As I’ve mentioned earlier in posts this week, I’m currently up in Boulder, Colorado for Startup Week , a week-long smorgasbord of startup events organized by Andrew Hyde of TechStars . It’s been my first time visiting Boulder, and to be completely honest, I’ve been blown away by its close-knit friendly community of startups, entrepreneurs, venture capitalists and more. I had always heard that Boulder was a very unique atmosphere for entrepreneurship, but I had no idea just how special this place was until I was invited to come visit. Sponsor Part of the reason I think Boulder has such a closely bonded community is that the entire downtown area is no larger than a few square miles. There are hundreds of startups located in and around Boulder, and their proximity to one another creates an amazing sense of solidarity throughout the city. When a new startup launches in Boulder, the entire town gets behind it to provide a base of enthusiastic early adopters. Groups of designers, developers and founders are constantly meeting-up and sharing ideas and advice for each other’s companies. Tuesday night, the Boulder New Tech Meetup became a standing-room only event, and tonight’s Ignite Boulder will fill the Boulder Theater with the equivalent of 1% of the entire city’s population. These are just a few of the valuable reasons why startups should think about moving to Boulder to launch their business. Everyone here is extremely supportive of each other, and access to the city’s entrepreneurial resources make it a haven for young companies to get off the ground. Plus, the weather is beautiful, and the small town feel of the city is a nice change from the hustle and bustle of big cities like San Francisco and New York. But if you miss that, Denver is just a half-hour drive away. I will be looking forward with much anticipation to the next chance I get to come to this wonderful city. I would encourage any company contemplating the idea of moving to the area to spend a few days in the community before making a decision. The city and its people are incredibly welcoming and chances are that once you show up you won’t want to leave. Granted, I haven’t been to Austin and haven’t spent a significant amount of time in Silicon Valley, but something is in the air up here in the Rockies. Disclosure: TechStars covered the author’s travel cost to attend the above event. Discuss
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First Impressions from Just Two Days in Boulder
If Location Apps are Games, How’s the Gameplay?
One of the motifs you keep coming across when reading about Foursquare and Gowalla, the mobile location apps, is that they are games, and the games are fun. The most important thing when it comes to gaming is the most subjective, whether the players are having fun. But it’s not the whole story. Were these apps structured to have gameplay, a through-line with obstacles and rewards? Are Foursquare and Gowalla, and apps like them, games by design? And if so, is the gameplay good? Sponsor If you’re unfamiliar with the applications, users visit various real-world locations and check in via mobile device. On Foursquare, they score “badges” for visits and, if they’ve visited a given location more than any other place, they become the “Mayor” of that locale. “Parents often make chores a game to get their kids to do them,” said Dylan Romero, Community Manager for The Great Game Experiment. “They hit the part of the brain dealing with achievement and reward to get more desirable results. I think Foursquare is more a game in this sense. If you want to incentivize customers, videogame or not, give them something to shoot for.” “The game mechanics are designed to lead people through the experience of using the product,” said Dennis Crowley, co-founder of Foursquare. In other words, gameplay is not in service to the game, but in service to the product. “The ‘game’ for me is to see if I can get a response or, even better, a perk out if it,” Klavars, a Foursquare user, Tweeted. Although there is currently no reward, other than regard among the Foursquare community, presumably, some venues offer specials to Foursquare users. Gowalla differs in some important respects from Foursquare. Gowalla uses a series of icon-based rewards called stamps. Given that Gowalla was born from a design company, it’s no surprise that the symbols are very attractive. Likewise its “items.” Locations are sometimes tied to items that show up when you’ve checked in. You can hold the items or drop them off elsewhere, which means a given place may have more items than it had originally. The scoring of these items seems more traditionally game-oriented than Foursquare’s simple badges. Gowalla also has the equivalent of badges in its pins which can be strung together into itineraries for trips.gowallaferry.png Gowalla also has the equivalent of badges in its pins which can be strung together into itineraries for trips. However, according to Gowalla’s Josh Williams, the company doesn’t see it as a game at all. “While there is certainly an element of entertainment and fun to be had while using Gowalla,” he told us, “we view it first and foremost as a social networking service.” “The iconic items are a bit of an experiment for us. Can we lay a transient piece of data across the service and allow people to interact with it by moving it from place to place, attaching meta-data to it (like a digital message in a bottle), or even attaching real world value to it, as in the case of the NBA tickets given away to a Nets basketball game last week. They’re simply another way to interact with the world around you.” Gowalla requires GPS and that’s how a user checks in. Foursquare only requires you enter the address, which has led to cheating. However, gaming is not just in the rules but in the expectations. With Foursquare, the unwritten expectation is that if you check in at a place, you will be there for some time. Here the location app aspect of Foursquare creates an expectation in its gameplay. On Gowalla it is perfectly acceptable to check in to a place you can’t really stay, like a landmark. It seems, then, that neither company has consciously designed their services to be games. But much in the same way that a kid finds a baseball diamond in a clearing in the woods, perhaps the users are the ones who’ve identified and acted upon, the latent gameplay. Because although Foursquare and Gowalla may not be games, there is a game that is being played with them. Gowalla, in requiring GPS and requiring no any real relationship to the place, might be less appealing on the location side of things. Playing Foursquare is also arguably simpler, and therefor more appealing to more people. I think it’s fair to say that people with higher gameplay expectations will probably find Gowalla more appealing, regardless of creator intent. People who want quick fun with more of a social aspect may favor Foursquare. Discuss
Hiring Programmers: Screening Out Liars and Duds
Every entrepreneur will tell you that recruiting the right candidate is important. While startups are constantly trying to find programmers that mesh well with their culture, team and work-style, one article suggests that companies still struggle finding candidates that know how to program at all. Jeff Atwood published a post this morning entitled, The Non-Programming Programmer with a stunning look at how many interviewees misrepresent their abilities. Sponsor Says Atwood, “I am stunned, but not entirely surprised, to hear that ‘the vast majority’ of so-called programmers who apply for a programming job interview are unable to write the smallest of programs… It’s the equivalent of attempting to hire a truck driver and finding out that 90 percent of the job applicants can’t find the gas pedal or the gear shift.” Atwood suggests putting candidates through a quick programming test before screening for culture-fit and personality. In a past post he presented us with some phone screening questions and something he calls the FizzBuzz test. Today he points to Mike Lin’s See[Mike]Code as an excellent screening resource. Lin’s site allows you to watch candidates program in real-time. Those that complete the 10 line programming test are then considered for an in-person interview. These tests can potentially save a company alot of money as many in-person meetings require springing for airfare and a hotel room. Other good screening resources might be found in a candidate’s GitHub profile or in links to their contributions to open source projects. Photo Credit: turtlemom4bacon under the CC Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic License Discuss
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