Category Archives: Ormigo

The Future of Social Networks

I just read two competing views that are actually very similar.

First the wonderful Charlene Li from Forrester blogged that social networks will be like air in the future. She actually has a few slides available from a recent talk. In short, she believes that in 8 to 10 years you will look back to Facebook or LinkedIn and wonder what people where doing there because in the end, everything will be social.

The general idea is that the Open Social Graph is really something that we need and that the big players will be working on together because having one social graph is really to the benefit of everyone. It’s really what Noserub, which one of our devs Dirk has initiated, is all about. This means that in the end the social networks that are just there to be a social network, will die. I am already filling all my social networks with my GMail address book (not inviting people just syncing and seeing how is there) and this really means that my GMail address book is my social network.

At the same time Cringely wrote his latest piece called Antisocial. He argues that it is getting too much and boy do I agree. I can’t join the 50th group or add the 75th application or check who bit whom or what who rated. He really believes that there is just not enough value in all of them. The next big thing will come along faster than you think.

It ties in wonderfully with something I think John Battelle said recently, that these sites have to start competing on features and not on data. Because in the end, Cringely is right, and Charlene is too. Most of them that are just social networks will die, because there is no reason to have them if you have a social graph underlying your life. This is really why we have built Ormigo over a social network. We are no social network as such because that is not where the value comes from, but we are a local market place and local market places of the future will have to be built on social networks, because local is inherently social.

Our value does not directly come from the social network but rather it is one of many features. The value comes from giving you the best local merchants to solve your current problem. Social connections, analysis of the life stream of user and merchant, and so on, in the long run, will be important to do this correctly. Interesting times ahead.

Update: And yes, that means that there will be lots of features, systems, sites out there that will just use social components. This is exactly what Facebook is about. Just read this from Zuckerberg:

Beacon isn’t even a part of our ad team. It’s part of our platform team. We think these large social networking sites are going from large monolithic sites like facebook.com … to social services. A lot of them aren’t even things we’re building. Some of them are going to be inside facebook.com. An increasing amount of that is going to be outside facebook.com. What we were trying to do with Beacon was taking the first step with letting people take actions on other parts of the Web and feed back into what their friends are doing. It also ties into the ad system, because it can be an endorsement — someone you care about is doing something, that’s much more effective.

Scoble on the Future of Search

Techcrunch posted a few videos from Scoble on the future of search, where he argues that Facebook, Mahalo and Techmeme will throw down Google from its mighty mountain. The full list of the videos is here. The idea is Social Graph based search. It will overtake Google, Microsoft and Yahoo!.
His first point is that you didn’t find the post through search, because the search engines do not know what is inside the video. First error there. Currently this might be true, but not in the long term. You might want to read Surviving Immortality by Cringely. Computers will become more and more powerful.

One of his big point is that Mahalo, Techmeme, Facebook are SEO resistant, meaning resistant from spammers. The thing is though that everything normal people can do based on logic, a computer will be able to do eventually. Sure it is not easy, but it is something that will happen eventually. They will be getting better.

Techmeme, built a fabric by hand through linking behavior between the top blogs. This is good, but it is nothing that cannot be done automatically. It’s pretty similar to pagerank really, just that there is a person filter behind it. This is the people rank that Google has already talked about. Of course having access to a social graph, is something that helps to build this kind of trust graph. Did you know Google just hired Brad Fitz, LiveJournal fame, who is working on opening up the Social Graph, similar to what our own Dirk Olbertz does with Noserub. I shortly posted about it when I cleared my backlog. The push is going on to open the social graph up just because it really helps in creating your own search engine. Lijit is another search engine that is working on this. We are working on monetizing it at Ormigo through building a quasi-lead market that banks heavily on getting to know people and connect them with the best local merchant for their current needs.

As you notice, I really believe in the social graph bit. If I have a financial consultant, or a lawyer, a friend or even his friend, that lives in my town, might want the same one when needed. This is something that is already happening offline, but we are monetizing it online. First through allowing advertising of services through aggregation, but learning along the way how people interconnect. It’s again automated though.

One point Scoble has is that Facebook has been able to keep the seo spammers out, which seems to not be the case for e.g. Plaxo. I am not sure yet why an open social graph cannot keep SEOs out of the system. My friends are my friends and the graph increases the value of those friends for linkage.

All in all very good ideas, but I am not buying that it will replace Google.

Update: Now read this.

Michael Kleindl invests in Ormigo

We just sent out the press release that we were able to attract Michael Kleindl as a second Angel Investor for Ormigo. The German press release is here and for a bit more information in English, check out this story on alarm:clock euro.
After Hemjö Klein, we are very happy to be able to welcome Michael Kleindl on board, who has been helping us amazingly in terms of contacts in the internet media industry. And we thought we have good contacts ;)
To give you an idea on why Michael invested, I’ll try to translate his German quote from the press release.
„The local advertising market is one of the very big growth markets. With it’s concept, Ormigo, the two founders and the technology is ideally set-up to conquer not only the German market.  The business model is a perfect addition for every notable publisher.” – Michael Kleindl
Tell me if you have a better translation :) I would only like to add one thing, namely the team we have managed to attract to Ormigo. I am very thankful to all of them for taking the leap and trusting us to do the right thing. The experience and level of dedication that flows through our offices is a wonderful sight. Thanks for sharing the vision.

formcamp in Munich

Currently formcamp is taking place in Munich at the German Yahoo! HQ and our own Timo has been invited to take place. We are looking forward what kind of ideas he is bringing back to extend our platform.

Ormigo Online

I wanted to wait for a quiet period for writing a bit about our launch, but as this is very likely not to happen, I am just writing a few notes now. As said, Ormigo launched last week and things are going very well indeed. What we are doing, in very short, is allowing local merchants to have access to new customers that inform themselves about products they sell online. The entire system is focussed on products or services that are not sold via an impulse buy, but where you have to or want to talk to a real person before making a decision.
As it is currently still focussed on creating demand from local merchants for different products (financial products in germany first), there is not a lot for the general internet user to do. This being more of a B2B service this is even likely not to change too much in the near future.
Thanks to the great team have have assembled, launching went smoothly and we are already well into the next sprint for another part of the system which will focus more on the user side of things. But with this, I’ll finish and go back to work for another period of light blogging. :)

Amazon Elastic Compute Could aka EC2

I wrote some time ago about my first AWS Billing Statement, already commented by Marshall from TechCrunch. As they now wrote themselves Amazon EC2 is currently being trialed by a small number of long-time Amazon Web Services customers.

Thankfully, my last post about their S3 service seems to have put me in that camp and I am now free to play with the new EC2. :) Actually, I think it might be a good decision on their part, because I might really be using this for Ormigo some time in the future, dependent on how different services pan out.

The idea to easily deploy a new server without worrying about it too much is a good one and having a scalable infrastructure is too. The biggest problem really is that it’s still a bit expensive. With Host Europe i can get a 2.8 GhZ Xeon, with 2GB of Ram and 2 73 GB SCSI drives with Raid, including 5TB of traffic for 199 EUR, or I could go with Hetzner and take an Athlon 64 3700+, with good setup and unlimited bandwidth (throttled at 10MBit/s after 1TB but can be increased again in 250GB increments for free).

The question is how easy the servers can be managed, how easily DNS can be handled with possibly changing IPs or crashes, how fast the boot and what the network speeds are from Germany. But all in all, in the corporate space, this sounds very interesting.

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Now the Headhunters Call

Now the headhunters are already calling on the main Ormigo number and let themselves be connected through to our employees … what the hell. :)

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Fusemail starts to Rock

We recently chose Fusemail as our email solution and it is really starting to rock. I searched for a long time for a hosted email solution as I really don’t want to have to think about it and I was very happy to find Fusemail. We now have 1GB IMAP mail boxes with them. Spam filtering seems to work great and if something like spam ends up in my inbox I simply drag it to the spam folder and the system learns.
Above that I just synchronized my Contacts and Calendar via SyncML from my Nokia N70 to Fusemail and now my Contacts are shared with the rest of the team. iCal Remote integration still has a few problems but I am sure that these will be solved soon. The Webmail interface is nice for on the road and all in all I am starting to be a really happy guy here.
If you are looking for a reliable email solution, take a look. There is an Outlook Sync client for those in the windows world, but due to SyncML it also works well with non-Windows people. Here at Ormigo we now have two Windows systems, two Macs and one Linux machine, meaning that we want it to work everywhere. Fusemail does that.
Thanks also to our reseller GID mbH. I can be a pain sometimes, I know ;)

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Jobs at Ormigo

Greetings everyone. I posted another update on the Ormigo Blog about another job opening. First we were looking for core developers, which was also posted on the old Ormigo site and has proven to have been quite successful. After our successful financing, we changed the site a bit so you can’t find the original bit about developers anymore, other than on my own blog. At the moment, the Ormigo Jobs Section has three open positions, all in German. One would be for a quality assurance professional, which I called Qualitizer (for Quality Optimizer) here. This can be a part-time, or freelancer, or whatever job really. This should really be a full time job but we are testing our feet to see what is out there first. There are lots of options for you to move in this post, and we are open for suggestions. The new job I just posted is for a Web Developer who will be responsible for our Front End, Corporate Identity and Usability initiative. We are looking for a young and fresh mind that wants to move things and has an eye for good web design and a drive for going deeper into the development part of it all.
The other job that is posted is an internship for a marketing, creative writer type of position. We want somebody that is good with words and wants to try out their skills in a fresh new start-up. Looking forward to hearing from you too.

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Ormigo Looking for a Qualitizer

To not have the world blow up in our face before we start, we‘d like to solicit the help of a quality assurance specialist for a PHP Platform. This might be as a freelancer or, preferably, as a resident developer (part-time possible) who likes to go beyond simple PHPUnit implementations. You want to think ahead and find new ways to exploit what your head tells you and your fingers allow you to code. You like WebServices and know about the problems they bring, love PHP and enjoy working a team.
The team is small and you will be able to shape the world we live in, contribute back to the open source systems you use and make sure that the core developers can happily code away with a big stick looming over their head that gives them a big NONO once they build something that doesn’t connect well with the rest of the platform.
In general you are bug hunter, but your personal goal is to not have anything to hunt for when they builders go to the woods. While the builders push forward to extend our woods, you make sure that everything stays nice and tidy. As such you do not simply want to test what is there but to build a harness, a system within the system, that facilitates keeping the code performing well. At the same time you know that a certain roughness, a certain fertilization on the soil, is a good thing. Some things will fall from the trees when shook but as they will not hurt anyone for the time being. It’s the trip wires you have to deal with first.
Interested? Contact me a oliver(at)ormigo.com. Looking forward to hearing from you and chatting about how we can make this work for you and build a great product together.

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