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Location Tracking and Heat Maps

citysense-smallCitysense by Sense Networks launched two days ago. Since the cat’s pretty much out of the bag, I might as well talk about this. Quote:

What if you could look at your cell phone and see a heat map of where everybody in the city was at that very moment? The more people at any given location, the redder it would appear on the map. That’s what Citysense does. It is a mobile application that is supposed to help you figure out where the hottest clubs and night spots are so you can go there (or avoid them, depending on your preference).

The reason why I find this so curious (and why this post has any mention of cats escaping bags) is that this is an idea Henry and I were strongly considering about two months ago. We wanted to use heat maps of cell phone activity to plot the hottest places. Since it would be done in near real-time, the theory was that it could help people find popular nightlife or help businesses find ideal retail locations.

We were so intrigued by the idea that we used it on our application for Y-Combinator’s summer round of funding. I even spent two weeks making a heat map demo that could render thousands of data points.

What happened? Y-Combinator didn’t invite us for an interview. We got a form letter back saying the equivalent of “better luck next time.” It was no surprise; they got enough applications to bring down their server right before the deadline. Our application probably just got lost in the shuffle.

After the Y-Combinator application was over and we got our response, we promptly dropped the concept. There were some problems with the idea (which I’ll get into), and we had other, related ideas to investigate. It’s funny how when you run your own company and can do anything, a lot of ideas come and go.

Now it’s two months later, and Sense Networks, maker of Citysense, is rolling out location tracking analytics and heat maps in a big way. They have an impressive set of executives, too. Of interest to me are the two guys with ties to the MIT Media Lab, Alex Pentland and Tony Jebara. I’ve probably seen some of their work before, especially Pentland and his Reality Mining.

In a way, this launch confirms that we were on to something, and it makes me wonder why we dropped the idea. However, the idea did have some drawbacks which we realized at the time.

The largest problem was data. How do you get enough data to actually have realistic and useful statistics? You could start from the ground up with each individual cell phone user, asking them to install an application that tracks them. From the user’s perspective, there are two main problems with this method:

  1. Any rational person will have huge concerns about the privacy implications of installing the tracking application on their cell phone.
  2. The user needs to perceive some benefit from the application, otherwise they won’t want it.

An application like Citysense is a great way to overcome these two problems. It aggregates anonymous data, and it’s branded as a fun way to find active nightlife. This was the same solution we came up with to solve the need for data.

That said, I’ve ignored the elephant in the room. No one will want to use the nightlife application if no one else is using it. For the first few users, there will be nothing to look at. You need thousands of people for the data to be any good.

How does one overcome this? Well there are other sources of data. You could go to cell phone companies and ask for access to their data. That would surely get you lots of information, but I’m sure the cost would be astronomical. Plus, cell phone companies aren’t know for being open with their data.

That’s where Sense Networks has an edge. They have prominent executives, namely guys like Pentland, who have long standing research relationships with major cellular companies. For us, location tracking and heat maps was an idea we had two months ago. For Pentland, it’s been a core focus of his research for years, and this is at MIT, a place known for having great connections.

Taking all of this into account, we are still interested in this area, and the launch of Sense Networks won’t stop us. There are massive opportunities waiting in mobile devices, and we are just beginning to see them bloom.

Aggregating, analyzing, and acting on the behavioral data that mobile devices generate will be one particularly hot area. It will enable contextual applications, and it will change the game similarly to how Google changed online advertising with contextual ads. I won’t say exactly what we’re doing yet, but we have a pipeline of products lined up to get involved in this particular opportunity.

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Barcamp Boston 3 Recap

Barcamp Boston 3 Cafeteria

I spent this last weekend attending Barcamp Boston 3, a two day grassroots technology event on Saturday and Sunday, as well as the Barcamp pre-event party at Betahouse. I put some pictures from Barcamp up on Flickr, and here are pictures from everyone.

Barcamp is best described by the following snippet on their web site:

BarCamp is an unConference, organized on the fly by attendees, for attendees.

There is no registration fee, but you don’t just attend a BarCamp — you can participate in discussions, demo your projects, or join into another cooperative event.

Topics may include, but are not limited to: open source software, startups, UI design, entrepreneurship, AJAX, hardware hacking, robotics, mobile computing, bioinformatics, RSS, Social Software, programming languages, and the future of technology.

Barcamp Boston is just one instance of Barcamp - there are other Barcamps all over the world. You can find them on the main Barcamp web site.

(For those of you who aren’t programmers, “Bar” in Barcamp doesn’t refer to a place where alcoholic beverages are served. It comes from Foobar, a common placeholder name in programming.)

For a list of sessions, I took pictures of the Saturday and Sunday session boards from both days. Flickr displays them out of order, so I marked them with numbers.

Barcamp Boston 3 - Google App Engine PresentationSessions I attended:

  • Saturday
    • Visualization at an Internet Scale by Matt McKeon from IBM’s Many Eyes project
    • Distributed Twitter by Joe Cascio
    • Git as a subversion replacement by Josh Nichols
    • Google App Engine by Shimon Rura and Brian Olson (shown in picture)
    • iPhone Development by Dan Grover
    • Viral Marketing by Matt Peters from Pandemic Labs
    • Open Source Backup and Recovery Discussion led by Joe Slag
  • Sunday
    • Code Secrets
    • Build your own wireless router
    • Ubuntu Discussion
    • PHP Development Discussion led by me

Here are some links to products and web sites I learned about:

  • Career Numbers - career analytics currently in stealth mode
  • Wonder Warp - iPhone and Mac applications from Dan Grover. He did a talk on iPhone development.
  • Draconis Software - web application development
  • Diet.com - nutrition information with access to info over SMS
  • My Punchbowl - party planning and invitations, fairly well known and funded. He hosted a discussion on hiring people in tech.
  • Gigafloat - social messaging, link sharing, etc.
  • Babbledog - social bookmarking and news.
  • Many Eyes - data visualization research from IBM

This is just a small sample. The Barcamp Boston 3 wiki has a much more comprehensive list of attendees with links to their sites.

I enjoyed the event, met a lot of great people, and received many clever suggestions for my company.

Some events on the horizon include:

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TED Talk - Johnny Lee: Wii Remote hacks

Here’s a short video of some of the coolest Wii Remote hacks I’ve seen to date:

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Hans Rosling: Debunking third-world myths with stats

The video I’m referring to, ”Debunking third-world myths with the best stats you’ve ever seen“, is an insightful TED talk given by Hans Rosling in February of 2006.

While debunking third-world myths may be interesting, Hans is make an even more powerful point with his presentation: we can challenge our beliefs and vastly improve our understanding of the world if we improve the way we visualize and interpret data.

In other words, the analysis of statistics and research data isn’t just an information problem, it’s also a design problem. How do we humans, with a limited capacity to understand vast quantities of data, represent statistics eloquently enough so that we may understand their meaning?

This question is the focus of Hans Rosling’s company called Gapminder, which he refers to in the TED talk. Him and others at Gapminder have produced an excellent piece of software, called Trendalyzer, which taps vast quantities of data and visualizes them with stunning clarity and interactivity. To see what I mean, try out Trendalyzer using this link.

The important thing to realize is that Gapminder isn’t creating the data, they are just improving the way we look at it. In that way, they are solving a design problem, not an information problem.

The concept is a powerful idea, so much so that it attracted the attention of Google. In March of 2006, Google acquired Trendalyzer and its development team from Gapminder.

Despite the sale of the technology, Hans is still using Trendalyzer to demonstrate interesting world trends on the Gapminder web site. Check it out.

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PubMatic: Ad Optimization

I noticed this article about Pubmatic today on TechCrunch, and I found it interesting. It includes a video of Amar Goel, founder and CEO, presenting at TechCrunch 40. They were a 2007 TechCrunch 40 finalist, and the company is based in India.

Pubmatic is an ad optimization service. Think of it as aggregating the different ad services out there (Google Adsense, Yahoo Publisher Network, etc.) in order to maximize the return you get on your ad space. While it seems mostly targeted at publishers - people who want to display advertisements on their own site - they also provide some features for those of us who want to place ads.

For publishers, the idea behind Pubmatic is simple. They automatically pick and display the highest paying, highest converting advertisements out of the major ad networks, allowing the publisher to increase their ad revenue.

It certainly sounds like something I could use, but how does Pubmatic make money? For now, the service is free to their beta users, but eventually they’ll need to take a cut or have some sort of fee. I’ll have to keep tabs on this service and similar services and see how they develop in the future.

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Google and Yahoo Meddle with Search Ad Campaigns

While doing my usual daily perusal of digg, I found a useful video of Stacy Williams describing some liberties that Google and Yahoo may take with your search engine ad campaigns. This short video (just under 4 minutes) was filmed at the Search Engine Strategies (SES) conference in Chicago, and in it Stacy touches on the following three points:

  • Sometimes ads are not active even if Google/Yahoo say they are (because they are actually in the process of editorial review).
  • Search engines may change your ad match types (broad vs exact and so on) sometimes without notification. Stacey gives a funny example.
  • Swapping of text ad titles and descriptions in certain scenarios.

The moral for us online entrepreneurs is that if you are using search engine advertising to promote your new business, you may need to pay closer attention to those ads than you thought.

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Funding Your Dream - Panelist Video

For any entrepreneur, funding is a critical step in starting your business. Tech startups in particular have a dearth of options in front of them. However, if you are just getting into the game, you may feel somewhat lost as to where to start.

Guy Kawasaki, an author, managing director at venture capital firm Garage, and all around interesting entrepreneur, has a post on his blog featuring a video of venture capital panelists. They answer many questions that should help you navigate the world of venture capital.

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