Saturday, July 28, 2007
My book on Google Book Search
One of my friends forwarded me this link:
Yes, this is my book on programming mappoint in .net (from O'Reilly) now available in Google Book Search. Eventhough the entire book is not available, you can still see significant portions of the book :)
Saturday, July 21, 2007
See you at Inman SF Connect 2007
I will be on a panel at Inman SF Connect 2007 where we will be discussing the aspects of Social Networking in in real-estate.
Here are some details about the session:
Thursday, August 2, 2007
Social Networking: New ways to participate and prospect
Moderator: Marc Davison, Partner, 1000Watt Consulting
Panelists:
David Gibbons, Director, Community Relations, Zillow
Chandu Thota, Co-Founder & CTO, Fatdoor
David Bethoney, Co-Founder & CEO, PropertyQube
Ben T. Smith IV, Co-Founder & Chairman, MerchantCircle
I would love to see you there if you are attending!
Friday, July 13, 2007
Neighbors, Interests, Aggregation of data
"It isn't that I don't mind knowing who my neighbors are, its just that I’d rather meet them on the sidewalk and not in some virtual chat room"
I agree with James - at fatdoor, our mission is to connect people at a neighborhood level - not so much in the chat rooms but - at a neighborhood level. Let me explain what this is about. I have had conversations with a number of people regarding "knowing neighbors". Usually the conversation goes like this:
Me: Do you know your neighbors?
Someone: No, actually I don't...
Me: Don't want to know them, come on, they live around you...
Someone: Sure, but I don't have time... I'm too busy
Me: What if there is a service that introduces your neighbors online and you get to know them before you get a chance to meet then in person?
Someone: Oh, that's interesting, would love check it out, so I know who lives around me
We all know our neighbors, but in the sense of "knowledge" comes in different variations: we say "hello" to them everyday, we wave at them as we drive by - but we don't know their names are or we don't know their interests so on and so forth. That's the social gap that we aim to bridge. To that end, we aggregate interests in any neighborhood and present them as an "interest cloud" (ala tag cloud see below).
So how would one use it? Simply use it to enable offline activity. First you get to know neighbors who share similar interests as you do - and then we let you connect and communicate with them to collaborate better in the neighborhood - by creating a community (eg. a mothers club or a book club etc) around what you really care about.
So the key is: teardown the information-flow-barriers online to create activity offline. That's what we do - and hey if you are interested in helping us, we are hiring :)
Sunday, July 01, 2007
Identity, Responsibility and Social Networks
John Udell has a post about Simon's blog and local blogging rules (Simon is the editor of my book). In that post John talks about two rules that Simon has about "local blogging"; one of them, in particular, caught my attention and resonated with me very well in the context of my current work at fatdoor:
Responsibility is inversely proportional to community size
When you’re doing local stuff, you can’t stay anonymous for long. I think that has a major impact on the tone of things. The content has to be a lot more accurate because people will call you on it. Somehow the level of responsibility increases as the size of community decreases. It really changes the dynamics thoroughly.
There are two important things to note in this rule: identity and responsibility. Just think about it. When you reveal your real identity online and when you deal with real people online (that you actually know or see in real life), that does change the dynamics dramatically. That's the same reason why the dynamics of different social networks are so different on MySpace, Facebook and Fatdoor.
When real people participate, they form a mature social networks that behave responsibly; now that makes me feel like the good old new yorker cartoon (that famously said: "On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog") sooo Web 1.0 :)
What do you think?

















