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Entries for May 2008


May 1, 2008


THU
1
MAY

Pub to pub

By Marcelo Calbucci

 

    My friend Nathan Kaiser is organizing a nPost Happy Hour Pub CrawlOpen in a new window next Friday (5/16/2008). They'll go from bar to bar and TwitterOpen in a new window as they move along. Who said is all work and no play in startupland?



May 9, 2008


FRI
9
MAY

Last minute Web 2.0 Gifts for Mom

By Marcelo Calbucci

 

    Check out this post with several cool ideas for mother's dayOpen in a new window.

 



May 13, 2008


TUE
13
MAY

How to not become old

By Marcelo Calbucci

 

    For me, a clear sign that you are an old person is when you start avoiding or preventing change. I have this belief since my early twenties when I joined the workforce and saw some very pathetic examples of co-workers that would do anything and everything to keep things the same.

 

    By then, I had decided I would fight becoming old (of the mind) by accepting and going after change. From the simple things to the big things. From trying a different route to work every once in a while, to changing car, house, lifestyle. Just to try it.

 

    We certainly cannot prevent becoming physically old (although research will improve our life expectancy and life quality significantly over the next decades), but we absolutely can prevent from becoming old mentally.

 

    Are you old?

 

    Here are a few signs:

  • You park at the same parking space every morning.
  • You have a routine for breakfast, lunch and dinner.
  • You buy the same brand of sliced bread every time.
  • You want to buy a TV that will last 10 or more years.
  • You wish they would make TVs today as they used to 10 years ago.
  • You don't try any new Web service because "the way I do for the last 10 years is just fine".
  • You don't try new foods or order always the same thing at a restaurant;
  • You have a 30-year mortgage at your house and you think you'll be there for 30 years.
  • You don't travel or you don't like to travel.

 

    This is not a "yes" or "no" kind of thing. There is a scale and everyone is somewhere on that scale. It's a scale from 1 to 10, where 1 is someone that proactively work to avoid any change, 3 is somebody that avoid changes, 5 is someone that accept some changes, but not others, 7 is someone that accept all changes and proactively works towards some changes, and 10 is someone that has commitment issues and change is all there is.

 

8:39 AM | Permalink | 3 comments


May 15, 2008


THU
15
MAY

Geo-tagging has been broken on every site until now

By Marcelo Calbucci

 

    Anyone knows a website that does Geo-tagging? Flickr, perhaps? Zooomr? Every photo sharing service? Wrong. They call it geo-tagging, but it's not. They are just attaching a Lat-Long number to a picture and that is it.

 

    I believe the new service provided by Yahoo Internet Location PlatformOpen in a new window (and soon to be copied by Google and MSN) is about to change the way we think about Geo-Tagging.

 

    Think about this scenario. I upload my Europe trip pictures to Flickr and put all of them on the map (or I used a camera that has GPS coordinates). Now I want to see the pictures on a map... Easy! Now I want to see all pictures in "Paris". Gulp! I can't, because the damn geo-tagging doesn't convert those Lat-Long numbers into named locations.

 

    I tried to implement Geo-Tagging for SampaOpen in a new window in 2006, but never finished the feature after 6 weeks of development. The reality is that Geo-Tagging done right is much, much harder than writing 10 lines of Javascript and putting it on a Google Map.

 

    Locations as we think about them are regions (polygons) that overlap each other, they have hierarchy, multiple names, convert to map coordinates and to names. Paris is a region, so is France, so is Europe. But Paris is also a name of a city in Texas, and Paris in France might have a nickname ("city of lights"). How do you handle that? And how do you handle where the picture was taken versus of what it was taken? I might be in Manhattan, but if I took a picture of Brooklin, what is the geo-tag?

 

    Ready for more? What if I want to geo-tag my house, give it the coordinate and call it "House"? That geo-tag is specific to me only, and that should be ok.

 

    So far, I have not seen any service that "got it", but I think we are about to change a corner on web 2.0 "geo-tagging" technology and I'm very excited about it.




THU
15
MAY

When did we become so bitter?

By Marcelo Calbucci

 

    Did you notice how much complaint every person does every day? We complain about politicians, the economoy, products that don't work, overpriced gasoline, UIs that are "stupid", our lack of time, lack of money...

 

    Are most of the people like that or just most of the people around me that are like that?

 

    As a society have we changed and become more critical and bitter about our lives or it has been like that since Plato?

 

    [I woke up at 5:30 AM so my brain is in some strange mode]

11:43 AM | Permalink | no comments


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