The real patron saint of the web

It’s nice to hear that, every once in a while, the nice guy finishes first. Sir Tim Berners-Lee was just awarded the Millennium Technology Prize. He was also knighted last December and listed as one of Time’s 100 most influential people of the 20th century.

So what did he do that was so great?

He invented the Worldwide Web while at CERN in 1989. That in itself is not new: the hypertext concept is prevalent as far back as 1945. No, the real kicker is that he then gave the technology away. Without his contributions, the Internet as we know it today would never have existed:

“There would have been a CERN Web, a Microsoft one, there would have been a Digital one, Apple’s HyperCard would have started reaching out Internet roots,” he said. “And all of these things would have been incompatible.”

His current project, the Semantic Web, aims to make information retrieval more intelligent and intuitive. He is also outspoken about abolishing software patents altogether:

“What’s at stake here is the whole spirit in which software has been developed to date,” he said. “If you can imagine a computer doing it, then you can write a computer program to do it. That spirit has been behind so many wonderful developments. And when you connect that to the spirit of the Internet, the spirit of openness and sharing, it’s terribly stifling to creativity. It’s stifling to the academic side of doing research and thinking up new ideas, it’s stifling to the new industry and the new enterprises that come out of that.”

Smoke and mirrors and portals

Sympatico/MSN held a BBQ at Yonge-Dundas Square to celebrate their launch of the Sympatico.MSN.ca “superportal”. On hand were burgers, hotdogs, ice cream bars, mini-compass keychains that don’t work, and baseball caps. The homeless never ate so well; one fellow was helping himself to fistfuls of ketchup packets. On hand for entertainment were the AntiGravity troupe, with men on “AntiGravity Boots”, trapeze artists, and trampoline acrobats.

sympaticomsn 005.jpg

You think they overdid it? Naaah.

Shoulders of giants for rent

Did you know that US and EU copyright laws now extends creator’s rights to their deaths plus 70 years…effectively perpetuity? Or that Canadians enjoys cheaper meds than the USA, due to Canada’s anti-pricefixing laws? I’ve been reading Boing Boing‘s Cory Doctorow (and former Torontonian) argue for reform in today’s intellectual property laws for a few months now, and he’s always impressed me in how he makes his case.

If you ever wanted the 5-Minute University on Intellectual Property, look no further than Wired’s colour centerfolds on trends and statistics in piracy, medicine, genetics, and my current topic de force, open source.

Doctorow feels that current IP restrictions stifles innovation, and it’s hard to disagree in this age of idiotic software patents and the RIAA’s intimidating lawsuits. He sums it up quite well in this letter, where he points out that the self-righteous copyright owners of today were the pirates of yesteryear:

“…filmmakers (who enthusiastically violated Edison’s film patents), broadcasters (who played records without permission or payment), cablecasters (who pirated free-to-air signals for their networks) and even hybrid entertainment/electronics companies (like Sony, whose piratical VCR was characterized by the motion-picture people as the certain death of the film industry) are all standing shoulder to shoulder in the fight against programmers and ordinary citizens who have, once again, discovered a better way to distribute and reproduce creative works.

“It’s no surprise that these pirates of the entertainment industry want to pull the ladder up behind them and dog the hatch. After all, the traditional role of inventors has been to create massive new revenue opportunities for the entertainment industry, and the traditional response of the entertainment companies has been to seek legislative relief from those opportunities….

“In a world where 80 percent of the music ever recorded isn’t available for sale
anywhere, the P2P networks have revived what is, quite literally, the largest
library of human creativity ever assembled.”

The butterfly flies tonight

objects_june 010.jpg objects_june 012.jpg

This souvenir came in the mail today. It’s coming. It’s the Sympatico.MSN.ca website. Apparently the portal folks over at Queen’s Quay have been burning the midnight oil on this one. Hopefully they did right this time. Here’s to you folks, this all better be worth it.

Update: Nice site, although My Page doesn’t work in Mozilla and GetEmail seems to be down for most folks. Email passwords are also being transmitted unencrypted?!

Changes are three-fold:

  • new Sympatico MSN portal, with special customized version for Sympatico subscribers
  • MSN Premium software (free or by subscription, it’s not clear)
  • Sympatico Mail Enhanced by MSN (kinda like a Hotmail/GetEmail combo)

I was in the beta. Meh, it’s all about brand strategy.

Innovation and how to love your liver

It looks like one of our partner companies has devised a new innovation initiative. Which is fine, – who doesn’t like initiatives? – but I just can’t get over the name: Prometheus. According to the news release, he’s the “God of Innovation” and his name translates as “he who looks forward” and is known for “intelligence, service and excellence.”

Methinks someone didn’t crack open their Greek mythology texts in high school!

Prometheus was actually a conman. He was also a Titan, not a Greek god. It was his conning of Zeus that caused the Greek gods to take fire away from man in the first place.

I would also be wary of being the initiation lead behind this program. You see, for his transgressions, Prometheus was chained to a rock and had his liver eaten out by an eagle every day. His liver would regrow every night to begin the torture anew. Fortunately, Hercules rescued him only after 30 years of being a living foie gras luncheon platter.

Basically, Prometheus was not the type to win Employee of the Month awards. He didn’t even invent fire – he stole it from the forge of Hephaestus, the god of fire. Now there’s a better candidate for “God of Innovation”. Personally, I think Prometheus is a better spokesperson for P2P networks. 😉

When it comes to strategy and innovation, it is Athena that should be the patron goddess of IT. (The Vatican decided on St. Isidore for the Internet and all things computers.)

Moral of the Story: When naming stuff, make sure you actually know what your chosen name means.

Feet of clay

Two Jeffs stirring the pot this week:

An MBA not the cat’s meow after all?

“There are now so many schools churning out graduates, but demand for MBAs has stayed constant or fallen…”

Stanford professor Jeffrey Pfeffer wrote a paper called “The End of Business Schools? Less Success Than Meets the Eye” where he postulates that getting an MBA may not be as valuable as first thought. Anyone remember that FedEx commercial where the newly-minted junior executive has to fill out package slips his first day on the job? “But I’m an MBA!” he protests. “Ohhhh,” his manager realizes. “Then I better show you how to do it.”

“No one disputes that an MBA from a highly prestigious school such as Harvard, Wharton, Chicago, or Stanford can lead to high pay, partly because of the great contacts students make there. Still, Pfeffer cites study after study strongly suggesting that this is because those schools are so hard to get into (and so costly once you get there), only the best and brightest fast-trackers have a shot. In other words, they are people who most likely would have succeeded whether they went to B-school or not.”

Microsoft not the bee’s knees after all?

“The Web

Wassup was robbed

Speaking of memes…Seanbaby and Wave Magazine lists the Top 10 Best Internet Fads. The Kiss Me guy, Cats, and Tourist Guy makes the list. But where is the Budweiser “wassssup” parodies? Philistines!

These breakdancing Decepticons seem to have come in too late to make the list.

Memes have an unusual staying power. I was at the streetcar, and two girls started singing the Hampsterdance; that is, if lyrics such as “dib-a-dib-a-dib-dib” can truly be sung and given its proper respect without a worthy dose of helium.

Giggles later, one of them reminisces, “Boy, I remember hearing that when I was 5!” Oh, woe is me to have been born and raised in the dark ages before the web!

Don’t interrupt, use word of mouse

Finished reading new-age marketing mogul Seth Godin‘s Unleashing the Ideavirus. The first trick to releasing an ideavirus is to call your concept a peculiar name, such as “ideavirus”. The second trick is to then make people read 104 pages of your book to find out what you’re talking about and realize that “ideavirus” is just your pet name for “word of mouth advertising, via the Internet”. Next, litter the pages with URLs of past books you’ve written and companies you are connected to. Step 4: PROFIT!

So Seth practices what he preaches, but what he preaches is not earth-shattering. Current advertising techniques, which he calls “Interruption Marketing”, basically involves pouring scads of money into commercials and ads in an attempt to harass people into buying something. Spammers and telemarketers take interruption marketing to its logical extremes by shotgunning ads to unwilling eyeballs and ears, with the absurd notion that any exposure is positive exposure. As customer resistance increases, marketers just turn up the heat – which is why you now see adverts hanging over urinals, bigger and more garish web banners, and corporate names stuck on sport stadiums. And we were this close to getting billboards on gravestones, I kid you not.

However, Godin argues that marketing through memes costs much less money and can be much more effective. By quietly distributing it to the trendsetters, key influencers or “sneezers”, your idea can spread to a large target audience (the “hive”). To keep the idea contagious, the idea must be easy to pass along (“smoothness”) and aimed at the right people (“vector”). The beauty is, everyone that is targeted by the ideavirus actually want to hear your message. Godin cites Hotmail’s little sig at the bottom of each Hotmail email and Amazon’s referral program as choice examples.

The Internet has launched a many-to-many proliferation of digital samizdat. Every day, people online are dissecting and discussing products and services. As David Weinberger passionately evoked on CSPAN (Jon Udell helpfully provides the pertinent part of the video here), when he was looking for a washer/dryer, he went to “every company’s website…Google”. In minutes, he discovered an ongoing discussion on the very model he was looking for. The commentary was merciless, unsanitized, and most importantly – human and trustworthy.

Several companies have tried their hand at creating their own memes or viral campaigns, such as Burger King’s cheeky Subservient Chicken website, or Volvo’s faux documentary “The Mystery of Dalaro”. A groundbreaking Internet scavenger hunt based on Kubrick and Spielberg’s A.I. spawned an entire fanbase called the Cloudmakers to solve it. (The storyline in the game is far more interesting than the one in the movie too, IMHO).

One company, BzzAgent LLC, believes they can make a business out of paying “buzzers” to become digitally-accelerated Mary Kays.

Marketers ignore the many-to-many social phenomenon at their peril, as the movie industry found out. If you make a crappy movie, everyone will know before you say “Gigli”. Deceiving your customers is even worse; those who think they can artificially create an ideavirus may be in for a nasty surprise. Ideaviruses cut both ways; all the spindoctoring in the world won’t wash. “Any attempts to escape the new transparency will ultimately prove futile,” David Kilpatrick writes. “Build a business that will not be injured by the disclosure of data.”

Can it work in a positive manner? It depends on the idea and its execution. Amusingly, half of the dotcoms Godin cites as sucessfully using the ideavirus had perished shortly after this book was published in 2001. Even Godin fumbles when he released “The Big Red Fez” in 2002. He promised Ideavirus readers he would release the book for free online to generate buzz, or he would write an explanation of why his ideavirus strategy failed. If you check that site today, there’s no ebook, and a link promising the said explanation only goes to his blog’s main page.

So, basically the book was on tactical marketing methods designed to make you part with more of your hard-earned money. But since advertising is here to stay, I’d rather have the less annoying kinds.

Doors open

Sunday was a perfect day for stomping around Toronto and peering into interesting buildings normally blocked from public eyes. And peering and appreciating Toronto’s architecture is what the Doors Open event is all about. It only runs for one weekend in May every year, and with over 150 buildings to choose from – everything from churches to City Hall – you basically have to pick your favourites, and hope for the best. We got to see three buildings:

CBC Building.jpg CBC Gorg Clock.jpg

The CBC Broadcasting Centre. They have a neat children’s museum on the ground floor, with video clips and memorabilia from Mr. Dressup, The Friendly Giant and other excellent CBC children’s shows from the ’80’s. Upstairs on the 7th floor is the carpentry department. Up there they have sets for Coach’s Corner (with a cardboard cutout of Don Cherry!) and Athens 2004, plus other great stage props, such as the Royal Canadian Air Farce’s Chicken Cannon sign.

The clock on the right just cracks me up. It’s a Gorg clock from Fraggle Rock, designed by Tim McElecheran. The clockdial is inscribed with imaginary numerals, and since the Gorgs are Muppets with four fingers, McElecheran used an octal numbering system. My geeky heart flutters just thinking about it.

BMW Toronto.jpg BMW Toronto Interior.jpg

The BMW Toronto dealership. Silverlotus remarked that this was a sleazy way to get people to spend an afternoon ogling cars, and she’s probably right. Still, the building has some architectural merit: all the walls are made of glass, including the elevator, and they use a moat around the dealership to cool the building. Perched on a hill overlooking the Gardiner Expressway, it has a commanding view of the downtown core. It’s also the largest facility of its kind in Canada.

Union Station - Overlooking the Hall.jpg Union Station - Between the Glass.jpg

Union Station. If there was ever an award for Most Neglected Historical Landmark, Union might get it. Once the hub of activity during the heydays of locomotives, Union is now a pitstop for subway and GO Train commuters, and it’s in need for $150 million in repairs. The washrooms have the same fixtures they enjoyed when they were brand new in the 1930s.

What hasn’t aged a bit, however, is the Great Hall. It’s flanked by two giant windows on either side to let light in, and the bricks are made of a special Minnesota limestone that further reflects this light. The giant windows are actually translucent glass hallways that employees can walk through, which you can see in the picture to the right. Despite all that ingenuity, there was one gaff – the carving of the name of the city of Sault Ste. Marie is mispelled.

Buy your latte in two seconds flatte

conference 005.jpg
Dexit Inc., based in First Canadian Place in downtown TO, has been making a big push in giving out these little RFID debit tags. They also offer a sticker version that adheres to your cellphone, but since it’s permanent glue and you’re going to want to chuck your phone in two years time, the sticker doesn’t seem prudent.

Basically, they work like iPass keyring fobs; you just wave it in front of the Dexit scanner at a participating retailer, and away you go. No PINs or swiping required. You can fill them up with a maximum of $100.

My first worry, solvency, as been largely mitigated. TD Canada Trust and the National Bank of Canada seem to be backing them financially, and both Telus Mobility and Bell Canada have marketing arrangements with them. They’re also pushing for an IPO.

The bad news: It’s still only supported by a small number of merchants, virtually all of them fast food joints, in and around First Canadian Place. However, Dexit is also cleverly supported at Ryerson and York cafeterias – captive young savvy audience, check!

There is also a price for the convenience. The tags are free, but it costs $1.50 per cash refill. In a world of no-fee Internet banking establishments, the question becomes one of utility. How much time do you really save? A few seconds of fumbling for change or punching in a PIN? Is that worth a minimum 1.5% on your purchases (assuming you refill a full $100)?

The ruggedness of the RFID tag itself is also dubious. Silverlotus’s Dexit tag has been banging around her purse for a couple weeks, and its lacquered label has already begun peeling off.