Some Thoughts On the Personalities At Mesh
by Tony Hung on May 31, 2007
Interesting meeting some of these folks in person. Here are my thoughts on what some of them were like, or seemed like.
Live at Mesh07 : Day 2 @ 1635h: Monetizing the Long Tail — Life Beyond Adsense
by Tony Hung on May 31, 2007
Andrew Goodman talks to Christine Herron, Ted Murphy, Mike Masnick and Nancy Peterson on monetizing things beyond Adsense. On business models MM: There’s a lot of stuff that’s free — what do you charge for and what do you give (…)
Live at Mesh07 : Day 2 @ 1505h: How To Build A Community, Part 2
by Tony Hung on May 31, 2007
More on building a community with Lionel Menchacha, Will Pate, and Jordan Banks: “How do you manage that passion?” WP: When I started at Flock, pick your title — well, I chose “Community Ambassador” because there were groups that weren’t (…)
Live at Mesh07 : Day 2 @ 1505h: How To Build A Community, Part 1
by Tony Hung on May 31, 2007
Mark Relph talks to Will Pate, Jordan Banks, and Lionel Menchacha about How To Build a Community “Community means different things to different people — what does community to you or organization?” LM: Communities can be formed around similar interests (…)
Live @ Mesh / Day 2 @ 1340: Digital Sharecropping
by Tony Hung on May 31, 2007
With Mathew Ingram, Simon Pulsifer, Jeff Howe, Michael Sikorsky “How do you respond criticism towards crowdsourcing?” JH: I think its a false controversy. There were far fewer models back then, and there was no sharecropping taking place. I think it (…)
Live @ Mesh / Day 2 @ 1145h: 15 Minutes of Fame
by Tony Hung on May 31, 2007
3 developers get 5 minutes each. Wild Apricot: Wild Apricot is a web based membership software. The long answer is that there is many organizations, small for example, who have variable money. They’ve built the software that sells for $12-100 (…)
Live @ Mesh / Day 2 @ 1112h: Building A Web Business — With Jim Buckmaster of Craigslist, Part 2
by Tony Hung on May 31, 2007
More: On the newspaper industry: I think its easy to point to the Internet when you’re laying people off to raise profit margins to please Wall Street. In my mind its unfair to lay it our feet and its done (…)