Posts from July 2005

My 50 Favorite Albums (continued)

Some_girls1978. 

The summer before my senior year in high school.

This record comes out.

It hits the turntable and the funky disco groove of Miss You comes blaring out of the speakers. 

I don’t think I took it off the turntable for months.  And I never have stopped putting it on the turntable, the CD player, the laptop, the iPod, and now the blog.

This is probably not the best Rolling Stones album.  I put Exile in that slot.

But this is the record where the intersection of their greatness and my current awareness met.

I love every single song on this record and always will.

#My Music

Delicious Daily Links

I have had about ten requests for this "how to" post. 

So here it goes.

If you want to add daily links to your Typepad blog like I do on mine, here is what you currently have to do.

I stress currently, because this was a hack that Joshua did quickly and hasn’t yet cleaned up.

It’s going to get a lot easier to do this in the future.

But back to how you do it right now:

Step 1 – Go to your delicious account.  Here’s mine.

Step 2 – Click on the link on the upper right that says Settings

Step 3 – In the right column, under Experimental (and I stress experimental), click on the link that says "daily blog posting"

Step 4 – You get a set of fields that look like this:

  add a new thingy

job_name
out_name
out_pass
out_url
out_time
out_blog_id
out_cat_id

Most of the people who have emailed me have gotten this far, but then they see this and throw up their hands.  For good reason.  So here is what needs to go in each of the fields:

job name – anything you want.  I put "daily" in there
out name – your typepad account name
out  pass – your typepad password
out url – http://www.typepad.com/t/api
out time – the GMT that you want the "fetch" to happen.  I use 0 in this field which does the fetch at 8pm EST which is midnight GMT.  i think the best number to use is 4 if you live on the east coast of the US and 7 if you live on the west coast of the US.  that will do the fetch at midnight.
out blog id – this is your typepad blog id number.  you can get that by opening up a typepad post window and look at the last number in the url.  it will say /post?blogid=xxxx.
out cat id – this is the category you want typepad to use for the daily links.  i don’t use anything here although I have had requests to add this to my VC and Tech feed.  i might do that.

Step 5 – hit submit query

That should do it.  I hope it works for all of you who have been asking.

I am sorry that this is limited to TypePad users, but that’s all I know for sure.  I suspect users of other blogging platforms may be able to re-engineer these instructions if they want to do that work.

#VC & Technology

Mandarin Chinese in Schools

A reader of this blog sent me an email yesterday to tell me that his wife Kerri Lyon, who is a reporter for CBS news, did a piece on kids learning Mandarin Chinese in school.

He told me that my kids’ school Little Red/Elizabeth Irwin was prominently featured in the piece.

I found it on the Internet and watched it just now.  I was impressed that 25% of the 9th grade class at our high school has signed up for Mandarin.  But I think even that is not enough.

It seems to me that Mandarin ought to be the most popular foreign language in our schools.  French and Spanish are fine, but this century has been called the Chinese century for a reason and our kids should be learning the language at least at the rate the Chinese are learning English.

And we aren’t even close.

It’s a two minute piece.  You can watch it here

For some reason, it won’t work in Firefox, so use IE if you want to watch it.

#Random Posts

Great Stuff

Stagger Lee and John Henry are legends of popular culture and popular music, and I’ve heard songs about them over the years, but never really knew much about who they were and what they did.

Jason Chervokas changed that for me and will change it for you, if you wish, with his latest edition of Down In The Flood, his weekly podcast on american roots music.

It’s 39 minutes of history and music and its simply great.

You can listen live over the Internet here.

Or you can download it into iTunes (v 4.9) by selecting Advanced, Subscribe to Podcast, and then entering this into the box:

http://feeds.feedburner.com/DownInTheFlood

iTunes will do the rest for you.

Either way, I highly recommend this show to anyone with an interest in american music and popular culture.

Bravo Jason.

#My Music

Feed Thinking

Tom Watson went camping with his kids last weekend and came home to find 242 new items in Bloglines to read.

It’s a common occurrence.

I have given up on my feedreader for exactly that reason.

I had lunch with Nick Denton yesterday and he asked me what feedreader I use.  I told him that I use many of them for many reasons, but none of them for the purpose of reading all my feeds.

What I do these days, I told him, is use the blogroll on the right hand column to read the blogs I like.  I go down that list every day.  When I find myself skipping a blog on the list frequently, I take it off.

I use the linking from other blogs, delicious, digg, and other cool apps to find new stuff. Discovery is the big deal now and I have seen some other interesting discovery apps that will be coming soon.

I do have a database of feeds, which I keep in Bloglines. But to me that’s just a UI into an OPML file.  Every time I find a blog I like, I add it to Bloglines. Since I can export the OPML file, I’d really like to find an application that manages feeds as its sole utility leaving the reading part out.  I’d move to that pretty quickly.

If I find myself visiting a new blog frequently through my various blogreading activities, I’ll add it to my blogroll.

The other feedreaders I use are Newsgator (for mobile), MyYahoo (for feed headlines I need to see every time I start my browser), and iTunes (for audio and video content).

Why do I tell you all of this?

Because after finally getting around to reading and thinking about Microsoft’s vision for RSS in Longhorn, I think my kludged together approach happens to be the future of feeds.

Longhorn is going to offer a central repository of feeds.  Think of it like the printer list in Windows.  You add feeds like you add printers.  Then every app that runs on Longhorn has access to those feeds natively.

In that world, you don’t need to add feeds into iTunes, iTunes just looks at the feeds in Longhorn, figures out which ones are audio feeds, and gives you the option to get the audio files once or every time.  iTunes can also give you a UI to enter new feeds into the Longhorn repository.

Every app will be that way.  Outlook Calendar will look for feeds that have scheduling information and give you the option to add those events automatically to your calendar.  And Outlook Calendar will have a UI to enter new "schedule related" feeds into the Longhorn repository.

This is how I am using feeds already so this vision works great for me.  Feeds are becoming so present on the web that the idea of reading them centrally seems badly broken to me.  But managing them centrally and making them available broadly to whatever apps they can add value to makes a ton of sense to me.

So what does this mean for RSS investment opportunities? 

I haven’t solved that problem yet, but I am working on it.  I think it means that we need to "go up the stack" as they say and look for applications and services that can use the infrastructure that Microsoft is building into the operating system layer to add value.

I haven’t gotten beyond that.  But I’d be interested in talking to any entrepreneurs who have interesting ideas how to profit from this new world of feed ubiquity we are going to have soon.

#VC & Technology

VC Cliche of the Week

Most entrepreneurs are smart, many are very smart.

But one of the things that entrepreneurs need to watch out for is being too smart for their own good.

We call that "too clever by half".

It’s a cliche I’ve used and heard used for as long as I’ve been investing, but I honestly have no idea where it comes from.

I did a little work on the web, and the best I could come up with was this.  I suspect the origin of this cliche is british, but beyond that, I have no clue where it comes from.

Whatever the origin, its a good phrase.

I remember one of my earliest investments.  The entrepreneur was really smart but whenever he had a deal to work on, he’d always try to optimize it way beyond what was necessary.  He’d get too cute and in the end all the complexity worked against getting the deal done.

I recall another deal early in my career where the entrepreneur had a company interested in buying his business.  It was a good deal.  But he tried to carve out a part of the busines that he thought the buyer wasn’t interested in.  The buyer didn’t really want that part of the business but they thought the entrepreneur was trying to pull a fast one on them and the mistrust that developed killed the deal in the end.

The phrase "keep it simple stupid" is really great advice for anyone who is really smart and prone to overcomplicate and overanalyze things.

The tendency to overcomplicate things often shows up in business plans, business models, product plans, and the products themselves.  And things that seem really interesting and attractive on paper often don’t end up being very attractive in real life.

I have come to believe that the act of reducing something to its essential elements and focusing laserlike on them is the best thing an entrepreneur can do.

Because being "too clever by half" is often the kiss of death for a business.

#VC & Technology

Bloc Party

Silent_alarmDid I mention that I am really digging the new Bloc Party record Silent Alarm?

Yes, I know I did, but I just felt like mentioning it again.

It’s a daily listen these days.

#My Music