YouCanHasCheezburgers; or, Employees are Miscellaneous

ICanHasCheezburger

ICanHasCheezburger, or at least sites like it, should have a place on your corporate intranet.

So Why should lolcats (pictures of cats with captions in the imagined/projected diction of a cat who uses IM/SMS a lot) belong in your Enterprise 2.0?

Developed by two individuals known as Cheezburger and Tofuburger, is best enjoyed without deep explanation – just start visiting the web site, subscribe to the RSS feed (this is the one which works best on my phone), or follow them on twitter. For those who need explanation, start here:

Because your employees are people too. In fact they were people long before you made them employees. As people, they have interests which only partially (or maybe even not at all) overlap with whatever it is you pay them to do (gasp!).

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Gartner Web Innovation Summit Notes, Day 2

On the second day of the Gartner Web Innovation Summit, I unfortunately had to miss a number of sessions – had some conference calls and some briefings with folks at the conference.

There were a few good ones I did get to, though.

First was titled “User Experience: The Next Wave” and was Ray Valdes’ take on the core value of user experience and “usability-centered design.” He had some great general principles for how organizations can take advantage of scientific, measurable approaches to usability to get beyond the “I like the blue one” design process to many still follow.

He also pointed to some of the key fallacies about “usability-centered design” (I still prefer user-centered design as a term):

  1. Usability testing (“validation”) has to be expensive
  2. User-centered design has to explode the project schedule
  3. Users like the system we designed the old way, therefore we don’t need to change
  4. Having a customer-focused attitude replaces doing formal design

He closed by talking about some of the new technologies and approaches (social software, new interfaces and input modes), and how really the primary challenge (and answers) remain mostly unchanged: solid strategy, best-practices in design, and a constant feedback loop with actual testing.

The second talk I saw was titled “Strengthen Your Governance Strategies for the Wave of Web 2.0 Technologies” and was by presented by L. Frank Kenny.

He talked about all the new kinds of endpoints into the enterprise which characterize web 2.0 – mashups, rogue service endpoints created to connect to outside services, users consuming outdated versions of corporate web services, etc.

Ultimately he argued that the current generation of mashups and syndication feeds probably don’t necessitate new controlling technologies for most enterprises – they can be governed by existing CMS systems, firewalls, filters, and the like.

He suggested that organizations should consider taking advantage of some of the new services which monitor social networks, the blogosphere, wikis, and forums – services like brandimensions, cyveillance, and webclipping.com – what he called “Brand Protection” as an emerging market.


Last session of the day was the Yochai Benkler keynote about which I wrote earlier.

I missed, unfortunately, the “It’s the Web, Stupid” presentation by David Mitchell Smith and Gene Phifer – based on the presentation slides (which attendees get access to but I can’t share) it looks like I would have enjoyed it. Here’s how they describe the presentation in the agenda:

Although the Web 2.0 name is popular and represents the Web of today, the world seems hungry for 3.0, whatever that is. While Web 2.0 suffered from being perhaps overly broad, the special interests driving 3.0-mania have the opposite problem – they are often too focused. We’ll look at the future of the Web including the semantic Web, the mobile Web, the virtual world Web and other candidates for “3.0.” Regardless of what the next big buzzword is, the Web will remain one of the major catalysts in technology and one of the major sources of innovation.

Anyone reading this who did see that session care to comment on it?

The $3.97, Mobile, Web 2.0, Infrastructure Appliance

As a consultant who travels a fair amount, this device gets my vote as the single most important discovery this year:

Web 2.0 Appliance

When you’re at a conference (I’ve been at both Ajax World West and Garnter Open Source / Web Innovation Summits in the last week) or in an airport, electrical outlets are at a premium. There are countless web 2.0 knowledge workers wandering the halls seeking power. (Ampires, or wherevolts).

This little device turns that moment of potential conflict – where you spot an outlet but all the available sockets are in use – into a moment of collaboration. (In case it isn’t possible to tell from my hotel room photograph, this translates a single three-prong outlet into three. Simply approach the user of one of the existing outlets and ask to unplug them for an instant – they get to stay plugged in, you get to plug in, and you get one bonus plug for a third person or a second device.)

It’s “just good enough” – carrying a real powerstrip with fault protection, etc. would be better, from the point of view of protecting your laptop – but hey, you were plugged directly into the socket already, so this doesn’t make things worse.

It’s small enough to put in your computer bag and travel without problems.

It’s cheap enough that if you leave it somewhere by accident you can just go buy another one.

It’s even in RSS orange.

Gartner Web Innovation Summit Notes, Day 1

I’ve already written up a number of notes from sessions I saw at the Gartner Open Source Summit, which overlapped with the Web Innovation Summit.

(Full disclosure: Optaros was a sponsor of the Web Innovation Summit).

Unfortunately I got in too late on Tuesday night to see any of the Tuesday evening sessions. I would have enjoyed Anthony Bradley‘s Web 2.0 Basics Tutorial, based on reviewing the slides and seeing Bradley’s other presentations. I like the way he approaches questions about adoption and Enterprise class Web 2.0 applications.

Wednesday am, running a few minutes late due to a conference call with Optaros colleagues on the East Coast, I wandered into the opening remarks just in time to hear the speaker (was it Adam Tinkoff?) ask “is jeckman in the room?” – he’d been following me on twitter as I tweeted away about my travel saga. (Planes never arrive on time anymore – it’s really just a question of how late they will be or if you’ll get there at all). Best publicity I’ve had from twitter so far, though I’m not sure my “complaining about travel” tweets are the ones I most want to be known for.
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AjaxWorld West Presentation: Two Steps Forward, One Step Back

I presented earlier this morning at Ajax World West. The title of the presentation was “Two Steps Forward, One Step Back: Back to the Browser Wars.”

Not sure how valuable the slides will be in the absence of my commentary on them, but here they are:

Thanks to those who attended and feel free to contact me with any questions.