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Monday, September 17, 2012

Getting Down to the Wire!

My Kickstarter has one week to go!  Please feel free to back me for  $25, $50, $100.  Best of all, if you pick the $125 level, you help me create a fictional start-up company and even make up a fiction CEO male or female. And that fictional way they will change the world with their fictional product -- it's all waiting for you!


Click here to check it out!

Sunday, September 02, 2012

Sunday Morning Sermon:   Back to the School of God's Creation

It was still August and I started seeing "back-to-school" ads everywhere.  There were offers featuring yellow school buses, red school books, snacks for recess and the usual palate of orange, crimson and brown fall leaves.  It was hot and there was nothing autumnal about it.    Summer was weighing me down -- hot and humid -- all around me.  It was getting on my nerves, all this talk of 3-ring binders and pencils and pens.   It just wasn't the right time.

But then it happened.

About a week ago, I got up early,  as I usually do, to go for my walk on the bike path, tied on my sneakers and went out the door expecting the usual summer morning, maybe even a hot one, but instead there was a cool breeze and it was darker at 6:00 am than usual.  It got my attention.

I walked down the hill to the bike path, joining it in Arlington Heights, heading towards Lexington.  Not crossing too many people as I went -- a jogger here, a biker there.

My quiet morning's walk on the bike path is private and safe. The concerns of the day haven't started to take over my thoughts.  I haven't cast off the dreamy state of sleep quite yet.  The big green lush canopy of summer leaves welcomed me.  The full shady arch of leaves offers safe passage.   I still felt swaddled, held tight in the soft sleepwalk of dawn, with occasional bird songs to encouraged my steps,  but mostly wrapped in a comforter of quiet.

After a bit of bike path, crossing the line from one town into the next, I started to notice things.  I was waking up.   Things had changed.  It was fresh and cool.  Like a kid passing me a note in class, the breeze had a scribbled a message for me.  It  was was easy to read, spelling out the word September, in big letters, a month I love.

Now it was time for back-to-school specials.  And something very special was going on here.  I was back in the school of God's love and majesty.   I looked all the way up, to the tall tall trees, and was thrilled by what I saw.  It came in a flash of awareness.  I nearly blurted it out loud.

He did this.

He can do this.

All this.  The tall trees, the big, quiet forest, the chipmunk on the side of the path with his little paws, even the few people I saw -- made them.  I said "Good Morning" to each in passing, to honor them and him.  We were all in on this big secret.  You wanted to shout out, "Look at this!  Look at what he did!  He made this morning!"


All things bright and beautiful, all creatures great and small.
All things wise and wonderful, our dear God made them all.  

And then I got it.   I recalled the big lesson I'd learned many times before, but was happy to be reminded of it.  The lesson of our faith.


How can we ever worry. or wonder, or fret over a single thing, when we live like this, in his love and grace?  In this majestic creation of his love?

Soon, He would take these leaves and with little effort, paint them in a riot of color -- splashes of vermilion and orange and yellow and a little green here and there, left behind, just to remind us he had made the lovely summer before. with all its ripe fruits and gardens full of vegetables and herbs,  and now would he lead us safely through autumn into winter.

Good trick.

But more than anything I was struck by a sense of knowing that when you walk in his world, with his son by your side, there is nothing but comfort there.  He leads us through long happy days of summer sun and he would lead us through bleak times of occasional hopelessness and darkness.  And we could still know one thing -- the important thing.

Nothing can hurt you when you walk with Him.  And if you must leave this earth in a sudden moment, or slowly, even painfully, what a friend you have.  What a guide.

Sometimes, you have to go back to school to remember this fundamental lesson of our faith, to know him.  To know he is always there.  To know you can let go and let God.  He's got your back, as some would say.

And to be reminded that we need only thank him on a regular basis, by sharing our kindness and faith with others.  That this is our business.  This is the way to thank him for the profound mysteries all around us, which he executes without a hitch.  We're talking about the guy who knocked off the Earth in 7 days.

So let me end with hoping you'll take a morning walk on the bike path and be thankful for all his gifts.  We're about to enjoy one of the best ones -- autumn in New England.  And I'll close with some of the words to the hymn, All Things Bright and Beautiful, just to celebrate our thankfulness.

The cold wind in the winter, 
the pleasant summer sun, 
the ripe fruits in the garden, 
God made them every one. 


Friday, August 31, 2012

I Get Knocked Down:  Still Anything is Possible


It's the Friday morning of Labor Day weekend and I dropped a bunch of teens off at coffee shop in Arlington. They're young, sexy, pretty and handsome, thrilled to be heading into Harvard Square on the bus to knock around. And they are excited, happy, silly. Are you?

I pull away and I'm trying to put my finger on that feeling. It's the feeling that anything is possible.  Anything!




And I'm thinking,  Shit, that's it!  That's what it feels like to be an entrepreneur! That's the feeling you get in an accelerator! You are surrounded by BRAVE, CRAZY, ANYTHING-IS-POSSIBLE people 24x7 and once you've experienced that, it's a bitch to live any other way.

I mean face it, most businesses are all about, "Oh sorry, we don't do that here," or "Oh no, we've always done it this way," or "Why reinvent the wheel?"

Okay, ready, SOMETIMES THE WHEEL NEEDS REINVENTING! And that's what enterpreneurs have -- insane amounts of optimism and the ability to jump on an opportunity and make something happen.

Whether they're chasing a hot girl down the street, chatting up a stranger in a bar, reimagining how a time-honored practice can be completely revamped, they are open to all possibility.

What a way to live! On the edge of possibility, creativity, chutzpah and welcoming new ways of thinking and bringing new products and things into being.  They try things.  They fail on a regular basis.  They are ready to try try again.

Oh yeah! They get knocked down but they get up again!  He sings the songs that remind him of the good times.

And that's what I'm writing about.  Thanks again for all the support.

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Friday, August 24, 2012

Thanks to my fellow Kickstarter project managers for sharing their stories last night at our event at the Microsoft NERD (New England Research & Development Center) in Cambridge. Laurie Kahn, who just hit her pledge goal yesterday spoke about her project Love Between the Covers, a documentary film about romance writers. Joel Brown left beautiful Newburyport to visit the city and talk about his guide book to the gorgeous area around his home -- The Essex Coastal Byway Guide. Check it out here. Ian Schon added his great Pen Project to the other bibliophile projects. His pen is terrific and like the others, despite making their goals, you can find them all on Kickstarter and still buy into all three. And my project is starting to take baby steps -- it's only 2 days old -- and you can find my Founders Less Than Three video here.

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Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Kickstarter

So here goes! I'm kicking off my Kickstarter project today, with a little help from my friends. It's called Founders Less Than Three and you can support it right here!

It's a novel all about entrepreneurs -- five CEO guys and five CEO girls and their teams are building new companies from scratch and racing to get funding.  Boston is the best place in the world to found a start-up and my enterprenerds come from all over the world.

It's early here in Boston and I am thinking about my characters getting up, washing their faces, getting ready for the day. It's 5:30am, so a bunch of them have been working all night at their offices at Kendall Square. It's just one of those things, you figure you'll grab the T in time to get home late and then you just keep working through the night instead.

If you haven't tried Kickstarter, this is a great time to join. You can support my project for as little as a $1.00 and there's no complicated sign-up process and all that. Have you ever bought anything from Amazon? If so, then that's all you do with Kickstarter -- it all runs through Amazon and you don't even pay for a month (and only if my project gets fully funded.) So try it out and be sure to peruse the other amazing creative projects over at Kickstarter as well.

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Saturday, July 28, 2012

Guy Kawasaki's Cool New Stuff


Guy Kawasaki's set up a mailing list if you want cool stuff about his upcoming books and other projects he's been working on.  Just go to this link.

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Wednesday, June 27, 2012


Congrats to Psykosoft!

pastedGraphic.pdfIf you were at TechStars Boston this past year, you noticed a truly fun, nutty, excellent, international, mega-creative team called Psykosoft, run by Mathieu Gosselin who is CEO but calls himself the "Mad Captain" btw.  He's French.

Psykosoft just got $500K from Atlas Venture -- you know that guy Fred Destin -- and Balderton in London -- they are super cool and that means painting like a master just got a lot easier!  

Here's the serious version with lots of nice links to talk to these guys.

You'll be talking to them for sure, since this is pretty painting software that will work on the mysterious Microsoft #Surface.


PSYKOPRESS RELEASE


PSYKOSOFT, graduate of TechStars Boston 2012, secures $500k seed funding for product innovation and global talent search


June 22, 2012 

Cambridge, MA

Tours, France

Munich, Germany 
Copenhagen, Denmark. 
This press release comes from many places because Psykosoft, the ‘crazy creative software factory’, knows the creative class is spread across the globe.  As the creators of the winning web app, Psykopaint, the international team at Psykosoft is thrilled to announce they have raised a $500K seed round co-led by Boston-based Atlas Venture and London’s Balderton capital with angel investments from executives at Harmonix (Guitar Hero) and Brightcove.   
Psykopaint, the company’s flagship app, is already attracting more than a million unique visitors a month, with a growth path that is doubling every few months.  
Just as Instagram lets you stylize your photos, Draw Something dares you to show off your silly sketches, now Psykopaint lets you paint like a great master, literally in the style of Renoir, Monet or Van Gogh.  
Psykosoft was born in the premier accelerator in Europe, London’s Seedcamp last year and then in January 2012 was chosen to be in TechStars Boston, the very selective Kendall Square accelerator program.  
Psykosoft CEO, Mathieu Gosselin will use this investment to attract a dream team of top talent across the web, who will speed Psykosoft’s development as they perfect new ways to create and paint from photos, focusing on the Apple iPad and Windows 8 platforms, including the new Microsoft Surface.   
In fact, Psykopaint is one of the leading creativity apps already available in the Windows 8 Store.  “We’ll use this money to hire awesome people, make the tablets versions amazing and create other new top secret products,” Gosselin explains. 
As Gosselin has said, “At Psykosoft we’re crazy. We believe in originality, we believe in personality, we believe in emotions … Things that are not usually associated with software, but software is just a means to an end. And the goal is to make an artist out of everyone.”
Psykosoft will put creativity tools, which are fun, original and easy to use, into the hands of users of all ages.  Gosselin, will source the best talent, across the world, in the places they love to work, live, and innovate.  His current team already includes some of the top talent in the field, including an ex-lead developer of Aviary, the exciting suite of web-based creativity apps. 
Mathieu understands how truly creative people work and says wisely, “If you were building a sports team, you’d search worldwide to find the best talent.  Location shouldn’t matter. Amazing people are dispersed like nodes on an intelligent network, they don’t always live near you and they don’t always want to gather in the same stupidly busy and expensive place.  If you are in Beijing, Belarus, Beirut or Bellevue but share our vision, love to create stuff and have talent doing so, I don’t care where you are, I want you!” 
Please contact Mathieu Gosselin for  any questions
Phone: +33 6 40 30 39 76
Skype: peutichat
Psykopaint (The Web app): http://www.psykopaint.com
Psykosoft (Company site): http://www.psykosoft.net
Mathieu Gosselin self-portrait made with Psykopaint:
Psykosoft Logo:
Psykopaint Windows 8 Screenshots:
Psykopaint Web Screenshots:
Techstars pitch video:
About Atlas Venture:
About Balderton Capital:
Balderton Capital is one of the largest venture capital firms in Europe, committed to finding and helping talented entrepreneurs build great companies. Based in London, it manages $1.9 billion in committed venture capital. Since 2000, Balderton has invested in over 100 companies, principally in numerous European countries but also in the US and Asia. Notable investments include Bebo (sold to AOL for $850m), Betfair (floated on the LSE in 2010), LOVEFiLM (sold to Amazon in 2011), ScanSafe (sold to Cisco Systems for $183m) and MySQL (sold to Sun for $1 billion). 

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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

I Paint Like a Master

My PsykoPaint painting of "When Meteors Visit Tuckerman's Ravine"

Wednesday, June 13, 2012


Yoga Time

When you do yoga you think about breathing, it's true, but you also think about time.  Time is a crazy animal, very sly, hard to figure out, sometimes shy.  Every morning when you show up on the yoga mat, time might feel like little wooden blocks, maybe with M, T, W, Th, F, S and S stamped on them.  Alphabet blocks that you pile up day by day, moment by moment.  Or time might feel like water flowing to you, through you, around you.  Or maybe time feels like wind.  Pushing your back some days or wafting past you others.

When you do yoga, time is always playing tricks with you, or more accurately, the way you experience time is so different from one session on the mat to the next you could swear some greater force is messing with your mind.  

I do a set of yoga exercises from a great Rodney Yee DVD most mornings and of all the benefits it delivers -- physical, mental, psychological -- what it really shows me is how our consciousness of time is so mutable.

My experience of time is sometimes quiet and slow moving like an old horse in a soft green pasture. Other times, my awareness is flying in all directions like a wild bird flapping its wings madly, trying to escape to the bigger blue sky.  Even worse, some mornings my thoughts are just ping ponging and ricocheting from wall to wall and to calm them down seems next to impossible.

Try it some time.  Give it some time.  High time you did.  And, oh yeah, namaste!

Photo Credit:  Gaiam

Monday, June 11, 2012


Alphabet Duvet

There are letters of the alphabet marching across my bed like an army of literary ants.  It seems strange that as writers we have a toolbox of only 26 handy little letters to build our creations.  I think carpenters get to take more tools to their worksite to build houses.  AND they get to wear that great leather tool belt slung across their hips.

So if you are finding your letters unruly, please contact me, I can get them in line.  Need help writing, editing, copyediting your work?  Happy to help.  Check me out at Content.ly too!

Wednesday, May 09, 2012


Christophe Maire, CEO of txtr

Before meeting Christophe Maire at the NextBerlin conference I was hearing many good things about him.  As the CEO of txtr, I heard txtr was doing cool stuff, that Maire was full of good ideas and best of all that Maire could be counted on in the Berlin start-up community to help others and was working hard to make Berlin a great place to start companies.  Nice to have your reputation precede you in such a way, in such a town.

We talked about most of the big digital publishing issues of the day:

--Most important issues to solve in e-publishing: discovery and curation

-- Next big thing in reading digital books according to him:  It is essential to simplify the reading experience. (This is not a commonly held opinion, as many people are racing to embed more graphics, audio, video in ebooks.  I was glad to hear his contrarian view.)

--Is reading an immersive experience for young readers the way it is for older readers, who have adopted e-readers more aggressively than teens and 20's?  (See "Generations & Gadgets" infographic here.)  He couldn't say, but pointed me to interesting ventures like Machinima, where the words "machine" and "cinema" give you a clue to their gaming/editorial concept.  Machinima is targeted to that 18-35 male demographic, who seem to give their attention to gaming, YouTube and all things video, before reading.

--The big question:  We talked about digital textbooks and where that was headed.  Again, Maire said this will be very interesting to watch as it plays itself out.  Certainly, one advantage of digital textbooks is the ability to use small, light slices of texts, instead of having to drag around heavy, often out-of-date paper textbooks.  How tablets develop will be crucial to e-textbook adoption.

Picture Credit: LinkedIn

Tuesday, May 08, 2012


KISS: Keep It Simple Stupid

It really is so difficult to tell a short, sweet, simple story about your start-up.  As I'm listening to CEO's pitching here at the #NextBerlin conference in #Berlin and after #Techstars Demo Day last week in Boston, there's nothing more true than the K.I.S.S. principle.  Please keep it simple to keep yourself from sounding stupid.

When I go back home, I enter a Facebook world as they go public next week and I figure there were early times when even Zuckerberg explained his startup and people scratched their heads.

If you're an entrepreneur and have not read the great book, The Facebook Effect by David Kirkpatrick, drop everything and go read it.  Especially read about the way Sean Parker coached Mark Zuckerberg in terms of dealing with VC's -- Parker had been screwed before so he was very savvy about what NOT to do.  I loved the pitch where they arrived in their pyjamas like they had slept late.


Martin Luther at NextBerlin

There are some very cool people here at NextBerlin and I think Martin Luther would have fit right in.  He had that weird black hat and beneath it, a headful of wild, radical ideas.  He used the newest technology to share his ideas.  Books!

SHARE: I visited the Wartburg Castle where wealthy guys let him hide out while he translated the Bible from the priestly languages of Greek and Latin to the people's language of German. This was a radical move and got him in some serious trouble.  Luther would have loved ebooks!  I saw a great exhibit down the hill at Bach's house in Eisenach where you learn that Luther was the original indie musician as he translated the old Latin music of the church into German hymns like my favorite "A Mighty Fortress."  (See hymnal below.  I saw the real book!)   Luther was a guy who liked to click the "share" button and did it at every opportunity.


INDIE:  Yes, I can't help thinking of my boss at Libboo, Chris Howard when I read about Luther.  Chris was an indie music guy first (still a great musician) and now the indie author champion.  Luther loved to sing and did it all over the place and put hymns into the hands and hearts of the common man.  Luther loved to spread ideas in any way possible.  The guy published on a DOOR.  Chris has the same attitude.  Different hat.

TRANSLATE:  Luther put great ideas into the people's language and I can't help think as I meet bloggers, speakers, organizers and all the other great people here in Berlin that the language they use to spread ideas is the language of the Net -- English.  It's the people's language now and helps ideas fly out across the network to places near and far.

MY GOSPEL:  My religion is ebooks.  Please learn how easy they are to make, how perfect for sharing ideas that change the world, change the everyday lives of everyday people.  And best of all, do it in record time.

Photo Credit:  See Wikipedia




Tuesday, May 01, 2012

Vacation Mayhem: Hate Nutcracker?

Fun collection of stories about vacation and holiday "horrors" from Libboo.  Check it out here.

I love one in particular.  "The Nutcraker as I see it" by Nick Zaino III describes the totally weird experience of seeing The Nutcracker ballet one holiday with his relatives.

Did something strange happen?  Did they get into a car accident on the way to the ballet?  Did someone hit someone else over the head with a beer bottle in the Texas theatre where they did allow beer and ballet to mix?   No -- Nick and I share the exact same opinion of The Nutcracker:  it's really weird with big rats, young girls, wooden men.  What gives?

I have a particular hatred and dread of The Nutcracker as a guy I was dating once cancelled on me at the last minute because his family -- I think his mother -- insisted he attend the ballet instead of go out to a great Christmas party I'd been excited to attend with him.  Bad move.  That guy got X'ed off the list.  


Saturday, April 28, 2012


Post-digital at my house


As I get ready for the #NextBerlin conference and consider the theme of the event, "the post-digital world" -- I have been asking myself, "what's really post-digital in my house?"  After a few days, I have narrowed it down to one obvious thing: my sixteen-year-old son.



Born in the year the Internet went commercial and ubiquitous, this kid has never known a pre-digital world and it shows.

If I want to reach him -- forget email or phone (and especially voice mail).  Those are media used my old folks who want to nag, bother, or punish him.   He's not interested.   If I tell him weeks after the fact that I emailed him something important to read, he scrunches up his face as if to say, "Why would you send me email and why would you think I would ever READ it?!"

My post-digital boy travels light -- his devices are mobile -- and his media starts with text (or SMS) and ends with Facebook.

He has newly downloaded iTunes constantly playing in his ears or in our house, discovered via Pandora or Grooveshark.  He also discovers a lot of his favorite music on YouTube videos of skateboarding, rock climbing or other extreme sports.

He wouldn't know what I was talking about if I said "post-digital" because he takes digital for granted.  It doesn't describe something modern or futuristic.  It's the default for his world.