Feb 01

Color Wheels are wrong? How color vision actually works -

An interesting article about colour theory, from photons to colour tags (#FFFF00).

Jan 31

TED: Visualizing the medical data explosion -

Today medical scans produce thousands of images and terabytes of data for a single patient in mere seconds, but how do doctors parse this information and determine what’s useful? 

Jan 19

Amazon.com announces "Elastic Beanstalk" for AWS -

Amazon Web Services have made yet another announcement for increased functionality (its just about weekly at the moment!). “Elastic bean stalk” is an automatically scaling solution for Java.  Despite its awkward name (I thought it was a joke at first), this looks like an interesting development, going after Google App Engine, Heroku and other managed hosting providers.

Java means we won’t be using it any time soon, but if they come up with a managed .Net solution it would probably be worth a look.

Jan 18

Facebook's 3rd Biggest Advertiser is a Bing Affiliate -

Things don’t look too good for the revenue and earnings outlook of the worlds biggest social network.  Not only do most of its revenues appear to come from “Social Gaming” (Zynga), but now it appears that its 3rd biggest advertising client is for a site that is VERY scammy.

Makes you wonder if it can really justify that $70 billion dollar valuation!

Jan 09

How would you like your Graphic Design?

How would you like your Graphic Design?

(Source: lharboe, via taitems)

Jan 04

SQL Server: Use of Rank and/or Cross Apply in sub-queries -

Here is a great article from a former co-worker, Khaja on the performance benefits of using Cross Apply in sub-queries.

Jan 03

Goldman Sachs invests in Facebook at $50 Billion valuation -

Goldman Sachs has reached out to its wealthy private clients, offering them a chance to invest in Facebook, the hot social networking giant that is considering a possible public offering in 2012, according to people familiar with the matter.

Google's Chrome climbs its way to 10% of the browser market -

NetApplications published its year-end market browser share numbers today which had Google’s (GOOG) Chrome nearing 10% of the overall browser market share.  If you look a the last two years, you see a steady decline in Microsoft’s(MSFT) Internet Explorer which has lost 12 points in that time.  At the same time, Chrome has gone from almost nothing to 10% of the browser.  Firefox peaked at 24% last year but has since dropped back to its 22% and change.  Safari, which shares the same Webkit rendering engine as Chrome, make modest gains over the past two years.

Google's Chrome climbs its way to 10% of the browser market -

NetApplications published its year-end market browser share numbers today which had Google’s (GOOG) Chrome nearing 10% of the overall browser market share.  If you look a the last two years, you see a steady decline in Microsoft’s(MSFT) Internet Explorer which has lost 12 points in that time.  At the same time, Chrome has gone from almost nothing to 10% of the browser.  Firefox peaked at 24% last year but has since dropped back to its 22% and change.  Safari, which shares the same Webkit rendering engine as Chrome, make modest gains over the past two years.

Nov 03

Evolution of Lean: The MEAN Start-up

The concept of the “lean start-up” has got a lot of traction recently.  For those of you who aren’t familiar with the lean start-up methodology, it centres on building products that are relevant to consumers.  It does this by suggesting you test your assumptions about customers by building a Minimum Viable Product (MVP), taking it to customers and changing it (or Pivoting) until you have reached Product Market Fit, where you have a business that actually does something of value.

This all seems rather wasteful to me, so I would like to introduce a new start-up company methodology, called The MEAN Start-up.

The MEAN Start-up does away with the wasteful testing of assumptions, creating an MVP and pivoting.  Rather than innovating to build a new product and learning from contact with customers, you leave all that hard work to other start-ups run by young passionate entrepreneurs who often read Hacker News and want to give back to the start-up community. 

Instead you read Hacker News to find out about other start-ups who have already achieved product market fit and steal their idea.  That’s where the MEAN part comes in.

With the idea in hand and a perfect template available (their app), you can easily out-source the creation of your new competing / stolen product to India (or the Philippines) for less than $15k.  When you consider that the start-up you have copied / stolen from has probably invested, say 4 person years in getting to the point of product market fit (through developing, iterating, pivoting, etc.), you have just saved yourself around $500k! 

You can then spend the rest of your money on PR, marketing and sales people. 

 My personal favourite example of companies using the MEAN start-up methodology is Zurb, with their app http://verifyapp.com/, which appears inspired by http://fivesecondtest.com.  Another example is Facebook, which used to be a lean start-up but has since evolved to the MEAN start-up with its inspiration from Twitter (News Feed), Foursquare (Places), and now Groupon (Facebook Deals).

So don’t waste your time innovating or building something new, simply steal the idea from someone who has already done it!

Standby for my new start-up: SuperBingoCardCreator.com