Why do I like geeks? Cause they get excited by building things. Solving problems. You can see it in their eyes. When I was at Carnegie Mellon in the Robotics Lab a geek yelled “it works!” when his code compiled and made the robot do something for the first time. I love that act of building. Of discovery. It’s the purest thing about this industry. All the other stuff. The accountants. The lawyers. The PR. The marketing. Are things that geeks put up with so that they can fund another moment of discovery.
I’ve been very fortunate in the past 24 hours to be able to look in the eyes of a couple of remarkable geeks: Richard Lusk, CEO of Foldera and Albert Lai, founder of Bubbleshare. They showed me their products. Demoed their latest features. And talked about their dreams. I’m kicking myself for not videotaping them, but I’m sure you’ll all discover them soon enough anyway.
Both told me about being shocked by just how fast adoption is happening. In Foldera’s case they had 400,000 signups in their first 14 days (it was all kicked off by a link on TechCrunch). I hear, from Richard Lusk, CEO and Oliver Starr, CMO (pictured here getting ready for my demo) adoption has actually increased in the past two days (those numbers are three days old). These are remarkable numbers. The word-of-mouth network is far more efficient than it was. Remember ICQ? They released November 1, 1996 to 40 people and by December 15, they had 65,000 downloads. These numbers BLOW the ICQ adoption curve away.
Is Foldera real? Damn, it is. I want it. It’s like Sharepoint and parts of Outlook put on the Web. Small businesses are going to eat this up. And I was suprised to learn that it’s built in .NET. Even better. But, I don’t want to hype it up too much. This is something you need to discover for yourself.
Bubbleshare? They just released a few new features yesterday. They have the first zoom (I snapped a picture of Albert’s screen when he demoed it to me — all done in AJAX, it’s very cool). The first audio annotation on photo sharing service. Cool blog integration and more. I’m going to start using Bubbleshare for my photo sharing. You should check it out. It’s not as hip with the insiders as Flickr, but they are doing some cool stuff that Flickr isn’t doing that makes it worth your consideration.
I hope you get to see the fun that both of these teams are having building software. That’s what it’s all about.
