Archive for the 'Technology' Category

Appcelerator Hits the Top 10

I know, I know.  This blog is starting to become an Appcelerator fan boy site.  What can I say?  Jeff Haynie and crew are hitting on all cylinders.  I even opted to not talk about the latest addition to Appcelerator’s advisory board just to ease off some.  But Jeff isn’t making this easy.

The folks at Appcelerator (and Jeff himself) have announced that they made the Top 10 of TAG’s Most Innovative Technology Companies in Georgia.  At the TAG Summit on Wednesday Jeff is going to do a three minute pitch about his company (hmmm..  three minutes..  interesting amount of time - keep that in mind because you’ll be seeing that number again in a future post).

Too bad I can’t make the summit.  Speaking of which, you probably won’t see any posts from me between Wednesday and Sunday this week.  I’m occupied with some folks who are in town and we’ll be doing some crazy meetings while they’re here.  I’ll post details about this on my personal blog since it isn’t startup, entrepreneurship, or fund raising related.

Oh yeah, congratulations to Jeff and the Appcelerator crew.  Blah, blah, blah…  :-)

Google Goes On A (Mini) Hiring Binge in Atlanta

GoogleIt looks like the GOOG is starting to add onto its Atlanta staff by opening up seven new positions in its Atlanta data center.  I hadn’t realized that the Google data center in Atlanta was down on 10th street but once you see how close that is to Georgia Tech, you can see why since it’s ideally suited to attract PhD candidates as they graduate from school.

Laser Atlanta’s SpeelLaser B

Honestly, I’ve never even heard of Laser Atlanta.  But apparently they make all things laser for all things measurable.  They just released a new palm size laser detector for law enforcement.  Of course, as Engadget says, the description of “palm-size” may be stretching the normal definition a bit.  By the way, the model in the picture doesn’t seem to be too happy having a laser shooting out near his head.  Just an observation.

(via Engadget)

What To Say About Evoca?

I had an interesting call with the CEO of Evoca, Murem Sharpe (that’s her in the photo to the left holding the phone), about what they’re doing a few weeks ago. If you recall I previously wrote about ATDC companies that didn’t drive their own public awareness. One of the companies that does seem to own their public persona is Evoca. They have a nice looking site as well as an updated blog (although the last entry right now is dated December 28, 2007).

The reason it has taken me so long to write about Evoca is first, there has been a lot of good stories to write about but second, I needed to figure out what I thought of their business. In a nutshell, Evoca lets clients convert audio into an embeddable online audio clip. Nothing spectacular, right? Well, their hook is that you use a regular phone to do it. So the idea is that usage is vastly simplified since most everyone knows how to use their phone or cellphone to make a phone call.

Evoca has some interesting client wins including the Discovery Channel and has even been used by President Bill Clinton. But I’m really struggling to see how I could use this service myself. Maybe it’s because I’m not a Skype user (Evoca provides free call recording on Skype). Or maybe it’s because I would often rather chat on IM, email, or in person rather than on my cell phone (I was recently called a Luddite by a friend because I don’t do mobile email - I just like to say that I rock it old school). Judging by the list of recent Evoca recordings it seems like a lot of folks use Evoca in other countries. Maybe we just don’t get “it” in the U.S.

The competition in this space is pretty fierce. There are a lot of companies doing telecommunication related stuff including Grand Central (acquired by Google), Jangl, Jott, Yap, and Jajah. Not to say that any of these companies is directly competitive but it wouldn’t take much for one company to bleed over to another. For example, Grand Central already allows users to embed voice mail messages they receive onto a web page.

Evoca has built their system to be highly scalable and I noticed that they were serving content off of the Amazon S3 service which I talked about before in relation to JungleDisk. Murem also told me that they are using the open source Asterisk project as their platform through which phone calls get convert into audio files.

Evoca is a virtual company with people spread in multiple states. Murem told me that there are about twelve active employees and the company was founded in July 2005. The company has been completely bootstrapped over this time with no outside funding.

I’ll keep an eye on this one to see how it evolves and if I can figure out a way I can use the technology. I still haven’t figured that part out yet. Maybe I need to get a technologically current cell phone first. Nah…

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Web Trend Map 2008 by Information Architects

Information Architects have just released an update to their web trend map.  Like the original map, the new map uses the Tokyo subway system as a guide to organizing popular web sites.  Pretty interesting.  But then I might find it interesting since I spent so much time in Tokyo subways while I was working in Tokyo.