at Civica the other day and they can work from home when they want or just bob into their nearest office if they fancy a change of scenery. I think this is important as you can get a bit of cabin fever if you work from home all the time.

The other important thing is to be disciplined in your work hours so that it doesn't eat into your home life - which can be difficult if you have colleagues in different time zones! Anyone tips for homeworkers? Or views from your office (as above)?