HanMeta: FeedSt It Is

As 10/10 grew near, I started getting pretty disappointed that I had not yet decided on a project. I’ve thought about doing a PHP web app with an MVC framework to an iPhone app written in Cocoa. I’ve even thought about developing content for blogs with topics ranging from programming to business development to… music games. (Yes, I love music games. Too much. In fact, if a certain post gets done, you’ll see how much I love music games.)

After some meetings with the Josh’s upstairs (in my mind), I’ve decided to move forward with making a feed reader. Not GadgetGet or SetStat, but FeedSt.

Why Not Gadgetget?

Here’s what I wanted to create in a nutshell.

  • Gadget repository
    • First a niche market (maybe just Apple products to start out), then move into anything using electricity. Heck, at this point, consider moving into any nonperishable item ever. Maybe RFID would have taken off then…
  • Search engine for pre-existing prices and reviews
  • Gadget pricing
    • Keep historical data of price point drops and show trends.
  • Wishlists across vendors
  • Marketplace(s) for buying and selling gadgets
    • Push data to eBay, Amazon, and Craigslist, or even, create GadgetGet’s own marketplace.
  • Better reviews, with relevance.
    • A new algorithm-intensive (of which I’d have to re-learn some of the insanity) engine to parse relevance on who’s reviewing what.
    • Example: I care much more about what a friend with a proven track record of awesome gadget picking has to say about some douchebag online complaining about the shipping company when it has nothing to do with the product.
    • Much later, I figured out that this is called “Collaborative Filtering”. Definitely quite the challenge.
  • Much more in-depth specs and comparisons.
    • One example: LCDs
    • Warranty: Really annoying to find if you’re looking at multiple LCDs.
    • Actual item weight: I needed this for mounting the LCD, but everyone was listing the weight for everything that comes with the box.

Most of this functionality exists out in the web. It’s just not tied together in one happy place. I also have a list of companies that have already created so-so comparison shopping sites that achieve some of these features but very poorly (sidenote: I have no idea what gdgt.com is supposed to be about, but maybe it’s something like this?).

The real question is, would I use this? I would use this to keep track of all of my gadget purchases, and even check how much I’ve spent on stuff over time. It’d be a very useful system to buy and sell used gear as I shed my technological skin very quickly. It’d also be extremely useful for when I want to find out more on an array of items. If I ever wanted to get into photography, I could very quickly look up which lens were awesome at what, using reviews of people that I trust.

But I can deal. Searching on Google for review ends up serving me pretty well, and all I really ever do is go to Amazon and Newegg for reviews and buy from Amazon anyway (because Amazon Prime is so freaking awesome). Eh. It’s a problem that I feel like only a certain few people have, and I don’t foresee myself paying for this service. If that’s not the case, if it really is that I’m trying to profit from advertising (3rd party accessory affiliate sales or direct affiliate sales or just general Google Adsense), I’d need some serious runway in terms of money, hardware, and people. Eh. I’ll maybe work on this later.

Why Not SetStat/StatusFix?

Initially, this project was supposed to be my first foray into creating a pure social network. You know, the kind where there’s very little thought to actually how one is to make a living off of one. (I kid… kinda.)

This was my first effort (although a minor effort, at best) of actually doing what people would generally call a “startup”. I got a couple of my friends together to build the thing, and renamed it to StatusFix. I probably should have gone all out and went for VC capital, if I were bold enough. Regardless, getting a group of friends fired up about a social networking app was ultimately a fun overall. Getting everyone together and managing meetings as well as release schedules… would have been fun if I kept going.

As the project unfolded, I lost sight of what I wanted. I learned that this wasn’t a project that I was in control of, but became much more of a group effort. This isn’t a bad thing if from the start it was to be a group effort, but from the get-go I had a vision for StatusFix, and I wasn’t going to compromise it. I also felt that I wasn’t a very effective person in the project overall. I had to step back and prove to myself that I could “do”.

So I left, leaving it in the capable hands of the people I worked with. I haven’t heard much about the project after I left, but I think it’s still being worked on here and there. I’m definitely holding onto StatusFix.com for a while… it’s a good name, and maybe someone will make some use of it. (I want 5% cut, tee hee.)

I learned a lot of lessons from this experience. Relationship lessons aside and more on business lessons, I learned that I didn’t want to go into creating a project for the sake of having a project made. It had to be useful for me and also be freaking profitable. Also, it had to be fun, new, and exciting in ways that I can’t really describe: the gut feeling.

And so, more recently, going back to the original name, this general concept of a social networking application turned into one for setting status messages across multiple platforms. (Sidenote: StatusFix was going to be everything and the kitchen sink. Which would have been redonkulously awesome.) It wasn’t just for messages; I wanted to incorporate status images also. I began to think about the iPhone platform for this, since there’s a camera built right in. The location awareness was interesting as well. With the recent garbage that’s going on at the iPhone App Store with the NDAs and the removal of applications, I thought twice on this project.

However, the iPhone App Store is not why I pulled back on this. I decided to go with another project, although I see myself using this app quite frequently. I feel like someone else can work on this. It’s just something I may do in my spare time, but it’s not all that important. Also, the features of this app might as well just be an addition to any of the multitudes of applications out there already.

Plus, it’s a social networking app, for the sake of social networking app. Facebook is doing that… moderately well. They’re keeping afloat, which is good. The only place I’ll be making money is the sale of the iPhone app, and maybe some kind of freemium scheme for the webapp. Meh. Definitely a good side project or a proof-of-concept project, though.

Why FeedSt?

Okay, finally. To the point of the post.

I use Google Reader. A lot. I don’t think I can go without a whole day without my news (lest be hit with the dreaded 1000+ count on the number of unread items… I’m never letting that happen again). I can benefit directly from a better feed reader, with a lot of features that I personally can use and love and would even pay for (not much, but I’d be willing to go over from free to not free, $.00 to $.01, which is a huge difference.). Reader’s good, but it can definitely be better.

The question is, am I building an app based on just pure providing the same look and feel of Google Reader plus some features? I hope not. I hope to actually do something different than just slapping a few more features on Google Reader and call it. I wouldn’t pay for that, not saying that this is strictly going to be a pay-only service. Freemium ftw.

A sidenote here is that I have a soft spot for this project. This truly was my first “business mindset”-driven project ever. After I graduated from college and after I did a couple months of freelancing, I really wanted this project to work out into the first project of HanMeta. I went on and got a full-time job, though, and so the plans of world domination was put aside.

Make something people want. That’s it.

I feel as though feeds are going to be immensely important real soon. I’m talking not only in the technorati, but for everyone. “iTunes for data”? Heh.

Of course, I can’t put all my eggs in one basket. But really, at this point, I’m sick of the researching of what projects I should or should not be doing. I picked it. My gut has a warm and fuzzy feeling. I hope it isn’t the massive amounts of caffeine.

Rock. Roll. Repeat.

I feel like a huge weight has been thrown off my shoulders. Now, it’s time to learn even more what I have to learn as I go along.

3 Weeks Remain

The long four day weekend was mostly spent on one of two things: Rock Band 2 and setting up for projects. And the Rock Band 2 stopped as soon as I completed the game in solo guitar mode. And no, I didn’t count the Endless Setlist… unless I can get 3 other kids to go all out for hours and hours on end.

This weekend was a blur. I don’t remember much of it. A lot of late night talks with Dean didn’t help the project progress, but was beneficial. As a sidenote, he’s my third impromptu roommate after I started living solo (I guess I should count that Jong-Sun kid, because he was over constantly, so four).

Moving on, I’m hoping to get the whole development environments set up tonight. It seems like my forearms aren’t even happy about my typing this entry. We’ll see if I’ll sleep happy or not.

Summary Of Said Weekend

I have these artifacts as evidence to the caffeinated stupor I was in.

The Six Cans of the Apocalypse

Remember, the green one’s the most tasty.

But yeah, working ’til the week hours of the night/morning, I popped on the sysadmin hat and rocked out. Finally after having installed MediaWiki (it’s a little slow, I need something faster… any suggestions?), I started to document the insanity.

I bought a new”er” slice at slicehost. I love how close to the metal all of the insanity is. I finally got to see how Derek worked his magic during the days of StatusFix… er… more like I copied and pasted commands, all the while man paging everything that went past my eyes. Lots to learn and screw up on so that I’ll learn even more.

Still need to work on Capistrano deployment from the git repository. Hoping to get this done tonight. Still not sure where I should be developing… should I be using my computer for both dev and test? Hmm.

Lots to chew this week. But indeed, only three weeks remain.

Tired of my Twitter Updates Yet?

Subtitle: “Suck It Up and Write.”

It’s been a while, I know. As each day passed without a worthwhile post being put up here, it got harder and harder to write. My thinking is that if I could somehow blog about how I haven’t been able to to blog, it’ll get the ball rolling, and the dailies will follow.

Physical Limitations

Subtitle: “I’ve got tunnels in all up my extremities”

Yeap. My wrists are acting up again. And quite a bit, actually. I feel like exercising and working out helped to lessen the pain, but… I’ve also been having issues with my ankles for two months. Turns out that after seeing the doctor for the first time since I got my work permit, I might be onto something called Tarsal Tunnel Syndrome. We’ll see if I have both Carpal and Tarsal next week after I get some strange electrical testing done on me.

It could be that all these issues are connected to some kind of Hypothyroidism. I hope not.

Also, for about a week, my jaw wouldn’t open all the way. I’m only realizing now how much I grind my teeth as I sleep. Might be why my jaw feels a little stiff when I wake up.

And I’ve been having pain in my upper left abdominal region. This one is still up in the air. Maybe poor posture?

So to sum it up: My body is like… melting away. This leads into…

StatusFix

Ah yes. My first multi-member project that I hoped to be a part of. Health complications definitely made me a little bit hesitant to continue in this endeavor. Also, there were huge lessons I started to learn as I partook in this project.

Which will follow later.

So those that don’t know yet: I’m off StatusFix. It still feels kinda like my own project, but it’s… time for the next project?

The Next Project

If my wrists aren’t going to be stupid, I’ll be posting the details to my next awesomeness. Also, I’ve secured another client to work for. At least I’ll be secure in that for a little while.

New Toy: AppleTV: Delicious

  • Overall, it’s great… when it works. I’ve had it crash and start on me twice, and it hasn’t been a week yet. Once, I had this weird green screen that made it restart on its own; the other time, I had to physically hard boot it. That was just at the beginning: now it’s getting better.
  • It’s made me watch video podcasts at the beginning, because I didn’t have any video content on it at first. Like Diggnation HD, which is pretty entertaining, although not that informative (this podcast stuff is another post on its own… my goodness, is someone keeping count on how many other posts this single entry is going to spawn?)
  • Over 802.11g, it’s slow. It’s slower than I could have ever imagined. Streaming music isn’t a problem. It’s the part where I want my entire music library and a few TV shows/movies on AppleTV. The first sync took me an entire night.
  • Rather than hack it, I’ve just started to re-encode things into H.264. Not the best codec for quality… or maybe it’s just the fact it’s re-encoding from .avi files. Hope to figure this out.

Twitter: It’s destroying the way I blog

Seriously, it’s making it blogging too easy. I also looked at Tumblr.

Less friction to getting my content out means faster updates. It also means a HUGE decrease in signal-to-noise ratio.

A second blog

See what’s going on? These sections are becoming Twitter updates. Oy.

But yes, I’m thinking about starting up a second, much MORE focused blog. I’m just trying to figure out the logistics of keeping and maintaining two WordPress blogs. I might have to call on some source version control software to automate plugin updates and such.

BLAH BLAH BLAH

Okay. I’m blogged out for now. Come back later for something more worthwhile.

Josh Kim: Co-Founder of StatusFix

I’ve heard about this state of realization I’m in during my Entrepreneurship class, back in my senior year of Illinois.

StatusFix is no longer mine. It’s ours. I’m glad that it is, even though initially, it hurt a bit.

Dose of Reality

It was an idea I’ve had for a while. The Entrepreneurial Beast inside couldn’t wait any longer on the ideas I’ve carried in my brain and my notes. I‘ve had some inkling as to what should be done, and so, going by the book, I’ve shared my ideas with close friends and colleagues.

At that point, I still thought it was my idea. While I was sharing about the multiple ideas I’ve been scheming and listening to comments and suggestions, I thought that I was laying foundations for something… greater than me.

Hilarious: Creating something greater than me, and thinking that it’s still mine. Silly me.

Tangent: Facts I Cling To

  • Less about the Idea, More about the People.

  • Most likely, someone else had thought up your idea, too.

  • A great leader enable others.

Back to Your Scheduled Post

Even though I’ve had these facts seared into my brain, I couldn’t apply them with StatusFix.

It’s a paradox, really. I never thought of my friends as free slave labor to my riches. I wanted everyone to be fairly compensated. But at the same time, I wanted my vision to permeate within StatusFix. I wanted my DNA to be implanted into this thing. I wanted to lead.

Initially, I was really excited to have people onboard. This being the first time working with a group outside of school or work made things refreshing. Also, I was surprised that others actually believed in this idea. Enough to use some of their time, skills, and effort to bring it to fruition? Awesome.

Then, reality kicked in. Sometimes I was wrong. But rather than admit defeat, I would stand by them for the sake of standing by them. (I do this alot.) Silly me. Sometimes I was right, and I would have to defend my position. All in all, these discussions were the process that brought our team of five to this place in time.

There seems to be no end in sight for learning and growing, just like other areas in my life: I can be wrong, I just cannot forget to learn.

The truth is, though, I brought these guys together, underneath the banner of StatusFix. I’m managing my own resources as well as StatusFix’s. I feel like a manager at times, but I must “know my role”. I am not the “leader”. I am the facilitator.

Always bear in mind, Josh Kim: Without the people, StatusFix is nothing but another page in your idea notebook.

Now What?

I’m one of the 5 co-founders of StatusFix. I am also the founder of HanMeta.

StatusFix is only a sub-project off of HanMeta at this point, until it gains some momentum (momentum meaning… profits). If it does, then we’ll actually create a company, and divide up the profits/losses.

Creation/Upkeep cost of HanMeta is 100% my own. Eventually, hosting and domain registration costs will be divided along the percentages agreed to at an earlier meeting. (JUST for statusfix.com and Slicehost – VPS Hosting).

Now I can sleep better at night, knowing that when that day comes when we make our first $1, I know how to divide it up.

Footnote: “Secretary”

A nickname I had in high school was the “Secretary”. I will not going into details why, but I think it’s apt to write that here.

If any of my high school friends want to comment on this, go for it.