Tuesday, July 20, 2010

iGuide.travel

Description unavailableImage by Ching Lau via Flickr
“Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness.” – Mark Twain

Alex is a self taught developer who has built an inspiring travel information site - iGuide.travel - that makes him low six figures in annual income. The money has tripled every year since launch. More than half of his money comes from travel booking, about half from Google AdSense.

“People travel to faraway places to watch, in fascination, the kind of people they ignore at home.” – Dagobert D. Runes

We talked at length yesterday over dinner at Mitali, and then through a long walk over to Union Square and on over to the Hudson. We have been friends since December 2009 when we met at a NY Tech MeetUp after party. He was buying drinks for everyone around him. I don't even know you, he said, and bought me a drink anyway.

“A journey is like marriage. The certain way to be wrong is to think you control it.” – John Steinbeck

iGuide.travel is an interactive map and travel guide. He started out by wanting to inspire people to go explore the world. That mission has stayed, but he also added on a new mission along the way: innovation. Innovation as a techie, as an entrepreneur. How can he better understand the needs of those who visit his site? 30% of his traffic is from North America, 30% Europe, 30% Asia.

iGuide.travel is "the world's premier travel mashup." It relies on user generated content from a few different sources. It has "lots of photos, lots of maps."

"Who are your competitors?"

"No competitors. It is the best and the only one."

“For my part, I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel’s sake. The great affair is to move.” – Robert Louis Stevenson

"People just need to get out of their country, that's all," says Alex whose father is a geography professor in Philadelphia, his elder brother - "my genius brother" - a software entrepreneur focused on aviation training with four Masters from Yale, Cambridge and Oxford. Alex was in Japan for four years as a kid where his parents were teaching.

"Tokyo is New York City out 20 years. If the aliens were to land, they would land in Tokyo."

“Traveling is a brutality. It forces you to trust strangers and to lose sight of all that familiar comfort of home and friends. You are constantly off balance. Nothing is yours except the essential things – air, sleep, dreams, the sea, the sky – all things tending towards the eternal or what we imagine of it.” – Cesare Pavese

He launched the site in April 2007. A year later he felt the first spurt of traffic. He started getting 1,000 page visits a day. Then it died down. A few months later in November 2008 he was doing 3,000 visits a day, or 100,000 visits a month. Today the site does 425,000 visits a month. He makes more than some CTOs of some top tech companies in town.

Putting the site together has been "a long learning process."

“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines, sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.” – Mark Twain

iGuide.travel has 20,000 destinations, 7,000,000 places on the map, and 100,000 travel guide pages. The site has 6.5 million inbound links according to Google Webmaster Central.

“Tourists don’t know where they’ve been, travelers don’t know where they’re going.” – Paul Theroux

Some of the pushes the site hopes to make down the line are to do with the Google Maps Street View, improving loading time, and creating a mobile version of the site. He also has Mapcarta.com in the works. It is an interactive atlas. He also has a You.travel in the works which is like iGuide.travel Lite. That is also more experimental. He hopes to have 6-10 languages on You.travel. He would like to move from making low six figures now to making low seven figures down the line. How exactly? He does not know yet.

“Two roads diverged in a wood and I – I took the one less traveled by.” – Robert Frost

He is headed to the University College London ("where Gandhi went") for a Masters in Technology Entrepreneurship that should be a September 2010 to September 2011 stint.

"All I wanted was to be able to pay my bills doing this," he says. That was his starting point. 30K would be nice, he thought. But then you cross one hill, and you see another.

“A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step.” – Lao Tzu

Life-work balance is something he thinks about a lot, and he feels like a lot more tech entrepreneurs should. You need to socialize enough to make up for all that screen time, he says.

While he was still working on his site, he took off to be in Rome from Fall 2007 to Spring 2008 for a few months of learning Italian. He was still working on the site while he was learning the language.

“A good traveler has no fixed plans and is not intent on arriving.” – Lao Tzu

A few weeks back he realized it had become painful for him to handle the mouse with his right hand, so he trained his left hand to do it. At first it was hard, like showing up to learn a new language. And then he did it. And now it feels so natural to do it.

"I think this has activated the right side of my brain."

“The journey not the arrival matters.” – T. S. Eliot

He is a first generation American. He was whiling away in San Diego for a while before his New York City move. In San Diego he met a college friend of mine from Kentucky, a Bengali guy now based out of Cincinnati where the NY Tech MeetUp emcee Nate Westheimer is from; Mitali means light in Bengali, but we did not figure that mutual friend part out for a few months of knowing each other.

“Once you have traveled, the voyage never ends, but is played out over and over again in the quiestest chambers. The mind can never break off from the journey.” – Pat Conroy

His father was born in Austria, mother in France, both Ukrainian. His brother is based in England.

“Not all those who wander are lost.” – J. R. R. Tolkien

Alex feels like he has mellowed out since he hit his six figures income. I like not having to think about money all the time, he says. I am more relaxed. The money will keep coming while he will be at school in London.

“Perhaps travel cannot prevent bigotry, but by demonstrating that all peoples cry, laugh, eat, worry, and die, it can introduce the idea that if we try and understand each other, we may even become friends.” – Maya Angelou

He says he is a huge fan of the "big screen web." And he is excited about 4G. Pages take too long to load now.

“Too often travel, instead of broadening the mind, merely lengthens the conversation.” – Elizabeth Drew
“I soon realized that no journey carries one far unless, as it extends into the world around us, it goes an equal distance into the world within.” – Lillian Smith
“To travel is to discover that everyone is wrong about other countries.” – Aldous Huxley
“The first condition of understanding a foreign country is to smell it.” – Rudyard Kipling
“The whole object of travel is not to set foot on foreign land; it is at last to set foot on one’s own country as a foreign land.” – G. K. Chesterton

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News: July 20

Lotus EffectImage via Wikipedia
TechCrunch

Google Image Search: Over 10 Billion Images, 1 Billion Pageviews A Day
Offerpal Moves On, Gives Game Developers New Ways To Distribute Notifications
MOG Launches All-You-Can-Eat Music Service For iPhone And Android
SCVNGR Looks To Make ‘Checking In’ Less Antisocial, More Physical

Mashable

10 Tips for Corporate Blogging
Nokia Looking for a New CEO [REPORT]
China Satisfied with Google Search Tweaks: So What Has Changed?
.CO Domain Names Now Available
How Mark Zuckerberg Intends to Repair Facebook’s Battered Image
Google Launches Buzz Firehose
How Mobile Technology is a Game Changer for Developing Africa

CNet

Apple earnings should quell antenna debacle
The story behind $255 billion in gold
New bill renews Internet privacy fight
Chinese official: Google's search fix is law-abiding
BP crowdsources Gulf clean-up technologies
Handset world: Don't speak for us, Steve Jobs
Google Energy buys wind power in first deal

BusinessWeek

Bill Gates, Teachers' Pest
The Energy Industry Turns on BP
Rise of the Corporate Tweeters
Sarkozy's Campaign Finance Scandal
Goldman Profit Drops 82%
Solving the Social Security Squeeze
BP Well Stays Shut as U.S. Says Leaks Pose No Threat
Britain Delays Universal Broadband Goal
Avoid a Self-Inflicted Second Recession

Digits

Is India Ready to Offer the iPhone 4?
Users Rate Facebook Slightly Above the Tax Man
Netflix Execs Finally Find Their Passports
Mark Cuban: In the Future, Stores Will Recognize Your Face
Looking to Cellphones to Deliver Aid in Africa

Bits

The Recipe for Clouds Goes Open-Source
Fallout From the iPhone 4 Press Conference
Virtual Tiger Woods Takes A Tumble
Bits Pics: Twitter Traffic During the World Cup
A Field Trip to an Apple Lab
Google Buys Metaweb to Improve Search Results
What We’re Reading: Trailers
It’s Just a Phone
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Saturday, July 17, 2010

I Am Big In Canada


An image is worth a thousand words, so let me not elaborate too much. This map above is based on the traffic to this blog this past week. The major countries seem to be as follows.

The Germans Called Me Robin Hood

Canada
United States
United Kingdom
India
Brazil
Mexico
Australia
Germany
Japan
South Africa

Sergey Brin's Is The Right Stand

I got Brazil and India but not Russia and China.

A 4 AM Traffic Peak, Mostly From Canada
Traffic: Canada Top Country, 2 AM Peak
What Just Happened? 3,000 Page Hits

The page hits for yesterday stand at 2,000 and for today so far stand at 1,000. So I guess that 3,000 hits a few days back not an aberration. That 3,000 could be my new daily floor.

Weekends tend to be slow for bloggers in general. People read blogs when they are at work! So 1,000 for a Saturday is good, it is like getting 2,000 hits on a week day.

My Secret Sauce

If you want to know how to do this, this is my attempt at a formula.

Blog Traffic = (Number Of Total Posts)*(Number Of Inbound Links)*(Frequency Of New Posts)
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Go Outside: Cults



We All Want Someone To Shout For: Best Songs Of 2010 So Far
(Via Fred Wilson)

Beach House – 10 Mile Stereo
Young Empires – Rain Of Gold
Delorean – Grow
Broken Bells – The High Road
Big Boi – Shine Blockas (Feat. Gucci Mane)
Caribou – Odessa
Glass Vaults – Forget Me Not
The Soft Pack – Mexico
Aloe Blacc – I Need A Dollar
Cults – Go Outside

Special shout outs to: 1,2,3,6,7,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,27,28,29,30,31,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50.

Skipped after sampling: 4,5,8,26,32.



Slow Motion: Panda Bear
Rome - Phoenix W/ Devendra Banhart


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News: July 17 (2)

Image representing New York Times as depicted ...Image via CrunchBase
New York Times

One Bride for 2 Brothers: A Custom Fades in India
Draft Law Revives Practice of Soviets
Energy Secretary Emerges to Take a Commanding Role in Effort to Corral Well
Voices From the Spill | Dia D’ingianni, Retiree: A Dream of a New Life Is Painted Black by Oil
Officials Call Results of Well Test Encouraging
Paterson’s Legal Bills Are Adding Up
Harlem Journal: For People on the Margins, a Ministry Steps Outdoors
Animal Autopsies in Gulf Yield a Mystery
Four Recommended Apps for Losing Weight
At School in Harlem, Resentment Over Girl’s Drowning on a Field Trip
Teacher Fired Over Field-Trip Drowning of Girl, 12
Bangladesh, With Low Pay, Moves In on China
After Goldman’s Concession, Regulators May Be Satisfied
Apple Goes on the Offensive
Bits Pics: Twitter Usage During the World Cup
Europe Without Hotels
This Land: From a Gulf Oyster, a Domino Effect
Habitats | Bushwick, Brooklyn: A Bushwick Mansion Where Music Fills the Halls
State Secret: Chelsea Clinton’s Wedding Plans
Wheelspin: In Michigan, Homage to the Auto’s Heritage
Editorial: Haiti at Six Months
Op-Ed Columnist: Tweet Less, Kiss More
Movie Review | 'Inception': This Time the Dream’s on Me
Theater Review | 'Wanderlust: A History of Walking': A History of How We Got From Here to There
Love Among the Ruined
Man as an Island
Time to Wake Up, Sleeper Spy
Digital Diplomacy
When Funny Goes Viral
Quote Unquote | Fashion Phobia
What Business Can Learn From Chess
Laugh Lines, R.I.P.
Aging Gracefully, the French Way
David Brooks: The Gospel of Mel Gibson
Wealthy Reduce Buying in a Blow to the Recovery
Iran’s President Renews Pressure on Conservatives
Charles M. Blow: Dog Days of Obama

Time

Schwarzenegger's Minimum Wage Rejected
Palin Earned $75K to Speak at University
Smoking Gun Sought in BP-Lockerbie Link
CNN: BP's Progress Bittersweet for Some
The Child Tobacco Farmers of Kazakhstan
Kazakhstan Comes On Strong
Why Venezuela's Chavez Dug Up Bolívar's Bones

CNN

Tolerance for Ground Zero mosque
Back on TV, same old Fidel
Poll: Reid moves ahead of Angle
GOP blasts Obama on economy
Poll: Palin hot with GOP
Techies moving to 'Silicon Prairie'
Afghan 'Oprah' helps country heal

Foreign Affairs

The G-20’s Dead Ideas
Castrocare in Crisis
Coping With China's Financial Power
Khomeini's Long Shadow
Veiled Truths
Defining Success in Afghanistan
Renewing American Leadership
Honolulu, Harvard, and Hyde Park
The Dead Hand: The Untold Story of the Cold War Arms Race and Its Dangerous Legacy
Obama and the Americas
Fear and Loathing in Nairobi
Mugabe Ãœber Alles
Prisoners of the Caucasus
Empire Without End
The New Cocaine Cowboys
No Good Deed Goes Unpunished
Stopping Proliferation Before It Starts
Ukrainian Blues

The Economist

Egypt: After three slow decades, change is in the air
Greece: A controversial consolidation
Where has America's greatness gone?
Tibet and Xinjiang: Marking time at the fringes
Europe's future: Can anything perk up Europe?
The future of Europe: Staring into the abyss
Protests in Indian Kashmir: Stony ground
Lexington: Where has all the greatness gone?
Arab autocracy: Thank you and goodbye
China and Sri Lanka: The Colombo consensus
Hong Kong's economy: End of an experiment
Charlemagne: Calling time on progress
Ranking care for the dying: Quality of death
Leader: America's bank reform is hardly a panacea, though it fixes some important things
The banks' supposedly miraculous contribution to economic growth has been more of a mirage
When kings and princes grow old
Your Party. At last, an up-and-coming force in Japanese politics
Somalia comes to Uganda
Bombs in Uganda are probably the work of the Shabab
When the rivers run dry

India Today

RSS sorry for damage at Headlines office
K'taka political crisis reaches Delhi
'Muslims won't forgive Mulayam
TV studio attack: Sena MLA held
'Pak army chief derailed talks'
CPI-ML seeks arrest of Nitish
Normalcy returns to Kashmir
Bihar court summons Sonia
Film review: Tere Bin Laden
Film review: Udaan
Film reviews: Lamhaa
Lamhaa banned in Gulf
China wants to bid for 2026 FIFA WC
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News: July 17

Image representing ReadWriteWeb as depicted in...Image via CrunchBase
ReadWriteWeb

The New Digg: What It Means For Power Users & Publishers
10 Inspiring TED Talks for Startups
Ben & Jerry's: How a Big Brand Explores Augmented Reality
Google Launches App to Let Users Share Open Parking Spots
Twitter Launching Analytics Product Soon
The Future of Tech According to Kids: Immersive, Intuitive and Surprisingly Down-to-Earth
Augmented Reality Becoming More Like the Read/Write Web
How Steve Ballmer Ruined the Cloud and the World Cup
RFID Helps Indian Company Trap Ghost Workers
Google Makes Major Semantic Web Play, Acquires Freebase Operators Metaweb
3 Deadly Mistakes made by SaaS Providers
Apple: Free Cases for All

AllThingsD

Facebook Will Announce 500 Million Users Next Week With “Facebook Stories”
Gizmodo to Cooperate With Probe Into Lost iPhone Prototype
Justin Bieber’s “Baby” the Most-Watched YouTube Video Ever, So Far
Jobs Feels Like He’s Been Through a Tear-Down
Jobs: Nobody’s Perfect (But We’re Very Close)
AMD: After Hours Gains Gone; Focus Turns To Processor Delay
Shhh! Google Buys Metaweb to Boost Search Results
Apple’s iPhone 4 Solution: Free Cases For Everyone!
Hey! Did You Know a Lot of People Used Twitter During the World Cup?
The Only Problem With Droid X Reception? Too Darn Warm.
Apple’s “Just Encase” Answer to iPhone 4 Complaints
Japanese Author Skirts Publishers With iPad Novel
The Facebook Movie Is a Money Maker for Twitter
Venture Capitalist’s New Frontier: Where Cellphones Meet Retailing
AMD Posts Sharply Higher Sales
Paul Allen, Microsoft Co-Founder, Pledges Fortune to Philanthropy

Engadget

iPhone 4 proximity sensor fix in the works
RIM co-CEOs pull no punches responding to Apple's antenna statements
Jobs: 'no one's going to buy' a big phone
iPhone 4 coming to Canada and 16 other countries July 30th
Apple: iPhone 4 drops 'less than one additional call per 100 than the 3GS'
iPhone 4 proximity sensor fix in the works
iPhone 4 sales: 3 million and counting, 1.7 percent returned
Apple affirms: no software fix for iPhone 4 antenna issue
Xbox 360 sales increase 88 percent in June, give it US console crown for the month
Google halting Nexus One official store sales after current inventory depleted
Nokia: 'we prioritize antenna performance over physical design if they are ever in conflict'
2011 Subaru Outback gains in-car WiFi option, strange Maine birds not included
Toyota and Tesla plan to bring electric RAV4 to market in 2012
Sony Alpha A390 and A290 DSLRs hands-on
Boxee's first production Box gets shown off to the world (video)

ArsTechnica

iPhone 4 antenna: unanswered questions, unearned trust
Mercury flyby maps new territory
4G data caps: not here yet, but likely to come
Ocean bacteria may create as much methane as they destroy
What happens when we run out of oil and coal?
Grades don't drop for college Facebook fiends
Funding overhaul aims at fast broadband for rural healthcare
Electric vehicle, battery makers get charge out of stimulus
Droid X first impressions: nice hardware, Motorola
iOS 4.0.1 tweaks bar display, doesn't fix signal drop
Clear Channel: Internet means we get to buy more radio stations
Users of location services worried about robberies, stalking

VentureBeat

Boxee shows off final version of its video streaming Boxee Box (video)
Facebook co-founder Moskovitz says movie has more sex, booze
Nokia kicks Apple while it’s down, says it prioritizes antenna performance over looks
Apple does have a sense of humor with “antennagate” (video)
Even during iPhone 4 damage control, Steve Jobs is a skillful onstage presenter (video)
Intel snags former Palm and Apple VP Mike Bell for smartphone plans
Google acquires MetaWeb, says Freebase will become “more open”
New report: VC investing bouncing back in Q2
Samsung strategist Omar Khan talks superphones (video)
Roundup: Firefox comes to the iPhone, MySpace gets a makeover and more
SGN launches Skies of Glory as the first cross-platform Android-iPhone game
Apple won’t recall iPhone 4 despite reception problems, WSJ says
California sues Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for blocking green energy initiative

GigaOm

Is the Difference Between MySpace and Facebook Black and White?
Four Business Tips From Apple's Steve Jobs
Why Google Launched App Inventor
The State of Open Source for the Smart Grid
Hulu Plus on the PS3: Less Content Than on the Web
Google Gets Semantic: Buys Metaweb
Surprise: World Cup Final Fails to Set Another Peak Tweeting Record
The Email Signature: From Efficient to Overkill
Google’s App Inventor: Escalating the Mobile Ad War?
Google Bows to Criticism, Changes Google News Design
When it Comes to Broadband, UK Still A Laggard
Seed-Stage Investments Jump Sharply in Q2 2010
Video: Chris Sacca Helps Founders Cash Out Shares Early
Esquire Misses the Point on Twitter and the World Cup
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Friday, July 16, 2010

Reclaiming My Twitter Account

Twitter logo initialImage via Wikipedia
I have decided to reclaim my Twitter account. What I mean by that is I am no longer going to be feeding TechCrunch, Mashable, CNet, BusinessWeek and Time into my Twitter stream like I have been doing for over a year now. They have had their free rides. Now I have a blog that intends to compete with them. I am going to link plenty to them on a near daily basis. But now the feeds into my Twitter stream are going to be only from my blogs. Most of the fed tweets will be from this blog itself because this is the most active of my blogs.

I did that feed thing because when I was desperately trying to accumulate followers on Twitter, I figured I could not fail in my attempt to create a great Twitter stream if I fed from some of my favorite blogs, news sites to visit, my favorite magazines. 

That worked for a while. It no longer works for me now that I am toying with the idea of pro blogging in a serious way. 

A spike in blog traffic can boost your self esteem. It has boosted mine. Now TechCrunch, Mashable, CNet, BusinessWeek, and Time come across as crutches, possibly even competitors. Why am I giving them all that free traffic again? 

TwitterFeed tells me the newest feed from CNet into my Twitter stream has 700 clicks. Those clicks could be mine. Those could be clicks for my blog. 

Hello people, the free lunch is over. 

I never really did the RSS thing, and I tried Google Reader but I did not become a regular. I was using Twitter for all that. But no more. Now I create my own news feeds in the form of daily blog posts that link to many news items from many different sources.

A 4 AM Traffic Peak, Mostly From Canada
Traffic: Canada Top Country, 2 AM Peak
What Just Happened? 3,000 Page Hits
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A 4 AM Traffic Peak, Mostly From Canada

Internal development of Canada's internal bord...Image via Wikipedia

How do you explain this? I think people in Canada sleep less. Or this is traffic from the northern parts of Canada where the sun is around many more hours of the day. Or parts where the sun never sets in summer.

Hello there. Thanks for dropping by.

The page hits for today stand at 1200, which used to be the previous peak for the longest time. And the day is still young. Looks to me like this blog's traffic is about to take off, enough that I can do this full time, if not right away then perhaps in a few months, or maybe even right away.

Blogging full time would be the best thing I could do for my startup that I expect to launch in about 15 months after I get my green card. Blogging full time would allow me to read all I want to read, to network feverishly in the New York tech ecosystem. I would explore the landscape for my startup through my blog.

If I have 1200 page hits for the day, and the top page for the day is getting only 80 of that, and that page is not a new page, but from a week back, that means I am doing well with the search engines. Traffic from search is the best kind. Otherwise sometimes you get a spike in traffic because some big shot blogger linked to you, and then all that traffic has evaporated in a day.

Search engine traffic is the good kind. It is more stable. Although Google can always tweak the algorithms and make you go away. But then that tweaking can go the other way as well. You could see another spike, spike upon spike.

If I were to treat this blog like a full time business, what would I do?

I like the blog's name: Netizen. It is a solo operation.

Every day I would put out a page of links to all the top stories from all the top tech blogs and from top news sites. A top story is what I determine a top story is. I would be making no attempt to be objective.

And I would write a few blog posts every day on topics of interest to me.

I would go to and blog about many of the key tech events in town. The two top tech events in town are:
I would watch and share videos from the top tech events anywhere and everywhere. You do that enough and you realize watching those videos is often better than showing up for many of those events. You can't show up for all of them anyways. And if you are going to every event on the list, your networking is not focused enough.

I would be commenting at other blogs much more. You have to be out and about, you know.
  • Content
  • Traffic
  • Monetization 
Those are the three elements. 

As for monetization, the Google ads are back up. But Google ads only make good money if you have a ton of traffic. I wish I could dig into the NY tech ecosystem to have more companies let me do blog post ads. 

Or maybe it is too early to think of full time pro blogging. The traffic is building up but it's not there yet. But it would be nice to be able to do it full time for a year. And then I could do a $1 salary thing for my startup the way Bloomberg does for the city, he is a $1 a year Mayor

I should probably send out a few emails. Hey, how would you like for me to do a blog post ad for you? Letting me do a blog post ad or two for you is almost like hiring me as a business consultant. I bring along more than exposure. I bring perspectives. 
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Google's Metaweb Acquisition



This video above explains it better than the blog posts below. Metaweb is about barcoding the internet so it becomes easier to search stuff online. No wonder Google came knocking. This is also a great example of innovation happening outside a big company in a startup. If you are a big company, when you can't do it yourself, you can sometimes make up for it by being on a constant lookout, like a frog and fireflies.

TechCrunch: Google Acquires Metaweb To Make Search Smarter
Metaweb develops both semantic data storage infrastructure for the web, and Freebase,an “open, shared database of the world’s knowledge”. Freebase is a massive, collaboratively edited database of cross-linked data. The idea behind the product is to create a system for building the semantic web. Freebase allows anyone to contribute, structure, search, copy and use data.
The Official Google Blog: Deeper Understanding With Metaweb
we’ve acquired Metaweb, a company that maintains an open database of things in the world. Working together we want to improve search and make the web richer and more meaningful for everyone. .... we’re also excited about the possibilities for Freebase, Metaweb’s free and open database of over 12 million things, including movies, books, TV shows, celebrities, locations, companies and more. Google and Metaweb plan to maintain Freebase as a free and open database for the world.
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Tech, Women, Diversity

Stained glass at St John the Baptist's Anglica...Image via Wikipedia
Often when Fred Wilson puts out a blog post where he links to about four different blog posts, I know it is one of those posts that is asking for a reply blog post, sometimes to echo the sentiment, sometimes to express a disagreement, often just to give further momentum to a great topic. Today is the turn of women in technology.

This whole debate reminds me of the creationism debate. My take has been religion and science deal with two different levels of reality. Religion is a belief system. Those beliefs do not have to follow the laws of physics, and many of them don't. Jesus walking on water makes sense in religion, does not make sense in science. I am not going to think you are a prude for believing that.

Religion has to be looked at in the religious realm. Science inhabits the scientific realm. And there are intersection points, like when Galileo was harassed. When Neil Armstrong landed on the moon, many people in Nepal did not believe. The moon is a god. The guy probably climbed some hill, and thinks he is on the moon, that was the sentiment.

Gender is as big a topic in sociology as gravity is in physics. It is big. It is all pervasive. Just because we don't think about it much does not mean gravity is not active every waking hour, and while we are down.

There are many - they tend to be white men for some reason - who argue technology is neutral to your background. You can be any gender, any cultural background, it does not matter. They are lying. Or they are ignorant. Some of them are evil. They are invested in persisting the status quo.

Even where meritocracy can be shown to exist, those with the merits and the skills and the intellect stand on centuries of favoring one kind of people over another kind of people. And that is when there are not outright sexist informal and formal structures in place.

Gender and technology: there are many intersection points.

Equality is something that has to be proactively sought. I don't think sexism is in the interests of men. A healthy male female ratio in the workplace and at the various leadership levels has to be attempted. This is not a male versus female issue. There are those - men and women - who are on the right side of history, and there are those who are on the wrong side. We should get more people to come over on to the right side. We have to constantly be evangelizing.

Fred Wilson: XX Combinator
Tereza Nemessanyi: XX Combinator
Brad Feld: The Discussion About The Lack Of Women In Tech
Eric Ries: Why Diversity Matters (The Meritocracy Business)

When you visit Fred's blog post, make sure you don't miss out on the action in the comments section.
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Thursday, July 15, 2010

Darren Rowse's Seven Links Challenge

Image representing FeedBurner as depicted in C...Image via CrunchBase
Take the 7 Link Challenge Today #7links
  1. My first post: When Web Hosting Is No Longer A Problem
    This is me celebrating the new, free Blogger platform.
  2. A post I enjoyed writing the most: Social Media Week: The Best NY Tech MeetUp Ever
    I have received so much positive comments from people I know about this one.
  3. A post which had a great discussion: Online Dating Newsflash: Race And Religion Matter
    This is just Alex and me talking. But the talk went on and on.
  4. A post on someone else’s blog that I wish you’d written:
    How I Make Money Blogging: Income Split for June 2010
    Darren Rowse makes it look so easy. Just jack up the traffic and run Google ads. His Feedburner count is at 140K, mine is at 2K.
  5. My most helpful post: Could 2011 Be Venmo's Year?
    The founders of Venmo really appreciated this. I touched lives with this post.
  6. A post with a title that I am proud of: Me @ BBC
    This is me hitting the big leagues.
  7. A post that I wish more people had read: To Iran, With Love (3)
    Darren, I think you should help me with this fundraising. It is a good cause. You should help me with this because you are the top pro blogger on the planet, and I am the top blogger in terms what big stuff I have been able to do politically through the blogging medium. What I did for Nepal, I want to do for Iran. I want you to take the lead on this fundraising.
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Traffic: Canada Top Country, 2 AM Peak

Image of Dario Meli from TwitterImage of Dario Meli
Now I remember why I disabled Google Analytics for this blog months back: you keep wanting to go back to check the latest numbers.

Blogger Stats

For the past week Canada has been my top country, it has given me 50% more traffic than the US. Go figure.

There is a peak for 2 AM on July 13 for the week. I thought that might be India. Nope. It's Canada. Might those be college students pulling all nighters? Toronto? Hello there. Thanks for dropping by.

@quikness might appreciate my Canada popularity.

This has been my top post this past week: Brazil.

What Just Happened? 3,000 Page Hits

Given enough page hits, I could do this near full time while I wait to launch my company. That would be swell. Would be a great way to prepare for a company launch. Somebody once said blogging is like graduate school seminar. It can be. It can be many other things as well.

Blogging falls in the mind food domain.
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