General

Websites are becoming more and more like games

December 7th, 2006  |  Published in General

The most successful sites are starting to become more and more like games, according to Amy Jo Kim. Sites like eBay and YouTube thrive and become addictive by incorporating game-like activities: collecting items, earning points, getting performance feedback, making deals and exchanges with other players, and creating customizations. The prediction: The way we consume media now is on the way out, and in the future media will incorporate lessons from all types of games, from Space Invaders to Legend of Zelda, to create a richer experience.

Every Section of Craigslist Will Have Its Own Startup

December 4th, 2006  |  Published in General

About two years ago, I made a prediction: That for every section on Craigslist there would be a whole company founded to improve on it. These startups would try to one-up Craigslist with a better interface, better features, social networking, or search tailored toward their particular type of listing. It looks like that’s pretty much what happened. Can anyone point to any section of Craigslist that doesn’t correspond to some Web 2.0 company?

The Hot Space

December 4th, 2006  |  Published in General

I fail to understand why there’s such a rush of entrepreneurs to get into the latest “hot space.” Do entrepreneurs really think they’ll succeed by jumping into an area that’s already been publicized to death, with massive competition already lined up, and where Google, Yahoo and the other major companies have already made their big acquisitions? I’d much rather work on something completely obscure and out of left field, and develop it until it becomes the next “hot space.”

Maybe I’m missing something obvious — please enlighten me on the logic here.

Firefox Commercial to Air

November 30th, 2006  |  Published in General

The Firefox commercial that my brother directed and that I helped with is going to air in Boston and San Francisco starting Monday. I’ll post a schedule once have that info. The commercial was produced for the Firefox Flicks contest, and you can watch it on their site.

Update: As a community sponsor and a supporter of the Firefox project, you can get your name included in a Firefox ad when it runs on TV.

Why I Hate Shopping, and What to Do About It

November 29th, 2006  |  Published in General

It’s the holiday shopping season, a time when I reflect on the fact that I hate shopping. Whether online or in person, I find shopping to be a frustrating, time-consuming experience that ranks low on my list of favorite activities. Before you denounce me as somehow un-American, let me explain just a few of the many reasons, and some ideas about how shopping could be better:

  • Shopping is all about gathering information. But there’s too much information, and once you’ve made your purchase, it all becomes worthless. Shopping is like a big research expedition, the goal of which is to discover the exact right product at the exact right place to buy it. Because of all the different product models and minute differences between them, there’s a lot of information to sift through. You can spend hour after hour researching a $250 purchase. It’s fine to spend the time if you’re buying an expensive item like a car, but a total waste for small things, like gadgets and cell phones. All that time you spend learning about the products is basically useless once you finally buy something. It would be better to use that time to learn something with some long-term value.
  • Reviews and recommendations are of dubious value. Reading countless reviews is a big time sink. They often disagree and it’s hard to know what sites to trust. If you happen to be in a store, good luck finding anyone working there who knows anything about the product. Aside from Consumer Reports, there’s very little that’s trustworthy.
  • Shopping = schlepping. I hate the physical chore of shopping, having to go from store to store, finding products on the shelves, and waiting on line to pay for them. What a waste of time and energy. I hate it when I schlep all the way to a store only to find out it’s out of stock for what I want. This is one aspect of shopping where the suburbs beat New York City hands down. It’s a lot easier to shop in a mall, and bring home your purchases in a car, than to take the subway all around town, from store to store, lugging your purchases with you.
  • The need to keep track of little slips of paper. I hate having to worry about the return policy and customer service of a particular retailer. And reciepts are an archaic concept. It’s ridiculous that have to keep little slips of paper around to prove I bought the product in case I need to return it. The store has a computer system and knows my credit card number – why can’t they just look it up?
  • What’s the real price? Who knows. Companies are always inventing complex schemes to try to test your price sensitivity in hopes of getting more out of you–coupons, affiliate points, rebates, special limited time sales, and price variations based on your cookies or purchase history. Whenever I buy computers or electronics, I now go and scour the Internet looking for coupon codes, not because I need a discount, but mainly to avoid the feeling of being screwed by paying full price. Even without coupons and discounts, companies aren’t even consistent internally. Every time I find a book I want in B&N, I hesitate to buy it because I know if I order it from their website, it’ll be cheaper. Why the difference?
  • Comparison shopping sites are all but unusable. You get hundreds of listings of the same product, because the site’s not smart enough to know that ‘Manufacturer Cellphone Model ABC-123” and “ABC-123 Manufacturer Cellphone” are the same thing. This could be improved with some kind of visual matching that would be able to tell from the photos which products are identical. Moreover, I can’t search or filter on the attributes that matter most to me. For instance, if I’m searching for a gadget, it would be great to be able to pick and choose specific features, and have the site reliably find products that match them. Even better would be the ability to search on “soft” attributes, like color, aesthetics, hipness or style. For instance, I should be able to search for something like “mid-century modern coffee table”, and if I don’t immediately find the piece I’m looking for, adjust sliders different qualities like the shade of color, or how modern vs. traditional its style is. Otherwise, you need an expert advisor who’s familiar with everything available.
  • EBay is in a class by itself. I especially hate eBay. EBay is only good for one thing: its tremendous product selection. Every other aspect of its user experience is absolutely terrible. Not only do you have to first choose the product you want to buy, you are on your own to judge countless offers for that product, all of which differ slightly by condition, terms, accessories, shipping charge, and other factors. You then have to judge hundreds of different sellers. You are one your own to decide who’s the best, and all of them seem to have 99% positive ratings. At that point, you’re ready to place your bids, so even after all that research, you have no guarnatee of even getting the item. An auction format might be find for collectibles or rare items, but buying standardized current products at auction is insane because of all the additoinal information you need to gather. Have a problem with a seller? EBay’s ready to offer no help whatsoever.

Those times I do enjoy shopping are at stores where collection is heavily edited by a group of experts, and comes at a predictable price point and quality, and when there aren’t hundreds of choices differing in minute ways. For example, shopping for furniture at Crate and Barrel is a great experience. All of their products basically match because it’s all in a certain style, it comes at a predictably high level of quality, and they are always good about returns. It’s a strong brand and I know what it stands for, and it lives up to its promise. Brand names continue to be important, even in the age of the Internet. Most of the reason people rely on brand names, of both products and stores, is to overcome the information-gathering chore and the explosion of choices. When used properly by their owners, brand names are great shortcut because they allow consumers to bypass the information gathering chore.

Any company that can make shopping even marginally more pleasant, and cut down on the amount of information gathering, will definitely be getting more of my shopping dollars!

Big Lists of Things

November 29th, 2006  |  Published in General

Did you ever notice that some of the most useful, intuitive websites are basically just big lists of things?  Who would have thought that a ranked list of user-submitted links would be a good way to discover news?  Or that a chronological list of posts could be a more effective communication tool than an elaborately designed website?
Well, here’s another one.  UnSpun is a new review site by Amazon.  The site consists of community-contributed lists of the top, best, and greatest things in every conceivable category.

There Aren’t Enough Tech People in NYC

November 22nd, 2006  |  Published in General

Over at the nextNY blog, there’s a recap of Fred Wilson’s discussion on whether NY is a good place for startups. One of the main problems he cites is the lack of good tech people in New York. I totally, absolutely agree.

I often feel that I’m the one of the few people here who does what I do.
It seems like nearly everyone else who works with technology in a substantial way works on Wall Street. This is a completely different environment and culture from the world of Internet, new media and startups. Another, comparatively smaller, group consists of front-end specialists, often involved in advertising, media or web design. There are a lot of talented graphic designers and user interface specialists in NY, and they bring a great design sense to some of New York’s startups.

The lack of talented tech people has got to hurt businesses that start here, especially those that are forced to outsource everything. A startup’s all about execution, and you’re just not going to get the dedication, attention to detail, creativity, and passion from some overseas outsourcing company. Plus, the turnaround time to get anything done is much longer, due to distance and communication barriers. This may be fine if you’re developing something standard, like a basic database app, another shopping cart, or the nth clone of MySpace, but I couldn’t imagine a team developing anything truly disruptive or innovative using outsourcing exclusively.I’d find it hard to believe that a totally nontechnical core team could have had the vision for, and the capability to implement, sites like Blogger, del.icio.us, Feedburner, Flickr, PayPal, YouTube or any of the hundreds of other new ideas that have been unleashed over the past few years.

And speaking of MySpace clones, lately I’ve been getting asked nearly every other week to develop one, or to join up with a startup doing one. Come on, enough with the MySpace clones already. You’re like three years too late!

Any startup that’s forced to outsource all of their technology truly has a difficult challenge. Nothing beats getting a talented product guy, marketing guy and technical guru in the same room together to work together.

If you’re a tech person in NYC, contact me — I want to know you exist! 

No Wii For Me

November 20th, 2006  |  Published in General

I haven’t been a big video gamer the last few years, mainly because today’s games seem to take too much time to learn, and I don’t have the patience to learn all the secrets of a complex imaginary world.  The real world is complex enough.  I like small, simple games geared more toward the casual player, not the gaming junkie. SimCity and Civilization are my personal exceptions to this rule, and many times I’ve started to play Civilization at 11PM, “for only for an hour” only to realize it’s suddenly 3 in the morning.

The new Nintendo Wii looks different, and some of the games seem oriented more toward players like me. So I decided to buy one yesterday, and did something that I thought was rather clever. I set up a script to scrape Amazon’s order page, and text message my cell phone the minute the product became available to order. The text message arrived on schedule at around 11 Sunday morning, and I raced to the computer to hit the 1-click order button. Amazingly, all 100,000 consoles Amazon supposedly had were sold in the 30 seconds between the moment I got my SMS and the second I tried to place the order. Apparently this idea wasn’t clever enough. At least I wasn’t sitting up all night hitting ‘reload’ or waiting outside outside all night.

Captcha Spam

November 17th, 2006  |  Published in General

I got my first ‘captcha spam’ yesterday! It consisted of a single graphic containing a paragraph of jittery, contorted text on a patterned background.

Captcha Spam

They must be trying bypass any spam filters that use OCR on images included in emails (I didn’t know there were spam filters that do this, but apparently there are!) There’s also been a report of the first ASCII Art spam. Spam techniques just keeps getting weirder and weirder!

Fast forward

November 15th, 2006  |  Published in General

I haven’t watched a commercial in months, thanks to the fast forward feature on my DVR.  So what if someone sponsored the fast forward feature, and had their logo or ad show whenever fast forward is pressed?  Just a thought.