4 posts tagged “twitter”
I exceeded my party quotient this week, attending two incredibly satisfying parties showcasing some cutting edge startups and an internet mogul that knows how to party like it was 1999.
First up on Tuesday, Jeff Pulver showed us Chicagoans how to throw a party. It's been years since I last experienced the irrational exuberance of the go-go VC-stoked internet startup era of the late 90's. But it all came back Tuesday night with the co-founder of Vonage renting out the entire House of Blues with a three-hour open bar and his own band for 1000 of his closest friends. His. Own. Band. And it was cool to see a captain of the VOIP industry who's down-to-earth enough to greet you personally and rock it like Eddie Vedder on the dance floor. Can't think of many tech CEOs willing to let it all hang loose like that. And I'm now also his friend on Facebook. The evening was also an opportunity for a Twitter F2F meetup for those of us geeky enough to grok what it's all about.
Then on Wednesday, it was the debut of the Chicago Web Ascent showcase of startups, with yet another open bar (this one with tasty chocolate martinis) and cool technology. This is what it must be like to be in the tech community in the Bay Area. I saw four companies worth noting: IQZone, which allows you to upload cameraphone pictures to an instant classified ad system; Spongecell, an event promotion system with sophisticated back-end analytics; ImThere, a social events network; and Pickle.com, which allows mobile users to upload on-the-fly cameraphone photos to a live web page. All of these companies have incorporated mobile functionality in their respective offerings. With all this activity in the mobile space, it's still unclear which companies are going to emerge as sustainable, profitable success stories in the long run.
Through a fortunate coincidence, I'll be in Minneapolis this weekend visiting friends and also playing the Least Dangerous Game. It's like a treasure hunt / hide&seek game, except what you're seeking is the game's founder who's hidden himself somewhere in the Twin Cities area. And all the clues are issued via Twitter. I'm geeked about it, though I'm at a disadvantage because I don't know the area well enough to get around and will only have public transportation to rely upon.
Here's an interesting news post from the UK. Apparently T-Mobile has sponsored a contest to find the best romance poet text messenger. They should run something like this stateside. Twitter a while back ran something similar in conjunction with a poetry magazine where the task was to write your bio in 160 characters. It beats reading updates from your friends about them doing laundry.
Dan Gillmor posts an entry on his blog today about the journalistic potential for Twitter. With the recently created Twittermap mashup, are we close to seeing embedded journalists covering life Twitter activity, similar to the embedded reporters covering Second Life?