Technology

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Road Trip

It is a gray rainy day in Connecticut. By December standards it is warm but by any other standard it is cold and dreary. I rest on the couch. In a few hours, I will drive down to Virginia to pick up my two older daughters from college. Before that, I will go to the technology committee meeting at my local school. Our large orange Maine Coon Cat curls up next me, seemingly approving of my decision to nap during the day.

Road trips can be fun, seeing new things on a leisurely drive, but this trip will be done in the dark and won’t be particularly leisurely. The trip back is likely to be much more fun as my daughters and I catch up.

I expect my time online will be fairly sparse for the next couple of days, but I still hope to get a little content up each day.

With that, it seems like a good opportunity to post an email that I had sent to a mailing list of educators that use Second Life for education. One person had started compiling a list of blogs about Second Life, and another person suggested there must be a more Web 2.0-ish way of gathering the list, something like tags in delicious, a wiki, etc. I wrote my response, which was well received, and I’ve been meaning to add it to my blog for sometime. Since the content is sparse right now, and the email fits nicely with some discussions about the technology committee, here is my snarky response:

With a more technologically savvy group there might be a more 2.0-ish way. But even with that you would probably need lots of communication ahead of time to deterime which tag to use. Then, to reach out to people, would probably need to explain what del.icio.us is, how to sign up, how to tag your own blog, or other resources you find valuable.

Then the discussion would drift to how to use the feed from del.icio.us, how to add it as a blog roll on one's on blog, how to important into various blog reader software, like bloglines or Google Reader. A side discussion explaining what RSS is and how feed readers work would evolve. Someone would ask for a feed reader in Second Life and a minor religous war between BlogLines users and Google Reader users would ensue.

This would probably start a discussion about OPML, which would need further explanations and start off yet another minor religious war over protocols and open source. Someone would be bound to point out hacks to get del.icio.us feeds available as OPML. Others would point out that ma.gnolia.com already supports exporting OPML and uses OpenID and hence would be a much better solution than del.icio.us. Others would then complain about OpenID being too complicated and not widely adopted. Others would point out that Yahoo, Google, Microsoft and AIM among others are starting to support OpenID. OpenID purists would point out that Microsoft's OpenID is only in testing right now, and that Google is running weird modifications to OpenID that makes it not really true OpenID and probably unlikely to work with ma.gnolia

A side discussion would evolve about OpenID, Second Life and OpenSim. A hard core geek would point out a hack to make Second Life and/or OpenSim appear as an OpenID provider. Then there would be a discussion about services working as an OpenId provider and not an OpenID consumer. Someone would set up an Away message and the thread would get diverted once again.

Somewhere in the middle of this, someone would say that they've already built a pretty good list, and if people would just email their URLs they would add it to the list and be done with all of it. This would lead into a discussion about using email to accomplish a task versus using more 2.0-ish ways. A meta discussion would ensue....

RINSE, REPEAT

Enjoy! More when I get back.

Life After Wall Street, My Visit to Google

Last week, I was invited to an Open House for financial services technical professionals at Google in New York City. I wasn’t sure how I ended up on the invitation list. I thought that it perhaps had something to do with me blogging conferences in the financial services, technology and/or advertising and marketing areas. So, I grabbed my PC, cellphone and other blogging tools and headed off to Google.

When I arrived, I ran into Marc. I had worked with Marc at a job on Wall Street, and some I was confused for a moment, since he was wearing a badge identifying himself as a Google employee. Part of the confusion was because I had worked with another guy named Mark on Wall Street who had gone over to Microsoft. I mumbled a few confused, what are you doing here, as I tried to make sense out of everything.

It turns out that Marc was the person who had put my name on the list, and the open house was not about blogging, but was about getting the message out that Google is doing very well, with over five hundred engineers in New York City and an appetite for more, especially any of those that had spent time on Wall Street.

So, I drank some white wine, ate some hors d’oeuvres and schmoozed. There were quite a few old friends from Wall Street who were there. A few had moved over to Google and others were being courted.

I took a tour of their office. The building is an old transit authority building, with elevators that could carry trucks. The building takes up a whole block and has the largest footprint of any building in New York, and only one building has more floor space than the building. I took a few pictures with my cell phone of images that seemed to capture the spirit of Google engineering in New York. There were scooters to get around the building quickly. There were food kiosks everywhere. There were collections of antique computers, a rec room and a panoramic picture of New York with Godzilla added in.

Back in the presentation room, I chatted with various Google employees and the environment. I spoke with a tech support manager about the difficulties of doing tech support in a place like Google. I asked about IPv6 and he talked about religious factions that were pushing hard for it and others that were ambivalent.

I talked about the twenty percent time. This is the time given engineers to work on something they are passionate about. I asked about how such projects were managed, and asked about what emerges out of these projects. This led to one of my favorite topics about how in many ways, social networks are nothing but higher level neural networks, and it would be very interesting to see people work on quantifying connections in social networks within specific contexts and then applying back propagation to the social networks to adjust the network. I was asked what such social networks would ‘solve’, and I suggested it had something to do with discovering what is ‘important’ to a society.

I talked briefly about whether there had been much discussion about a Google executive becoming our nation’s first CTO and was told there had not been much water cooler discussions on this.

When it was time for the presentations to begin, we all sat down. Since I had gone, prepared to wear my bloggers hat, I took out my laptop and took notes. It felt strange to be the only person with a laptop fired up taking notes. I connected through Google’s guest WiFi and managed to Twitter a little at the same time.

Ben Fried, the Chief Information Officer for Google was introduced. He had worked for thirteen years at Morgan Stanley before coming over to Google. He spoke about going to hear Salman Rushdie speak, only to find himself sitting near Brian W. Kernighan in the audience. His message was clear. Google is a fun place with lots of interesting people.

“We are here to tell you that there is life after Wall Street,” he proclaimed. “We have tons of really hard problems and we hire super smart people to solve those problems.” He spoke about his days at Morgan Stanley saying, “We said technology is the business on Wall Street. It really is here...Engineering is the core of what the company does.” He went on to note that “Finance works here to support engineering” and tied things together with “We are hoping to take advantage of these hard times…. I have many many openings…”

He talked about his process of coming on board at Google took him eight months but that he hoped others would make a decision sooner because he needs “a lot of great people pretty damn quick”.

He was followed by Google Engineering Director, Alan Warren. Dr. Warren said that his talk was about Google Finance, but really he wanted to talk about how projects were done at Google.

When he started working on Google Finance, he was told “Build it so the users love it, and we’ll figure out how to make money off of it later.” He also noted that “One of the things we try to do is drive change”. He spoke about gathering up work from people doing projects on 20% time.

In terms of ongoing project he told everyone that in ads they have projects that will keep them busy for the next three years, at least.

Dr. Warren was followed by another Google Engineering Director , Fran Ryan, who joined Google eight months ago, coming over as part of DoubleClick. Mr. Ryan focused on issues of scale, massive numbers of events, of ad revenue and logs files to be processed. To do this, he mentioned some interesting technology, the Google File System, MapReduce and Big Table. Each of these papers are ones that I look forward to spending time reading, if I ever get some free time.

During the Q&A time, they also mentioned Sawmill which also sounds very interesting. There were plenty of other interesting comments, but at this point, it might get a bit long winded and geeky for most of my readers.

So, while this was not a typical blogging outing, and how many blogging outings ever really are typical, it was fascinating. The message was clear, for bright technologists there is life after Wall Street, and Google would like the brightest of them to consider Google as part of that life.

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Testing Mippin and Admob - Mippin feed validation KEY=31d15c7e

This is my first test of Mippen. Mippen is a site that takes an RSS feed and coverts it to a mobile site.

The mobile site for Orient Lodge is currently http://mippin.com/ahynes1.

To validate the feed, I am adding this string:

Mippin feed validation KEY=31d15c7e

In addition, Mippen works with AdMob. Admob places ads on mobile sites. I figure I should test this at the same time. They are asking for some install code, which it seems like should be handled by Mippen. We'll see.

Have any of you used Mippin or Admob? Have you checked my site out on your cellphone?

Any feedback is appreciated.

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power.com

Techcrunch has an article about Power.com, a new “social inter-networking” site that links Facebook, Myspace, Orkut, Hi5 and other sites into one site.

They are a Brazilian based company with about five million users already, I suspect mostly gathered from Brazilian Orkut users.

I've gone in and played with it a little bit. Other than random places where Portuguese slips through, I haven't found any obvious glitches or anything especially noteworthy.

They are trying to grow the site virally and anyone that gets 100 people to join in the first 100 days gets $100.

I could send out email blasts through them to my friends on these various networks but that seems a bit spammy.

Instead, I'll post the banner they provide:

If a bunch of people sign up this way and we find good reasons to use other than simply as innovators and early adopters, I might send emails to some people as well, but probably not.

So, take a look at power.com and let me know what you think.

XRI, OpenID, FOAF, XFN and Open Social Networks

Today, I stumbled upon QDOS’ FOAF Search Tool and spent a bit of time exploring FOAF and related technologies. I’ve been interested in these technologies for quite a while and always enjoy checking back to see what has been going on.

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