Posts Tagged 'jeff pulver'

Interlude.fm, Fiddme take Techonomy by storm

Techonomy 2010

Techonomy 2010

Although Techonomy is only in its 2nd year, it’s shaping up to be THE technology/entrepreneur event in Israel, giving 6 (7 this year) start-ups a prominent stage to present their product/service, before a panel of distinguished judges and a loving crowd. Techonomy is organized and produced by Orli Yakuel and Eddie Resnick.

7 companies presented yesterday at Techonomy 2010: AppsFire (video), Bulloonz (video), Fiddme (video), Interlude (video), Omek Interactive (video), SircleIt (video), and ZBang (video). Each presenter is allocated 10min, followed by a Q&A section from judges (and crowd). Voting is done by audience, text messaging their winner (SMS). Videos courtesy of Geek Media.

Interlude.fm

Interlude.fm

Interlude.fm took 1st place, after a brilliant demo by founder, Israeli musician Yoni Bloch. Interlude developed an interactive platform for video, that allows users to interact with the video, choosing various paths, thus altering the original timeline of the clip. Each selection impacts both audio and video, but Yoni explained that you can put restrictions, such as pre-defined opening and closing scenes, director’s cut, and more. According to Robert Scoble, interlude could save MySpace and is a really cool tech for musicians. In a recent project featuring a 3min video, interlude technology tripled the average time on site, to 9min (!) with 1m unique visitors. Yoni’s demo (video below) at Techonomy was shot at his house in Tel Aviv and offers 256 options, complied of 38 different scenes shot on-location.

Fiddme

Fiddme

In 2nd place, very close to interlude.fm, came Fiddme, a social network for foodies, from founders Yosi Taguri, Eran Kampf, Naor Suki, and Udi Milo. Fiddme allows foodies to share their food, by taking a picture and uploading it to fiddme community, using iPhone app or the web. I’ve known Yosi and Eran for some time now, and their passion for the product (started capturing food roughly 2 years ago), along with a beautiful user experience, and the location-based buzz (@foursquare integration coming very-very soon), will make Fiddme one of the best viral apps out there.

Twitter in Israel

With twitter gaining momentum, I’m starting to see more Israelies followers – GO Israel! Although the enterprise adoption of twitter in Israel not as the US or European one, there are plenty of people out there twitting, who are working for Israeli companies, ranging from Hi-Tech, Advertising, Consumer Products, Retail and others.

Lev Cinema is one of the veteran chains of cinemas in Israel (25 years), doing its best to succeed in todays world, with broadband internet aceess, DVD, LCDs and video streaming. It recently opened it twitter account, @lev_cinema, and its first action of business was to gather as many followers as possible – # of users is the key indicator when it comes to any web 2.0 business.

I was very happy to see they opted for a unique marketing activity, that has a high cost vs. benefit value – free screening of Coen Brothers‘ latest film, Burn After Reading. It was also an opportunity to meet almost 70 Israeli twitters, most of whom I haven’t met in person.
The screening was super, movie was funny – too bad I arrived late (I was counting on commercials to make it on time, which surprisingly enough, there were none) and missed the gathering.. 🙁 Fortunately, Israel was there to take some pictures, so there’s a proof I was there.
As I (and others) commented in the post (Hebrew), I kind of hoped there would be a more formal gathering, before the movie started. People seating at the cinema, lights on, 15-20min discussion on social media in Israel, ROIs, best practices, ideas and feedback, something like that. I mean, you already have 70 twitters at one place – why not make the most of it? Nevertheless, it was an excellent activity, leveraging the use of social media, specifically social media in businesses.

Guess I’ll meet you guys (and gals) at one of Jeff‘s social gatherings this week.

Breakfast with Jeff Pulver @ Tel Aviv

Went to my first Jeff Pulver’s Breakfast clubs, at Tel Aviv harbor. I met Jeff last month, lecturing at KM Summit – he was at the hotel, doing back-to-back meetings (I think it was something like 30..). The concept of these breakfasts is very cool, and Jeff really got this down to a form of art. Upon arrival you get a little welcome package, with stickers to write your name and tagline, and another blank sticker that serves as your personal ‘tag cloud’ – so people you meet can tag you.
Jeff explains it better in this video.

The most interesting thing for me was meeting couple of 12 year old kids, who came with one’s mom, to see and learn what social networking is all about. The kids are familiar with blogs (although they don’t write any), know what facebook is (but use Ning instead) – but social gatherings are not IN yet. If you think about it, that sounds strange, since the first groups are formed in pre-school and high-school, so the transition to social networks should be quite natural. That’s not the case here. The kids were quite the attraction – Jeff also spoke with them, and interviewed them, so did Kfir Pravda.

Generation Y seems so real all of a sudden…

Live blogging from KM Summit

Well, it’s my first attempt at this ‘live blogging’ concept, hopefully I’ll do it right…

Arrived at KM Summit this morning, at Hilton Tel Aviv. As someone living outside of Tel Aviv, getting into the city in the morning takes some planning, and time.. usually an hour. Luckily I used the time to go over my presentation (when the light was RED, not while driving), and catch up on TheMarker newspaper from yesterday. Parked at Hilton in 08:30, just in time for the pre-event networking. Even met a friend from my army reserve unit, which, ironically, sells SAP Portal… a small world.

No pictures yet – will upload them soon and over the following days…

09:15

Moria Halevy from ROM Knowledge, the lead sponsor of the event, is keynoting the event, talking about blogs and blogging. I’m gonna prepare for my presentation – will pick this up afterwards.

10:15
Finished. It’s hard to talk about social networking and social software in 25min. I can talk about the subject for 3-4 hours, easy. The last 3-4 slides – which were more important, steps to implement enterpeise social software in your business – I covered faster than I wanted. There were also couple of questions from the audience on IBM’s experience with blogging and bloggers that ‘ate’ my time. Overall, I think the presentation went well – I got the crowd involved (asked questions and gave away small prizes :-), showed KM and enterprise social software is kicking and growing and finally that IBM is the right partner to help you – Lotus Connections.

10:10
Yehuda Tzirkel from Elta Systems is talking about using web 2.0 technologies for market intelligence. Most of the things are well-known, but still, as a social software advocate, it’s good to see other companies are implementing web 2.0 for various business needs.

10:30
Gilad Savyon, co-CEO of Nogacom is talking about their innovative search technology – NogaClass, a solution based around information discovery and analysis.

10:50
Naama Berkovitz from ROM Knowledge is showing the results of their KM survey, which covered over 70 businesses in Israel, with a little more than 170 participants. Not statistically valid, but still… Most organizations with active KM projects are large, over 1,000 employees. Almost 70% of organizations employ KM manager (under IT department), with computing or knowledge background. However, in 5%, the KM manager answers the CEO or other strategic unit. In terms of budget, 45% are operating under 10K a year – which is quite impressive – the ability to implement KM projects with tight resources. In terms of portal infrastructure, Microsoft’s MOSS is leading with 54% (decrease from 62% in 2007) – proof of the strong presence Microsoft have in Israel. As for the future, most participants will continue to implement web portals (55%), but web 2.0 technologies are also top in to-do lists for 2008.

11:15
Break !
During the break I met some colleagues and customers (Bank Hapoalim, Bar Ilan Univeristy, Teva, Central Bureau of Statistics and others), and also a sort of VIP in the social networking arena: Jeff Pulver. Jeff is in Israel this week, doing some breakfasts and business meetings around the adoption of social networking. It just so happens those meetings are held at the lobby of Hilton Tel Aviv.. small world again. Jeff will flying out tomorrow, but when he’s back in Israel next month, I’ll be sure to join one of those breakfasts.

12:00
Back. Adam Shuv is onboard, a long time member of social networking arena in Israel, and one of the founders of TheMarker Cafe. He’s also the CEO of Refresh, an internet company focuses on content management. Anyhow, Adam started talking about social networking – facebook, linkedin, myspcae, etc, and mentioned several companies that are using external blogs to communicate. IBM was not one of the logos on screen, and I was ready to raise my hand and say something, but the next slide made me lower my hand. Adam mentioned Lotus Connections, referring to the Youtube video, that started playing in the background:

‘The best social software I’ve seen so far is a solution from IBM, called IBM Lotus Connections, that provides a platform for companies and enterprises to share knowledge across teams and communities.”

At the end of Adam’s presentation, he showcased several social networks, that are less known in the business. One of those networks was Respectance – a social network for dead people. Really… or as we say in Hebrew, walla… Poking around with the network, I did a quick search on Heath Ledger, who passed away earlier this year. Apparently there are over 1,900 results… fans of course. I’m sure Heath’s family didn’t open any of those results.
Basically, what that means, is that when ones die, it’s easier to ‘steal’ ones identity…

12:15
A lecture from Gur, co-CEO of Debate, a company specializes in business debates. His lecture was interesting, and there are some tips I’m gonna take from his lecture. Especially what’s the #1 rule to pass a message to your audience – Very simple:

Tell them what you’re gonna tell them; Tell them; Tell them what you told them.

The lecture involved the audience, which woke some people from their morning naps… and was actually funny at times. Thanks Gur.

Note to next live-blogging: bring my power adapter… my X60 lasted for brave 4 hours of emailing and blogging – gotta charge now..




Mobile & Media Consultant. I help startup companies launch products to the consumer market. Reach out: dvir.reznik [at] gmail.com
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This is my personal blog. The postings here do not represent the thoughts, intentions, plans or strategies of my past employers or of my clients. It is solely my opinion.