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Set this TypePad free or I will kill it.

I'm CEO of a startup so I don't have much free time and I'm always cognizant of how much things cost.

I have been a paying for TypePad for five years and everyone I care about thinks I'm stupid for doing so. Over two TypePad accounts I have paid nearly $1000 to Six Apart. Enough. My paying for TypePad begins to end today.

Today I destroyed the TypePad for my company Renkoo. With the touch of a button, renkoo.typepad.com just plain disappeared from the webiverse. It's just a matter of time before it's gone from the Google cache, too.

I killed the Renkoo TypePad for three reasons. First, Renkoo TypePad was costing me an annual fee despite the fact that I haven't posted here in over a year. Second, two years ago I moved all Renkoo TypePad content over to renkoo.wordpress.com which is hosted for free. And third, Renkoo TypePad was costing me an annual fee.

In other words: Money, Money, Money.

It's 2008. Information wants to be free. Blogs should be free. Blogger is free. Flickr is free. Vox is free. Twitter is free. LiveJournal is free. Facebook is free. WordPress is free.

I won't go into why Wordpress is more fun to use than TypePad. If Six Apart decides to make TypePad free by September 1, 2009, I will keep this blog housed here. If not, I will move this blog. I already have ifindkarma.wordpress.com and I'm not afraid to use it.

How will Six Apart survive if they don't charge for TypePad? I'm sure they can figure something out. Chris Alden, Mena Trott, and Ben Trott, plus a deep bench, are so smart that August Capital put a lot of money in them to figure it out. So figure it out.

Because charging me for TypePad makes me want to leave so badly that I went all Keyser Söze on my TypePad tonight, and it felt gooooood.

Rather than give in to their demands he murders his loved ones and all but one of the Hungarians, whom he spares knowing that the survivor would tell the mafia what has transpired.

I killed one TypePad today. I'm ready and willing to do it again if I need to. Six Apart, set this TypePad free.

"Best Facebook App Ever": Booze Mail

When Facebook opened itself up to everyone several months ago, no one was sure what the appeal for non-students would be. Facebook needed a killerapp to lure those people with money but not a lot of time, and Facebook itself was unsure what that killerapp would be.

But Facebook was clever, and a month ago they released a platform that encourages other people to figure it out. It was clever for two reasons. First, to paraphrase Bill Joy, most smart people in the world are not on Facebook's payroll. Second, software and by extension Internet services reflect the worldview model of the people creating that software; allowing others to build on Facebook effectively represents other worldviews.

The most popular apps on Facebook to emerge in the first month of its platform reflect the most popular values in America, such as social status (Top Friends), media consumption (iLike, Video, Movies, Flixster), mysticism (Fortune Cookie, Horoscopes), and superficial bonding (Graffiti, X Me, SuperPoke, Free Gifts).

It's that last value -- superficial bonding -- that is most disappointing. MySpace has always been a place to "friend" many people you'd never want to meet in real life, but from its earnest beginnings Facebook aspired to use online tools to help people connect offline -- in the real world -- to build more meaningful relationships. What these superficial bonding apps lack, despite being fun, is a substantial connection to the real world that is offline.

This saddens me, because I'm fond of a saying the inventor of the World Wide Web uses in his talks. Tim Berners-Lee likes to quote Robert Cailliau in declaring that there's

"No such thing as a virtual beer."

What he means, of course, is that throughout the threads of human history, people have built more meaningful relationships while consuming liquids in each others' presence. To drink with someone is to bond with her or him; to do it regularly deepens that connection. From the watering pond five thousand years ago to the water cooler today, humans bond fluidly. There's another famous saying that humans are water's way of getting from one place to another, but I digress.

Maybe it's that the liquid lubricates the vocal chords enough to chatter more effortlessly. In any case, there really is something profound and hardwired in our wetware, that eye contact, body language, and back-and-forth talking actually makes participants feel closer to each other.

Relationships deepen via conversations that happen one drink at a time.

Of course, somewhere between 5000 years ago and today, water became too boring to bond over, so people developed conversations with... flavor. Tea, coffee, hot chocolate, juices, soda... and alcohol. Libations and spirits have the additional benefit of reducing inhibitions for those among us who are introverted by nature. This is why the social lubrication that alcohol provides encourages Sir Berners-Lee to still declare, in 2007, that there's no such thing as a virtual beer.

Or is there?

What if a virtual beer could double as an offer to get together to have an actual beer?

If the virtual beer were sweet enough looking, and the application for sending it was good-natured and fun, then the recipient could treat it either as an actual offer to get together in real life, or s/he could see it as just an ephemeral expression of "I think you're cool" if s/he was not actually interested in meeting offline. With the pressure of rejection removed from the situation, a sender can make offers to deepen friendships without trepidation.

Which is a long-winded way of saying that people could really use a tool for sending online drinks, to help them offer to connect with friends offline without the fear of embarrassment that comes from rejection.

Such a tool, instead of building superficial relationships, would help people to build more meaningful relationships with their friends.

And yet, none of the top ten Facebook platform apps as of the last hour of June 2007 have booze!

Note that I'm using the term "booze" playfully to connote all manner of liquids. Plenty of people have bonded without alcohol, and I think that's great. I do find it amazing that Starbuck's has managed to resist offering booze for decades, but I digress again.

When we started Renkoo more than two years ago, my co-founder Joyce Park was fond of saying that we were building a service that would, in her words, let people get their drink on by helping them arrange with friends when and where to get together in real life. "Coffee", "Drinks", and "Meeting" quickly became three of the most popular get-togethers that friends were using Renkoo to coordinate.

Journalists and investors regularly looked at the application Renkoo is building and saw an invitation service, and wrote that we were concocting an "Evite killer". We weren't; instead, we were competing with the 30-plus-email-threads that would happen every time we tried to coordinate a group of friends getting together for lunch... or a drink!

Joyce and I are both 30somethings with very little free time. She thinks email is boring and antiquated, and I get hundreds of (non-spam) emails from people every day. Plus, let's face it, email is no fun.

Unless you could include virtual drinks with your email that people could collect and use as a springboard for potentially getting together for real-life drinks.

Last night, Renkoo released our very own Facebook app to do exactly that -- and encourage people to get together and deepen their relationships:

The playfully-named Booze Mail (and yes, you can send coffee and other non-booze drinks)

Like email, you can customize the message to start or continue an interaction, and Booze Mails are sent to a recipient's email inbox by default.

Unlike email, you can turn off the deliver-to-email option. In fact, you can receive communications on your Facebook page if you install the Booze Mail app, so you don't need to use the email part at all. Also, every Booze Mail comes with a flavorful icon reflecting the taste of the sender, and recipients can have fun collecting the whole set!

In the 24 hours since we released the product, a thousand people have downloaded Booze Mail and more than 6000 Booze Mails have been sent. Most Booze Mails so far are single sender and single receiver, although there have been several people who "bought a round of drinks " for a few friends at once. And we're thinking through ways to make future communications more interesting.

When Facebook opened itself up to everyone several months ago, no one was sure what the appeal for non-students would be. Among those first thousand downloads of email were some people who signed up for Facebook accounts specifically so they could use Booze Mail. Yeah, I know that doesn't move the needle for Facebook, and it's anecdotal evidence at best, but it still made me smile when these users wrote to me that Booze Mail was the "Best Facebook App Ever". Thank you, everyone! Keep sending Booze Mails; we'll make more.

Renkoo's mission is to provide fun, useful services that help people get together in real life. We will keep improving both Renkoo's "classic" service and Booze Mail to better serve that mission. We truly believe that what separates people from computers are the services that help separate people from their computers. ;)

Renkoo Robots

Cheers!

Lately I've been enjoying... lunch.

Specifically, Renkoo's Lunchbox, which is beautiful, and This Week In Lunch, which will grow in usefulness over time.

Yesterday, This Week In Lunch sent us to Portobello Grill, where lunch started off... liquid...

Cosmo meets Beer, with Wine not far behind.

Twitter Notifications Off; Google Reader On

It was just a matter of time.

With more than 200 friends on Twitter, my text message notifications got out of control.

I got more than 1500 notifications by SMS in the last week. Too many to keep up with (and still less than Jason Calcanis before he turned off his SMS notifications).

To deal with the inundation of text messages, at first I turned off phone buzzing for SMS. There was no way to turn off phone buzzing just for Twitter, so I turned off phone alerts for everything.

As a result, Joyce said that she could no longer text me with important stuff, because there was no indication I would look at the text message in a timely manner (since my phone was no longer buzzing when it received a message).

So that solution didn't work. I needed to escalate.

So I've turned off Twitter.

And now that I've turned off Twitter, I can turn my phone buzz notifications-when-I-get-SMS back on.

But I still want to keep track of my Twitterfriends. What to do, what to do.

Enter Google reader. I can now read my Twitter friends feed in an RSS reader. And Google reader is so much more usable than I remember when I first tried it. As Zwoddy said, b'bye Bloglines. (Doubleplus good: I can add Renkoo feeds, too.)

Bloglines is to Google Reader, as Typepad is to Wordpress.

I now go to Google Reader and Wordpress everyday. Bloglines and Typepad, once a month.

Four Wordpresses and My Ever-Shortening Attention Span

In my everything is everythang life, I work pretty much every waking hour, and yet somehow in the last few weeks I've borrowed a little time to type a little in four wordpresses...

Wednesday is the new Thursday

Giving 2.0

Adam Rifkin wordpress

Renkoo Blog

Oh, the first and the fourth wordpresses are the same. So that's three wordpresses, not four. Off-by-one error. :)

I also updated my Favorite Places a little. And realized an alarming trend about my attention... a trend that MJ has also noticed...

In 2002 and 2003, I had the attention span and energy to create an entire website using my vast knowledge of 1995-era HTML -- ifindkarma.com. Yes, it's ghetto in its use of TABLEs -- but I'd like to think that it's ghetto fabulous.

In 2004 and 2005, my attention span and energy shrank to the size of blog posts, and even then I was often bloviating, like in this post about weblications.

By 2006, I barely had the attention span to squeeze out a picture on flickr or a bookmark on delicious.

And now, if I've got the energy to send fewer than 160 characters at a time to twitter once or twice in a given week, I'm happy.

In five years I've gone from websites, to blogs, to pictures, to bookmarks, and now (barely) to SMSs. If I don't pull out of this tailspin soon, the next likely step is complete silence. And/or paying someone else to write what I'm thinking. Hmmm.

Now that I think about it, that doesn't sound half bad. :)

Wherefore art thou still using IE6?

I'm still using IE6 because a majority of the users of Renkoo are using IE6, and I want to see what they see.

And yet, like Renkoo, I wonder why people stay with IE6.

Got any ideas? Contribute to the poll.

Adam Rifkin's Keepers

Time for some Adam Rifkin poetry, sure to make Joyce Park cringe...

Roses are red,
Beer comes in cases.
Now at Renkoo
I can list favorite places. :)

On that note, let's get to my list. (And yes, this is so cutting edge it hasn't even made it to the Renkoo Blog yet...)

Favorite Places in the Bay Area

Beard Papa Cream Puffs
Bob's Courthouse Coffee Shop
Bliss SF
Citypub
Destino Spa
Elbe
El Raigon
Il Fornaio
La Fondue
Mandaloun
Mango Cafe
Max's
McArthur Park
Milagro's
Navio
Prolific Oven
Tamarine
Talk of Broadway
Town
Vive Sol
Zibibbo

Favorite Places Elsewhere

Bliss 57 in New York
Charlie Trotter's in Chicago
Crepe Place in Santa Cruz
Etta's Seafood in Seattle
Hot Doug's in Chicago
Katz's Deli in New York
Tarantino's in Pasadena

That's all for now. Mmmmm... more later...

Slipping Away From Typepad

Forgive me, Typepad, for I have sinned. It has been over nine months since my last confession. In fact, except for deleting comment spam and trackback spam, I've spent almost no time here in the past year. Of course you don't mind as long as I pay my annual fee, but the less time I spend here, the less connected I feel to this place that houses some content from when my fingers danced over their keyboard many moons ago.

Where has my time been spent lately?

  1. Renkoo. Startups are all-consuming. Renkoo is a startup. Therefore,  Renkoo is all-consuming.

  2. Wordpress. The Renkoo Blog is there now. And the more time I spend with Wordpress, the more I love it. Now when I visit Typepad it feels like visiting four years ago. (Much as I try, I can't get into Vox, either.)

  3. Offline. One of Allen Stern's predictions for 2007 predictions is that people will decrease their overall online time by 10%. Allen writes, Renkoo is a tool that helps you plan offline events with your friends and family. Adam Rifkin (yours truly) spends a lot of time on Renkoo. Therefore, Adam Rifkin is offline regularly.

So I'm not likely to write a lot more here for a while. Maybe I would write more if I moved this blog to Wordpress, since I spend so much time there now. It's an experiment worth doing at somepoint. I'll let you know when/if that happens.

Happy Chinese New Year!

The great thing about advice is that there's so much to choose from.

Us gnomes are geniuses at corporations. In 2005, there seemed to be a prevailing air of encouragement of bright young small teams to get out and start companies; for example:

This optimism thankfully evolved into a more level-headed set of advice in late 2005 when Evan Williams offered his Ten Rules for Web Startups. 2006 has seen a continuation of this more even-tempered attitude; for example:

It's good to be eyes-wide-open as an entrepreneur. And remember not lose sight of the ever-important phase three: Profit!!!

Renkoo

Renkoo Beeta has finally shipped.

Joyce told me this evening that releasing the beta was like giving birth to a 20 pound bowling ball after 40 hours of labor. For a moment, let's bask in the afterglow before jumping back into improving and adding features.

Renkoo.com

Reality is the product of the imagination as it shapes the world.

After the final no there comes a yes.
And on that yes the future world depends.
        -- Wallace Stevens, "The Well Dressed Man With A Beard"

Eveything is Everythang.

Sometimes I go about in
pity for myself, and all
the while, a great wind
carries me across the sky.
           -- Ojibwe Saying

 

(Gathered in a hospital room, watching a boxing match on TV.)

Paulie, watching a boxer get hit: It's a life of abuse.

John Schwinn: Well, he is a boxer. Heh.

Paulie: It's the same for everybody. (To Tony:) Look at you, T. You do your uncle a kindness, you get shot for your efforts. You think you got family, but in the end, they fuck you, too.

Tony, to John: He's grieving. His aunt just died.

Paulie: I tell ya, we each and every one of us are alone in the ring, fighting for our lives. Just like that poor prick. (Points to boxer.)

John: Well, that's one way to look at it.

Paulie: You got a better one?

John: Don't get me started. It's complicated...

Paulie: Think I'm stupid?

John: Well, it... It's actually an illusion those two boxers are separate entities.

Paulie: What the fuck?

Rapper: Illusion?

John: "The separate entities" is simply the way we choose to perceive them.

Tony: I didn't choose nothin'...

John: It's... it's physics. Schrödinger's equation. The boxers, you, me... we're all part of the same quantum field.

Rapper's girlfriend: You ever substitute teach at Carlton middle school?

Tony: He's a rocket scientist, fer chissakes. Bell labs. (Boxer beats on other boxer.) You were saying?

John: Well, think of the two boxers as ocean waves or currents of air. Two tornadoes, say. They appear to be two things, right? Two separate things? But they're not. The tornadoes are just wind, the wind stirred up in different directions. The fact is, nothing is separate. Everything is connected.

Rapper: Everything is everythang. (Raises cup.) I'm down with that.

Tony: Get the fuck outta here!

John: The universe is just a big soup of molecules bumping up against one another. The shapes we see exist only in our own consciousness. (TV picture goes out.)

Paulie: You're so fuckin' smart... fix that TV.

John: (Laughs.) Okay...

...

Tony: So, Mr. Wizard, you were talkin' about tornadoes. Know what the Indians say about the wind?

John: No.

Tony: They say that sometimes we go around feeling pity for ourselves, but behind our back a great wind is carrying us.

John: We don't see we're part of a much bigger reality.

Tony: And then we die.

John: Why are you so interested in all this?

Tony: I was in the coma, and I... look, I don't remember nothin'. But before I woke up, I felt like I was being pulled towards something. And I don't wanna go back... Then my wife told me I woke up at one point. I said, Who am I? Where am I going? You know, it makes you wonder. About... heaven... and, uh... hell...

John: That presupposes a duality of good and evil. You know, it gets us back to the idea of separate, opposing entities. You know where I go with that.

Tony: Well, this Bible guy I know says you're going to hell.

John: Maybe he's right. Got my test results back. Laryngial cancer.

Tony: Jesus, I'm sorry.

John: Yeah, I was thinking maybe you could do me a favor, and, uh, you know, what's the term? "Whack me"? Sorry. Bad joke.

...

Paulie: All I'm saying, [your mother] Livia with all her faults never abandoned you.

Tony: Fer chrissake, Paulie, you know what your problem is? You go around in pity for yourself! You think you got it bad. You're not stuck in some hospital with fuckin' tubes coming out of you. You can eat food like a normal person...

Paulie: T., I never meant to trivialize your situation...

Tony: Well, you gotta get beyond this petty bullshit, Paulie... You... You're part of something bigger. When you gonna learn that?

...

-- Sopranos episode 69, "Fleshy Part of the Thigh"

Music

Reading

  • John Battelle: The Search

    John Battelle: The Search
    My favorite book of 2005. Period.


    (*****)

  • Steven D. Levitt: Freakonomics : A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything

    Steven D. Levitt: Freakonomics : A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything
    "Just because two things are correlated does not mean that one causes the other. A correlation simply means that a relationship exists between two factors -- let's call them X and Y -- but it tells you nothing about the direction of that relationship. It's possible that X causes Y; it's also possible that Y causes X; and it may be that X and Y are both being caused by some other factor, Z.

    Economics is, at root, the study of incentives: how people get what they want, or need, especially when other people want or need the same thing.

    Incentives are the cornerstone of modern life. The conventional wisdom is often wrong. Dramatic effects often have distant, even subtle, causes. Experts use their informational advantage to serve their own agenda. Knowing what to measure and how to measure it makes a complicated world much less so." (*****)

  • Malcolm Gladwell: Blink

    Malcolm Gladwell: Blink
    A book of anecdotes about the power of thinking without thinking; this book is a more interesting read than Gladwell's previous, The Tipping Point.

    New York Times: "Gottman believes that each relationship has a DNA, or an essential nature. It's possible to take a very thin slice of that relationship, grasp its fundamental pattern and make a decent prediction of its destiny. Gladwell says we are thin-slicing all the time -- when we go on a date, meet a prospective employee, judge any situation. We take a small portion of a person or problem and extrapolate amazingly well about the whole."

    David Brooks, who wrote that review, adds: "Isn't it as possible that the backstage part of the brain might be more like a personality, some unique and nontechnological essence that cannot be adequately generalized about by scientists in white coats with clipboards?" (*****)

  • Paul Graham: Hackers and Painters

    Paul Graham: Hackers and Painters
    I don't agree with some parts of this book, but I truly loved reading it, and it really made me think. I referenced it in my weblications and superhacker and phoneboy posts. Favorite chapter is How to Make Wealth. (Thanks, Ev.) (*****)

  • Joel Spolsky: Joel on Software

    Joel Spolsky: Joel on Software
    Joel is really good at wielding "diverse and occasionally related matters of interest to software developers, designers, and managers, and those who, whether by good fotune or ill luck, work with them in some capacity."

    Joel on Software embodies the principle of "Welcome to management! Guess what? Managing software projects has nothing at all to do with programming." This book, a compendium of the website's wisdom, is useful for everyone from team leads estimating schedules to software CEOs developing competitive strategy. (*****)

  • Bruce Sterling: Tomorrow Now: Envisioning The Next Fifty Years

    Bruce Sterling: Tomorrow Now: Envisioning The Next Fifty Years
    Bruce wrote this book to come to terms with seven novel aspects of the twenty-first century, situations that are novel to that epoch and no other. It's about future possibilities.

    "This is the future as it is felt and understood: via human experience... The years to come are not merely imaginary. They are history that hasn't happened yet. People will be born into these coming years, grow to maturity in them, struggle with their issues, personify those years, and bear them in their flesh. The future will be lived." Here here, well-spoken, Bruce. (*****)

  • The World's 20 Greatest Unsolved Problems: John Vacca

    The World's 20 Greatest Unsolved Problems: John Vacca
    "Science has extended life, conquered disease, and offered new sexual and commercial freedoms through its rituals of discovery, but many unsolved problems remain...

    If support for science falters and if the American public loses interest in it, such apathy may foster an age in which scientific elites ignore the public will and global imperatives." (*****)

  • Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins : Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution

    Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins : Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution
    I had the pleasure recently of meeting Amory Lovins and hearing him talk about Twenty Hydrogen Myths and the design of hypercar. (He also talked about Bonobos... wow.) I'm a convert to the way of thinking espoused in Natural Capitalism. I used to be cynical about the future, but Amory's work has made me a believer that many great things are about to come. The best way to predict the future is to invent it. (*****)

  • Merrill R. Chapman: In Search of Stupidity: Over 20 Years of High-Tech Marketing Disasters

    Merrill R. Chapman: In Search of Stupidity: Over 20 Years of High-Tech Marketing Disasters
    In hilarious prose, this book catalogs lots of stoopid high-tech marketing decisions. It offers clear, detailed analysis of many a marketing mishap, with what happened, why, and how to avoid such stupidity. Might just be the best. book. ever... (*****)

  • Paul Krugman: The Great Unraveling: Losing Our Way in the New Century

    Paul Krugman: The Great Unraveling: Losing Our Way in the New Century
    A book exposing the pitfalls of crony capitalism, from corrupt corporations straight up to the executive branch of our government. Krugman is nonpartisan -- what he exposes is foolish short-term thinking on the part of recent United States policies. The patriotic thing to do, he advises, is to fix these economic problems now before they become much harder to solve.

  • Henry Petroski: Small Things Considered: Why There Is No Perfect Design

    Henry Petroski: Small Things Considered: Why There Is No Perfect Design
    "Design can be easy and difficult at the same time, but in the end, it is mostly difficult." (*****)

  • Alexander Blakely: Siberia Bound

    Alexander Blakely: Siberia Bound
    One of my favorite books of the past few years. Xander is a master storyteller. (*****)

  • Susan Scott: Fierce Conversations

    Susan Scott: Fierce Conversations
    How to make every conversation count. One of my favorite books of the last decade. (*****)

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