Facebing! Get ready for it…maybe?

Ya know, in the movie The Social Network (heard of it? Ha!) there’s a scene where Mark Zuckerberg, still in college at Harvard, goes to hear a lecture from Bill Gates where he says: “the next Bill Gates could be in here right now!” (pretty meta huh?)


Whether good ole’ Marky took that very moment to heart we’ll never know, but he sure is doing what he can to emulate him, and now, he’s working with him!

It used to be an algorithm game; now you can throw math by the way-side, they will have knowledge of just what you and your friends like through your Facebook profiles. The two companies (who started working together four years ago)  are basically looking at your Facebook Like buttons you and your friends have clicked, then inserting a module into the search results that spotlights pages they’ve given a thumbs-up.

This shift into a more integrated and personalized search experience spells a massive chink in the armor of Google. Check out this great article on FastCompany for The Six things you (and Google) should know.

All the best,

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Jay Kubassek

Google Brings Merlin to Email

Can Google do any wrong, seriously? It’s like they have these rooms —filled with really smart people somewhere, just sitting around a table coming up with great ideas to make your life easier. While cheerful gnomes massage their feet, feed them magical grapes and sing carols. Wait, that’s what happens actually doesn’t it? (minus the gnomes probably)

Announcing Email Oracle, a browser plug-in, which allows you track a bunch of different aspects of your email accounts. Wonder who’s opening your emails? How long it’s been since someone responded? Want to set a reminder for yourself to get back to them? Get analytics on all your communication? Ummm yes please!

Check out the video tour below:

Oh yes, and of course it’s FREE. Three cheers to Google…again.

Jay Kubassek-

Oh Canada…my home and native land…

As you know, I’m Canadian. The grand land of Gretzky and Bullwinkle. Molson Ice and Keanu. Well, maybe we could do without Keanu. We’re a country of rather warm and engaging people. Travel anywhere in the world —  if you see a few people having a good time, and they invite you to join in, chances are they’re Canadian!

True to the spirit of the good humored Canadian disposition — comes what may be the coolest entrepreneurial idea ever — FLATTER ME CALLS. Flatter Me (http://www.flatterme.ca/), started by two guys in Montreal, is a service that lets you sign up for a friend or colleague to receive a phone call with these guys complimenting them!

Three amazing things here:
1. No idea is too outrageous to become a business if your intentions are rooted in the right place. These guys wanted to prove to themselves, and the world, that you could make money doing something to make other people feel good about themselves.
2. It’s only 5 bucks
3. Canadians rock.

Here’s a few things this great service could be used for:

1) Employee Motivation Phone Calls. Did someone do something great at work? This is new way to encourage a job well done.
2) Cheer Me Up Phone Calls. Know someone that is having a bad day? Feeling helpless? We can help.
3) Happy Birthday Phone Calls. Happy Valentine’s Day. Happy Anniversary. Happy Father’s Day. We do it all!
4) Appreciation Phone Calls. Mom’s overworked? Wanna make someone feel appreciated. We won’t let them forget how valuable they are!
5) You Can Do It Phone Calls. Know someone that has a goal? Training for a marathon?

I think the service is great, and the idea is even better. “Pay it Forward.”

Have a great weekend everyone.

All the best,

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Jay Kubassek

Khan Wins!

A little over two years ago Google announced the 10^100 project. Where people all over the world could submit ideas in competition for millions in funding. It began with two simple questions: What would help? And help most?

2 years later, and over 150,000 ideas submitted, Google announced their 5 winners. I’m pleased, but by no means surprised, to find that The Khan Academy (www.khanacademy.org) is amongst the winners. Awarded 2 million dollars to help the organization create more courses and translate them into multiple languages, the Khan Academies meteoric rise is just another testament to the power education and philanthropy combined.

As for the other 4 winners…well let’s just say I think I might have come up with a couple things a little cooler (monorail capsule bicycles?). What do you think?
Read More: Click here to check out the other winners.

All the best,

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Jay Kubassek

Zero emissions: The Way of the Future

tesla-roadster-25-xlConsidering the oil-related environmental disasters we’ve seen lately, most visibly with the BP oil spill, it’s now clearer than ever that we’ve got to kick our addiction to fossil fuel. Given the advancements in computer technology and the like, it’s sort of amazing that electric cars aren’t already in widespread use in the US. This month’s WIRED (one of my favorite magazines by the way) Joshua Davis discusses how the delay in implementation hasn’t been for lack of innovation. Electric car technology has been in existence—demonstrating world-altering efficiency—for close to a decade.

What’s been holding us back you ask? You guessed it: Marketing.

Back in 2004, the problem with getting the old electric cars off the ground had little to do with real metrics like: a lack of speed or interior room; it had more to do with what you would call the “cool factor.” Early electric cars weren’t much to look at, or to sit in for that matter. Investors balked. Partly because they couldn’t envision an American public, that for better or worse, usually likes suped-up, cool-looking cars, over the homely, environmentally friendly one.

Enter Tesla Motors. CEO Elon Musk (co-founder of PayPal who walked away with a cool $180 million) put $6.3 million into Tesla to help make their new electric vehicles high-end and high-performance; but also incredibly cool. A product with the stylistic innovation to compete with the Mercedes luxury sedans and Porsche Roadster. As we all know “interest begets interest.” Soon companies like Daimler and Toyota took the bait and followed suit. Toyota is now working with Tesla to develop electric RAV-4′s.

Here’s a quick rundown on how they work: the Tesla Roadster is powered by 6,831 rechargeable lithium-ion batteries. What’s that? They’re the batteries that 2011-Tesla-Sports-Cars-Roadster-2.5-6are most likely powering the laptop you’re using to read this! They have great energy-to-weight ration, and a slow loss of charge when idle. Lithium-ion technology is improving exponentially to help us all stay connected, and the guys at Tesla have smartly just adopted the technology. Their cars actually advance at the same rate as battery science. No need for car companies to innovate batteries when others are already on the job.

Whereas oil needs to be drilled for, extracted, refined etc; electricity can be made in plethora of ways. Wind farms, solar arrays, coal-powered plants; all of these have next to zero emissions, and their CO2 footprint is far, far….far less than that of combustion engines. The new electric cars on the market can be plugged into a 220-volt line. Davis: “Just like the dryer!” The dashboards of new models even boast an icon that shows the nearest locations of battery depots  for recharging.

The prices right now are pretty outlandish for the typical consumer. But as a former auto mechanic and a sports car enthusiast, I’ve gotta say my eye was immediately drawn to the Tesla Roadster 2.5: 288 horsepower, a 56-kilowatt-hour battery good for 3.5 hours of non-stop highway driving, or around 245 miles if driven casually around town. Yes, it’s currently around $109,000 (or $101,500 after the tax credit!). But expect that number to drop drastically as electric cars become ubiquitous here and abroad—as I firmly believe they will.

For those who are discouraged by the relative unaffordability of electric cars at present, I’d refer you (yet again) to one of my favorite quotations from Mr. Henry Ford: “If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.”

For now, in an enduring recession, most of us will have to settle for gas-powered (and occasional gas-guzzling) automobiles. But the cost of innovation is high, and the sooner we can all accept that a zero emissions model is our only alternative for a sustainable future on this planet, the sooner we’ll be able to afford killer-looking electric cars.

All my best,

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Jay Kubassek