Glenn hotel @mashable meet.

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Last night was the mashable meet celebrating their anniversary on the rooftop bar of the Glenn hotel. The scene was great, open air above the CNN signs, with people mingling too.

I also got to meet some other entrepreneurial people with rankem, ehire.com, apartments.com and some developer friends (sam).

I didn\’t know about it until I went on Twitter after dinner, and last minutely decided to go.

New Puppy : Midnite

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To join the ranks of many other 23 year old guys out there (I\’m thinking Waterski and Startup.)

Well, technically he is my parents\’ puppy (which I made sure to clarify,) but he is more attached to me. Really attached, like if I get 10 feet away from him he either wimpers or runs to catch up to me.

I\’ve never had a puppy before, all of my previous dogs have been 3 years old before we got them. This is also my first male dog.

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The first week has been challenging. As the one person in the house that he reports to the most, sometimes I want my space. And he can\’t stand to sleep too far away from me (we\’re moving his crate a few inches every night.) Similarly, as a puppy he has some instincts that I have to work on curving, such as his need to bark back at any strange sound he hears (raking the leaves) and to remember to go to the bathroom outside and not go on the carpet (too often… I spoil him sometimes or the good sofas.)

He also likes chewing on my toes, and recently, my socks. Tonight I was putting my shoes on to take him for a walk and my sock went missing between the time that I picked it up and put one shoe on.

Midnite is the name he got from his previous owner (shortened to the geek Midi — well, maybe when his bark gets to sounding better — is Dog a midi synthesized instrument? It\’s appropriate because my mom can\’t see him at all. He has a distinct black lab look, with a small white chest hair area.  He\’s 6 months old… has big legs, but I can still sprint faster than him.

So far he doesn\’t pick up tennis balls, but plays with a squeaky toy. He tore up a guitar chew toy, but loves socks (black socks.) Eating a carpet is something to train not to do as well.
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Rivalry Weekend Football

I\’m not sure why, but I seem to view football games, especially Wins and Losses, differently than most people. Maybe it\’s because I played football, or maybe it\’s because my parents had no one team when we were growing up.

As you probably know, Georgia Tech (#7) lost to the University of Georgia this weekend, and it was a reasonably unexpected upset. Upset is a good word to move on from here, because some fans get REALLY UPSET when they lose or don\’t do as well as they had hoped.

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Some people get too emotional though. I don\’t really understand how cursing loudly does anything but disrespect your team. I don\’t understand why you would throw something because your mad (unless you just have an abusive personality.) Heck, I don\’t know why you\’d really be mad or upset at a game, but especially a good game.

All a football game is for fans should be entertainment. You are paying to be entertained. The players really don\’t care how much you care as long as you can be that 12th man on your home field by yelling loudly.  A loss hurts your ranking a little, and so ?maybe? your pride in your team or what you might think it stands for, but it really doesn\’t.

To throw it out there, this last weekend\’s rivalry game was great entertainment, well, at least with 3 seconds left in the first half (most of the first half seemed hardly like there was a game going on to the Georgia Tech players.) The end was nail biting. There were great hits. There were amazing plays. By both teams, on both sides of the ball. I felt like I got my entertainment value out of my ticket!

It\’s great to have a friendly rivalry (and maybe fun bets like having to change a facebook profile image) and having to tell your friends Congratulations. It\’s not fun to get arrested like the fan who threw a cup at the UGA player who was waving a flag around. If you lose a game, chin up, hopefully it was a good game – you should congratulate the other team or talk about what you wish would have happened differently (not passing 4 times in a row on the last possession) and you can accept a little ragging from some other fans or a flag waving (but hopefully not a goal post removal.) If you\’re on the winning team, GREAT, go celebrate, your team is the best, calculate how you will move up in the rankings, talk about the greatest plays. In the end, just be a good sport – after all, the players weren\’t killing each other on the field, no they were coming together (in prayer.)

As a player who lost in regional playoffs on his high school football team I can tell you that losing sucks for the seniors because it means it\’s over and that you missed achieving your goal – but you\’re not mad at the other team (unless they downright cheated) and in any case, that\’s the way the world turns.

By The Way: Nice Win UGA. It was entertaining, see you next year.

In other news, the only other great game on last weekend was Auburn vs. Alabama. Runaway games aren\’t any fun.

Microsoft Incubation Week Review

As I mentioned, I was really busy last week with the Windows Azure Incubation week held at Microsoft in Alpharetta.  The event was a week long event from Monday until Friday.

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The first major surprise that we learned was that the Microsoft people wanted us to use ASP.net coding and not use the offshore development team (Thank You Dmytro@  Soft Serve) for primary development.

The project that I worked on was Chris Stuckey\’s FandomU, a social networking site focusing on conventions, fans, and vendors to extend the connections you make at the actual event.  Hopefully FandomU will be able to launch with the MomoCon Japanese Anime convention in March 2009.

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The week was quite the experience. Microsoft brought in a handful of advisors and consultants to teach us about the Azure platform and (particularly for us) to use Asp.net technologies.  Jeremy Likness from Wintellect taught me the basic asp.net connections between the ASP and C#.

Here is the front page of our part of our prototype site, in the 4 days that we had to develop, we developed a few key features, registration, the beginnings to shopping, and the introduction to an idea of things like sharing images and videos on the cloud.

In addition to knowledge, Microsoft provided a great overall experience. We had nice co-working space with brand new \”beta\” style windows 7 computers at the MTC.  We had 3 meals provided 5 days of the week, and not just fast food pizza, but some pretty classy changes including Indian and Thai food.

Thursday, Microsoft spokesman Larry Gregory came and introduced us to all of the great features that Microsoft offers to entrepreneurs and startups. They have a lot of features that I\’m sure will be great. We also did an interview regarding our progress that will be posted on Channel 9 – spoiler: I somewhat

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embarrassingly spit Microsoft Marketing for the PHP community.

Speakers came in throughout the week, and on Friday, these speakers, and other startup voices in Atlanta sat as a judging panel for all of the startups. This was really valuable, as we all got a chance to practice our pitching abilities.

Because we sucked up more than a little to Larry Gregory by mentioning that we could expand from a conference like Momo Con to others like Dragon Con, or his interests like Farscape and Motorcyles, he presented us with our \”incubation\” week diploma.

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My group thought that the week would be more about coaching and less about technology, along with better planning for working with the offshore team as opposed  to us needing to be incredibly familiar with Microsoft products. It was slightly awkward to find that only 3 of 7 companies there had only just reached an idea and planning it out.

I\’ll post later about some of the teams that I met.

I\’m at Bar Camp Atl 3

Tonight I am camping downtown at the ATDC in the Centergy building of Gatech 5th street after a fun 6 hours listening and learning about various cool subjects.

\"\"The night started with barbecue before the opening credits to the cool sponsors like Microsoft, ATDC, TechDrawl, and an insurance co.

I was a little confused at first with the room setup (there were 8 rooms available – but better to be prepared) and scheduling was sort of quick and on the fly.  So on the fly that my seminar got moved to the front when somebody needed a projector later on (on the bright side, I got to see Sherry\’s presentation on social media (more to come later.)

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The first thing to know about my presentation is that I planned to have maybe 5 minutes to present with a projector and a quick q&a, but instead, I had 30 minutes to present (luckily I undid this by finding the room about 5 minutes late.) My presentation was on Peltier Junctions, thermo couples, and an ideation session into Micro-tech producing a ceramic paint with magnetically align-able junctions.  Unfortunately, I only had two attendees and one was a little on the ADHD side of things. The important thing though is that we were involved in the exchange of ideas; one of my guests expressed a great idea where peltiers could be used: water towers – because the water is chilled (and this takes energy, and the top of the tower is exposed to sunlight – a peltier could insulate and help provide electricity at the same time!

Next, @sherryheyl from concept hub inc showed us her ideas on social media marketing and different revenue models. Some of the more interesting ideas were that \”Knowledge is no longer power\”, \”Knowledge is free\” based on the example of Good Will Hunting learning all that he knew for $1.50 in late charges from the local library.  She also talked about the issue of financial advisors not knowing how to use technology, so monetize advisors by training them and certifying them to use your site.

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Then I went to the Duct Tape Corset session (how to make duct tape clothing)

which was over-hyped on twitter by the likes of Stephen Fleming (the competing session) and Keith McGregor, but was still interesting with the 3 people who did show up to discuss it, including a man wanting to make a vest. I think that using paper towels or cotton for the foundation for these is a much better idea for breath though (than a trashbag.)

Next, I went to a more casual conversation on micro appliances where THE MICROSOFT HATER (he yelled against the MSFT sponsor to start the night) presented us with three of his more mobile devices – a nokia mini laptop, a psp type device, and the gameboy mini (showing how the loader would load any

rom catridge inserted. These discussions lead to topics concerning screen size, typability, batter life, and I even talked about my netbook. BTW, I got a lot of comments about my mini 10, and a lot of people are impressed by its size and the hd decoder chip. The conversation was really educational, and the guy presenting works with the it at GPC.

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Chris, somebody that I\’ve met through Ajai and the GT Young Entrepreneurs and SOBreakfasts from Fandomu.com who runs MomoCon (a free anime convention held near gatech) presented on creating more community with your social network. We did sidetrack a little into getting together a \”skeptics\” group and a lot of the ideas were based on little things that people will save for to spend on at a convention and using local resources, having short inventory items (food/tshirts) and working with similar ideas to co-op or otherwise provide adequate spacing to provide.

It was about 11 now, and I walked in on the \”end\” of @stephenfleming\’s QA session on the energy grid, alternative energy, and solar power on the tail of the  Hydrogen Myth. My question as to whether we really should look at the smart grid technology or more toward independent generation led to an interesting discussion with Michael about the Russian micro nuclear generators that were liquid lead cooled (so automatically contained if overheated) that could power a neighborhood, be plenty safe and maintenance free underground for ~ 20 years in the size of a meeting table. The conversation continued until the 11:30 spot and ventured into how Georgians want Atlanta destroyed in flooding and a history lesson into Milton County (which I contend if it does split off again will only be doomed to eventually repeat history eventually because Atlanta is where all of the people complaining about being taxed from work – I don\’t care how long ago something happened, if it happened for a legitimate reason, that could legitimately happen again – these citizens shouldn\’t complain about supporting the lower half of the county now, when 70 years ago it was the opposite, because 70 years can happen again pretty easily. ) Then we talked about the brain train and the idea that it might take 25 years for the beltline to be really begun, when the property and old tracks are already there and just need some cement trucks to get started.

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The last session I went to was Tim talking showing how reverse engineering with IDA can help find security issues or otherwise audit programs to ensure, or just see what types of comparisons and api calls a given program is making. We reverse engineered code, found a map to where a comparison occurred in a password program, and then rewrote that line to accept any password. One example is to bust the myth of paranormal activity sensors for iphones … see if they\’re just random or if they do actually call api functions to the gps, microphone, or g sensor.

A few suggestions for the event would be a chance to get to the schedule, groupthink with people and decide which presentations would be best. I\’m not sure than an online schedule would work the best, but it could, so I could figure out who i want to go listen to while listening to a presentation.

Some presentations that I hear were good were \”How to Stare at Women\” by Sean, a craft homebrew beer session by MSFT Hater dude, a MakeBot cheap 3d printing (plastic) presentation by http://www.ericweinhoffer.com – and Michael Mealling\’s space talk.

Late night is getting late (and dang, wordpress wants an update. ) Here I am camping in the middle of the ATDC room, with somebody snoring nearby. Goodnight, I look forward to tomorrow. Maybe I will present about using ffmpeg for your multimedia application/ service tomorrow.

Other late night activities included talking about histories and hobbies with guns (yeah I talked about my 5 in a dime with a 22 and shooting a black powder rifle) under the veil of the Zombie Apocalypse and playing some Call of Duty 4 with some startup modded Xbox controller (sometimes I really wish that I was into video games.)

Finally, a big thanks to the sponsors, Microsoft, the McRae insurance group, tech drawl, and ATDC. Learning a lot.

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