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    July 17, 2008

    Alleluia : Twittervision on the iPhone is there !

    Just installed Twittervision on my iPhone. Absolutely stunning app. The potential uses in business are countless. I better hurry up creating my Web 2.0 start-up in Pau ;-)

    Microsoft SMS : the Stupid Me-too Strategy

    Microsoft has just launched its Windows Mobile Apps online store, apparently (you bet) to compete against Apple' s AppStore for the iPhone.

    As I've both an iPhone and a PocketPC, I can do head-to-head comparison. I swear, it's not because I'm an Apple Fanboy, but the AppStore rocks and the WinMobApps sucks. A matter of product design, of course : the user experience per se, with the integration of the store into a global solution, the ease-of-use, etc.

    For instance, the Microsoft store requires you to install Silverlight, to enable the caroussel type of product selection. Guess what : this feature is embedded into Mac OS X (ever heard of CoverFlow ?)...

    That is a pretty stupid strategy from the guys in Redmond (another one ? ;-), proving that Microsoft is struggling like hell to stay... alive.

    Funny MacDailyNews take on that one : "Any day now, we expect a post-liposuction Ballmer to show up at some trade show dressed in jeans and a black mock turtleneck saying "Boom!" a lot."

    iPhone & MobileMe : Say Bye Bye To The Auto-Reply

    Verifying my .Me settings this morning, I've realized something : since I bought my iPhone 8 months ago, I never used again the automatic reply feature for emails when traveling. 

    Since the advent of Lotus Notes and MS Outlook, the typical auto-reply looked like this one :

    Dear Sender,

    Thank you for contacting Marc Duchesne.
    I will be on a business trip until October 31st.
    During that time, I will have limited access to my e-mail. I will respond to your message as soon as possible.

    I apologize for any inconvenience,
    Carpe Diem,
    _Marc

    Now, thanks to the iPhone, I don't care mind being abroad on the road : I ALWAYS have access to my e-mail. Will I reply to them "as soon as possible", that's another story !

    The Web 2.0 Typical Disease, or How To Make Your Product Stand Out

    I've just cleaned up my .Me (formerly know as .Mac) email inbox, reducing the infernal number of messages from 500+ down to a more affordable 100+.***

    Among those hundreds of messages that I sorted, archived, or trashed, more than 20 were confirmations of registration at this or that Web 2.0 new service or new application. I tell you what : I couldn't remember 4 out of 5 of them. What the heck is this or that stuff about, I can't tell.

    My first conclusions on this fact : either I start suffering Alzheimer's Disease (maybe I should call on Dr. House) or the service itself wasn't worth the try - which explains why I didn't remember even the names. About names : I'm not the first one nor the last one to say that many of the Web 2.0 start ups have obscure names or products names - that's a Web 2.0 game, actually : choose the most non-sensed name, and you'll get noticed. At least for a short while (see above).

    Now, the lesson : if you want your Web 2.0 app to stand out the crowd, make it shine. Make it visible. Make it recognizable. Pick a handful of early adopters, wait a month or two after they've signed up, and then ask them what your product is about. If they're able to answer right on the spot, you won. If not, better think again your model.

    *** I do use my inbox as a To-Do list - that doesn't mean I've got 100 to-do items (ever heard of threads ? ;-)

    Tip of the day : for those of you don't have a Gmail account yet, create one. Then, use it as a backup for your regular email account(s). I personnaly set-up a special Gmail account just for this backup task a couple of months ago, and I can tell : it's very very convenient. You never sweat again when you delete an important message by mistake : it's still there, somewhere in the Cloud ;-)

    July 16, 2008

    Feedly And The Customer Satisfaction Fairy Tale

    Since last week and the latest Firefox 3 update (3.0.1), I can't get Feedly running any longer. That's a real pitty for me, as I consider Feedly as the best RSS feed reader so far - for once, you can design your own online newspaper at a fingersnap.

    Unfortunately, the automatic FX update stopped the service. No chance to re-install the add-on : "The feedly 1.0b3 could not be installed because it is not compatible with Firefox 3.0.1."

    So after several attempts, I decided to call on Feedly' support. I discovered the Get Satisfaction service : technical support the Web 2.0 way. Absolutely stunning, for it is the one place you as an end-user can go and call for help on most of your favorite tools and apps. The list of companies currently being supported by Get Satisfaction is definitely impressive, from the smallest newest startup (say... Feedly for instance) to the biggest largest company (say Apple). Twitter seems to be the number one in terms of questions and support team.

    Among a few other Web 2.0 apps, Get Satisfaction is typically the sort of tool which every single Enterprise 1.0 should adopt and integrate immediately. It's a fantastic way to keep in touch with your end-users, by proving them how much you care about their satisfaction.

    Actually, this type of service is based on an old concept made modern. In this case, it's Usenet and its numerous FAQs and discussion boards at the Web 2.0 sauce. Nothing new ("the people-powered customer service for absolutely everything") but all new (the ease of use and the flexibility).

    As soon as I get my own startup up and running, Get Satisfaction will be part of the toolkit.

    ps : my own dashboard is here.

    July 11, 2008

    iPhone 2.0 'Remote' : a Small App For A Giant Leap Forward

    Apple_iphone20remote Shall you have an iPhone or iPod Touch, you can now remote control your iTunes libraries (Mac and PC, Folks) with the little yet jaw-dropping awesomely fantastic Remote application.

    Now, once again Apple is showing the way to the Future : how we'll be able to control any *connected* device from our smartphone - er, iPhone.

    Possibilities are endless, including for professional applications. ***

    More details on Remote here.

    *** Call for developers : you 're young, you're open-minded, you're french (yes, some of us combine those three criteria ;-) you're an iPhone/Mac developer : please drop me a line (Twitterers welcome).

    July 10, 2008

    ROTFL (Rolling On The Floor Laughing) Seriously ;-)

    Here's an ATM machine' s screenshot, captured last night in downtown Pau. What a brilliant customer experience, is it ?!!!
    IMG_0664

    For you geeks reading this blog, here's the MS Windows' s error message :
    IMG_0666

    Question : Who the heck developed this mission-critical app ?

    Next question : When the hell will the big guys (hey, you're seeing a large bank here) realize that Windows really sucks ?

    July 09, 2008

    Say Goodbye Farewell To Second Life

    Lively_byGoogle Second Life is dead. Google just launched its own "virtual world" platform : Lively. The difference with SL ? Lively is entirely Web-based. You don't need to install and run a standalone piece of software, as opposed to Second Life (how many of us have been rapidly fed up launching SL ?...). To play with Lively, you just stay with your favorite browser, aka Firefox 3 (it runs with IE too).

    Lively is truly the signal most of us were waiting for to go investigate the potential of Virtual Worlds for business. And it's made by Google.

    For a complete review on Lively here by Techcrunch.

    Download Lively here. That's the only thing that sucks, by the way : there's no Mac version for the time being, although Mac users are among the most efficient beta testers because we easily become early adopters...

    Cycling At The Fiber Age

    IMG_0608 Le Tour de France will make its annual stop here in Pau next week. The city is readying for the big show, with signs, ads, and welcome events popping up everywhere. In the meantime, the new release of the blockbuster "Pro Cycling Manager" game is on the shelves.

    Among the key features of this 2008 version, there's one which rings a bell to me :

    " Play in single and/or multi-player mode (allows up to 20 players over the Internet or via LAN). "

    Imagine the benefits of FTTH Fiber-To-The-Home for such a game : no more players number' s limitation, so that you could be part of a *real* 200+ racers' peloton, even better graphics, and a faster speed of reaction for you to counterattack your rivals...

    FTTH does offer many other possibilities to practice sports like Cycling or Skiing. For instance, imagine home-trainers connected to the Internet, simulating a real competition between cyclists for their  indoor training during winter...

    Shall you be a game developer loving Sports (e.g. Cycling, Tennis, Ski, Rafting, etc.), please feel free to drop me a line : Pau is the place you should be.

    July 02, 2008

    IM-Translate Goes To Microsoft' Windows Live

    IM-T My friends of IM-T have reached their first major milestone : their Messenger plug-in is now referenced on Windows Live' s Gallery.

    That is an amazing success story for the young start-up, formed by my old yet always up-to-date friend Georges Pantanelli and some of his developers.

    Since the IM-T' journey is quite an unusual adventure, I've asked Georges a couple of months ago to post its diary here on the FiberGeneration blog. Now that they're WindowsLived, he has a bit more spare time to share it with you. Stay tuned for Mister Georges' s first post - due sometime by next week, as they say in the Web 2.0 area -)

    post-scriptum : shall you know somebody able to help IM-T to get in touch with the US press, you can contact Georges at : gpp@im-translate.com

    June 27, 2008

    "Fete du Tres Haut Debit" Running Notes

    Yesterday in Mortain, a beautiful small town a few miles away from the Mont St Michel,was the 3d Ultra-Broadband Conference, held by the french optical cable manufacturer ACOME.

    Here are my running notes, as is - means no re-writing * ( my personal comments under brackets ) :


    Regis Paumier, CEO, ACOME. keynote speech :

    - CETHD Center of Expertise for Ultra Broadband : 1,000+ visitors to date (note : opened mid 2007)

    - there are many issues with Quality and Maintenance (on optical networks, FTTx)

    - key issue in France (on FTTH) : rural environment.


    Ms. Agnes Huet, President, Comptoir des Signaux. market survey by the FTTH Council Europe :

    - FTTx networks Business Model :

    a) OpenAccess is mandatory

    b) Operator vs. End-User : capacity becomes commodity; extends potential services; puts the End-User at the center of the market.

    - User-oriented solutions : puts the End-User at the epicenter of the system : dynamic bandwidth allocation, dynamic services allocation.

    - Open Access / Open Networks not widely adopted in France : very few existing networks allow such services.

    - xPON infrastructures limit Open Access systems.

    - Collectivities want to : investigate all potential solutions; model contribution and ROI.

    - Collectivities claim they don't have visibility on those solutions (hence the need for permanent live show-rooms).


    Yves Le Mouel, President, French Federation of Telecoms (i.e. : Operators) :

    - FTTH in France : need 100k new subscribers per month to be considered "mainstream";

    - Investments : estimation = 10 Billions euros over 10 years (see recent announcement by SFR - link in french);

    - New Business models must be invented, because based on abundance of bandwidth and services;

    - the key question is : how to deploy a complex infrastructure to deliver services the simplest way (note : hence the need for a complete paradigm shift. Think Different);

    - how FTTH will win by 2012 : the Killer App.

    - the Killer App : images, video, online gaming, music, unlimited storage (read : Cloud Computing);

    - services : teleworking, telemedicine, teleassistance, telemonitoring, online shopping;

    - QoS : PnP, Easy2Go, AlwaysOn.

    - avoid the Digital Divide : think Geography, Social, residential customers vs. enterprises...

    - issues to be fixed : evangelisation, training & education of networks' deployment professionals (comment : good to hear that from the operators themselves);

    - this represents more than 100,000 jobs (comment : good to hear that one too. I personally claim FTTH is a unique opportunity for new jobs and businesses creation, since months);

    - target FTTH France 2012 : 3-Mo new subscribers per year. Same as ADSL. (comment : on this one, I slightly disagree : ADSL is easy to deploy, because it uses an existing infrastructure. FTTH : you need to install at least the last mile).


    Thierry Houdart, Deployment Director, Axione (ETDE groupe Bouygues). an innovative solution for optical cable deployment :

    IMG_0512

    - install the optical cable along the low-voltage power distribution network;

    - speed : up to 1-km per day, by 2 technicians;

    - no traffic disruption (road, power, telecom, etc.);

    - capillarity : the fiber cable can go right to the end-user;

    - infrastructure' cost : divided by a factor of 2 to 3 compared to existing traditional solutions, e.g. buried cables;

    - green deployment : lower the CO2 emissions by 50%.

    My personal take (this time w/o brackets, because it's a pretty crucial point ;-) : I assume the cost of deployment with this new solution is less than 30€ per meter, all together - site survey, components, installation, etc. Let say we can achieve 15€/m : a fantastic quantum leap for FTTH. 


    This solution is a true paradigm shifting one anyway : the split of the cost of deployment is no longer 80% civil work and 20% components + instal; it is now 20% civil work and 80% components + installation. On top, it's an eco-friendly solution. Fiber finally goes Green. Brilliant.

    * I wish I could capture notes this way ;-)

    June 25, 2008

    Web 2.0 At Its Best : Feedly

    For those of you who a) use Firefox 3, and b) a RSS feed aggregator & reader, Feedly is the add-on you need.

    Read the comprehensive presentation here on Mashable, so you'll get the whole picture.

    Feedly

    I use Feedly since Day One (as well as Firefox 3, of course) : it's both simple and powerful, flexible and easy to set up and use. The page looks like an online magazine (which it is, at the end of the day), unlike Netvibes or GoogleReader. With its typical Web 2.0 attributes, such as The Wall where others can share with you recommendations and annotations.

    Since Feedly is an add-on to your browser, you don't need to go to Netvibes or GoogleReader any longer : set Feedly as your homepage, that's all you need to do. Sure, you can do the same with your traditional RSS reader, but it's not "integrated" into your browser.

    Thestory I'm convinced Feedly is another step forward to the true Enterprise 2.0, since it enables the user to aggregate multiple information and content onto a single page without the need to connect to an external website. A brief look at the Feedly's mash-up diagram tells me we've now everything in hands to create, implement, and truly use simple yet efficient & productive vertical *Web 2.0-based* applications...

    June 20, 2008

    The World In A Words Cloud


    This is my Del.icio.us tags' list as seen by the lovely yet addictive Wordle cloud generator.

    A wonderful tool to analyze a text to find out the most frequent words in it.

    See here the result on a 12-pages document I wrote back in 2002 at Agilent Technologies for the introduction of a new product : the Modular Network Tester. This document was aimed at presenting the new platform to the sales channels. Look at the corresponding cloud, and you'll get the message ;-)

    MNT

    Thanks to Bruno Giussiani for the heads up.

    June 16, 2008

    Broadband Washroom

    IMG_0121_2The lovely city of Pau is truly The Broadband Country. See this hand dryer in the restrooms at the Pau airport. The Dyson Airblade™. It wipes your hands dry in a matter of seconds, the time for you to realize that it's done. When hygiene and fun meet. That's innovation, Folks !

    For more details on the Airblade™, go here.

    You may read the whole "Why Airblade" section : it's a pretty nice lesson of product marketing.

    Also, the Customer Service part is a model. I never thought hands drying could be so interesting.

    June 10, 2008

    Freak This

    IMG_0309 Seen in Pau yesterday, this banner at a perfume shop. Just curious to learn what a "Nail bar" consists of.

    May 29, 2008

    Microsoft Does It Again

    [UPDATED 1:15PM CET, this time with links and tags]

    Microsoft does it again. What ? Copying Apple ! See this demo of the forthcoming new OS from Redmond, so-called "Windows 7". Everything single thing you see there is already available on the iPhone and the Mac platforms, thanks to Mac OSX 10.5 aka "Leopard", should Apple release touch-screen based Macs in the next couple of weeks

    To get a multi-touch UI on a PC, you'll get to wait until, hum, 2010. Until then, you be sure I'll be playing with my MacTouch since a while ;-)

    May 28, 2008

    "Second Life: Virtual Worlds and the Enterprise"

    A must read essay that I've discovered today whilst surfing on Bruno Giussani' s LunchOverIP blog : "Second Life: Virtual Worlds and the Enterprise", by Susan Kish. It was published last year, but it's still pretty valid and useful for those of us who want to better understand what are the possibilities offered by the Virtual Worlds in the Enterprise.
    Download PDF here.

    May 12, 2008

    Just This [09-08]

    Like Shopping ? You Will Love The Mall Plus (dot com ;-)

    Still not the colorful experience of a real journey at the Wafi City (for instance), but a true step towards full 3-D online shopping.
    Let the fiber shine in to our homes, and we'll probably get real-time person-to-person interaction like in the real World.

    May 10, 2008

    The time of the twits

    Step by step, month after month, the Web 2.0 is changing the way we can use data and information.
    See here how you can mash your twits up. Thanks to Dipity.

    For many businesses, it's time to think different.

    May 07, 2008

    Teaching Fiber Optics The Paper Way

    Img_0019_2

    Since I came back in the training business a year ago or so, I decided to drop the traditional slideware stuff * for a more 21st Century stylish method : use the Web 2.0 gear such as YouTube for tutorial videos, Picasa for real world photos, and more recently Facebook for post-training social and collaborative networking (note : all free apps, as I want to keep the learning materials costs as low as possible for the customers).

    However, whilst going whole online digital is nice because it's hype, I still need a paper board to explain a lot of things, which a video clip will never replace (except perhaps those made by the folks at CommonCraft).
    I love paperboards : it forces you to go crisp & clear, splitting your explanations into simple/one-page explanations - as Twitter forces you to write a message in less than 160 characters. Over the last 15 years that I was delivering training courses and sales seminars, I've collected lots of my paper rolls, for me to keep record of the interesting discussions with the attendees.

    Of course, bringing a paperboard roll back home works fine when you travel by car, but it's a bit more tricky when you fly. Thanks to Apple, this issue is over. I now capture all the relevant stuff with my iPhone, and upload it on the MacBook right away. That makes the paperboard digital ;-)


    * note : I'm thinking of using cartoons such as this one to explain and share complex stuff in the next future.

    April 28, 2008

    Teaching Fiber Optics Basics Without YouTube

    Piclens_pic So-derle, the Green Fiber Evangelist' video collection got a huge success last week at the training I was delivering to a french telco. For the second time since a quarter of century, I haven't used a single slide as my fiber optics training materials but a web page.

    The first time I used a navigator instead of M$ PowerPoint was back in 1996, when my friend Didier Boucher and myself were touring France to evangelize installers and end-users. By then, Netscape Navigator was our best companion, displaying the html pages I created with GoLive and the likes.

    Last week, Firefox 3.0 beta and the amazing add-on PicLens were on the party. Thanks to the Internet. Means, thanks to the connection to the Internet. Because, unlike 12 years ago when all the html and jpeg files forming my presentations were on my Mac's hard-disk, today the whole stuff is... on the Cloud. YouTube, Picasaweb, Facebook, etc. : they're all online.

    That's the bad thing when you're a connected guy like myself : you do rely a lot on the Internet. It strucked me the hard way this morning, when I was to go on the Green Fiber Evangelist blog to start the training session I'm delivering this week at a large install company : got no LAN connection to start with, hence no Internet connection, hence no online videos, hence no *live* training materials.

    Then, the IT guy came to the rescue after lunch, to give me the IP address, DNS servers, proxy settings things to help my Mac go online. It worked, except for one little tiny detail : this company forbids some websites, among which... YouTube. Bye-bye the Green Fiber Evangelist blog (at least for the rest of the week here ;-)

    This is kind of weird : a 6,000 employees firm who wants to penetrate the optical networks installation & maintenance business don't authorize ubiquitous access to the Net. By the way, only 600 (six hundred) people out of those 6,000 have an email address. 10%. Who don't even get access to the most popular websites in the world. As my dear former boss Robert is used to say : "there is room for improvement" !

    Anyway, Accor hotels do provide free WiFi to their guests. So, thanks to Accor (and Orange), I'm posting this text from my hotel room. After an hour or so spent on downloading all the Green Fiber Evangelist videos on my Mac, with TubeTV.

    That's the lesson of the day : never rely too much on the Net. Download vids and pics and copy them on a USB key before going to the customer. And start evangelize people : you need an internet connection to get on the Cloud ;-)

    April 20, 2008

    Teaching Fiber Optics Basics The YouTube Way

    Why spend time on training course slides and notes design and edition, when everything you need is available on the Net ? Provided that people better remind images rather than text, YouTube is one of the new companions of the teachers, trainers, and instructors of all kind, together with Wikipedia and a few other Web 2.0 tools.
    Here's a collection of videos I've put together for fiber optics training - most are in english, some are in french. Enjoy, and feel free to use. The playlist is available here.

    April 19, 2008

    FiberOnDemand Refresh

    I've revamped the Fiber On Demand blog. Was a matter of a few clicks only, thanks to Yahoo!Pipes (see the features in the previous post). Aggregating content from different sources onto a single web page has never been so easy.

    Just missing a 3D/whirling/magnifying carousel, which will be available in a next release I guess.

    See Fiber On Demand here. Subscribe to the RSS feed here.

    Yahoopipes_fiberondemand

    April 18, 2008

    FiberNews MashUpdated

    I've updated the FiberNews site.
    After a few months out in the wild space of the blogosphere, it was time for a first revamp.
    First modification : more news, coming from more online resources - adding RSS feeds with Yahoo!Pipes is just a matter a seconds.
    Second modification, thanks to the new "Get a Badge" feature : replacement of the Google Map mashup by the Yahoo Map, directly from Pipes. Just outstanding. It's mashup for the rest of us.

    You can visit FiberNews here.
    Add the FiberNews as a badge on your own site, or get the RSS feed, JSON, PHP, KML and more - including getting the results by email or phone - here.
    My public pipes are available here. Feel free to copy, paste, and use.

    Yahoopipes_fibernews

    April 15, 2008

    [Web Too] IM-Translate

    Imtranslateworldtext
    French startup IM-Translate is born, offering the first online instant translation of instant messages:

    Immediate translation of instant messages. You do nothing differently — IM-Translate™ integrates seamlessly into your existing IM application — just type as usual. Forget copy, pasting or jumping back and forth to a web-based translator. Your buddy receives your message plus a translation — instantly. You see the translation of the text you typed. You also receive your buddy’s messages in both languages. Free! — Downloads in seconds with broadband.

    First IM app targeted : Windows Live Messenger, aka MSN.
    As I told my friend Georges, CTO of IM-T, they should release a Mac version as quickly as possible, since Mac users are more suited for beta testing campaigns : we love giving feedback, for the developers to enhance their products.
    Also in the pipe : the app for Google.

    Interesting : IM-T is formed by... US citizens and registered in... France, for some legal and market issues.
    IM-T is a typical Web 2.0 start-up : of the six co-founders and team members, nobody knows more than two others face-to-face. They never met altogether so far ! Their collaborative tools : Google, Skype, and email.
    One of the founders is my old buddy Georges Pantanelli. A french High-Tech industry veteran, who relocated to the US in the 90's. Georges got his american passport two years ago, in San Francisco. The lesson : in California, everything is possible for those who have the entrepreneurial spirit.

    IM-Translate site and download here.

    April 11, 2008

    Belgium Goes Web 3.0

    This is true User-Interaction. Just amazing. And so funny ;-) Enjoy !

    April 02, 2008

    Wake Up Call By Google

    Google did it again. A true breakthrough online app, which is set to be the next revolution in the Internet mattress - ooops, sorry, matters. See here for more details.

    March 21, 2008

    The It-Could-Be-An-Apple-Gadget Edition

    See here. The Flip is a brand new camcorder made by Pure Digital Technologies "for the rest of us".
    Simple, easy to use, and just enough features for 80% of the population. On top, the Flip is pretty much affordable for most of us (at Agilent, I've learned not to say "cheap" ;-).
    Definitely a gadget that could have been designed by Apple. Which, I suppose, has served as a model for the definition and creation of The Flip.

    March 20, 2008

    It's about Apple : How To Get Everything Right By Doing Everything Wrong (To Certain Extent)

    Bz_apple_f

    Wired Magazine has published an excellent article on Apple : "How Apple Got Everything Right By Doing Everything Wrong". A must read, including the Evil/Genius and Online Extras side articles.

    For an Applemaniac, Jobsian Fanatic like myself, those type of readings just confirm what we already presume on the Product Marketing & Industrial Design way at Apple (at least since Jobs' s return in 1997).
    It also raises three questions in my mind :

    1. when even a pure self-made man like me can understand quite a bit of the underlying long term strategy and the tactics at Apple, why the heck no other company is applying the same methods ? Can you think of another name, in any other industry, with this level of perfection in Industrial Design and Marketing at large ? Maybe Trek ? Or maybe I'm too much Apple-branded that I'm too blind to see outside the Reality Distorsion Field !

    2. why can't we French people enjoy the beauty of an AppleStore, whilst the Mac/iPod/iPhone/iLoveIt maker is to open a superstore in rainy Liverpool ? Is there something we Frenchies don't get about Apple and/or Steve Jobs ? Hey, we've bought into the iPhone hype - even restaurants' s maîtres d'hôtel have iPhone now.

    3. the last yet most important : when will I get a job at Apple ? ;-)

    March 19, 2008

    Fiber-To-The-Home : The Exploding Market

    See by yourself...

    [UPDATED 03-19-08 2:25PM CET] The video is no longer available on YouTube. That's the beauty of Web 2.0 and Rights Management ;-)

    March 14, 2008

    It's about the iPhone

    Back at home after being on the road (and in the air, and on the Southern Alpes slopes), I took a couple of hours this morning to watch the recent introduction of the iPhone SDK by Steve Jobs and his fellow Apple execs.

    Apple_iphone_sdktop_20080306

    You'll get a flavor of the impact of the iPhone Software Roadmap by reading those two articles, from David Pogue for The New York Times here, and Mike Elgan for ComputerWorld here.
    Quote Master Pogue : " iPhone 2.0 will turn this phone into an engineering tool, a game console, a free-calls Skype phone, a business tool, a dating service, an e-book reader, a chat room, a database, an Etch-a-Sketch…and that’s on Day One."

    To better understand why the iPhone 2.0 is THE Revolution many of us were waiting for, just watch Scott Forestall, VP iPhone Software, demonstrating one of the most exciting new features of the platform, based on the built-in 3D-accelerometer : undo a photo edition by... shaking the iPhone (demo starts at 39:30).

    After seeing this, you'll get a better picture of Apple' s Hardware roadmap : the next gen iMac will be multi-touch based. Then, you'll agree with Elgan : the iPhone will change the PC world, forever.

    February 29, 2008

    Looking Forward To The Googled Fiber World

    Back from San Diego, I had a meeting yesterday night in Paris with the VP Sales & Marketing of a new startup working on some *fiber network monitoring* stuff. I can't disclose anything of course, just that it's about Fiber-To-The-Home.

    Things we've discussed until late in the evening were on the forthcoming changes in the optical comms industry per se and our own lives.

    Like this one : thanks to FTTH and 40G/100G/etc. networks, we're going to be "online" everywhere anytime, with our entire "life" relying on *The Net*. Fine.
    Now, since we'll do everything - working, watching TV, training, sharing life, etc. - through a single fiber strand, this one better stay up and running 24/7 : we won't accept being cut off for 2 days until the Repair guys come in. Hence the need for monitoring systems, which would look after the faults on the fiber right up to our living room.

    A tremendous challenge, provided the numerous FTTx networks topologies and technologies. A challenge which requires to think out of the box. Something the legacy Test & Measurement firms can't do. Something a well funded startup can do. How much do they need ? $5m. Which is not that much for a solution which will help change the World (because it'll guarantee your fiber stays okay).

    Ed. note : French world-famous blogger Loic Lemeur got $6m for his Web 2.0 video-sharing platform. Raising $1m less to produce something which really serves the World shouldn't be that much a problem. At least in a perfect World...

    February 27, 2008

    Texas university to give Apple iPhone or iPod Touch to all incoming freshmen

    Read on MacDailyNews :

    "An Apple iPhone or iPod Touch will become a central part of Abilene Christian University's innovative learning experience this fall when all freshmen are provided one of these converged media devices, said Phil Schubert, ACU executive vice president.

    At ACU - the first university in the nation to provide these cutting-edge media devices to its incoming class - freshmen will use the iPhones or iPod Touches to receive homework alerts, answer in-class surveys and quizzes, get directions to their professors' offices, and check their meal and account balances - among more than 15 other useful web applications already developed, said ACU Chief Information Officer Kevin Roberts."


    More on this initiative here
    Full description of the project by the ACU here.

    February 21, 2008

    Get EnterTrained With eXperide

    Dscf0012 What if you could get trained on fiber cable installation right at your place, right on the field ? No more wasted time in transports, no more painful lecture training in a classroom far from your home, no more hands-on practice on a table. Just a time-saving, practical, productive training.
    That is what eXperide is to provide : quick-start on-site hands-on training for installation & maintenance contractors, enabling technicians to get up-to-speed faster and better.

    I won't disclose everything of course - although I'm quite proud of the marketing & sales strategy the team has put together - but here's a brief overview of the tools eXperide will bring to its fellow customers sometime this year :
    - pre-equipped mobil-home trucks, sporting ready-to-use workstations for hands-on training (cable preparation, splicing, and testing);
    - pre-loaded iPhone and/or iPod Touch, with e-learning materials (e.g. podcasts and videos) and direct access to eXperide' s technical support;
    - discussion forums and weblogs, for people to share their best practices and experiences.

    Quite an exciting one, right ? Then, stay tuned for more ;-)

    February 19, 2008

    Rehearsing In The Air *

    Pdfoniphone_2 As a presenter who like to travel light - I'm a bit tired of opening up my laptop at each and every security check in the airports (even if it's a MacBook), I'm currently testing a new way to rehearse and do presentations whilst on the road (or in the air).
    Here's the 7-steps process :

    1. with Apple' Keynote, create the simplest slides set possible, following Guy Kawasaki' s 10/20/30 rule and Garr Reynolds' s Zen approach,
    2. export the Keynote file to both Powerpoint and Acrobat file formats,
    3. upload the three files onto Zoho Projects,
    4. import the PPT file into Zoho Show,
    5. send the PDF file to myself on my .Mac account,
    6. copy the three files on my favorite USB key,
    7. check the availability and integrity of all those files (takes a few minutes only).

    Then, I can :
    a) access the slides from anywhere in the World, thanks to the Web 2.0.
    b) download the PDF onto any PC or Mac once on site.
    c) review the slides on my iPhone.

    The latest proves to be the most interesting part of the experiment. For instance, I can rehearse my presentation in the airplane, without needing to grab my MacBook. Also, I don't fear intrusive eyes from the guy next seat, see what I mean ?

    * " in the air ", not : " on the Air " ;-)

    February 14, 2008

    plusmo : Plus For Your Mobile Life

    Plusmo_logo
    Just discovered a new cool stuff this morning, thanks to an unknown reader of FiberGeneration : plusmo.
    Here' s the brief review by Jessica Dolcourt for Webware back in September 2007 :

    "Plusmo's mobile widgets application is a cool way to read RSS feeds on your cell phone or PDA, but that's not the only reason it was named a finalist on the Webware 100 list.
    In true Webware fashion, Plusmo's site offers hands-on excitement--the chance to publish and share widget mash-ups and create an iPhone widget from templates. Users can also make personal blogs available as a Plusmo widget, and can install a browser bookmarklet or Yahoo plug-in to snag feeds while they surf."

    Full article here.
    plusmo website here.

    February 12, 2008

    Dear FTTx Contractors, Say Hello To Customer-Facing Coaching

    When you think about it, Fiber-To-The-Home is the ultimate experience for outside plant technicians. For the first time ever, those folks are working right in front of the end-user.
    That implies a lot of new behavior for the OSP people, as they are kind of the front-desk of the service provider. To make it short : the guy who's installing the fiber at the subscriber' s place is also the ISP' s sales rep.
    Hence the need for coaching the OSP technicians to customer-facing situations. Be the best sales rep. That's quite an interesting challenge, for both the trainers and the installers themselves. Have a look at this video, and you'll understand why.