Tag My City blog

July 29th, 2006 by Kinan Sweidan

Callie has already started blogging on Tag My City. The blog is about music, art, fashion, food and culture in the Dallas area.

Ximda team is working hard on getting Tag My City website lunched by the end of August. We are planning on having a website launch party by Sptemper. If you are in the Dallas area and like to come to the party, contact me to send you an invitation.

Posted in Entrepreneurship, New Projects | No Comments »

37signals accepts investment from Bezos

July 21st, 2006 by Kinan Sweidan

37signals announced today that they raised venture capital from Jeff Bezos (the guy behind amazon.com)

The move seemed to upset a lot of 37signals followers. 37signals has been a successful business model for small startups. They built very popular web 2.0 projects (Basecamp, Backpack, Campfire, Tadalist, and Writeboard) and initiated the development of RoR (Ruby On Rails).

I totally understand the reason behind their move and I think Bezos is one of the most innovative entrepreneurs and his input will be very crucial to take 37signals to the next level.

Congratulations to 37signals..

Posted in Entrepreneurship, News | No Comments »

Time, budget and scope.. the triangle of evil

July 14th, 2006 by Kinan Sweidan

TagMyCity logo

I’ve been working lately on my newest website TagMyCity.com. The website will allow users to do the following:

  • Create user profile
  • Add places e.g restaurants, spas, clinics..
  • Review places according to service, price, dress code, parking…
  • Upload pictures of places and users
  • Create events calendar for each city
  • Create groups and social networking

The website will also provide users with maps and driving directions using Google maps APIs. All the activities are real time which means when a user creates a place, the place will be created right away with no moderation (like wiki)

I usually like to push a slim version v1.0 as fast as possible because it keeps me excited about the project and it provides valuable feedback from first wave of users. Unfortunately that wasn’t the case with TagMyCity.

TagMyCity place

I felt yesterday that I was getting intimidated by the size of the project and it’s taking me too long to finish it. So according to the time, budget and scope triangle I have no choice except to scale back the scope.

Here I am trying to define the most important parts that I need to have in v1.0.

  1. Create a place, review it and upload pictures (place pictures)
  2. Create user profile and upload user’s pictures
  3. Limit searches for places by city with no distance predefined
  4. Get longitude and latitude of the place address (using web-service SOAP or XML-RPC) and locate it on Google map

So now that I have my new requirements written down, I am going back to my trusty Ruby on Rails (RadRails) IDE to continue coding. I will update this list weekly and document my progress.

TagMyCity- Place Pictures

Posted in Entrepreneurship, New Projects | No Comments »

Open source software is entrepreneurs best friend

July 14th, 2006 by Kinan Sweidan

osi

Start up cost for IT projects is usually very high.. you spend $$$$ on database server, $$$ on an application server, $$ on operating system… couple thousands here, couple thousands there and you spend all your budget on infrastructure.

Open source software has changed the game forever. If you own a small business or a start up company then you need to use open source products to lower your cost and save your money for the actual implementation of the application.

I build both complex n-tire enterprise applications using J2EE and SOA technologies for big companies and simple websites using Ruby On Rails and Ajax for small businesses. Sometimes I feel that I work in two conflicting worlds… the enterprise domain which only believes in big names and sophisticated solutions and the small business domain which believes in keeping things simple and at low cost.

Software Engineers at smaller companies come up with very interesting solutions for complex problems by using a lot of open source products. They are not afraid of trying open source software with the mentality of “how could you loose money when you don’t spend any money”.

The story is totally different in the enterprise world (except my friends at Google and Yahoo!) where complex solutions are provided for simple problems and open source software is considered more expensive to implement because it comes with no support or guarantee.

The true story is… open source is a serious contender to proprietary software and big companies need to get real and adapt to the new generation.

I personally would rather to spend my money on customizing open source applications to fit my needs instead of buying out of the box proprietary applications which were designed to fit everybody.

Here is a list of some of my favorite open source software (they are organized in a random way)

The list could grow too big so I am going to stop :)

Posted in Entrepreneurship, Open Source Software | No Comments »

When it’s good to be small …

July 14th, 2006 by Kinan Sweidan

I’ve always admired small companies and their abilities to come up with innovative ideas and elegant solutions in very reasonable time.

Its all about communication.

Small companies enjoy friendly and productive communication where the point of having meetings is to agree on things rather than disagreeing on them. On the other hand, big companies suffer from formalities and bureaucracy. Their meetings are about achieving personal agendas rather than providing practical solutions.

What surprises me the most, is the desperate attitude of some small companies to act big and to adapt to the corporate culture . As if you act bigger your revenue is going to increase. They don’t understand that having long meetings is a problem. They like to add more and more managers and directors to the point that they can’t get anything done because of the bureaucracy overhead.

What these companies don’t realize is that their size is their biggest advantage. They are more likely to satisfy the ever changing market demands than bigger companies.
If you are in the entrepreneurship business, you already know that plenty of the new ideas presented under big companies were actually made by smaller companies, or individuals. del.icio.us and upcoming.org are only few examples. These cool websites were 1-man projects…. Yes only one man, he is the designer, the developer, the project manager and the owner.

Big companies rather to buy smaller companies applications than trying to implement their own. The corporate philosophy is it cost more to build than to buy.
If you are small company owner, your company size is your biggest advantage. So don’t try to lose your friendly culture while big corporates are spending big money to restore theirs.

Posted in Entrepreneurship | No Comments »

Tag My City - update 1

July 14th, 2006 by Kinan Sweidan

Tag My City logo

If you are not familiar with Tag My City project, please read this first.
I am doing some progress on Tag My City website. The following functionalities are almost fully implemented:

  • Add a new place
  • Get the longitude and latitude of a place
  • Review a place
  • Upload pictures of a place

I am still not sure if v1.0 should cover all US. cities or just Dallas. I will be making a decision about that in the next two weeks.

Posted in Entrepreneurship, New Projects | No Comments »

Next Entries »