Seal's Blog - Previews of New Music
Thursday, March 08, 2007
Some of you will know that Seal is among my favorite musicians. Back in the mid-90's I used to collect all the imports and singles that I could find (no fair that they are so easy to get on iTunes now). I also would contribute photos and tidbits to the Future Love Paradise fan site when I could. Seal was actually the first concert that I camped out for tickets for (back in '94)
Anyway, fast forward to 2007. Besides a baby and supermodel wife, Seal has a great blog which he has been using to answer fan questions, show of photos from his life, and even preview new songs that he is writing!
I believe the days of creating in a secret lab, whether it be art, software, music, or novels are coming to an end. The future is creating in the open, letting your audience participate in the process. Thanks Seal for leading the way for the music industry!
It makes you wonder about these tech companies that make you sign an NDA before even telling what their product is... There is a (probably remote) possibility that someone is going to rip off all your ideas and get to market before you, but perhaps it would help customers spot and avoid the rip-off if the creative process was more transparent in the first place.
T2 Beta
Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Are you planning on doing a public beta for T2 by the way?
Good Question!
Let's start with some history... I got the idea for Bee Docs' Timeline from a Mac Lawyer discussion group that I was hanging out on about 2 or 3 years ago. I decided to take on the project, spent a few days drawing timelines in Adobe Illustrator and two weeks later, released my first beta of Bee Docs' Timeline.
For the first beta (which was an extremely rough version), I only invited people from the Mac Law discussion group to participate. They gave me their e-mail address if they wanted to join and each and every Friday I released a new and improved version to the beta group.
As the software reached my own milestones of stability and functionality I expanded the invitation to more and more people. Eventually I sent out press releases telling people about the beta. When the software was about a month away from its final release, I no longer required that people sign up for my e-mail list, instead anyone could download the beta from my website or sites like version tracker.
Bee Docs' Timeline was in pre-1.0 development for about 6 months and by the end of it I had several hundred people on the e-mail list and hundreds more who downloaded it without officially signing up. Each week's release generated dozens of e-mail suggestions and bug reports. The process was lots of fun and highly collaborative.
For T2, I also want to involve customers in the creation process but I want to try something new. One thing that is different is that I now know, based on hundreds of customer e-mails, phone calls and blogs, what people as a whole would like to do with Bee Docs' Timeline that they can't do now. I also know which of those things I am going to tackle in T2. The trick to T2 is going to be how to provide the new functionality while increasing ease of use, which everyone wants but nobody every asks for (especially those who try the demo and don't end up buying).
I'm also dividing my time differently with T2. Instead of doing design, development, and testing on a weekly iteration, I am slowing the cycle down. I am doing most of the design up front this time. This allows me to focus on the integration between all the new features. It also gives Apple time to stabilize Leopard before I get too deep in coding. It may also allow me to hire outside help for some aspects of the development.
Consider this blog the first part of the process. I'm tossing out ideas here about basic design, features, pricing structure, beta, icons, etc... The reason I am doing that is so that I can get feedback.
I'm a little concerned about other developers copying my design ideas, so I'm being a guarded about some of the design specifics. I'd rather be completely open, even to a very detailed level. So, I'm thinking of starting a separate private blog that I could invite select customers to join and provide design feedback. It wouldn't be for people to tell me everything they've always wanted but rather for things like "Out of these two alternatives, which do you think would be the easiest method to add a new event" or "In which menu would you expect to find the event import feature?" The private blog would be invite only and I would want those invited to commit to regular participation, not just lurking to see what's coming.
After the design is complete. I'll spend a month or two (or three) implementing the design. As soon as it is stable (ie, won't screw up your data or your computer), I'll release it for other folks to try. Probably the private blog readers first and then expanding the circle of users like I did in the 1.0 beta. There will likely be a month or two of polishing the application while there is a public beta before the commercial release. There will likely also be some polishing after the public release in the form of point releases too.
To the readers of this blog, please let me know what you think of this plan. If you agree that this is a good strategy, I'll work out a process for choosing the "design team" participants and get it set up right away.
Moblog
Saturday, July 22, 2006
If this works right, at the press of a button the photo I just took will get uploaded from my Sidekick to the T-Mobile server, then forwarded to my Flickr account where it will get tagged with keywords like 'cameraphone'. Then Flickr will forward the photo and the description to my blogger account, which will format the blog entry and send it to my server as well as pinging the search engines and feedburner which will make the RSS feed all nice and pretty for your news reader.
Of course the last step is for you to download the entry to your computer.
We're server surfing now baby! Web 2.0 style.
I'm Blogging Exbiblio
Exbiblio has asked British Journalist turned blogger Hugh Fraser and me to blog about Exbiblio's project to transform the way people interact with paper documents.
I will be writing from an insider perspective and Hugh will be writing as an outside observer. We are looking forward to great discussion with the blog reading community about the way people interact with documents, our company, and the future of paper.
I will continue to use this blog for Bee Docs' Timeline updates and personal tidbits like book reviews, but my posts at Exbiblio will receive more of my energy and focus over the coming months, so please come over and join us and be sure to add the new blog to your RSS reader.
Labels: blogging, exbiblio, hugh fraser