Montreal Tech Watch





TOPICS:
STARTUPS
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
WEB2.0
EVENTS
MOBILE
VIDEO GAMES
JOBS
HACKING

web2.0

P2P website ordered to stop operations (0)

Sunday, July 13th, 2008 · by Heri · hacking, web2.0

QuebecTorrent, a quebec-based torrent tracker, was ordered by the Superior Court of Quebec to close the website late last week.

To my knowledge, it’s a first in Canada, where file-sharing is still legal (well, until bill C-61 comes). Here, the legal team from media groups Musicor, Zone 3 Musique, TVA Groupe Inc, succeeded into making the administrator of the website, M. Sébastien Brûlotte, admit that the website was damaging the entertainment industry. They were in fact threatning M.Brûlotte of $200.000 in damages if he won’t “play nicely”.

QuebecTorrent has had 100.000 members during its lifespan, with torrents tracking in total 2700To. Compared to other websites like isohunt or thepiratebay, it is a relatively small torrent tracker though; and it’s likely that the owner of the website didn’t want to go through all these legal hassles for a website which is obviously a side-project.

The court judgement is interesting though because it sets a precedent in Montreal and in Canada for future similar cases, for companies or individuals considering p2p.

For the anecdote, the judge ordered the M.Brûlotte to display the court’s decision on the website till july 2009. The defendant complied; but the notice is drowned by advertising, plus a liberal dose of pop-ups and pop-unders.



(just for fun)

Identi.ca’s perfect launch (0)

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008 · by Heri · startups, web2.0

take-off
This might be too early to rewrite about identi.ca and give a judgement on the webiste’s success; however, there are already new interesting facts about the new service:

  • most of the bloggers who covered the event started to mention Twitter and its fail whale, which is now legendary. Evan Prodroumou’s Identi.ca was then seen as the saver of the day. Now the question is, can this be pulled of by any other company? Could you arrange to launch a service when the market leader is experiencing growth problems? This is extremely difficult in my opinion, but nevertheless, Evan managed to do it, and this should be something that should be thought about.
  • Most of the reviews of identi.ca mentionned that it was a clone of twitter, and that it lacked features here and there. However, most of those reviews were also enthusiastic, and the vast majority said it was good enough. Actually, identi.ca was beta-tested amongst a small close group during two months, with Evan busy resolving bugs and dealing with rough edges. We saw the introduction of remote subscriptions, OpenId login, replies, the bridging to im and gtalk, etc. If you are developing a website, the lesson here is: release and get feedback early, as it tells you right away what works and what doesn’t.
  • Reaching out to communities and opinion leaders. There is a tendency amongst startups to reach directly to big websites like TechCrunch & associates, and also do a parallel push on social media aggregators like digg or reddit. Granted, there was a link submitted to digg; I believe though that what worked was pinging the FLOSS people, people working on the Semantic Web, on Wikis, on Creative Commons, and the tech community in Montreal/Canada. When those communities published a post about identi.ca, such as Dave Winer, big media websites like ReadWrite/Web or The Inquisitr came naturally to the service. I’m sure there is something here that we all can learn from.
  • just introduce one simple feature, which was federation of statuses. There are many ways to replicate twitter; Plurk is doing for instance easier conversations, you could also imagine a vast array of new social features that Twitter can’t; but Evan focused on one approach and his take was the most elegant.

So far, identi.ca has already more than 10.000 users, and the laconi.ca sofware is already used by a handful of servers. It’s also the most viral web service I’ve seen in Montreal, and I don’t expect the attention to stop soon.

I know Evan is also considering this as a business, which should be Identi.ca’s next step. With Open Source software though, there are many paths to choose from (see SugarCRM, Zimbra, Magento, or giants like Red Hat and mysql) so I’m not worried about.

Photo: plane taking-off, AtomicShark

Praizes releases Praize’n'Raze for local recommendations (3)

Sunday, July 6th, 2008 · by Heri · startups, web2.0

There is a lot of local activity currently on a Facebook application soft-launched by startup Praized late last friday.

The application allows you to vote up (dubbed “praize”) and vote down (”raze”) local shops and places. Since the vast majority of the application’s users are in Montréal, we’ve got then on the homepage the most popular places in the city, such as la S.A.T (home to barcamps, unconferences, and other community events such as Pecha Kucha Montreal) or Station-C, a coworking place favorited by the local digerati. The application has also data from all north American cities, if you want to try it out.

praized-leaderboard

The application in itself is very sticky since the landing page lists the activity streams of users, creating a network effect; pushing you to also praize, comment or favorite those places. This makes praizing more interesting, compared to previous tries. Another new social feature is a points-based reputation system, with a view used as a leaderboard.

So far, I like the application, although I’m still not sure on its objective, whether it’s meant for entertainment or as a useful application. Successful Facebook applications I’ve seen so far are the one that have a strong playing component. Take the example of Movies by Flixster, which could have taken the usefulness path (what are the most praized movies), but have chosen instead to do viral quizzes.

In this case, I’m still left wondering after a while what I should do next — continue praizing around or if there was something special I ought to do.

There was a “aha!” moment though. Try searching for a generic place (such as pizzeria, greek restaurant, bakery etc.) and it will list for you the most praized places.

praized-search

Which is great because it solves the never-ending question of where to hang out with your friend(s). Try thinking about all the times where you want to invite someone to a special place; and most of the times, you’re left browsing pages after pages of various local directories. Websites like yelp already does social recommendations, but this is even more powerful since the people praizing the places are your actual friends. Thinking about it, it would be even more interesting if it sorts places according to my Facebook friends tastes, or if we can see directly friends who praized it, without having to go the place’s page.

Datalicious.ca does data visualization and user interfaces (0)

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008 · by Heri · hacking, web2.0

Datalicious is a relatively new company in Montreal started by Sébastien Pierre. As stated in the company’s homepage, it focuses on creating optimized interfaces for data visualization.

Sébastien Pierre is a newcomer from Belgium and France, having started there a small software R&D company named ivy.fr. He is known for the revealicious project (demo also avalaible on datalicious), which grabbed a lot of buzz a few years ago.

revealicious

Now, MontrealTechWatch don’t usually cover service providers; however since MTW’s main focus is “Technology and Innovation”, I think the company fits here. Datalicious uses a wide range of open source technologies, as well as public APIs to create new user interfaces, and seems to excel on both fields. It’s an approach I haven’t yet seen in Montréal, and brings fresh ideas that I hope will initiate and inspire local great projects.

I especially like the craftsmanship & attention to detail that can be seen in the website and projects like revealicious.

PS: ok, I just re-read the post, and it seems like blatant advertising. No, I was not paid for this post :-)  But still, I like datalicious’ approach.

Identi.ca launches as an open micro blogging service (7)

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008 · by Heri · Open Source, entrepreneurship, hacking, startups, web2.0

Control Yourself, Inc. has launched officially today Identi.ca, an open microbloggling service that takes a radical approach on how new social web services should be built and used.

Identi.ca is Evan Prodromou’s take on current SaaS and web applications practices. He writes in great detail about identi.ca’s inception in a blog post today. He writes for instance about walled gardens, mentionning how web companies such as Google or Yahoo are accustomed to suck in your data and history, and how most of them don’t allow data portability between different services.

identica

Identi.ca in itself is a service similar to Twitter, in the sense that you use it to tell your network of “friends” about your current activity. The beauty of the system though lies with laconi.ca, a AGPL‘d software that anyone can install on their own servers. Once setup, you can exchange data friend updates with other laconi.ca servers.

If you sit back a while and think about the concept, it solves many problems. It’s for instance an immediate solution to Twitter’s scalability problems — the flow of activity streams are now handled by the users’ servers and not by one single and monolithic web company. It also allows users to customize, add, improve their own version of laconi.ca, opening new ways to use the service, for those who want more security, more flexibility or maybe an in-house closed version.

I foresee laconi.ca as the wordpress of microblogging platforms but in many ways, better. It’s also the only service I know of that has implemented OAuth with a new microblogging standards named OpenedMicroBlogging, used by laconi.ca to authenticate and publish updates to other connected servers. I haven’t myself tried out laconi.ca; as I am still trying to understand the ins and outs of OAuth. Anyways, it’s great to see such innovation, and congrats to Evan!

Montreal Meeting — Fair Copyright for Canada (1)

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008 · by Heri · Events, web2.0

Fair copyrightThere is a meeting open to all tomorrow regarding bill C-61. The bill is viewed by many as an abuse, which was solely submitted because of lobbying from the US music and cinema industry, as well as media groups in Canada; while the MPs who submitted it said that it’s a necessary upgrade to Canadian law.

The meeting takes place at Station C, 5369 bvd St-Laurent, suite 430, from 6.00pm; and aims at organizing citizen actions locally, campaigns and brainstorming next steps. The movement was started by Evan Prodromou (also well known for its various wiki projects and support of new and open practices such as Creative Commons), and we already had a first meetup last thursday, with 20+ people coming to discuss the Bill’s details.

I encourage anyone to come there and participate as Bill C-61 will have many consequences in the future, in the way you will enjoy music or any digital media. Personally, my opinion is that artists and authors should have the ultimate word and should be able, on an individual basis, to formulate what rights&obligations users have when they consume their work. If the artist state that nobody should be able to copy or reproduce his/her work, or if there’s no limitations when purchasing their work, then it’s ok with me — but in any case, I don’t think it’s the government’s role to decide on an universal basis what users can or cannot do with digital media. This might suprise you, but hey, it’s a personal opinion.

A taste of things to come (14)

Monday, June 16th, 2008 · by Heri · entrepreneurship, web2.0

I mentionned a while ago that MTW would be transitionning to a full-team of bloggers, and many more UI improvements.

At that time, the motivation came from the meetup at Laika, where many suggested that it’s one of the main ways that could make MTW sustainable and become a long-lasting actor in the Montreal Tech landscape.

I couldn’t mention it back then, but one of my inspiration was GamersGlobal, an european video games website. They’ve got a publishing system where every reader is invited to register an account. Readers can then write content and edit articles, with valuable users getting higher ranks. Here is their pitch:

Do you want to do more than just read news or articles about games? Then join the GamersGlobal community today and grow from “User” to “Editor”! Together with our professional journalists, you’ll be part of an accurate, high-quality, up-to-date gaming website. It’s easy, it’s free, it’s fun

The beauty of the system is that they’ve created a community where they get both quality and quantity, original content, with a solid user base, with sections like “New” gathering contributions by users, “Special” which gets contributions by the editorial staff, Top and Hot which are variations on most commented/most viewed articles.

I’ve discussed with quite some time with the technology team of GamersGlobal. They were using Drupal with customized modules, and MTW could get the same CMS, which then solved the problem I raised. But the discussion ended and another completely different system is coming.

So what’s not to like with GamersGlobal’s CMS? Well:

  • MTW would then need a Drupal technology team and commit to it. I don’t have anything against Drupal, but it’s a software I have no experience in
  • MTW would turn into a pure media outlet, where the only prospects for revenues are advertising. As everyone knows, it’s an industry that is getting hit hard these days, so that wasn’t a good bet. I also don’t like the idea of pushing pageviews up, and the idea that you only get substantial revenues for millions of pageview …
  • I think MTW’s real value is not in the content, but in the community that was created around the website. The website gathers tech entrepreners, developers, industry experts, even investors, and I thought there was something to do about it

Talking and meeting technology people from Montreal since MTW came up, I also knew there were consistent problems in Montreal that makes it very difficult to be an entrepreneur:

  • It’s very hard to find co-founders or partners for a project, and there is no place yet that solves this problem,
  • Finding people to work on your project is also difficult
  • Most of the early adopters and experienced entrepreneurs get into the “loop” after a while (going to events that matters, knowing what’s important in Montreal, getting on twitter or other websites to stay in touch with others …) but for newcomers, e.g. for students, the path is daunting. I’d even say, there isn’t even a clear path if you are a technology enthusiast in Montreal,
  • Part of the problem in Montreal is that the density of people interested in technology and entrepreneurship is so low that it’s very easy to loose “faith”. You either move to Northern California or just do something else. I believe in places like Montreal, or for that matter in all cities that are NOT Silicon Valley or Boston, you need a central place to get like-minded people connected, share projects, get feedback, and keep the energy high, etc.

The upcoming system for MTW aims to solve all of the forementionned problems. In case you haven’t read between the lines, it’s a mix between Wordpress, digg and Facebook (well it’s more like Facebook than Wordpress). I’ve shown an early preview of the system to a few “stakeholders” (the same people that would use the system) and the reaction has been very good. There is also very good prospects in making it a business — and more importantly making it a platform where everybody wins and where we’d get a place that supports technology enthusiasts, like a virtual Silicon Valley, making the need of starting a technology venture in the Valley irrelevant. Potentially, the system could also be extended in other cities, but that’s a completely different story.

So that’s the explanation why MTW wasn’t updated for the past weeks, and probably for the week to come too. Thanks to keeping up with the website!

Bitcurrent needs your help with Webops survey (0)

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008 · by Alistair Croll · Technology, web2.0

Editor’s Note: This is a feature article from Alistair Croll, from rednod and bitcurrent. He has extensive executive experience in marketing and operations and is now launching rednod, a “startup accelerator”. Alistair Croll also provided us helpful advice for Blitzweekend; and writes for webware and gigaom.

Web sites matter. And the previously thankless job of web operations is getting more visibility.

O’Reilly called operations the secret sauce of many companies. Which is weird, because a few short years ago, web operators didn’t even know what to call themselves. They were the guy who knew how the load-balancer worked, living in that weird space between web design and networking. They wrote scripts, and understood BGP. But as designers and marketers, we took web operations for granted.

No more. As soon as an app goes live, it needs operating. A few high-profile failures have shown the world that reliable, scaleable websites take good architecture, reliable infrastructure, and constant vigilance. Allen Lewind wrote that “Failing to do so will inevitably cost these companies users, performance and money.”

Operations is also in transition. With cloud computing and on-demand hosting, much of the equipment is out of our hands. But that doesn’t mean there’s nothing to do; on the contrary, operators now need to keep tabs on their managed hosters and virtual machines. So whether you’re a “server hugger” or have all your stuff in the cloud, you need to worry about web operations.

Montreal-based Bitcurrent is a loose federation of analysts and technology pundits that look at the challenges of web operations. Several of the organization’s partners built the underlying components that make the Internet run today; others have built out some of the world’s biggest web applications.

And we want your help. We’re conducting a survey of Web Operations, trying to understand the challenges and trends web operators face.

If you run a web application, head over to Bitcurrent and take the survey. You can respond anonymously if you like. Tell your friends to respond. Spread the word.

In return, you’ll get access to Bitcurrent’s forthcoming report, The State of Web Operations. Plus, in conjunction with MTW, we’re giving away a free pass to the Bitnorth conference that’s happening in September to a random survey respondent. Fill out the survey and you’re automatically entered in the draw.

Standoutjobs win best web2.0 employement and jobs award (6)

Friday, May 30th, 2008 · by Heri · startups, web2.0

web2.0 startup jobs Standoutjobs has won the SEOmoz web2.0 award in the employement and jobs category. Nominees in the category were judged on usability, usefulness, social aspects, user interface & design, and content quality. In all of these criterias, Standoutjobs was ranked ahead of careerbuilder.com and monster, which is a feat, since these last two are 2 heavyweights compared to Standoutjobs, which has just launched earlier this year.

The SEOmoz web2.0 awards is an annual (virtual) event, where nominees are submitted on SEOmoz’s website, with winners chosen by a shortlist of bloggers, entrepreneurs and “business people”. SEOmoz in itself is a search engine optimization consulting company, which may raise potential conflict interests and the question of the impartiality. However, SEOmoz has been a leader in innovation and has during the past years giving back a lot to their “community”, with their actions having impact far beyond seo circles. I credit for instance the company of having validated SEO as a respected profession & trade that will make a difference for your website, through their works, articles and evangelization.

Furthermore, unlike other Internet awards, this award focuses on web2.0 and websites that are trying specifically to leverage user-generated content and new technologies such as using the web as a platform. I think Standoutjobs deserves 100% the award and this should encourage them to make an even better job - i.e. revolutionize the job & online recruiting space :)

Recently, Standoutjobs was also seen as Canada’s Top 20 most innovative company at the CIX. They have also announced new innovative features such as the use of iPaper to handle documents directly in the browser.

Congrats then to Standoutjobs! Great job!

Mediascrape’s credibility gets a hit; naive move at TC (5)

Monday, May 26th, 2008 · by Heri · startups, web2.0

I am reading a post on Techcrunch about Mediascrape, a local media startup, that made news recently. Michael Arrington reveals that Tyler Cavell, founder of the company, is threatning him of a lawsuit, since the latter found the post and comments about his company incorrect.

mediascrape I am not really sure what to think about the case. Threatning a blogger of a lawsuit is frivolous and reveals a big misunderstanding of blogs. Roberto Rocha once called Tyler “one of the most refreshingly candid company chiefs I know”; and it seems he still plays the same character. On the other hand, Techcrunch bloggers are making quick and easy assumptions based on what they see on the website’s homepage, while they are thousands of miles away from the company; fact is that there were reasons behind every criticism they threw at Mediascrape.

One thing is for sure, this is all very stupid; and diverts everyone from what Mediascrape really does. I guess I could try to defend Tyler Cavell in the comments sections (which bash Québec and Canada by the way); but the guy has never participated or went in any tech/network event around here. It’s the sort of person you have no clue what they are doing or thinking, and finish concluding that maybe they think they are better on their own. Heck, I am not even sure he’ll appreciate the support.

So, to any aspiring entrepreneur out there: network, connect, share, learn. Then iterate. Don’t do like the Capazoo or the Mediascrape by staying in your corner. Meet other entrepreneurs in the same space as yours. Go to the 5 à 7. Share what you are doing, and get to know what works out there. Go to the techbreakfasts. Go to conferences. It’s such a business 101 principle that I can’t even believe I am writing it here.

Found

  • Identi.ca

     

    To the consternation of Twitter users, the site often falters amid the demands of processing millions of tweets a day. One possible solution to this problem is on display at Identi.ca, the site that looks most identical to Twitter. What's different is under the hood: Nearly 100 different sites are sharing the load. "Instead of a single service, we're part of a federated network of microblogging sites running open-source software," says Evan Prodromou, who launched Identi.ca this past summer. He expects the service to mushroom from its current base of 30,000 to 500,000 within a year, and thinks it will surpass Twitter in users by 2010.

  •  

    capitalinnovation 2009

    Local investors are gearing up for Capital Innovation 2009, an event organized for March next year by Amiral Partenaires. The event will gather private investors such as VC funds, angel investors and fund managers; and is aimed at showcasing high-potential ventures needing from $100k to $1M.

    For the event, BDR Capital, ID Capital, iNovia Capital, JLA, MSU and Propulsion Ventures will be selecting 12 ideas which will be presented to investors during the event. Deadline on Nov. 28th for applications:

  • Weblocal is different though from their previous projects since it allows users to sign up, review + recommend businesses, tag them, as well as upload pictures and photos. It also has a mobile version.  Lots of user-generated content then, which puts weblocal in the same category as other websites such asmonavis.ca or praized.

    weblocal

  •  

    New standoutjobs Standoutjobs whichfirst launched at DEMO last year has announced last week they have launched “version two”of their product.

    They stay true to the original vision, which is to provide companies a full array of tools highlighting the company’s best traits, making thus the company more appealing to prospective candidate

  • he Main will become a wireless Internet playground by year's end, thanks to the merchants' association of the world-famous boulevard. The Société de développement du boulevard Saint-Laurent will provide free Internet access from Sherbrooke St. to Mount Royal Ave. to attract and retain more visitors and to push promotions onto tourists.

  • Flow Ventures invests in and accelerates startups. Our unique model combines financing, strategy and hands-on operational services designed to grow new ventures quickly and efficiently. Flow can accelerate your startup by operating key areas of your startup including finance, software development, HR, business development and administration. This allows entrepreneurs to focus on their products and their customers rather than building infrastructure and capacity.

  • Standout Jobs, a leading provider of Web-based tools to power companies’ online recruiting efforts, today announced the general availability of version two of its web-based Recruitment Communication Platform. Previously dubbed “Reception” while in beta, Standout Jobs’ Recruitment Communication Platform boasts many new features and updated functionality proven successful with more than 200 beta customers since the company’s launch at DEMO in January 2008.

  • La rive-sud de Montréal c’est bien évidemment PRATT & WHITNEY, HÉROUX-DEVTEK, 3M , BOMBARDIER, ou encore DANONE . Mais il existe en Montérégie, bien d’autres PME de domaines aussi diversifiés que les télécommunications, la chimie, la pharmaceutique, l’informatique, l’environnement, l’agriculture, l’agro-alimentaire, l’électronique etc.

  • My research shows that more than a third of the region's workforce comes from the creative class - scientists, technology workers, entertainers, artists and designers, as well as managers and financial types - putting it in the top 10 per cent of all regions in North America, and a global leader as well. Nearly a fifth of the Montreal region's workforce forms a super-creative core made up of the techies plus cultural and entertainment types.

  • If you're busy running your company, you're in the trenches most of the time. The key word there is "in". In Michael Gerber's excellent book"E-Myth Revisited" he talks about the need for entrepreneurs to both work in the business as well as "on" it. "In" is the day to day nuts and bolts. "On" involves stepping back and looking down at your business as a set of priorities, systems, people capabilities, etc.

    Sometimes getting the perspective to work "on" the business (and work on yourself for that matter) is as simple as business travel. Some of my best thoughts come when I'm stuck in an airplane for a few hours. I also work from home at least one day per month. I use that time to think. I keep an ongoing list of issues and opportunities and use these times of isolation to go through them.

Feedback

Archives

Ads

Montreal Startup & Small Business Loans - SDEVM.ca

Events

  • Wed Nov 26 5:30 PM - 9:00 PM: Montreal StartupDrinks (Reservoir, 9 Duluth East, Montreal)
  • Thu Nov 27 6:00 PM - 9:30 PM: StartupCampMontreal3 (SAT, bvd St-Laurent, Montreal)
  • Thu Dec 4 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM: Rencontre PHP Québec (ETS, 1111, rue Notre-Dame Ouest, Montreal)
  • Tue Dec 9 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM: Montreal Tech Entrepreneur Breakfast, December edition (Boccacinos, McGill Street, Montreal)
  • Wed Mar 25 10:00 AM - 4:30 PM: Capital Innovation 2009 ( 1145 avenue Union, Club St-James, Montreal)

  • Register and see upcoming events at TechEntreprise

    Canada

    Montreal

    Technology



    Flickr

    TE_calendarcardscapitalinnovation 2009weblocalNew standoutjobsseeyourhotelCodefest php QuebecCodefest php Quebecsoftimage, a part of Autodesksymfony

    MTW is brought to you by:

    Montreal Tech Watch is also

    See the Montreal Technology community at TechEntreprise

    Follow MTW's activity with the twitter feed



    © 2007 Montreal Tech Watch
    Photographs taken by MTW are under Creative Commons. Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0
    Screenshots, logos, videos, and trademarks showcased on Montreal Tech Watch are the property of their respective owners.