Om Malik’s Broadband Blog � 37 Signals – Anywhere But Here

Another from Om.

Link: Om Malik’s Broadband Blog � 37 Signals – Anywhere But Here.

Jason and his virtual bandmates are spread all over the country/world, and make a comfortable living from their efforts such as Ta-Da List and Basecamp. 37 Signals should have part of my story, but somehow I missed them. Shame on me!

They are a prototypical next-gen start-up, that shuns venture capital, has realistic expectations of itself, and is highly distributed. Jason says they are comfortable in the knowledge that they are not going to be the next Google. This self awareness has to be part of any start-ups DNA. There are many entrepreneurs who are “do-it-themselves” who often tell me that they are immensely worried about the unrealistic expectations placed on them by VC investments. You won’t find them in Silicon Valley, where these days features are posing as companies. They can only wish to get the fierce loyalty 37 Signals enjoys from its customers.

Two threads here get me thinking and are close to my philosophy.

1) Virtual company. I’m in a uncomfortable fix because I want something that is
geographically-challenged (not where I want it to be) and therefore
have to find other geographically-challenged opportunities where I want
to be (not where the action is). Something tells me that I won’t get a really cool job in one
state and live in another. Sigh.

2) Why the rush to grow? Call me näive, but why can’t we just be happy with getting what we need? When I worked for myself, I had many opportunities to expand. But, I chose to just work for myself because the gettin’ was good and that’s what I needed. And still need. Kudos to 37 Signals.

But, here’s the rub (as I repeat myself, for sure): we’re in a hyper-linked society – broadband, Skype, mobiles, jet travel, blogs, social stuff. The only reason to work in a specfic location is to be closer to the client or to the others in the office. If your main clients are not where your office is, there is no reason for you to be fixed there. If you don’t need 24/7, or maybe just 8/5, contact with the rest of the company, then you don’t need to be there physically. I am the first to admit that face time is invaluable and spontaneous face time is amazingly crucial to any business, but there is no reason a person can’t just come and go on a semi-regular basis, you know, to touch base. Heck, I was on the road or out of the office at least 50% of the time anyway. Why couldn’t I just live somewhere else and come in every so often?

I think folks who worked for themselves are more likely to ask for this than regular office workers. Indeed, I usually get strange ‘yeah, right’ looks when I choose to work from home. Damn, I’m rated on what I deliver not on the punch-clock.

Yes, this is a serious topic for me – serious and soon to change my whole family life.

Oh, and Jason from 37 Signals has, unlike many I have been speaking to lately for advice, moved away from Silicon Valley. The only one I have found so far.

Om Malik’s Broadband Blog � Google Sells and Market Yells

I wonder if they need a mobile guy like me. I could use a few of those bucks.

Link: Om Malik’s Broadband Blog � Google Sells and Market Yells.

The Bay Area housing market is all set to “kick-it-up-a-notch” as many newly minted Google millionaires are going to go shopping for palazzos. TheStalwart has details on the insider selling. For those of you who missed out on the Google IPO, here is your second chance. The company plans to raise $4 billion. Its not going to be risk free, according NYU finance professor Aswath Damodaran tells Fortune.

Futurice – PhotoBlog

This is not another blog client. Futurice has thought through all the requirements to make this an easy to use mobile app with subscription and bililng issues all worked out. A good example of a mobile app tied into a Web service.

Ah, but they can do this because they own both the server and mobile app side of things. I think the skill they have on both sides of the connections helps them come out with such great end to end solutions.

Link: Futurice.

Futurice PhotoBlog is a full-featured multilanguage mobile photo blogging system for sharing photos with friends. You will automatically get your own username.blog.futu.info website where you can post images. For the service provider there are many billing options.

Futurice PhotoFeed

Cool app. I love these guys. Wish I could dream up other apps with them.

Link: Futurice.

PhotoFeed – a free mobile photo feed reader

Photofeed is an application that brings your favorite photo blog feeds directly to your Nokia Series 60 phone. The application is free and you can subscribe any feed that implements ATOM with some mobile optimizations.

I’ve had some great discussions with them regarding mobile-friendly issues in Web 2.0. Here is one example of something that could use a bit of help if there were a standard mobile Atom feed. But, right now, feeds are sloppy because everyone is using a broadband PC.

thee blog ov al_iguana – Nokia 6680 and Three

Another happy customer. Basically, 3 has a great network that users won’t use. Now, how’s that for ‘cutting your nose off to spite your face’?

Link: thee blog ov al_iguana – Blog Archive – Nokia 6680 and Three.

My wonder-phone has a flaw. a serious flaw. because I’m on Three. I can’t access the internet. They’ve blocked it. No blog clients. No RSS readers. No Wap. All I can do is visit Three’s website. A Pay website. Want to read the news? Each item costs 50p. The weather? 50p.

Wake up guys!