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what i do

Web Entrepreneur William Kasel

Design Recognition on RGB Garden

The Man 9:13 pm

Hey, check it out, I got recognized on RGB Garden for two of my sites! First, this site, which you can check out here; and the second one which is for State Rep, John E. Bradley’s site, which is located here.

Also, if you want to contact me for any design, programming, customization of any open source application I can be reached at william {at] jumpfox [dot] com.

Gmail is down!

The Man 4:59 pm
Gmail is down

Gmail is down

Gmail has been down for quite some time. I was in the middle of writing an important email, and BAM! I tweeted Mike Arrington, but im sure he already knew. Yikes, im pissed. Look at the twitter search http://search.twitter.com/search?q=gmail, ive also read in some comments on the TechCrunch blogpost, that MobileMe, and supposedly Facebook is down.

Things & stuff…

The Man 4:14 pm

I decided to just chat about the state of things right now in my life. So– I’ve been working in Sproutcore for a while, it really is an amazing tool, but the learning curve kind of kills me. I hate not knowing something, and having complete command over it.

I ran across this tutorial by Johannes Farenkrugg. It walks you step by step through the use of sproutcore, and OpenSocial. I plan on writing a tutorial on sproutcore if I can get this stuff figured out in a reasonable timeframe. Any thoughts?

I pushed my move back to San Fran just a little bit — ill be moving sometime around the middle of this month. Looking for a place in The Presidio — anything open? 2 bedrooms or more please.

Because I pushed my move back, I now have more time to devote toward Heartland Singles, and getting things set up there. I actually have a meeting in a bit with some of my people from Heartland Signles, and the meetings I am setting up.

Well that is it for now.

Trip To San Francisco

The Man 9:19 pm
UpdateMy pal Brian has informed me ” I was the front end developer for one of the new product features (something unannounced) for Picasa Web Albums.”

My apologies Brian, I hope I don’t get you in trouble. Thanks again!

An awesome view of fog rolling over The Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. A special thanks to Flickr user Sutanto.

An awesome view of fog rolling over The Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. A special thanks to Flickr user Sutanto.

Last week I got an email from my contact at FlowGram asking me if i could fly out for an interview in the next day or so. If you do not know the history there,  I have been interviewing for this startup for a few weeks now.

So — I book my ticket for the next day at 7:00 CST, and start packing. For this I used Kayak, they are awesome! Anyway — I live in the middle of nowhere, so I had to drive an hour and a half to get to St. Louis International, halfway there my car overheats, and I’m stuck on the interestate. After the family helps me out, i get back home, and got to play the phone game — you know– the one where you call the travel insurance agency only to find out that had i wrecked i wouldn’t have to pay the change fee, but because im not in the hospital, or my car didn’t get crushed I have to dole out $150 minimum. They tell me to call CheapTickets, and CheapTickets tells me to call United, I call United and United tells me to call CheapTickets. So I tell them my story, and they transfer me to customer support. After 2 hours, and $175 I finally got to reschedule my ticket for 6:05 AM.

Now its time for a math lesson. I got home at 8ish — I spent 2 hours rescheduling — that makes it 10.  My flight leaves at 6 — it takes an hour and a half to get there, and an hour to get through security and what not, so that means i need to be there by 5, and leaving by (with a 30 minute leway) by 3. Ill need an hour to get ready, and gas up, putting me at 2. Through all the rush, it is now 10:30 — i still had to arrange a ride! So this all falls in place by about 11, to quarter after. Leaving me about 2 and a half hours to sleep. WELL I’m 20 something — I don’t need sleep. So we just go. Thats right no sleep — and an interview the next day!! We run around town, chugging red bull, and getting lost on the crazy St. Louis construction work interstates. Finally, I get dropped off at 3:30.  WOW. I have hours! Fast forward… im on the plain. I hear “We are having some minor difficulties with our navigation panel — this should only take a few!” JESUS CHRIST! Another 20 - 25 minutes goes by, and we are off — to Denver.

I land in denver, and litterally have to walk 100 feet if that to get to my next gate — cool. I go up and ask for a window seat. The woman puts me right behind First class — meaning more leg room — cool cool! I get on the plane, and as usual, I have to chat with my neighbor. Come to find out, he is the VP of Marketing for Fujitsu. KICK ASS! I talk this guys ear off. He was a really cool guy. Unfortunately I forgot his name! lol. Moving on — about to taxi, and the pilot comes on — “It uh… appears there is too much fog in San Francisco to land — we are going to have to wait for clearance — it could be up to an hour!” GREAT! Now, waiting on MOTHER NATURE! Just shoot me! Finally — we get going, and i get in to SFO only a few minutes late. Bam, back on track!

My ride picks me up — its David from Flowgram — a very cool guy. He really knows his stuff. DId i mention it was 60, and sunny in San Fran! God I LOVE the weather!

So — i go straight to the interview — I get a tour of the place — very nice, right off Market, across from Adobe.  After a few introductions we decide its lunch time, so we go to this awesome thai place.

After lunch, its crunch time. I felt like I was in a Google Interview. I had to program on the white board with a dry-erase marker. This proved to be more of a difficulty than i expected. I faired ok, but there was one problem in paticular that got me stuck (if you want to know it just email me).

Finally around 4:30 i left, and start walking down market. Had great Indian food @ Mehfil Indian Cuisine — the best Biryani I’ve had. After that, I walked down market, over to China Town, and down to Embarcadero, where I stopped at Butterfly, a trendy modern bar. I don’t know how much i paid for my drink, but the fried calamari appetizer, and a drink cost about $22. Not toooo bad, i guess it is San Francisco. The sun started to go down, and despite it being Friday night, i was cashed — i caught a taxi to Brian’s place where I stayed, and crashed. Brian was a nice fellow — the former lead front end designer for Picasa, just a bit away from his PhD, he was very bright; when I came there he was programming an iphone application just for fun. ;). Its kind of funny, his roomate worked for yahoo, and loved Google products, and Brian, working at Google, never took a liking to them. Below is a map of Friday’s route:

Saturday — I had to wake up at 6:30, Brian was going to Reno. I grabbed my bag, and walked around for a few hours. I dropped my bag off at the Four Seasons @ Union Square, and proceeded to stroll around until later that day I met up with a few old friends. First Marquis, a college friend visiting his cousin, and artist living in Oakland. Marquis is in charge of the marketing for OneCouture, the clothing line started by some Alums of my school, and good friends. After dropping his bags off at Hotel Union Square, we proceeded to have a few drinks at the Clift.

I later met up with Ben Weiss, a guy quickly becoming a close friend of mine, and my future roomate/business associate. We hung out with him and his Girlfriend in The Presidio. After he dropped her off we programmed, and talked business until later that night, when we left for a small party in the hills over Redwood City. From what I heard, we were in the same neighborhood, and in close proximity to where David Packard lived before he died. I met some cool people there, and partied till the sun came up.

The next day I left San Francisco, but I left knowing it was only a few more weeks till i was back, and it was permanent. I love San Francisco, and the culture. As one poet put it:

“It’s the indescribable conglomeration of beauty and ugliness that makes San Francisco a poem without meter, a symphony without harmony, a painting without reason — a city without an equal.” - Herb Caen, San Francisco Chronicle

Is twitter invincible?

The Man 3:09 am

Far from — Twitter, while having a brilliant idea, lacks many features, necessary for survival. In reference to the TechCrunch article posted yesterday, It really seems true that people could care less that twitter is always down, which proves the loyalty twitters userbase has. Twitter traffic remains steady

Twitter almost appears to have the Google, simplistic, thing going for it, but could that arrogance hurt them in the long run? The user base isn’t so much loyal, as it is dependent. There has yet to be something out there that takes twitter on in a really intuitive way. Of course there is identi.ca,  but unfortunately, they lack the biggest feature that keeps the tweets rolling in — the existing user base, and network. If Twitter had a way to export your followed, and followers, then we would see the end of Twitter in the upcoming months.

The network Twitter provides has even spawned comments by some of the nets top bloggers, quoting Michael Arrington of TechCrunch as saying “I now need Twitter more than Twitter needs me.” (TechCrunch, 08). It’s not the excellent service, it’s the network. Port the network somewhere else, and anything can survive.Twitter service is down

As quoted from the geek cult classic Pirates of Silicon Valley “You survive by making people need you, then when they need you they have nowhere else to go.” That is probalby the most relevent line to twitters continued success — It is both the question, and the answer. How will Twitters castle crumble?

Is the Facebook Platform a lost cause?

The Man 2:54 am

Social Media is obviously the driving force behind web 2.0, and how much better of a way to embrace social content than to open your site to developers? It goes back to the original Fast Company article on Ning, and the Viral Expansion Loop. Get members of the social graph to make something, that makes the parent node to the other nodes (people). Obviously, Facebook did this with their developers platform, and It has paid off well for them, and been highly embraced.

I have always been, and still remain the biggest proponent of the the developers platform, but it seems like the buzz is dying, and the community is being filled with garbage — usually clones, and over-simplified apps. One suggestion, and one that I always believed in, was the social graph allows good things to bubble to the top, in sort of a democratic way. But, think about first mover advantage, with companies such as RockYou, and Slide. They were able to jump in before there were anti-invite groups started to shut down the application platform all together.

The simple truth is the platofrm has been abused, and Facbook is suffering. Their grand idea is slowly slipping to commonplace. What does Facebook need? I don’t know. If they start cutting apps, then there would be an uprise, but something needs to be done. I am glad to see they are cracking down on the big dogs.

Maybe facebooks new redesign will help stop the mess facebook has with the applications, but with that set to launch July 16th, I wouldn’t expect much.

William Evan Kasel
me I am the founder of buzzbuy.com, a new kind of shopping utility for merchants. Using our tool, it is possible to create a fully functioning e-store in about 5 minutes. Embed the store in your existing site, or use your special url to send buyers to your store.