by admin - Published: August 27th, 2010 -

This November, Americans will head to the polls and choose from a multitude of candidates vying to become the next senator, governor or mayor.

But one particular race won’t be determined by popular vote, nor will it guarantee a certain length of term. We’re talking about the mayorship of a venue on Foursquare.

One of the more hotly contested places in New York City is the Chipotle on St. Marks Place. Ownership once resided with Mike Singleton, a software developer at Foursquare. But, when he least expected it, co-worker Nathan Folkman ousted him, and the battle was on.

Check out how the drama between them is playing out and tell us about your own battles for Foursquare supremacy. New mayor? Ousted mayor? We want to hear all about it in the comments section below.


More Foursquare Resources from Mashable:


The State of the GeoSocial Universe [INFOGRAPHIC]
Top 5 Ways Big Brands are Using Foursquare
Beyond Foursquare: 5 Location-Based Apps for Your Small Business
Why Location-Based Social Media Needs to Get “Passive” Aggressive
Top 16 Unusual Foursquare Badges


Reviews: Foursquare

More About: chipotle, companies, foursquare, foursquare mayor special, iphone apps, tech, trending, video

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by admin - Published: August 26th, 2010 -

Forrester logo According to a new report from Forrester, mobile development has gone from being a separate silo to being mainstream. As more and more IT departments will be called upon to create mobile applications, Forrester recommends managers and developers adopt its POST (People, Objectives, Strategy, Technology) strategy. POST was actually created for marketing and business development professionals, but the company explains how to apply it to mobile application development.

Sponsor

People

The process begins with profiling your target audience. Forrester identifies four types of mobile users:

  • Task workers
  • Information workers
  • Wannabes
  • SuperConnecteds

Each has their own requirements and you need to determine what those are before starting.

Objectives

Next you must determine what business objective(s) you want to meet and whether the mobile channel is an appropriate means for accomplishing those objectives. Forrester identifies the following innate strengths of mobile and suggests considering whether any of them correspond to your business objectives:

  • Acting quickly on time-sensitive information
  • Adding location-specific context
  • Alerting passive users to take action
  • Acquiring new customers
  • Reducing traffic in higher-cost interaction channels

Strategy

Before selecting what technology to use, Forrester suggests asking the following questions:

  • How many users do we need to reach?
  • What will our mobile application user experience (UX) be?
  • How will we deliver and support our mobile application?
  • Are on-device hardware capabilities needed?
  • Is the number of mobile users predictable?
  • What’s the application’s duty cycle, and what is our level of commitment to the app?

Choose Your Development Technology

Finally, you’ll be ready to choose what technology to use to build the application. There are now several options available for mobile development, including:

  • Mobile Web technologies
  • Java Micro Edition
  • Native client development
  • Full Web technologies
  • Container-based rich Internet applications
  • Mobile middleware platforms

Forrester recommends taking a full Web approach if possible.

Discuss

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by admin - Published: August 25th, 2010 -

MessageParty, an early-stage YCombinator-funded startup, takes the classic concept of a chat room and adds a geosocial twist by making any chat room location-aware.

The app, which launched in the iTunes App store earlier this week, is very straightforward. Users can create public “parties” through the app that work just like group IM conversations. What sets MessageParty apart is that it makes these chat rooms location-aware. Instead of joining a random chat room where users can be anywhere from Brazil to your neighborhood, MessageParty focuses on detecting just nearby chats that you can join.

Essentially, MessageParty is a location-based chat room client. You can chat with friends in a bar or create a chat room for a conference. There are even city-wide chat rooms and an “Everyone Party,” which speaks for itself. It utilizes Facebook Connect for logins and uses your Facebook picture as your Avatar.

MessageParty is currently an app with bare-bones functionality; it doesn’t have direct messaging, private chats or profiles. However, we can see the usefulness of MessageParty for coordinating events or providing an open forum at conferences. While this app still needs a lot of work, it’s got the basics down, plus it boasts a team from MIT and has YCombinator’s backing.

Would you use an app like MessageParty at a bar or a conference?


Reviews: Facebook

More About: chat, ycombinator

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by admin - Published: August 22nd, 2010 -
Smashing-magazine-advertisement in Balancing Inspiration and IndividualitySpacer in Balancing Inspiration and Individuality
 in Balancing Inspiration and Individuality  in Balancing Inspiration and Individuality  in Balancing Inspiration and Individuality

I love it when a good story is broken down so that even the simplest of minds can understand. I’m not the smartest, fastest or most creative person in the world, so I don’t like using a lot of big words or fancy jargon to try and impress you — but I’m learning every day, and that is what pushes me on. Let me cut the small talk and dive right in.

The Current State

When I look out on the hillside of design, all I see are copies of what great designers have done before us. The landscape has become so congested with cookie-cutter homes that seeing the real people living inside has become hard. It’s like watching that movie Pleasantville, in which everything is black and white and no one knows any better, and yet there are those pursuing something different, something original.

My hope is to inspire you to step away from the computer and open your eyes to the world around you. Expand your mind; think beyond the limits of the liquid crystals staring back at you.

[Offtopic: by the way, did you already get your copy of the Smashing Book?]

Getting Started

The first step in any recovery process is to admit that there’s a problem. Once we’re comfortable admitting that we’ve been copying each other’s style, we can move on. The next step in this design detox, if you will, is to close the laptop, turn off the monitor, put down the iPhone and go find a pen or pencil and some paper. Not so fast with that Moleskine journal! It won’t help you. You understand that Apple and Adobe products don’t do the work for you, and neither will the Moleskine make you a better [fill in your profession]. Only with time, patience and practice will you begin to refine your skills.

Don’t worry if you think you can’t draw. I hear that a lot, and I wish people would remove the word “can’t” from their vocabulary. Maybe you’re not good at drawing people but are amazing at drawing monsters, or maybe you’re not good at drawing buildings but are excellent at sketching wireframes. Just because your drawings don’t look like those of people you admire does not mean your drawings are no good.

Live in the Moment

Time does not stop — shocker, I know. You can’t fight it. Rather, think of it as the Rolling Stones do: time is on my side. Realize that time will make you better. The get-rich-quick approach is a cheap substitute for an investment of time: it might work for a few people, but it never lasts. Save yourself the trouble and commit to the long-term effort. Better yet, take an art history class and learn how long it took the great artists to achieve success. You’ll find that some were not recognized until after they were dead.

Pioneers Of the New Frontier

So where do we turn for inspiration? I always look to artists in other media. I’ll mention a few who have set a high standard — one so high that it hasn’t been beat. Still, I believe you have what it takes to run faster, jump higher and think bigger.

Leonardo da Vinci

Leonardo Da Vinci in Balancing Inspiration and Individuality

Leonardo da Vinci was the original Renaissance Man. Not only was he an amazing painter, he was also an extraordinary mathematician, sculptor, anatomist and writer — and those were just a few of his occupations. His career, which left a legacy that is still unsurpassed, is characterized by a passion for discovery and creation. If for no other reason, da Vinci is an inspiration to us because of his fervent passion for learning.

M. C. Escher

Mc Escher in Balancing Inspiration and Individuality

Maurits Cornelis Escher is a great example to us because he pursued his passion and succeeded, even without a degree. M.C. Escher’s artwork — an excellent source of inspiration for modern design — has a great deal to do with mathematics, but he never had formal mathematical training. Those of us building the Web could learn a thing or two from Escher’s work on symmetry and patterns.

Norman Rockwell

Norman Rockwell in Balancing Inspiration and Individuality

Normal Rockwell defined a generation. His depictions of the American lifestyle in the early-20th century are iconic. If Rockwell were alive today, he would definitely be one of the all-stars posting stuff to Dribbble.

Closing Words

There’s nothing like the feeling of accomplishment that comes from doing something you didn’t think you could. Whether you want to build websites, paint a mural, design icons or draw characters, I encourage you to make time for practice and to get away from the computer at least an hour a day. Pick up a book, take a walk, call a friend — do whatever you can to take your mind off technology. In those moments when we quiet our minds, inspiration comes and we can just be ourselves.

P.S.

Just one last nugget before you leave: don’t let a lack of inspiration overwhelm you or make you feel like less of a person. I know from personal experience that drowning in inspiration makes me feel unsuccessful. And yet when we judge ourselves against our own work, we hinder our growth. We have to find a balance between being inspired and being true to ourselves. That’s what makes the journey so exciting.

(al)


© Kyle Steed for Smashing Magazine, 2010. | Permalink | Post a comment | Add to del.icio.us | Digg this | Stumble on StumbleUpon! | Tweet it! | Submit to Reddit | Forum Smashing Magazine
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by admin - Published: August 21st, 2010 -

Polymaps is a free JavaScript mapping library for making dynamic, interactive maps in modern web browsers. It creates image and vector tiled maps using SVG.

Interactive JavaScript Mapping Library

Polymaps provides speedy display of multi-zoom datasets over maps, and supports a variety of visual presentations for tiled vector data, in addition to the usual cartography from OpenStreetMapCloudMadeBing, and other providers of image-based web maps.

Requirements: Modern web browser
Website: http://polymaps.org/
Examples: http://polymaps.org/ex/
License: BSD

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by admin - Published: August 4th, 2010 -

Back in May we reported a rumor that Telefonica was in talks to acquire Tuenti, the ‘Spanish Facebook’, for €80 million” ($104 million), but Tuenti vehemently denied it at the time.

Now, according to Spanish news site Expansion, the two sides have “virtually sealed the deal” whereby Telefonica will take 90% of the share capital of Tuenti, valuing the company at around €75 million or close to $99 million. There is further confirmation from Martin Varsavsky, founder of FON who has been informally advising the company, who repeats the Expansion story and adds that “all shareholders of Tuenti but management sold all their shares to Telefonica.”

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by admin - Published: August 1st, 2010 -

Casino giant Harrah’s will bring its popular World Series of Poker (WSOP) to Facebook and MySpace in a new partnership announced with Playdom, which was just acquired this week for over $700 million by Disney.

In the deal, Playdom will relaunch its Poker Palace game as the official WSOP game, starting first on Facebook and then moving to other social networks.

WSOP’s VP Craig Abrahams said in a press release, “We will immediately start to work on enhancing the game, bringing unique WSOP promotions and sweepstakes into the offering and ensuring that the battle for WSOP virtual championship bracelets can become a Facebook-friendly endeavor.”

The game will include, “single table play money, virtual cash games and single-table tournaments featuring both full-table and short-handed play,” and will only be played with play money. Users will also get a chance “to enter sweepstakes that award prizes including trips to Las Vegas and seats to live WSOP events”.

Original title and link for this post: Harrah’s and Playdom to bring World Series of Poker to Facebook, MySpace

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by admin - Published: August 1st, 2010 -

With more than 200 deals since 2005, Y Combinator’s Paul Graham knows how to size up a young team of entrepreneurs. However, he didn’t get it right from day one.

On Friday, we got a chance to talk to Graham after his morning panel with SV Angel’s Ron Conway. He discussed how his strategy has evolved over the past five years and why the balance of power is shifting in Silicon Valley. See videos ahead.

Information provided by CrunchBase

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