All Posts from October 2007

 
 

video on community building community discussion…community

Because in-browser recording is just too easy…

Comments encouraged!

15 billion freaking dollars?

So the tech world was a-buzz with two things yesterday. One, GMail FINALLY added IMAP support, making Gmail USEFUL on the iPhone. God bless. More on that as I find quirks, both positive and negative.

The other bit of news that had everyone reeling in their Aerons was the valuation of Facebook at $15billion, based on a 1.6% stake purchased by everyone’s favorite evil overlord, Microsoft, for a staggering $240million.

I admittedly haven’t read everything on the topic, but I do know this: reactions are, and will continue to be, sensational. Considering the facts, I think my buddy Ben Metcalfe laid reality out quite nicely:

Facebook, not the market, decided the $15bn

Ben goes on to tell a story about some property investors building a shopping mall who overbought residential property because the value of the land, in it’s entirety, was much larger to them on the whole.

Furthermore, I think Ben made the key point in his seesmicast: value is defined whens someone is willing to pay for it.

The $15b figure is 100% extrapolated, and nothing more, from another indicating figure (that may or may not have any basis to be extrapolated from).

Here’s the way I see it: I was a pretty active comic collector as a kid (surprise surprise). I recall buying a copy of Wizard each month, and getting excited as certain editions of some of my more collectible books were increasing in value. What I learned then, and is 100% true here as well, is that the ACTUAL value of those comic books, as they sat on my shelf next to the latest edition of Wizard, was the ACTUAL value of the paper that they were printed on. Until someone was willing to pay the value listed in Wizard (or any other value, higher or lower), the number in the pricing guide meant absolutely zilch (it may as well have been an arbitrary figure rather than dollars).

Perhaps thats a better way, a less SENSATIONAL way, of valuating things. Think about how wine is rated…a point system. That point system CAN translate into dollars…but it doesn’t have to (and in many times, it’s inverse). As soon as valuations start coming from the company instead of the market…well…nevermind. I dont want to cry wolf.

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learning by doing

So my co-presenter for BlogWorldExpo, Jake McKee, has put together a really neat series of challenges he’s publishing and interacting with through his blog that he’s calling “Community Contest 2007″. The brief explanation is, through daily challenges that encourage people to get comfortable with, and interact with, an online community, they not only have chances to win prize but actually LEARN something along the way. This isn’t double dare, kids!

Today kicks off the first challenge, and honestly it’s so silly simple, you’d be a fool not to play along. But don’t just go in for the prizes, go in with an open mind and lets see what Jake can introduce all of us to. Good luck! Oh, and I’m competing too, so watch out!

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for the love of the game

“We’re a community of workers, unified by the fact that we all make a living doing things that we love” - Dave Speers

I consider myself lucky that I really, really enjoy the work that I do. Recently, my passion has been poured into the coworking project, Independents Hall, and being involved in various other community building events. It wasn’t until a couple of weeks ago that I had to force myself to return to reality and face the facts…in order to pay the bills, Alex Hillman is a developer.

Coming back from Orlando I faced a pile..one of the most daunting piles of work I’ve ever felt myself under (far worse than any string of exams I felt while still in school). To be fair, the pile was my own fault. I hadn’t done a very good job of ramping things down right before swinging into “IndyHall Mode”, where I spent most of August and September. But, I had committed to clients, who had paid for services, and I was definitely pushing the limits of the relationships I have with my clients.

On the record, THANK YOU, to all of the clients I have that were patient and proud of the stuff we did with IndyHall, and understanding while I got back in the saddle and found my way back into my development routine.

That said…2 weeks of hell, 18+ hour days, juggling stacked and overdue deadlines (again, all my own fault)..and there’s finally some light at the end of the tunnel. If I could bottle the refreshing feeling I had as I started crossing things off my to-do list, and sell it, I would. I’m pretty sure that the government would make it a controlled substance, it because the feeling was that good. Ahem. Anyway.

I realized something. These working conditions I put myself under were taking away from one important part of what I did. I develop, because I love to. I was developing these projects, because I HAD to, and the situation I got myself into was leading me towards a burnout. Understanding that my commitments and promises are what drive business and growth, and my loyal customers could have left weeks ago but instead stuck it out with me, helped. But emotionally…the realization that I wasn’t enjoying myself was a little damaging. I did not want to burn out this quickly at doing something that I enjoy so much.

Then, one week ago today, a screenshot came across my desk from one of the sharpest interface designers I know, Amy Hoy. At the top of that screenshot, I saw this:

My good friend Gary Vaynerchuk, recently soaring into the stratosphere with his 300+ episodes of a wine-tasting video podcast, was staring me in the face from the “laid back friday” couch and pointing at me as if to say, “yo man, this one’s for you”. Amy asked if I knew anyone who could build this out for a wordpress template for Gary’s new side project, and something in me said “you’ve got other stuff to do, but this one will be good for your soul”. So I agreed to spend last Saturday banging out this template.

I’m still not 100% sure what about this project set it apart, and realistically, it was only about 3 hours of work, but it was able to zero me out. I didn’t do it because I had to, I did it because I wanted to. Yesterday, I spent part of my afternoon with Gary and WLTV Producer Erik Kastner, at the Wine Library (holy crap, you have to go the place is nuts) talking about some of the things clunking around in my head. We’ll see what materializes from those conversations, I think it’s some good stuff.

I guess the whole reason I started this post was to stress the need to do things that you love. It’s energizing, and it’s healthy. I remember being in grade school and having assigned reading and pleasure reading. At the time, assigned reading may have been something from a composition book, or a textbook…but either way I read it because I had to. On the other side, I’d pick up something I wanted to read (at the time, I remember R.L. Stein “Goosebumps” series was a popular choice).

The act of reading was the same. Eyes scanning pages for letters forming words forming sentences, paragraphs, pages, and ultimately some story. But the book I picked, I had an emotional gratification from. I think this goes for the work I do, too. The act of building out this page for Gary was no different, but seeing Gary’s site live was a different reaction than I had to any of the other project’s I’ve wrapped in the last few weeks.

So where does this realization leave me? Well, I’m still processing that. I’ve got some exciting new things on the horizon, opportunities and events. I have a dream that is being realized day by day. I have some of the best friends in the world that I’m so happy are around for all of this, and many more friends that I’ve made because of the events of the last several months. I’m glad that I have them to turn to at this point in my life as I’m putting all of the pieces together and figuring out the next move. Big or little, something’s brewing.

The only thing that’s certain is that I’m going to love it.

update: seems gary and i were reading each others thoughts and he did his 120 second video today on a very similar topic, his “big picture patch“. A good reminder to put things into perspective, no matter your situation.

Blog World Expo with B5

Thanks to Jeremy at B5 Media for putting together an extra day of event programming at the Blog World Expo and New Media Expo and inviting me to come and present!

Jake McKee and I will be bringing some of our experience with community building and identifying ways to create valuable conversations to a pro-blogger audience, and I’m REALLY excited to get up there with Jake as well as be in Vegas for a conference that is smattered with some of my favorite people.

I know quite a few friends who will be attending the expo so I’m looking forward to all kinds of fun while we’re in Vegas. There’s still time to register (today is last day for discount tickets, though).

If you’re going, thinking about going, drop me a note in the comments so we can plan to meet up!

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Shopify Payment Gateway List

Since this doesn’t exist anywhere except in the admin, I think, I thought it’d be handy to have a list of the payment gateways supported by Shopify.

P.S. This is NOT my grand re-entrance into blogging at dangerouslyawesome.com. my drafts folder has been growing, and the majority of my regular posting has been going on over at the IndyHall website. That will be changing, you have my word.

As of 10/11/2007:

External Payment Services

ChronoPay

GestPay

Nochex

PayPal Website Payments Standard

Credit Card Gateways

Authorize.net

Braintree

CardStream

CyberSource

DataCash

E-xact

Efsnet

eWAY

Linkpoint

Moneris

NETbilling

NetRegistry

PayJunction

PaymentExpress

PayPal Payflow Pro

PayPal Website Payments Pro (UK)

PayPal Website Payments Pro (US)

PaySecure

Plug’n Pay

Protx

Psigate

PSL Payment Solutions

Quickpay

Realex

SecurePay

TransFirst

Trust Commerce

USA ePay

Verifi

ViaKLIX

Checkout Replacements

Google Checkout

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