Archive for the 'Behind the Scenes' Category

Ruby on Rails Meetup at Microsoft in downtown L.A.

Micah and Doug at Microsoft during the Ruby on Rails meetup in Los Angeles

Here are Micah (left) and Doug at the front desk of the belly of the beast. It was a treat to eat pizza on Bill Gates’ dime.

The event was 45 minutes of socializing, an hour of 4 presentations, then 45 minutes of socializing and shop talk.

Ron Evans talked about MERB, a way of speeding up resource intensive Ruby applications running on Mongrel. This pricked our ears because speed and scalability is still a big concern with Ruby on Rails.

Woody Pewitt of Microsoft at Ruby Meetup Los Angeles

Woody Pewitt (above) gave the requisite Microsoft presentation. I expected a presentation on VisualStudio or something more “developery”, but instead he talked about Silverlight. It wouldn’t be a Microsoft demo without a product falling over; Woody had to login to a Silverlight demo site via Passport, but Passport wouldn’t cooperate. That aside, Woody ran a tight demo and is smart and friendly.

Woody and his boss (I can’t recall his name) were great guys, and hey, free pizza, though they definitely fit the profile of “product evangelists”. I asked Woody’s boss the following question: “How does Microsoft plan to reach out to young web developers building the next big thing when the cost of the Microsoft development stack presents a signifigant hurdle.” The answer was along the lines of “We’ll offer VisualStudio Express” (i.e. crippleware). Hmm. I’m sure the Microsoft stack is the best product for developing most Windows desktop software, but Microsoft is mostly irrelevant at the leading edge of web development. It’s terrible to lose that leading edge because the young people building hot stuff today will start in the free and open source world and they’ll tend to stay there.

If you’re looking for a day job or startup project I’d recommend these types of Meetups. During open floor announcements people talked about their projects and the type of developers they need. Casual events like this - instead of big junket style conferences - are a great filter because just showing up on your own time signals that you’re a passionate developer or tech employer.

Ruby on Rails Los Angeles Meetup

Announcements

I’m happy to announce that our friend Micah is now a member of the Newshutch team. Some other things are in the works, but the main thing is that you can expect the pace of Newshutch development to pick up. Stay tuned for updates.

If you want to meet Doug, Micah, and me in person, we’ll be at these web developer meetups in downtown Los Angeles on June 13th:

Newshutch user Tim Curran has written a Windows script that polls Newshutch and lets you know if there’s anything new. Thanks Tim!

Finally, I’ve launched a new personal blog at nathanbowers.com. It’s mostly about technology, product design, and business.

Venture Capital

ben franklinA venture capital firm called today. It turns out that we’re not quite hot enough for VC investment yet.

VC: “So we typically invest in companies with at least $500,000 in quarterly revenues…”

Me: “HA!”

Though I won’t be buying a Porche and an eight ball tonight, the call was productive. The partner I talked to was friendly and informative. He said that we should get seed or angel rounds of funding then talk to VCs.

It was nice of them to call though. We must be doing something right if we look expensive enough for a reasonably well known VC to call us up unsolicited.

I do feel like it might be time for us to seek investment to take us to the next level. Having to worry about consulting and day jobs is like driving around with your parking brake on.

Time for a new host

We’re sick of our current host. They are unreliable and unresponsive (I’ll name names after we move).

Can anyone recommend a good hosting company? We need a couple of dedicated *nix boxes.

Thanks to the Giant-est guy

MicahOur old friend Micah recently got back from a European tour with his band Giant Drag. Yesterday Micah, Doug, and I got together for an intense database and Rails optimization session.

Micah is an excellent programmer, hardware person, database expert, and a first rate drummer.

He’s also available for consulting work while he’s back in LA, so if you need a top notch developer, contact him at micah at giant drag dot com.

Look Ma! We’re on the Web 2.0 Show podcast

Podcast iconDoug and I were interviewed by Josh Owens and Chris Saylor of the Web 2.0 Show. They typically have high caliber guests, so it was a real thrill to be on their show.

A little “behind the scenes” trivia: In the original interview there was something of an awkward pause at about 17:05 after I go on an anti social software feature creep mini-rant, but Josh and Chris thankfully edited the awkward pause out. What I really meant to say was that instead of making tagging, tag clouds, friend groups, and all that stuff central to the Newshutch experience, we want to use the principles of social software in subtle ways. For example we could use categories as “tags” and “flagged” entries in interesting ways without explicitly making Newshutch a “social software” application.

Other highlights include Doug getting into the nitty gritty technical side of Newshutch, and me waxing ecstatic about how great it is to not have a boss. Many thanks to Josh and Chris. They were a lot of fun to talk to and excellent hosts.

Enjoy!

Web 2.0 Show Newshutch podcast and show notes.