Great Things come from Small Packages

An amazing statistic right? 2 million from 24; impressive anyway you slice it. Take that Facebook! In your face GroupOn!

We live in a viral world. Growth is no longer a slow and steady process; it happens seemingly overnight. Ideas go from atomic, to ubiquitous, in a flash. For entrepreneurs, the soil of new business growth couldn’t be riper. In 2011 more Americans, and citizens of the globe for that matter, will start their own businesses since the turn of the century.

As we close this decade, ask yourself what “idea rabbits” do you have waiting to blossom? Remember, the greatest of successes, begin as the smallest of ideas.

All the best,

jay_signature_email

Jay Kubassek

Cool Stuff Overload

While there is no shortage of crappy stuff in the news to brood and
mope about (if that’s your kind of thing that is) there is plenty to
inspire, excite and amaze out there too! I feel like everyday I find
out about a new innovation or story to draw both creative, and
entrepreneurial inspiration from.

So, with that said, going into the weekend, I thought I’d give you
guys a quick run-down of a couple interesting stories, people and
things I’ve come across in the last couple of weeks.

Facebook Facial Recognition:

The skeptics will yell Big Brother is watching, innovators will
marvel, and the conspiracy theorists will scream The Patriot Act is
running our lives! Still global facial recognition is mapping the
globe in a way even the most dyanmic of imaginations may have never
considered.

DeleteMe:

Abine, online privacy company, launched the other day launched
DeleteMe. Which is basically a delete button for the internet. Users
pay between $10 to $100 depending on how vast and complicated your
digital history is, to remove photos, videos, blog posts, old
accounts, you name it! Now you don’t have to worry about those
compromising snapshots of Halloween ‘02 when you regretfully decided
to be Spiderman.

Cassius: “I love you so” Video and App:

Vertical Integration, once a term reserved for boardrooms and
quarterly reports, is now the reality of any small business. Social
Media integration has become fundamentally intertwined with the
creative process; with entities of all shapes and sizes finding
interesting ways to interact with their audience while still providing
a promotional vehicle for their product.

Case and point. New York indie band CASSIUS. Who released a iPhone app
specfically created for the promotion of a single song. Appropriately
titled “I LOVE YOU SO”

The Ultimate Babysitter

The world’s most wanted man has just added “babysat” to the litany of
titles he’s already garnered. Julian Assange has finally been released
by British authorities into the custody of a man almost as interesting
as he is. Vaughan Smith is a former Grenadier Guard and the founder of
the journalist’s Frontline Club, a sanctuary for journalists and free
speech advocates. Mr. Smith released an open letter to British paper
The Independent revealing an intimate and definitively humanistic
portrait of the man of the hour Julian Assange. Worth the read: CLICK HERE

All the best,
jay_signature_email

Jay Kubassek

ON SALE NOW! Your Digital Footprint: Now Available in Concrete!

Let me start by stating:

I am not a politician, nor do I have a desire to be.
I am not a diplomat, nor do I have the desire to be.

With that said; WikiLeaks, Holy Crap! What a fiasco.

The term digital footprint is not new. We all understand by now that something or someone, somewhere and somehow, has a record of just about everything we do online (just ask the U.S. Government right?). WikiLeaks has shown that digital transparency is no longer really an option per se, it’s more of a reality.

Now, it is not my place to comment on the socio-political utility of WikiLeaks; as I said before, I’m not a diplomat! However, I do believe for the entrepreneur, how the government, the FCC and contemporary media-at-large, handle this intelligence blunder will determine in some form the future of web-related privacy.

Last week, a State Department official warned Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs students that discussing, posting, or commenting about WikiLeaks on any social media platform could “severely endanger” their future employment prospects.

The email is re-posted here:
________________________________

From: “Office of Career Services”
Date: November 30, 2010 15:26:53 EST:
Hi students,
We received a call today from a SIPA alumnus who is working at the State Department. He asked us to pass along the following information to anyone who will be applying for jobs in the federal government, since all would require a background investigation and in some instances a security clearance.
The documents released during the past few months through Wikileaks are still considered classified documents. He recommends that you DO NOT post links to these documents nor make comments on social media sites such as Facebook or through Twitter. Engaging in these activities would call into question your ability to deal with confidential information, which is part of most positions with the federal government.
Regards,
Office of Career Services

________________________________
Okay, well a couple of things:

1. It’s now obvious that the government, along with a multitude of other entities who want to commodify your online presence are: recording, notating and evaluating everything that you  do online.

2. Ummm…doesn’t this smell dangerously of 1st Amendment rights infringement?

3. G.N.F. Google Never Forgets

4. What you do online is no longer written in just pen, it’s in concrete.

As an entrepreneur, the line between your digital presence, and your actual presence is becoming rapidly minimized. The same integrity, and commitment to principle you carry in your day to day life, must translate into your digital presence, period.

As we move further and further into a digital economy, it’s only natural that your “digital integrity” will continue to be of growing importance and be a substantial vetting platform for online business consumers.

So remember, as business guru Warren Buffett says: “It takes a lifetime to build a reputation and only 15 minutes to destroy it.”

All the best,

jay_signature_email

Jay Kubassek

Coming Soon, to a browser near you….RockMelt!

First there was Flock, basically Firefox all dressed up in Myspacism. Then Mozilla jumped in the bathwater with Ubiquity (a double entendre if I’ve ever heard one) a plug-in like browser tool that let you update multiple social networking sites simultaneously. Hiya, Howdy and Hello….welcome RockMelt to the stage; Facebook’s integrated browser.

So…just to recap for a second, Facebook now has a deal with BING, to capture the search space, and now RockMelt to insert themselves into the browser argument? Not a bad market share right? Interesting little side-note, RockMelt is based on Google Chrome (same speed, looks and functions) so it looks like Facebook surely doesn’t discriminate when it comes to choosing partners.

In theory, RockMelt is actually more of a “social web browser” since you will eventually be able to upload, update (and every other up-prefix) to ALL of your social media platforms (it’s just Facebook and Twiiter at the moment).

Reviews of the beta phase are out. Per usual, the best review article is on WIRED: (Click Here to Read), or give it a test drive at RockMelt.com

Here are a couple of other notable site reviews:

All the best,

jay_signature_email

Jay Kubassek

Tesla and Toyota hop Into bed

A couple of weeks ago I wrote about Tesla motors, and their leading vision for electric hybrid vehicles. Well yesterday, Tesla CEO Elon Musk took one giant leap forward in making that vision a reality.

At Toyota’s annual dealer meeting in Las Vegas yesterday, Musk and Toyota President Akio Toyoda announced a $60 million dollar agreement to develop a new version of the Rav4 with the super cool Tesla electric powertrain.

The filing reads:
On October 6, 2010, Tesla Motors, Inc. entered into a Phase 1 Contract Services Agreement with Toyota Motor Corporation  for the development of a validated powertrain system, including a battery, power electronics module, motor, gearbox and associated software, which will be integrated into an electric vehicle version of the RAV4. Pursuant to the Agreement, based on preliminary specifications, TMC will pay Tesla approximately $60 million for the development services to be provided by Tesla.

Tesla expects to have a fleet of RAV4 prototypes later this year, and a commercial model of the vehicle will be ready by 2012.

News organizations, and more important every EV startup around the world, is now swooning after seeing the possibility of going from, well…just a well funded startup, to the parts provider for one of the world’s biggest automakers! Does this spell a paradigm shift in auto-making? Are we finally waking up? Or have the “auto-crats” just finally found a way to make electric vehicles profitable?

Maybe it’s all of the above. But regardless of the reasoning, it spells a victory for entrepreneurs, efficient energy initiatives, and more importantly for our children.

All the best,
jay_signature_email

Jay Kubassek