Archive for October, 2009
NYConvergence ORIGINAL The NYS Department of Labor's Skills Matching and Referral Technology (SMART) 2010 program will analyze the resumes of workers in its database for skills and work experience. According to the press release reviewed by NYConvergence, it will then e-mail them, recommending job openings in their areas based on their past work history, experience, and skills. For more information, you can visit the department's Web site. Related:> NY Tech Companies on a Hiring Spree> FiredUp Network Provides Advice for Unemployed> NYCEDC Seeks Consultants For NYCMedia2020
Wednesday, October 14th, 2009
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By aaron at Centrl Blog
With its new convenient online submission form, Centrl has made it easier for its users to publish their data on the Centrl network.
For more information, please visit http://centrl.com/publishers/

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009
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By aaron at Centrl Blog
Now you can embed Centrl into your site with just a few lines of HTML. For more information, visit http://centrl.com/developers

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009
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By aaron at Centrl Blog
Our crack team of translators have been working hard to translate Centrl into Turkish and Japanese! To access the Turkish and Japanese versions of Centrl, just change your browser’s language settings.


NYConvergence ORIGINAL On Thursday, October 15, 2009, at 10 AM in New York's City Hall's Committee Room, the New York City Council Committee on Technology in Government and the Committee on Fire Safety and Criminal Justice Services will hold a joint hearing on the citywide Notify NYC program, according to a press release received by NYConvergence. Through the hearing, the committees seek to gain insight into the program's success and its overall value following its upgrade to include all five boroughs in May 2009, assessing whether Notify NYC is effectively using its resources and broadcasting messages in a timely manner. Previous:> Notify NYC Goes Live Today
Wednesday, October 14th, 2009
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By aaron at Centrl Blog
Version 1.40 of Centrl’s iPhone application introduces a new feature that makes it easy for users to save and share locations. Just click location from the menu bar at the bottom, verify your current location by entering in address or selecting one of the detected near-by locations, enter an optional note, click share, select the users with whom you want to share, and your friends will receive a notification containing the location’s information.
This new functionality makes Centrl a great way to tell your friends about all the cool new places you’ve found.
[Editor's Note: This post originally appeared on Sanford Dickert, Social Engineer and was republished with the permission of the author. NYConvergence
welcomes submissions from members of the digital media technology
community in the NY, NJ, and CT tri-state area for review and possible
publication. Our e-mail address is tips@nyconvergence.com.] By: Sanford Dickert Last night, the nextNY Digital crowd
got a chance to converse with members of the Fourth Estate (or me,
depending on their poor fortune). Charlie O'Donnell put together the "Meet the Startups" touting "100 CEOs and founders of NY Tech Startups in one room".
Since I was not representing a tech company this time around, I went as
a stringer blogger to gather some info and names of new companies that
deserve some visibility.
To start off with, I must thank all who
spoke with me and gave me a short 30 second pitch - and will list them
below. I also asked two questions, based on the recent discussion on
tech companies and product managers in NYC brought up by Fred Wilson at the Clickable Cafe from a couple of weeks ago.
It
was asserted that there is a dearth of "product managers" in New York
City and a growth of this community (and skill set) would be a positive
indicator of NY Tech growth. So, aside from meeting the founders - I
asked about their tech staff and their "product management" staff.
Requisite Company Mentions As promised, I wanted to mention the companies I met last night. All were excellent discussions - albeit incredibly fast...
- Market Publique - online market place for vintage clothing (must be at least 20 years old)
- MyItThings - online user-generated fashion magazine
- Mobile Commons - SMS/telephone advocacy tools
- UpSkil.com - a new career education site (cheaper but better than UoP)
- foursquare - mobile, location-based notification and community tool
- centrl - mobile, location- and social-network-based community tool
- boomerater - user-generated portal/magazine for baby-boomers into a number of vericals
- Funnel Scope - travel search engine with twitter API connection to converse with friends on trip decisions
- Asian in NY - a "craigslist for Asian community members" or a gumtree in the US for the Asian community
- Kidmondo - online baby journals
- cookstr - online receipes
- MeetingWave - faciliatating connecting in person with your contacts (Meetup meets LinkedIn)
- Cloud Contacts - scanning of your business cards into a single dataset
- Convos - one-stop group communication and management platform
- OMGPOP - online multi-player games for teens
- Unigo - online publisher using student-generated content on universities
- Gate Guru - iPhone app for information on airports (similar to SeatGuru for airplanes)
- SquareSpace - SaaS web CMS with extensive tools
- kgb_web - an upcoming "Pandora for Content" - recommendation engine for all forms of content (with many other incarnations)
- Instinctiv
- a smart-phone music player with stronger recommendation tools by
tracking your on-device actions (e.g. skip, fast-forward, etc)
- Stratus Security - API access management and billing toolset
Now, in the course of the discussions with these companies - there were a couple of observations I made:
- Over
80% of these companies would not be considered "tech companies" -
specifically a company that is a tech product that is solving a
business need. Rather, most of these companies were media or service
companies that were startups - using tech as one of their
differentiator. Most of these companies either outsourced or "had a
tech guy" on their founding team.
- Of the other 20% of the
companies, the product management work was being handled by the
founder, the CEO (and or CTO) or (in the rare case of kgbweb) a separate Sr VP of Products.
- "Product
management" was understood as "owning the product", but the strengths
of the owner was the driving factor of what the responsibilities were
of the PM.
- One person who discussed with me about his company
also mentioned that as a former Product Manager of a major bank, he
could not find "product management" jobs in NYC when he went looking.
Why the concern?One
of the comments Fred made at the Clickable event was the need for more
product managers in NYC to help create startups. Being a former Valley
guy (Silicon Valley, not SoCal!), I was a product manager for a number
of companies and knew the community of members during my time there.
PMs were the "CEOs" of their products - either by market or by channel.
Their responsibility was to the P&L of their product line and
responsible for:
- sales performance (how the sales team performed with direct authority over them),
- market penetration (what percentage of the market did they own)
- marketing message and communication (how did the market understand the product)
- product features and enhancements (to expand their market offering)
- product delivery and testing (working with engineering/production to deliver the product on time)
- customer acceptance and service (all about retention and up-to-the-minute status on product service)
Depending
on the company, these responsibilities had different priorities based
on internal resources. But, if you note the list above, these are also
the responsibilities of a small business owner - just at a very
different scale or vocabulary. During Web 1.0 in the Valley, the
strongest CEOs tended to be the PMs of other companies because they
could easily generate the direction for these areas - not simply one
person for each. By being strong in a number of these areas and being
able to tie them together into a coherent product and company strategy
is one of the keys to a successful company. The challenge: how do you
make companies that need such product managers that are also
(eventually) rewarded for being the CEOs of small startups in the
future? Sanford Dickert, Social Engineer
Friday, October 9th, 2009
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By For Your Imagination at For Your Imagination
For Your Imagination is proud to present the October 2009 showcase of web video productions at the BigScreen LittleScreen on October 14th at 6:30pm. In this installment, we will be featuring THE THIRD AGE, BROOKLYN IS FOR LOVERS, TV IN A FLASH, and OLD FRIENDS. Created to help support and encourage the growth of the web TV community, we will screen some of the newest web series, discuss development, production, and overall business issues with the creators and the attendees. This meetup is brought to you by 10ton.tv and For Your Imagination. For more infomation and to RSVP visit www.meetup.com/bigscreenlittlescreen.
NYConvergence ORIGINALeHow and Lance Armstrong's Livestrong.com are being included as "pipelines" in Magnify's branded aggregation service as a result of these deals. This means that original content from both will be incorporated into the aggregation service which users of Magnify-powered video players can then be added into their video channels. Previous:> Video Service Magnify Raises Additional Funding[Editor's Note: Magnify powers NYConvergence's NYConvergence TV channel.]
Wednesday, October 7th, 2009
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By CEO at This is going to be BIG.
On Tuesday, October 13th, at 6:30PM, 100 Founders and CEO’s of NYC tech companies will gather at Sun Microsystems for nextNY’s “NYC Media: Meet the startups” event. The idea behind the event was that, on a pretty regular basis, tech and small business reporters find their way to me and want to know about the “comeback” or “birth” or “rebirth” or whatever of the NY tech scene. Then I have to tell them all about the fact that we’ve been here for years, heads down working. Half the time, they don’t know about the most successful startups or the most innovative ones. It’s not easy, either. NYC startups blend in pretty easy—squatting in other offices, in coffee shops, in their own apartments. You never know when the two dudes in the back of your Williamsburgh design showroom are actually a couple of hackers trying to change the world. Therefore, I thought it would be great to gather a bunch of NYC’s really awesome startups together in one room—and that’s what we’ll have. There will be 100 Founders and CEOs of NYC startups all in one room, including: Brian Adams – AdMeld (Raised $15 mil in two VC rounds since 11/08) | Seth Besmertnik – Conductor (Raised $12 mil, including $10 mil this year from Matrix Partners and Firstmark) | Zephrim Lasker – Pontiflex (Raised $8.75 mil since 4/08) | Anthony Volodkin – Hype Machine (Doesn’t need VC to be cool… Inc Top 30 Entrepreneurs Under 30) | Dave Morgan – Simulmedia (Founder of Tacoda, sold to AOL for $275 million) | Geoff Lewis – Udorse Up and comer from TechCrunch 50 - $500k from Founders Fund, Private Beta | So the big question is… where are all the local tech and small business reporters covering this? We’re going to have Jenna Wortham from the NY Times and John Abell from Wired, but I expected journalists to be tripping over themselves for this and we haven’t seen it yet. Where have all the reporters gone?? If you cover innovation, small business, technology, etc. you absolutely need to be here! We’re also going to include a short presention called “Your Guide to the NYC Tech Community”. Reporters, RSVP here! PS… If you are an entrepreneur, we are sold out (or more like free’d out, since everything at nextNY is always free). Please do not try to sneak in with a media ticket. I will find you and hunt you down like the dog that you are. Grazie.
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