2007-03-04

Taking a leap

By hannes @ 17:22 [ Meta ]
mediagonal + bitflux = Liip

For the last couple of years I've been working with with a group of fine folks under the name of mediagonal. That company is no more. But now there's Liip. I take this as an opportunity for some personal reflections and explanations on how this came into being.

So it's been a pretty good time with these friends in Fribourg, I certainly enjoyed helping grow a company from two guys of us in a living room to a serious SME with like 15 employees, a prominent customer base, a couple of really cool and truly innovative projects - and an enjoyable climate.

It's been a good place for me all the time, so good I neglected my studies quite a bit - but there's always been such a lot to learn in the real world. Working on software actually relevant to actual people, developing ideas on the actual brink of the doable, directly translating "how things should be done" (semantic, accessible, open and interoperable, and so forth) to "how things are being done here" (as said) and taking actual responsibility still sounds attractive to me today :)

We've had our little issues in management, too, of course: My role's been the one of the rusher, the forward always neglecting defense, oriented towards a superbright future and willing to take above-average risks. Luckily (I guess ;)) my friends in mediagonal's management are a little older and more reasonable, which always had a beneficial compensating effect. This lead to a company that turned from a wannabe full-service publishing provider to a "web 2.0" (in Nova's sense) software development shop, to a company (even if that may sound a little lofty) both pragmatic and creative, down-to-earth and innovative - and, in the end, sustainable.

Now one of the ideas that, after some time, made a lot of sense both for the risk-averse and the risk-affine was doing a merger with mediagonal's long-time partner bitflux. If you read this blog you probably know these guys anyway, suffice to say they've been working on the forefront of web development in this country for some time now. They often were the "techies of the techies" (first version of this blog software here, local, work for some design-oriented agencies, ..), mediagonal in turn more often worked directly with non-technical clients - in fact, finding reasonable synergies and examples of "more than the sum of its parts" is so easy I don't have to do it for you. Sheer size (two dozen soon..) and sites (Fribourg/Zürich/Bern) sure belong to them.

mediagonal + bitflux = Liip

So having explained the situation to you we could now speculate a bit about the future of the merger's product Liip AG. What I can say is that Liip's going to demonstrate some kick-ass stuff in the months to come - buzzwords like "Enterprise 2.0" and "Radio 2.0" (Blabla 2.0.. yes sure) come to mind, but there's also a large-scale public (e-)education project in the making, which you will find pretty interesting, I'm sure. If you want to keep yourself updated on these things, I recommend dropping the feed of this blog from your reader and adding our company blog's feed instead: http://blog.liip.ch/rss.xml.

That said, I can also tell you that I'm stopping to write on this undead weblog here and instead will write on blog.liip.ch for the foreseeable future. So see you there, and wish me luck with keeping the one adjective I liked most getting used with the old company make being used for Liip, too. That attribute has been "authentic".


2005-01-23

C'MON CONNACHT & other miscellanea

By hannes @ 23:34 [ Meta ]
Dear reader,

My second week in Ireland is over without a single blog entry here. Sorry. Basically this was due to things going not as well as I would have liked. Main reason: It's hard being far from your love. Hell I miss her. But that doesn't belong here, I guess.
What else? The boys took me out for a match of the local rugby team, playing a welsh side (Connacht 8 , Cardiff 18, despite all COME ON CONNACHT shouting). Besides big boys clashing into each other until unconscious this was rather boring for me, I mean soccer offers much more action, is much more dynamic. Ok, but then I might not understand rugby, sure.

Then there's the '1st Symposium on Interoperability Issues in Semantic Web Sites' at KMI on the agenda, which I'm going to attend with Stefan and Andreas(both being very kind to me, by the way). Please let me know if you have input, issues to be brought in at that occasion.

And then there's my regular work on that paper here, it will involve some PHP hacking, most probably interfacing with YARS, most probably dealing with beta.semanticweb.org and certainly involving Fresnel. Proposal will follow.

Oh, and I made Serendipity "podcast-enabled", which earned me the 38th mention on the Bitflux Blog. But alas, even hacking doesn't help against sadness and loneliness sometimes. I know it's my own fault, okok.

I won't mention the weather here, by the way.

Everything is going to be alright. Sure it will :)
You won't have to read further self-therapy postings, I promise. :)

2004-10-20

Finally some good news

By hannes @ 18:38 [ Meta ]
  1. I passed my exams. Amazing when considering the near-zero amount of time I spent preparing them. :)
  2. My complete Bach edition (171 CDs for € 148 instead of € 1349) arrived today, the "hänssler edition bachakademie" that had been on my whishlist for quite some time now.
  3. Playing with BXB is fun indeed, the built-in importer easily imported my entire blog, worked like a charm. You can have a look at the result, but the tool no doubt is not quite ready yet for me to switch: moblogging doesn't work yet (ok, doesn't work any more here..), and the admin interface is in the 'shoulb fixed soon' state. But it's free software, it's based on the magnificent popoon/bxcms combo and, last but not least, an installation would be under my control, something I appreciate more and more.
    Not meant to add oil to that fire, btw.

2004-08-25

Hidden Kaywa Features

By hannes @ 15:59 [ Meta ]
Kaywa blogs are always good for a surprise. Today I was told about a nice little feature present -but hidden- in all their blogs: an ASCII image filter.
It makes ordinary images like that one look like this :-)
There are some other and more useful features missing, but that's another story.. ;-)

2004-07-16

See you in August

By hannes @ 00:29 [ Meta ]
This weblog will remain in silence for the next two weeks, I'll be away at Barranconi/Sardegna. No notebook, no cellphone, just some good books such as "Empire and the Sun" by Alex Soojung-Kim Pang and "Vehicles: Experiments in Synthetic Psychology" by V.Braitenberg.
A remote farm, mountains made for mountainbiking, the beach, the sun, the books.
See you in August!

2004-07-10

The Mobile Version

By hannes @ 19:22 [ Meta ]
The software making this weblog run has recently been "crossgraded" from a stale (and hacked) to a stable (and official) version. You might have noticed some changes. Now the blog sports a WAP/XHTML-mobile version for mobile devices, like all Kaywa blogs do.
Any feedback from people with appropriate devices is very welcome.