Here's some stuff dottavi has liked. To find more cool stuff, check out Explore »

We’re getting excited for Startup School on Saturday! We’re sorry we can’t fit everyone who wanted to come, so we wanted to remind everyone that talks will be streamed live on Justin.tv here: http://www.justin.tv/startupschool.

 Here’s the final list of speakers:

Chris Anderson
Editor in Chief, Wired Magazine

Paul Buchheit
Founder, FriendFeed; Creator of GMail

Jason Fried
Founder, 37signals

Paul Graham
Partner, Y Combinator; Founder, Viaweb

Tony Hsieh
CEO, Zappos; Founder, LinkExchange

Mitch Kapor
Partner, Kapor Capital; Founder, Lotus

Greg McAdoo
Partner, Sequoia Capital

Mark Pincus
Founder, Zynga, Tribe, SupportSoft, Freeloader

Biz Stone & Evan Williams
Founders, Twitter

Mark Zuckerberg
Founder, Facebook

Safe travels to everyone coming to Berkeley from around the world.

Follow Startup School on Twitter-- http://twitter.com/startupschool


Todd says...

I hope this becomes an affordable reality!

via VentureBeat by Camille Ricketts on 8/26/09

picture-118Innovalight, the Sunnyvale, Calif. company that liquid-processes light-absorbing materials (other than silicon) into nano-size particles for so-called solar ink, says its technology is only three to five years from becoming a reality.

Spun out of the University of Texas at Austin, the company has lofty goals to make solar cells both paintable and sprayable. That way building developers could coat massive surfaces — entire roofs even — with energy-generating compounds of copper indium gallium selenide (CIGS). To give you a sense of how small these nano-particle cells are, they are reportedly 10,000 times thinner than a human hair.

The last time VentureBeat reported on Innovalight, it had just nabbed $5 million in financing from Silicon Valley Bank and Leader Ventures for continued development. So far, the company has used it to test prototypes. Results today are somewhat disappointing, with the cells converting only 1 percent of the sunlight absorbed into usable electricity. In order to compete with standard solar panels (some of which are 25 percent efficient), it will have to hit a target of 15 percent at minimum. The company says it will start looking at commercialization once it achieves 10 percent.

But Innovalight’s goal from the start has been to produce a creative and more cost-effective option of solar users, and it seems undeterred. In fact, it’s already looking ahead. Its founder, Brian Korgel says he anticipates semi-transparent solar inks that can one day be used to paint windows, cooling interiors while generating energy. It also earns brownie points for using CIGS solar modules, which are not only less expensive than silicon, but less harmful to the environment.

Innovalight’s investors include Apax Partners, ARCH Venture Partners, Harris & Harris Group, Sevin Rosen Funds and Triton Ventures. Over a year ago, the company’s CEO wrote a guest column for VentureBeat, which you can read here.


Todd says...

via MobileRead Forums by Valloric on 8/1/09

OK, here we go...

As some of you may already know, I have been working on an ePub editor for quite some time now. And after about six months of development time, I come to you with the current, initial version of Sigil. It’s still rough around the edges (to say the least), so consider it an alpha build at best (version 0.1.0). It can crash, it can bug out on you. It has nowhere near the features I want it to have, but it will get there. I consider this to be a multi-year project for me, so this is just the start.

Now what does it have to offer…

  • Free and open source software under GPLv3
  • Multi-platform: runs on Windows, Linux and Mac
  • Full Unicode support: everything you see in Sigil is in UTF-16
  • Full EPUB spec support
  • WYSIWYG editing
  • Multiple Views: Book View, Code View and Split View
  • Metadata editor with full support for all possible metadata entries (more than 200) with full descriptions for each
  • Table Of Contents editor
  • Multi-level TOC support
  • Book View fully supports the display any XHTML document possible under the OPS spec
  • SVG support
  • Basic XPGT support
  • Advanced automatic conversion of all imported documents to Unicode
  • Currently imports TXT, HTML and EPUB files; more will be added with time
  • Currently exports EPUB and SGF (Sigil native format); more will be added with time
  • Embedded HTML Tidy; all imported documents are thoroughly cleaned; changing views cleans the document so no matter how much you screw up your code, it will fix it (usually :))
  • An actually usable user interface
  • Native C++ application
  • Bugs :)
  • And a lot more...
It can be downloaded here: http://code.google.com/p/sigil/. There is currently no documentation, so don’t waste your time looking for some (it will be added with time, don’t worry).

Currently the Windows and Linux people get a zipped folder with all the required files. Mac people get a DMG. I’ll be providing installers for Windows and Mac versions when the code stabilizes a bit. The Linux people will get DEBs.

Notes for Windows users: you have to run the file “vcredist_x86.exe” before running Sigil for the first time. This is a Microsoft provided setup file that installs some files Sigil depends on.

Tested on XP, Vista x64, Windows 7 x64.

Notes for Linux users: Sigil requires Qt 4.5.0. I’m assuming you know how to install this.

Tested on Ubuntu 9.04 (Jaunty Jackalope).

Notes for Mac users: This has only been tested on Mac OS X 10.5. Previous versions might work. Also, Sigil isn't a universal binary, so Intel Macs are a must. I'll provide universal binaries after I sort out certain architectural issues that are blocking this.

Report any bugs here and on the issue tracker on Sigil’s website (search the thread and tracker first, please). Be sure to include any and all relevant information. The more info you give me, the better and sooner will I be able to help you. Feel free to give any suggestions on how Sigil can be improved. My TODO list of features and improvements fills up a book (literally), but I’m certainly more than willing to hear what other people think.

This is open source software, and it will hopefully be open source development. I want the community to say what should be changed, updated, improved and in what way. MobileRead is by far the most awesome community I’ve ever been a part of and I know we’ll be able to come up with some great ideas.


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After looking at my Google Analytics for my website I realized I'm in the "Minimalist" section of "Best Practices For Effective Design Of “About me”-Pages" on Smashing Magazine's website for my about page.
Thanks for the love. :)

I'm trying to figure out if I should redo my website or keep it minimalistic and update it with the same design style. Once I get it completely re-done I will post screenshots of how many different versions I made and why I wasn't satisfied with each design.

   

Filed under: about, about me, design, minimalist, minimalistic, nicholas patten, nicholaspatten.com, press, smashing magazine, smashingmagazine.com

Click here to read the full article.
I'm quoted on page 3

Thank you Linda, great article.

   

Filed under: article, design life, nicholas patten, nicholaspatten.com, press, twitter, twitterizing

clementine says...

The Big Picture has some of the best pictures I've seen covering the drawn out riots in Iran. "Many of the photographs here were taken and transmitted at great risk in the past week, in the hopes that others would be able to see and bear witness."

"In the ten days since Iran's disputed presidential election, street demonstrations have taken place every day. Iranian citizens, supporters of opposition candidates, continue to take to the streets and document what they encounter there, despite explicit government bans, the danger of arrest (many hundreds placed in custody), or possible physical harm (at least 19 deaths so far)."

                         
Click here to download:
A_Troubled_Week_in_Iran.zip (3657 KB)


Todd says...

[Sorry, the images didn't upload]


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1%25_Rule_(Internet_culture)

http://laurelpapworth.com/ has pointed out some interesting comparisons between 2006 and 2008 data on online participation.

One potential problem in comparing the data is that the 2006 info was US-based, while the 2008 data is Australian-based.

But the comparison is telling in a way...



   
Click here to download:
Repost_90-9-1_rule_of_online_p.zip (120 KB)


Status 2.0 is an art installation using colour and light, to represent in the physical environment, the emotions expressed on the Internet by the users of web 2.0 sites.

The web 2.0 movement has developed through user generated content and social networking. Social and personal information is freely exchanged and communicated by the users of these sites, and this information is constantly updated and accessed.

The accounts of user’s lives are shared, updated, and communicated though web 2.0 websites such a Twitter and Facebook.

The combination of digital, analogue and organic materials express the emotions through a physical display. The aim is to transform the emotion expressed in a remote digital environment into a physical, immediate and aesthetic installation.


garry says...

Full text of the article here and PDF (Thanks Zack!)

Filed under: startups, Y Combinator

garry says...

It's well acknowledged that markets are more efficient, and therefore create more value than non-markets. If I have 5 people bidding for the same project, I'm free to choose the best vendor for the lowest price. Without choice, then there's no virtuous cycle. I have to live with whatever there is.

Well, with Web 2.0, API's really do drive innovation. Because suddenly social media became pluggable. Twitter, Facebook, Ning, Digg, Reddit, MySpace, and even Google products can work with new products in ways their creators could not have anticipated.

We've seen this before. As Charles Mann points out in the recent article Beyond Detroit, the PC revolution was fueled by the interchangeable nature of every component of a computer. I could choose the best graphics card, whether it was ATI or Matrox or later on 3dfx or nvidia. I could get the fastest hard drive for the lowest price from Maxtor, Seagate, Western Digital, and the like. Intel vs. AMD vs Cyrix was another big decision. But everyone from hobbyists to the bulk buyers at Dell could choose the best. Because there was choice, everything got better and cheaper, faster.

Why? Standards. And we need more of them in Twitter clients. Right now, there are none, to the detriment of consumers and the Twitter ecosystem alike.

In Firefox, if I want to add a search engine, all I have to do is click the little tab and I can manage and add new search engines. The user has control. Yes, there are pre-set defaults, but it's not a closed system. If I want to use something, I can. It doesn't have to be in the box. I can add it myself.

The Twitter clients haven't done anything like this. Each list of URL shorteners, picture posters, and every integrated service is a custom list that is hand-picked by the creators. Arguably they have no reason to open this up. Exclusivity is power. In a selfish, self-interested world, each rational actor only has to act in their own interest.

Firefox allows plugins and modifications to their browser for critical features because they're a non-profit, and aren't bound by profit motive. Microsoft had to include the ability in Internet Explorer because the government forced them by rule of law in 2001 for being anticompetitive.

Somebody call Dave Winer -- we need a common standard and someone to rally behind! After all, Twitter is the new RSS.

Ev and Biz, maybe you can help? Twitter clients are playing in your playground. You have control of the API and ultimately you guys are the only ones who can make sure the playground remains a fair place for everyone to play -- not just the kids with extra money who can pay to play.

Filed under: product design, twitter