• Stuff I’m reading, listening to and writing

    Reading

    The Atrocity Archives by Charles Stross

    Listening to

    This week in Tech by LeoLaporte

    Writing/Written

    Technology Tomorrow: New Technology Likely to Drive Texas Industries in 2010

    Love What You Got: Unique draws bring tourists to your town

  • ACL 2010 lineup: Did USA Today just announce the headliners?

    ACL Music Fest organizers aren't scheduled to make an official lineup announcement until tomorrow, but USA Today may have spilled the beans a little early. This postedĀ this evening:

    The Eagles, Muse, Phish, The Strokes, M.I.A., Flaming Lips, LCD Soundsystem, Spoon, Vampire Weekend and Norah Jones are among the 130 acts scheduled to perform at the ninth annual Austin City Limits Music Festival.

    Ā 

    And even though performers had not yet been announced, three-day passes for the event, which will be held Oct. 8-10 at Zilker Park, sold out in 14 hours …

    Ā 

  • Why Facebook will buy Foursquare

    After returning from a quick weekend vacation, I posted a few of my thoughts on why Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg will be the one to buy Foursquare. It’s obvious to me that Facebook desperately needs Foursquare and its vast mines of location data.

    How Facebook will treat that data is another question.

  • Steam for Mac

    It's out. Go get it.
  • A quick look at the state of geolocation services

    A few weeks ago I set out to create a new community for people and businesses interested in geolocation applications. GeoAppLab is a blog for the geolocation community.

    The timing for such a community couldn’t be any better. I believe that in the next few years we’ll see entirely new ways of how businesses, consumers, organizations, and friends and family will communicate with each other based on their location and interests.

    Geolocation services are where search was 12 years ago.

    But geolocation may take it further. Search was about adding a taxonomy to information on the Web. Geolocation is about adding a taxonomy to real-world locations, adding that data to the Web, and integrating that information with where we are and what we’re doing at a certain space in time.

    On top of that, geolocation will aggregate your interests and your friends as they exist within your online social networks, which are an extension, albeit a better organized extension, of your real-world networks.

    Using these new services, businesses and non-profits will be able to better serve their patrons, recognizing their habits, their interests and their needs. It will enhance the noise-to-signal ratio.

    I spend a lot of time in the trenches of geolocation. It’s obvious to me is that there is no certain path to the future. Foursquare and Gowalla are now the big players, but Twitter and Facebook are both making conservative moves to integrate location services into their existing network features. In one big swoop, I think either of these companies could dominate the market. I don’t know if there will be room for more than one or two services. Possibly three at the most.

    Could Facebook or Twitter buy Gowalla or Foursquare? I think that’s very possible. But what that means to users is uncertain.

    Interested in learning more? Check out GeoAppLab. You can also engage the conversation with GeoAppLab on Facebook.

  • It’s time for a geosocial community, and what I’m doing about it

    GeoAppLabI’m a fanatic for check-in services like Gowalla and Foursquare. I get really excited when I see businesses like Austin’sĀ One Taco, who use check-in services to both serve customersĀ and make money. It’s the ultimate win-win, and it reaffirms that free, competitive markets are great. I love spending money on businesses that innovate and reach out to me in whatever digital space I’m in without spamming my friends and me.

    Every geek I know feels the same way.

    It’s hard to ignore the fact that there’s no real ā€œcommunityā€ for geosocial users and business owners who want help tapping these new markets. There’s no single ā€œgo-toā€ source for help.

    I hate that when I search Google for geosocial news and tutorials, I see little more than spammy blogs and fragmented articles.

    There’s no help for you if you want to get your business on the Foursquare bandwagon. There’s no help for you if you want to become a Yelp power user, or if you want to teach your parents how to check-in for free stuff at their favorite restaurant by using the power of Gowalla.

    That’s no longer the case

    Today I’m very excited to announce the launch of GeoAppLab, which strives to do all of these things and so much more. I want GeoAppLab to become a hub for geosocial users.

    I want to help businesses that want to better serve their customers through check-in services and geosocial networks. I want to help businesses connect through geosocial tools.

    I want to watch as the guy who got a free taco by checking in at the taco truck using Gowalla comes back again and again for paid tacos, and watch as he uses Twitter and Facebook to tell his friends how awesome this taco truck is.

    Social networking, andĀ especially geosocial networking, is about customer service. The sooner businesses get onboard with this exciting technology the better they can start tapping new customers and grow in ways that they never before imagined.

    The goal

    GeoAppLab is a lot more than just a Web site. It’s a place where users share insight and opinions, where guest-analysts offer tutorials and advice on getting your business to leverage services like Gowalla and Foursquare to double your profit. It’s a place where you can learn how to get the most out of geosocial communities and customer networks.

    Starting right now, you can visitĀ GeoAppLab for news and tutorials on how to get started in the geosocial space. SubscribeĀ on Twitter. Subscribe toĀ GeoAppLab’s RSS.

    Get itĀ through email.

    Just get it, and follow along for the ride.

    I hope to see you there.