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Posted on Jun 05, 2007 @ 12:46 am
in Planning 
This page will host the ideas for the weekend.
Now.
Posted by andrew hyde
80 Responses to “Ideas”
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June 7th, 2007 at 2:11 pm
Googlodeon
My four year old son loves to play on the computer. He plays online kiddie games on the Disney and Lego sites and he loves to browse the various toys sites. He looks at pictures of toys and watches videos. In fact, my wife setup a “favorites” folder for him called “wish list” where he can bookmark pages of stuff that he wants for birthday and Christmas.
There’s only one problem, he can’t read or spell. He can read his name and a few small words, but if he wants to see something specific, such as the Batmobile, he has to say, “Daddy can you come over here and spell ‘Batmobile toys’ for me?” What he means is “Daddy can you perform a search for Batmobile toys?” I simply go to his computer and type “batmobile toys” into the Google toolbar and do a search, then select something from the search that looks promising.
So that’s the idea: vertical search for non-spellers and non-readers (thus Googlodeon, Google + Nickelodeon). How would it work? I don’t know. Maybe it would allow users to select images that they like and then refine the search based on images that they’re viewing.
Most of my son’s browsing is based on digging deeper by clicking on images, but he quickly losses his navigation path. He uses the back button, but he generally will not go back through ten pages of history. When he’s exhausted his options (i.e. can’t find anymore stuff that he wants) he calls daddy or mommy to do a new search. There must be a good way to provide children (and others) a way to search without requiring them to be able to read and write.
http://davidduey.typepad.com/weblog/2007/06/business_idea_g.html
June 7th, 2007 at 5:39 pm
So when do we start posting our whacked out ideas for the weekend? I’ve got several broiling…
June 11th, 2007 at 3:36 am
@David: Speech-to-text/text-to-speech sounds like it’d be useful here. CSS has some sort of speech functionality designed into it, but I don’t know much beyond this.
Your navigation-by-image idea would be great for crossing language barriers. It reminds me a little of YC-funded likebetter.com.
This idea could also potentially reach the world’s illiterate.
Interesting idea, very cool!
June 13th, 2007 at 11:33 am
Okay, here’s a random one, tho prolly not a full product:
Basically, convert all the words of urbandictionary.com into the common dictionaries used by programs, so that your spellcheck will know WTF words like diss and milf and lol and cougar mean.
June 14th, 2007 at 1:15 pm
Do you hate having to pay the service charge to Ticketmaster? I do!
We could develop ticketing solutions that allows bands or venues to ticket their own events via the mobile phone. For smaller bands or venues, this allows the stakeholders to possibly bypass the promotions company and/or the ticketing company. This brings more revenue to the performers or venues. We could initially provide the service via text message with codes to provide at will call. With very little investment we could expand the security and interactivity of our service by providing RFID sticker that could be attached to cell phones.
Although changing any large percentage of the existing market would be difficult, working with smaller artists/venues and growing with them would present an ideal situation for anything we could develop. If we could provide a proof of concept with 5-10 clients, I believe our weekend of work would pay off significantly either through a sale or financing.
Website designers and software developers could create the consumer/client interface.
Marketers could work to create promotional materials geared to attract bands and venues.
Legal could craft the acceptable use for both consumers and clients.
Any feedback?
June 14th, 2007 at 5:09 pm
This may be a bit ambitious, but here goes…
I agree wholeheartedly with Dharmesh Shah’s assessment of social content sites like Digg. The problem is the content–it is completely random, (and while often interesting), it is NOT particularly relevant to me. (Think Truemors). The social content sites have responded by creating categories, BUT they really can’t slice the content narrow enough to solve the relevance problem.
The idea is to create a PLATFORM, where users can create social news site pages for any vertical market. The content “slices” on these pages could be anything from all things labradoodle, Notre Dame Football, a local political candidate, GTD, even the human genome project. Content within these narrow categories would be voted upon. There are those out there trying to create this PLATFORM (e.g., coRank), but I think a MUCH less complex model would be much more viral: 1. users can create their own pages; 2. news stories are listed in two basic categories: the latest, and the greatest (voted upon); and the site would allow for interaction (e.g., comments, chat, forum clouds, meetups?). The content slice on each page would be VERY relevant to its users, because unlike Digg, Reddit, etc. you’ve gone one step further and allowed the users to create the categories. Add RSS, etc. and you may have something very interesting. (In very narrow content slices it may help for the latest stories to auto-propogate with stories based upon user defined Google News Alert keywords, and then users vote stories up or down).
From this platform, there’s quite a bit you could do—I personally would love a widget on my blog that displays the stories relevant to my interests. There’s also gotta be a Facebook app somewhere in here :).
June 18th, 2007 at 5:47 pm
Efficient (Software) Project Execution
Hi,
I have observed that there is high inefficiency in running software projects. The reasons for inefficiency that I know are, 1) unqualified people, 2) organization culture,
3) not using right tools or using inferior tools or appropriate tools are not available.
I think there is an opportunity in solving 3rd reason and I have written about the problems
and a solution in my blog, the entry is http://p6n.blogspot.com/2007/06/efficient-project-execution-idea.html
Let me know your thoughts.
Thanks
Babu
June 18th, 2007 at 5:54 pm
The ones I sent in were:
* Twitter with > 140 characters
* A search engine that just returns you the actual answer that you wanted, not tons of stuff that
you have to leaf through (only works with very direct queries).
* Online multi-player turn-based web 1.0 game (build ships, send them to planets, find other
players, beat up their ships, take their planets, …)
* An online backup site. Just add more HD’s with more customers. Price accordingly. Can write
cross-platform apps with C++/wxwindows or tcl/tk or something simple like that for super-quick
app development.
* AllOfMp3Again.com - I head that they’re not doing so well.
* Some random mashup involving Google Maps StreetView.
* An RSS agregator that gets rid of duplicates (I subscribe to engadget, Gizmodo, and Digg’s RSS
feeds and there’s so many dupes in there that I end up reading the same @#$% article like 10
times - and Yahoo tubes sucks and doesn’t help at all).
* Something cool with GPSs and lots of LEDs!!!
* Build the first iPhone 3rd party app once the API comes out, like GCal for iPhone or something
super-trendy that can’t lose!
June 25th, 2007 at 4:20 pm
What about a new approach to sharing audio? A web-based sharing panel in which users can drag and drop audio files (AIR?). The page could stream all submitted audio like a radio station. Kind of a shoutcast service for the non-tech-savvy.
June 27th, 2007 at 1:37 pm
I like Nick Woodward’s idea; the Ticket Master workaround. We could maybe enhance the redemption process by passing a WAP push to the device. When the concert goer visits the venue, they would visit the WAP page earlier sent to their phone. The venue would just
have to eye-ball the page response (which would have a visible code unique to that event). The ticket would be redeemed automatically, without the venue having to look up the ticket number and check them off the list. Probably a bit unusable, but I thought I would spit out the idea.
June 27th, 2007 at 8:43 pm
Idea; take the ycombinator/techcruch idea of funding startups ~ except ~ let users and visitors of the site vote on which startup concepts should get funding. Charge founders $25 to submit their concept. The winning concept gets the money. Our web site could become an early investor in the concept so we could all become rich.
June 28th, 2007 at 12:07 pm
what about having a screen that attaches to your front door that is wifi connected, which allows you to list everything you need to take with you for the day. A touchscreen, once you check off your list, the door opens/unlocks. (obviously need to figure out the safety issue). Sort of a chumby type application. Could be flash with ink enabled. should sync to a web interface.
June 28th, 2007 at 8:34 pm
I second Troy Yohn’s idea, but with a little TechStars + StartupWeekend twist. How about a community with only founders and investors. Founders pay to submit a concept, and investors pay to get a vote. Ex: I invest $100, and I give $50 to concept A, $30 to B, and $20 to C. If A reachs $10k within 3 months, it gets funded, and I get 50/10000 * 5% of founders stock.
June 29th, 2007 at 8:35 pm
I would love to see something:
1) Viral
2) Useful
3) Kick Ass
Bring on the ideas.
June 29th, 2007 at 9:13 pm
I know several people who are currently maintaining multiple different blogs. For example, I might have a blog for my business-related stuff, another for a hobby and yet another for random news about my personal life.
Why not create a blog widget that allows you to pick which tags or categories you are interested in, and then creates a custom RSS feed based on what you selected?
This tool would allow bloggers to target multiple audiences all from the same blog. It would give your readers an easy way to pass on the posts about your cat.
June 30th, 2007 at 11:37 am
I think Troys idea is super cool. I’m not exactly sure how it would work, but there is something there.
June 30th, 2007 at 11:45 am
Here’s a wacky one I’ve had in my head for a year or so now. I am always forgetting to buy gifts.
So you enter birthdays of your mom, your sister, your niece, etc into the site. For each person, pick the (multiple) types of gifts they would like (flowers, toys, gift certificates, etc) and the amount you’d like to spend for that occasion ($10, $20, $30, $50, etc).
A week before that birthday, the user gets an email with 3 gift options (randomized based on the types of things they marked as appropriate for this person) at the appropriate price level.
One click, and it’s ordered.
You could even have an option to simply “send it” if the email isn’t responded to in time, etc (I’d use that).
The site gets revenue from ecommerce commissions or quantity discounts.
Simple, but it solves a real problem.
June 30th, 2007 at 11:59 am
I can’t participate in any effort to compete with ticketmaster or gifts since they’re both owned by IAC and they sign my paychecks.
Hopefully it won’t be something that will conflict with my current non-compete contracts.
- Steve
June 30th, 2007 at 12:00 pm
make that ticketmaster.com or gifts.com
June 30th, 2007 at 12:31 pm
[…] is now looking for startup ideas that we can implement next weekend, and the discussion is going on here. Why not add that web site you’ve always wanted but will never build […]
June 30th, 2007 at 12:37 pm
i really ike the birthday idea. is there a facebook app out there that already does this?
June 30th, 2007 at 1:00 pm
This is something that I was going to pursue myself, but I don’t have the technical skills
Having just graduated college I know the pain of purchasing textbooks. It is even more painful when you pay $100 for a book that the teacher never uses! Why not build a site where students can list the classes they took, with what teachers, and rate whether or not you should buy the book (buy/don’t buy). Users would also enter their schedule for the following semester and then get the privilege of students knowledge that have already taken the classes. Now instead of buying 5 textbooks for $500 and only using 3 I will just buy three for $300. The site is linked to Amazon to receive affiliate fees from students purchasing their textbooks from the site. The student saves $200 and the site collects $30 in affiliate fees. Now that is value creation! The problem of high priced college textbooks has been targeted for years with online book swaps, but never has anyone taken on the problem from this angle.
A side feature, probably not likely for the weekend, would be to scan textbooks Google Book Search style and determine how similar one edition is from the next (2nd edition is 97% the same as the 1st edition). This way students can reuse textbooks from the previous year without fear they are missing out on something.
June 30th, 2007 at 2:34 pm
I like David’s birthday idea, but how about a generalization? A reminders site, that gives you the ability to flag certain days or time periods with a given action. For your Mom’s birthday, you flag with ’send a gift of $25′, but on the 15th of every month you flag with ’send me a SMS at 8am to clean fish tank’, or on July 21, 2007 you flag with ’send me an email to read Harry Potter’. As the site grows, you can build out more advanced actions.
June 30th, 2007 at 2:59 pm
Building on the reminder idea - it would be great if you could simply text the system - I’m always stranded in impromptu meetings trying to record my action items on my Treo, it would be awesome if I could text them off and be reminded about them.
June 30th, 2007 at 4:49 pm
I like Troy’s idea and Justin’s riff on it.
I’ve been pondering a webspam blackhole that ties into DNS like the old ORBS and MAPS email blackhole lists.
Essentially it would be a database, searchable by DNS query (through an apache plugin) that would deny access to the website based on an entry in the DB (thereby preventing a known host from spamming a site).
Collection of blackhole candidates could be done automatically by collection of distributed filter output (see jenn.com/canspam.html for an example).
June 30th, 2007 at 6:44 pm
The fact that 50 odd people of very high calibre want to participate in this tells me that the startup should be about turning startupweekend.com into an international phenomena that massively accelerates startup creation with the benefits of economies of scale of predecided ways for doing things, hooks into capital, a ranking system for ideas, etc. As it spreads geographically it should start to also spread virtually, so people in different areas can do it virtually. The roadbumps the virtual guys hit will get solved in the first generation or two and then the virtual performance will become optimized. Case studies should be written about every startup weekend so that future startup weekends can become better. And that is the goal — to become better by learning what does and doesn’t work.
July 1st, 2007 at 11:40 am
I love the birthday idea and the generalization idea. Why not just make it an online ical or something of that nature. For those of us who don’t use the calendar’s in our phone. I have long searched for an app like this on the web and it would solve a real problem for me finally. And now I won’t ever forget mom and dads birthday.
July 1st, 2007 at 11:40 am
Think the bastard son of YouTube, GarageBand, and your doctor’s prescription pad.
What’s the product?
A simple web-app and associated community site that enables the user to generate (and share) short video clips or animations with embedded BINUARAL BEATS.
Why is this cool?
Binaural Beats have a PHYSICAL EFFECT on the user. They can be used to quickly induce a state of relaxation, high-focus, increased creativity, mild intoxication and, in 7 or 8 minutes, put a fully awake person into a deep sleep. Twitter can’t do that…
What’s the opportunity here?
The technology is already developed (you can license the leading Binaural Beat generator for commercial use for only $500) and there is a lot of science and history behind this, but NOBODY has made them easy to create and SHARE yet.
People are already selling a lot of cd’s, dvd’s and custom programs for meditation, relaxation, creativity enhancement, sleep aids, etc… but this hasn’t yet been wrapped in that web2.0 goodness that we all know, love, and profit from.
Plus, the viral potential for this is huge. Would you watch a 5 minute video that your buddy sent you with the note “watch this the next time that idiot from marketing steals your lunch out of the fridge, it will turn you into jelly…” or “forget the coffee, you will code like you’re Igor Grešovnik on speed after watching this.”
And it’s portable – the video aspect is great but it’s the binaural beats hidden in the audio that are important. Anyone with an mp3 player is set to go and those with video capacity are ahead of the game. Imagine taking the train after a busy day at work, watching one of these videos on your iPhone, and arriving home in a total state of relaxation. You’d tell a friend about that, wouldn’t you?
How do we make money?
1) Advertising – on the site and pre-rolls on each video.
2)Premium content subscriptions. Ability to create, save and export longer videos. Access to more powerful features. Get rid of the ads. Etc…
What could we call it?
The working title for this (after one beer soaked night with a friend last year) was “Video Valium.” Obviously Roche Pharmaceuticals isn’t going to let that fly so we settled on Chillium.com with the tag-line “Pharmaceutical Grade Media.” The kids will love it.
Why is this a good project for Startup Weekend?
1) It’s a fun project that everyone can relate to. You’d like to relieve stress, relax, be more creative, and be able to focus on demand right?
2)It’s doable in 2 days. We could build the business case, get a meaningful alpha / demo site up and running, and demonstrate enough potential for worldwide domination that the investors in the group will have their checkbooks warmed up and running by Sunday night. Big smiles and handshakes all around and you’ll be that much closer to quitting your job at the salt mine to bask in your internet millions.
July 1st, 2007 at 8:34 pm
To build on Justin’s comments, the site could be life event/category driven as well. Determine the common course of events based specific life events. Such as “graduate from school,” 30 days later get a reminder to “look for a job,”, etc. People could add wiki-style the basic timeline of events that start when buying a house, having a baby, new job, losing your job, etc.
So, as an example, if I entered in my marriage date, then if it was the Xth anniversary the reminder would include the type (paper, diamond, etc.) of gift to get as well.
Also, it could be category driven. Since weight loss is on my mind, I would love to get reminders that if I have a dozen apples, and I am eating them at a rate of 2 per day, that every 5th day I get a reminder to go buy more apples. Or a reminder to eat every 3 hours, etc.
Steve: If the gift ecomm was all driven by third parties, so the site was really just a lead generation/affiliate site for commerce, would that work?
And I still think it would be cool to have a screen of some sort right next to my door to remind me of the items and actions I need for the day.
July 1st, 2007 at 9:23 pm
Having just graduated college I know the pain of purchasing textbooks. It is even more painful when you pay $100 for a book that the teacher never uses! Why not build a site where students can list the classes they took, with what teachers, and rate whether or not you should buy the book (buy/don’t buy). Users would also enter their schedule for the following semester and then get the privilege of students knowledge that have already taken the classes. Now instead of buying 5 textbooks for $500 and only using 3 I will just buy three for $300. The site is linked to Amazon to receive affiliate fees from students purchasing their textbooks from the site. The student saves $200 and the site collects $30 in affiliate fees. Now that is value creation! The problem of high priced college textbooks has been targeted for years with online book swaps, but never has anyone taken on the problem from this angle.
July 2nd, 2007 at 12:24 am
I am primarily interested in mobile technologies and cool ways to use cell phones. An idea I have had for a long time is providing a way for businesses to get txt messages from customers. Having an “sms box,” sms-enabled web app, or something else in the store. The idea is that incoming sms is linked to a specific customer who can place an order for pick-up at their favorite restaurant, or pizza for delivery, or a cab request, or a bunch of other scenarios. The phone number the sms is coming from would be linked to preferences, addresses, billing, etc. I don’t think this would be too hard to build and I could envision many businesses adopting it as another channel to build their customer base.
July 2nd, 2007 at 10:47 am
I like the gift reminder idea as well. A challenge to this is that the person who would take the time to enter all their friends birthdates etc. is the person who needs the service the least. It us bozos who rarely write this stuff down in the first place that need as much help as possible. I tihnk tieing into social networking sites and other communities could be a real help here.
If for example the system looked in my outlook AB or yahoo account or facebook contacts, then offered to provide reminders. This would eliminate the biggest step…. adding names to yet another contact list.
The system could/should gather as much information from the ‘contacts” published data and suggest adding the dates to the subscriber’s reminder list.
in a nutshell, thinking about any way to reduce data entery by the user will drive adoption
July 2nd, 2007 at 12:06 pm
Summary
What do they want for Christmas? He wants a 42 inch LCD TV. She wants a trip to Hawaii. Who is going to buy this for them? No one. But what if family and friends could go online and deposit cash in a collective fund for these specific gifts. The wisher could then tag that fund to order the TV when it reaches the required amount or the fund could be indicated to cut a Visa Gift card for the total amount deposited. Think wish lists meets Goodfella’s wedding. The site would send emails to the wisher and to the giver and these messages could be customized with text ranging from simple to sentimental and they would also serve as receipts.
Revenue
Revenue would be generated via a small percentage of each amount deposited and would also be generated via transaction models with vendor. Also, we could charge vendor priority fees - for example, if I want a 50 inch LCD HDTV then Best Buy would pay a higher fee to be the primary site for this search.
Market
As far as I can tell, no popular service like this exists, but it might be fairly easy to implement for banks, retailers, Visa or AmEx; therefore, it would be incumbent upon us to get this to market quickly and then secure additional financing to make it big by this Christmas season. Then after the Christmas model proves successful we roll it into birthdays, weddings etc, etc.
July 2nd, 2007 at 12:25 pm
The Idea: Vevo.com as in Vote Early, Vote Often.
Whereas twitter asks “what are you doing” in 140 chars or less, VEVO asks “what are you deciding?”
The idea came from thinking about the Startup Weekend model. To eliminate the need for countless number of rules and to keep the Startup Weekend model self-organizing, we will need to rely on a democratic voting process to guide the course of the group’s action. I imagine we’ll be making a lot of decisions during the weekend through group votes. We will want a method to make these decisions quickly so we can focus more on developing and less on decision “overhead”
VEVO facilitates this process by allowing decisions to be made by a group through a quick, efficient, and accurate democratic voting process. How it would work:
1. A group moderator sets up a voting group by adding group member emails and configures the parameters of the voting group (anonymous votes, voting duration, etc)
2. Group members login and setup their account (turn on notifications via email / SMS / whatever)
3. When a group member wants the group to vote on a decision, they can, in 140 chars. or less, enter a description of that decision (either online or via a SMS short code)
4. Decision request is broadcast to group members via their specified notification channel.
5. Group members have, say 5 minutes (configured by moderator in step 1) to vote with a simple Yes, No, Abstain (Y/N/A) response via email/SMS
6. After the voting period has expired, VEVO.com tallies the votes and updates the group members with the results of the vote via their desired notification channel.
7. Group members can go online to get a history of all decisions / votes processed by the system along with pie charts of vote outcome. If the moderator has configured the group such that voting results are public, members could see how each person voted on each issue.
Additional Features:
1. Multiple choice voting
Markets:
1. Startup Weekend
2. Classroom settings - enable feedback / quizzes in large lecture halls and eliminate the need for the “clicker” devices
3. Board Room / organizations
4. Advertising Agencies for instant focus-groups or quick-response surveys
How to make money:
1. See twitter.com
2. 37signals model of varying service levels based on # of groups that a moderator can form, # of decisions per month, security, archiving of vote outcomes, notarization of votes
3. Advertising (last resort)
4. Maybe Diebold will be interested in acquiring us
July 2nd, 2007 at 4:32 pm
Tyler- taking off of your idea (22), you could build a Facebook API, essentially using the Facebook user base to build up your book critique data.
July 2nd, 2007 at 11:05 pm
Here’s an idea I’ve been thinking about implementing for a while now: recording user actions on a website and then being able to play them back as if you were looking over the user’s shoulder. This has been done before (http://tapefailure.com/, http://www.clicktale.com/), but I think that it can be done in a different way that addresses the problems of the existing services.
Both of these services are hosted, which has the benefit of easy setup and working across platforms, but creates problems with privacy (you’re sending potentially sensitive information to a third party), member-only areas (tapefailure doesn’t work at all with this stuff, and clicktale has some issues from what I understand), and dynamic content (again, tapefailure “fails” here, don’t know about clicktale).
I think that implementing this as something that the website owner can install locally has a lot of potential, because it fixes the problems outline above. I envision a Rails plugin, a PHP component, etc. It does the following things:
- Records the output of the request (HTML, etc.)
- Attaches JS to the page that records the users actions (mouse, keyboard, etc.)
- Gives admins a way to define what they don’t want recorded (blacklist)
- Provides an interface for playing back user sessions
There are a lot of features that can be added, but those are the basics. The business model would be to offer a free, time-limited trial, and then the user would have to pay a small, one-time licensing fee. We’d be able to enforce the licensing by scanning for our JS code using Google.
The nice thing about this project is that it can be easily broken out into pieces that the SW attendees can work on in teams:
- The JS recording code
- The server-side recording code (one for Rails, one for PHP, etc.)
- The JS playback component
- The server-side “tape” management interface
- The promotional site for the product
There are probably some other areas that I’m forgetting. I’d love to hear your thoughts on the idea, and if we decided to build this, I’d be the first customer.
July 3rd, 2007 at 1:36 am
Simplur.com (as in “simple pluralism”) The idea behind simplur is to give anyone, anywhere, an easy entrance to the political conversation of their choice through a simple “heat map” page.
I originally imagined it as a blue/purple/red (left to right) spectrum that is tagged by topic to show what different groups are chatting about at the moment. The size of the tag would indicate the “heat” currently being poured into the issue and would be an aggregate value determined by spidering rss feeds for content. Today, for example, I would imagine a lot of talk about “Scooter”.
The other way to imagine it would be to have a split screen with issues running down the middle as a two-sided histogram. Then the heat is determined with a simple bar. If the left is talking about something heatedly, then the left side bar extends more to the left. (There must be a better way to say that.) The same thing would happen on the right side.
In either case, when a visitor hovers over in issue, an ajaxie window pops up with options for learning about the issue, participating in the conversation, or voting in polls that other users have proposed. There could also be a simple menu for dropping that issue into their user account.
The user account could build out personal political profiles on certain issues, and this profile could be used in a number of ways. First, of course, social networking could be facilitated in an eharmony type way–platonic or otherwise.
But most importantly, the data from each profile could be used to amass anonymous political opinions on various issues. This data would be sold to news organizations and political campaigns. Issue opinions could also be tracked for changes given certain events or the thinking of influencers within the community. Simple up/down voting on what others are thinking would also be a possibility.
The biggest advantage of this sort of visual platform is easy entry for anyone seeking to figure out what’s going on and have a voice on the issues they care about. No more searching for political blogs or information about a topic. The whole spectrum is right there.
This could be related to the upcoming convention in Denver, of courseI would imagine that convention speeches will be webcasted live and podcasted. Registered members of simplur could be hooked up with a virtual like/dislike meter that tracked impressions in real time, similar to how market researchers do with content. Combined with user profiles, this would be extremely valuable information for both parties.
The list goes on and on. Again, though, the most important part is the front page visual user interface. That would be the most important part of the weekend, I would imagine.
July 3rd, 2007 at 1:46 am
Another idea…A site that allows people to control their schedules using a “bid for time” model. I first thought of this for doctors wishing to deal more efficiently with pharmaceutical reps, but the same could work for other industries.
So, a doctor says he will be available to take appointments for 1 hour on Thursday. His/Her profile is tagged with things like “doctor, denver, oncology”.
Then, a pharmaceutical rep sees this availability and bids $20. Another sees this and bids $200 because they’re out pushing a new line. The doctor takes the $200 (I assume), and a small percentage goes to us.
I’ve checked into the laws on this, and doctors have the option of accepting payment (or samples), as long as there is an assumed benefit to their patients. Not sure how we’d take a cut of the drugs, but I’ll be happy to discuss that in the wee hours of the weekend.
This could also be an automated way to conduct charity events - the ones where a celebrity agrees to have lunch with the highest bidder.
Of course, it could also be used to solicit bids. Instead of contacting sales people when interested in a product, just publish a time, a location, and a couple of descriptive tags, and then see who comes. Build in time, and they will come.
July 3rd, 2007 at 12:47 pm
What about a social bookmarking site that bookmarks places, people and things?
I could text a short message that reminds me about someone I met, a place Ive been, a thing I saw/experienced.
Then I would log into a site where my text message would be stored, I could search the network for the person I met, the place Ive been, etc. to see if my friends are connected.
A function could be a place based (where are you doing it?) and person based (who are you doing it with?) mini-blog.
For example, I text “Met Danny Newman at StartupWeekend.” When I log in I can see who of my friends attended StartupWeekend, what the network is saying about StartupWeekend, and more info on Danny (maybe his contact or favorite places), and finally, do any of my network know Danny.
July 3rd, 2007 at 12:49 pm
I hope my comments here don’t come off as aggressive as they may sound. I am totally gung ho about this and am not a party pooper.
That said, can we please choose an idea that’s not as mundane as remembering my lover’s birthday and what she wants? Isn’t the solution to that problem a personal one, not a technical one? All the reminder systems in the world aren’t enough to make me a more thoughtful person — they just solve the problem of me appearing unthoughtful.
I’m not picking on that idea particularly, but all of the ones that are, well, a bit mundane or too money-focused.
Whatever happened to DOING GOOD and using all our technical prowess, which is power, to create positive cultural change?
I appreciate everyone’s ideas, but with all of this brain power in one place you’d think we could think bigger.
Some more ideas:
- vevo.com/politics like Joe Scharf / Craig suggest but how about we make it a running meter of the 2008 elections? Syndicate out widgets/facebook/myspace components around the data.
- a map mashup similar to crimemaps but with the app’s epicenter being local neighborhood problems (eg, all the potholes in Colorado) In fact, we could even just do damnpotholes.com and it would be a winner. We could focus locally, but the system scales nationally. Lots of ways to monetize localized ads, etc.
- do-gooder.com, a public forum for posting your good acts for the day, you get points for each act. If someone does good by you, you can post the act ‘in reverse’ (eg, ‘this goes out to the nice man who paid me a compliment - thanks’). Lots of social tie-ins here and game-like qualities. Great stats and visualization possibilities.
- encouragement system for pregnant women. Have a spouse or friend that’s pregnant? Submit their mobile # or e-mail address and they’ll get a positive message at random times (too regular and it loses magic). Women love this shit.
I have more ideas but have to get back to work. I’m giving up a weekend of camping with girls to code with us geeks, so please, lets do something that’s meaningful!
July 3rd, 2007 at 1:17 pm
I guess electionvine has done something like the 1st idea I mentioned.
July 3rd, 2007 at 4:11 pm
I just read about some domainers complaining about a bunch of generic domain names that are unresolved and return 404 errors. They lament the fact that the owners could be making $1000s if they parked them and hosted one of those fake ad portals.
I don’t know about you, but I prefer a 404 over a fake ad portal. Those fake ad portals form a majority of the Web now — and chances are, if you let a domain name expire in the last 10 years, there is now one of these parasites in its place, hoping to make a few dollars more than the domain’s registration fee.
What if we were to develop a crawler that would identify all of these ad portal websites and then save them to a secondary lookup table used by a browser plugin (firefox or IE or whatever).
If the address of a waste-of-time ad portal was detected, it could pop-up a user dialog identifying the site as a fake ad portal before the visitor lands on the ads.
Philosophically, maybe if you remove the chance of revenue from these domainers’ sites, then there may be a reduction in the attraction to polluting the web with useless portals.
Just a thought
July 3rd, 2007 at 4:25 pm
If you google “gift reminder” you will find a myriad of services doing the gift reminder service. A great example is the personal and holiday reminder service offered from www.gifts.com
It’s a great idea but been done before.
July 3rd, 2007 at 4:45 pm
I would also encourage everyone to think big.
“Startup,” at least in the context that we are approaching it, implies a vision of building something of significant value that will reward our investment of time, energy and resources. Whether we go for the big dollar payoff, try to make the world a better place, or shoot for a combination of the two, let’s focus the energy, enthusiasm and talent of the people in the room on an idea with a large amount of potential.
Also, this event is going to generate a good amount of press for the entrepreneurial community here in Boulder / Denver. Given that we’re going to be in the spotlight, it’s to our benefit to be ambitious and tackle a big idea, even if we fail.
We can always scale it back once we get going but let’s begin the project with as much excitement and potential opportunity as possible.
July 3rd, 2007 at 5:38 pm
So, what is the ratio of web developers to programmers to other people? When I signed up, the “do everything” position was filled up, so I signed up as a programmer, but I’m a sysadmin/programmer really.
I’m guessing that if we have a large number of programmers, that the project will be back-end heavy, but if we have a large number of web developers, that the app will be front-end/GUI-heavy.
either way, it sounds like we’ll have a bunch of fun. I was checking out the Devner Co-Op location and I was jazzed to work there this weekend, but the Boulder location sounds better to me since I’m in the Boulder area anyway.
- Steve
July 3rd, 2007 at 5:51 pm
I’m a sysadmin at a dot-com, and I know that there is a need for some infrastructure up-front. That’s why I’ve set up a server that I’ll bring with me to the event with lots of L.A.M.P. server stuff on it (linux, apache, mysql, php, perl, python, ruby, VPN, phpBB2 (for quick voting/discussion), wiki (for docs), irc server (for communication), cvs repository, and more …) so we can be productive right out of the gate. I’m sure that people may want to use other tools too (I’m not limiting our toolset to these), but I’m offering it up just in case. Real user accounts and email will be available via this machine if needed.
- Steve
- Steve
July 3rd, 2007 at 6:08 pm
Before I forget, and before I can finish reading through everyone else’s ideas - here’s one I have that I think everyone will be able to participate in fairly equally, regardless of technical abilities…
My wife is regularly invited to parties. Parties to buy candles, jewelry, purses, makeup, etc. Would guys be interested in doing a similar thing for home brewing, small electronics, etc.?
With young kids, my neighbors and I are always looking for excused to get out of the house. I’d like to find products where the focus in on a group activity, and purchasing products related to that activity is the afterthought. For example: Sell the ‘host’ a home brew kit and the rep. show up with some cool home brew tools to make the activity work. The rep. then sells from a catalog of home brewing equipment and recipes. The group has fun making beer, and maybe buys some stuff to do it again later.
The main thing I like is that everyone who participates in startup weekend can act as a rep. at the end of the weekend, regardless of their role during the weekend, moving the concept forward.
July 3rd, 2007 at 8:31 pm
[…] by the ideas that are beginning to form on the StartupWeekend blog, its shaping up to be an amazing weekend of […]
July 3rd, 2007 at 8:40 pm
Another idea: I subscrive to tons of RSS feeds. How about making an aggregator that removes duplicate articles? I subscribe to digg, engadget, gizmodo and lots of others and it seems like I waste about an hour each day reading the same @#$% article over and over because everyone in the tech ‘blogosphere’ covers the same item. Might need to delay the feed a little, or just grep the content for links that have already been seen and nuke any following articles that link to the same URL …
- Steve
July 3rd, 2007 at 10:22 pm
Gents…we should definitely attempt to capture the startup weekend events on video no? maybe even broadcast it live J
Anyway…here is my pitch for a perhaps killer idea… www.15MoreMinutes.com
Basically American Idol meets Hot or Not on steroids
User generated video content to be uploaded (1 min max?). Must select the category submitting to for video clip uploading
e.g. Male Vocal
Female Vocal
Band
Comedian
M/F fashion model
M/F “other” model
Etc…
Viewers vote and comment on the video from particular category. Top-rated videos from each category are featured on the home-page. This allows everyone who wants to be famous the opportunity to be famous.
Just a thought…
July 3rd, 2007 at 11:22 pm
Here’s a more technical idea I had a while back. A browser plug-in to aid in online research gathering and bibliography creation. Create an area on the screen where you can drag and drop text, images, etc into. Behind the scenes it would organize the data, as well as tag the website, exact URL, etc. The resulting document could then be drag and drop reorganized to make an outline of ideas and to easily get back to the source pages.
July 4th, 2007 at 9:31 am
Idea: Custom Tour Guide
Problem: Typically to booking a vacation involves, booking a flight, hotel, and rent a car. But it doesn’t complete my vacation. I still have to find out where to have lunch and dinner, where to park my car during dinner and lunch. What activities to do while on vacation, finding driving directions from hotel to interesting spots, etc.
Usually, my time is wasted before going on vacation trying to make my vacation complete by researching every bit, visiting multiple web sites (Yahoo Travel, Trip Adviser, Google Maps, etc) for information. Time is also wasted when I am on vacation trying to find restaurants, parking spots, directions from hotel to interesting spots, etc.
Solution: The website that takes start and end date, vacation location, hotel address where you’re staying, etc and generates a complete guide for every day and lets you choose interesting activities, restaurants, etc. The guide includes where to eat, directions to restaurants, directions to interesting spots, weather data, etc.
The solution should be similar to REI (Recreational Equipment Inc) Guided Tours where you don’t have to worry about where to eat, where to go, next etc.
Implementation: This web site can be a MashUp of several services or web sites (Google Maps, Trip Advisor, Restaurants reviews site, Local Visitor center web site, Weather website etc)
July 4th, 2007 at 10:07 am
Since global warming is such a hot topic right now, did you know that 40% of all businesses do NOTHING to reduce their carbon footprint (e.g. recycling, using flourescent lightbulbs, turning off computers at night)?
How about a business where we demonstrate to others how to go green painlessly?
If we can demonstrate that buying recycled paper, and a fleet of hybrid cars, for example, will actually save each company money in the long run, it could be an alternative others would buy into.
July 4th, 2007 at 1:22 pm
@Steve Webb - Good initiative, Steve. Thanks for doing that. I have wiki aversion syndrome for which there is no known cure; how about KnowledgeTree for doc management?
Anyway, there are so many good ideas I feel a little self-conscious presenting mine…but here is my first one:
Big Idea 1: Real Estate Workflow Management + SaaS Platform
There are a number of industries that work on and with real estate data like the kind you get from MLS systems: real estate brokers, construction engineers, contractors, architects, brokers, handy-people, the default and rental industries. The core domain model is, I think, similar enough that it could be generalized and expressed in middleware.
There are a couple of revenue centers that I see initially:
1. Because the domain model is ubiquitous, SaaS would be a core business from the start. APIs for mash-up developers and the like would help establish a platform along the lines of Salesforce.com, Google and Yahoo. Initial APIs would be SOAP and a popular RESTful protocol.
2. Also, like Salesforce.com, we would build usable software that would be another core revenue center as well as force us to eat our own dog food (and we all know the benefits of eating dog food, now don’t we?).
So for the startup weekend exercise, a vertical-specific application could be developed. For example we could build a naïve workflow app for real estate brokers then mash it with Google maps and Skype or something (btw, this also addresses a skill set issue someone mentioned somewhere since we can have UI designers/developers and middleware and database folks working in concert).
It would also be cool to have an SMS MLS search tool so folks driving by a property with a “For Sale” sign in front of it could check the price without having to deal with a broker.
As the business grows, we could build on the similarities in the way property management and the default industry view and use the data to develop an application for those verticals.
Ongoing revenue centers can be developed such as Professional Services and managed services for those that don’t like their secret data rubbing up against other people’s secret data.
It is my believe that a working system could be developed by a team of smart folks hopped up on Red Bull in the time allotted.
July 4th, 2007 at 1:37 pm
Here’s my other idea:
Big Idea 2: Flexible Mash-Up Search Tool
The theme of managing the influx of information whether it comes via RSS Google search results or what have you, is a clearly a common one. Things are getting better but there are still serious challenges in finding relevant information and obfuscating the irrelevant (like I’m not sure why Google persists in reporting that I have results 24,900,000 for a search on “Ruby on Rails”; 99% of the time I never go past the first page, rather I refine my search and push the button again).
Tags help with this but don’t deal with the issue of aggregation.
The idea that I’ve have is essentially a mash-up of search tools and using custom functionality that allows a person to define their search environment. I is like Yahoo pipes (or simpler) but with the ability to include regular, non-RSS data sources. An example use case would be someone who is shopping for a car can mash up Google, vehix.com, car.com, eBay Motors and craigslist RSS feeds. It is filtered via tags and custom search terms. The UI is a web app using Air or Google Gears, etc. or browser a plug-in.
Revenue is advertising driven except for those that hate ads who can pay a nominal fee of $20 a year. The other idea I had was building an affiliate program for commerce related searches on top of this.
I think there is merit to this idea but I haven’t put as much thought into it as my other one. Since there were some other folks that talked about, let discuss this one to see where it goes.
July 4th, 2007 at 2:25 pm
[…] capitalists, jacks of all trade and cooks and lock them in a room together for a weekend with an idea. By marinating everyone’s brains together from Friday at 6pm until Sunday night at 10pm, the […]
July 5th, 2007 at 3:50 pm
Stu, I had something similar to yours (51), except that users would be able to select/right click text/images/media/links and tag them however they see fit. For example, you could select a quote from Bill Gates and tag it as Quote, Bill Gates. Then when someone searches the site for a quote from Bill Gates, this selection pops up with a link to the original page. You could then allow the site’s users to approve/disapprove the tagging for relevance, etc. Search is done to hell, but this idea involves humans, 100% of the time, creating the database.
July 5th, 2007 at 4:44 pm
Here is my submission: bakrupr.com
An totally cross platform open source (or commercial in this case?) application that backs up your system routinely to several redundant hard drives of the other users of the service. The space you’re allowed depends on the space you dedicate to the cause. If you dedicate 30GB, then you’re allowed to back up 30GB worth of data. This all happens automatically, and the result is that your data (encrypted on the fly of course) is backed up off-site and by several parties. Dedicate more than 200GB, and your account is free. A whole file is never backed up to a single machine. There are lots of other fun things to do once you have the users.
July 5th, 2007 at 6:39 pm
Boulder Social Network.
Basically an online community that coordinates meat-space events each week with themes, locations, content determined online by the community with voting during the week. Much like we have here with Start-up Weekend but think social events, singles events, film screenings, product demo’s and testings.
The community could court sponsors locally and globally, provide segmented market testing for trade, and connect people of similar interest in REAL LIVE SOCIAL EVENTS using online tools and technologies.
I’d join.
c
July 5th, 2007 at 10:43 pm
@Michael Sitarzewski: I had that *exact* same idea, but in order to be redundant, you’d have to have more than one copy on each person’s machine, so if you make the backup size 100MB and want a minimum of two copies available for restoration online, you’d have to make the minimum “shared” size to be 200MB. More copies would be necessary depending on the “lifetime” of your data on the network. Also, freenet (check google) is kind of like this. I think that a colaborative backup service is still a great idea, but implementation details would be tricky to work out.
July 5th, 2007 at 11:43 pm
build a facebook app that helps the middle school to college student study for tests and do homework… that would leverage your talents, do something meaningful, get incredible pr, and if it works work huge.. id love to be involved if you choose it.. good luck ..have fun.. the bid for time idea is excellent and if it doesnt exist could be an auction site built and pulled off in a weekend.. but i agree with the opinion that probably not as techie as your mission…. i have a lot of experience in detailing doctors , noone has bigger budgets than big pharma to get in front of docs and all their money and incentives like dinners and trips have been taken away.. “stark laws”. if this bid model is away around that , which i doubt, its a serious homerun.
July 5th, 2007 at 11:51 pm
Jeff Beard - Your Real Estate Workflow SaaS idea ia a great one. I have been kicking this one around in my head for several years and even had a developer put some legs to it. I have seen aspects of it work in the real world. It streamlines communication, and keeps the pesky buyer up do date on what is going on with the lender, broker, closer, etc. without all of the time-sucking calls. I am not able to make the weekend, but I would love to discuss this idea further if it is not selected this weekend. niles17@yahoo.com.
July 6th, 2007 at 12:15 am
Hey all. I wanted to share a few of my ideas.
1. Apply predictive market technology to government contracts. Use Fed Biz Ops as a data source. Similar concept to Stockpickr but with federal / state contracts.
2. Build a FireFox / IE plug in that allows people to put a star rating on social networking websites. For example, browsing myspace, the user could set a star value on a given profile. Site shows top people / interests / bands / etc.. from various social sites. Results are stored on a central site that is used to mine data and license it to advertisers.
3. Startup package for retiring government / military officials that allows them to start their own consulting company. Like a ’start your own beltway bandit shop’ we provide all resources (legal setup, accounting, etc..) they just do consulting work just like they did on their previous job.
4. Create a marketplace for local business to sponsor artistic (concerts, fashion shows, gallery showings, etc..) events. For example, apply the ‘Rolling Stones presented by Coors’ to a local scale with ‘Garage Band sponsored by Local Brewery.’ Business collects a cut of the fee to making the connection. Events are found on upcoming.org / social networking sites.
Also, if it is ok, we plan on setting up a confessional style video camera in case anyone wants to do a video blog or talk about lessons learned for Startup Weekend 2.0.
July 6th, 2007 at 1:14 am
i like dave cohens idea but it would have way more depth as part of zweme so it could paltogether and be sent to friends on line blind as well.
July 6th, 2007 at 11:30 am
[…] 6pm they will be going through all the ideas and figuring out which one to run with. Here’s a list of many of the proposed ideas, this should spur some […]
July 6th, 2007 at 11:36 am
Feel free to use any of the ideas from my site — click my link to see an archive.
If you guys go with the Reminders idea, maybe I could contribute a domain and become the 73rd founder
The domain is ‘Remynders.com’ — “my reminders”, get it?
I have one of my best friend’s weddings this weekend or I’d be joining you. Good luck all!
July 6th, 2007 at 5:26 pm
There are some things on the web that still can take a lot of time if you are trying to save money. For example, I recently was searching for some wheel bearings for my jeep, and because I didn’t want to get ripped off at the dealership, I went searching online. So, I checked out various auto parts stores online, some reputable, some not. I also looked at ebay and froogle and some other price comparison engines, and got flooded with some legit, and a lot of bogus info. Plus it was impossible to know the quality of the thing that you were getting unless you contacted the merchant directly to inquire about the specific brand etc. It would be cool to build a more community-centric form of dealnews - where people can get the best information/prices about a wide variety of products - not another pricegrabber. I would love to see it bringing to light some of the less mainstream, yet excellent merchants out there.
July 6th, 2007 at 6:34 pm
Here’s my proposal. (I’m not a programmer sorry, but you’ll get the point.)
An application that embeds a tracking code in an email. This email can then be use for “word of mouth” marketing by email to sell a product or service. Basically, an affiliate program by email. The original sender gets analytical information on who has participated (signed up, purchased, forwarded on, etc.), and may choose to use this info to reward the participants.
This is currently available in some form in email marketing tools and in affiliate program software but the ease of use is key and this sole focus of a business would make it very unique and give a strong position in the marketplace.
July 6th, 2007 at 7:19 pm
Appreciating ideas around sustainability. Also like the idea of transferring whatever we do to “meat space.” Most information workers, self included, spend countless hours online and could use some RL interaction with others. Or apps that allow for seamless transition from online to off-.
As a registered yoga teacher, I’d love to see this weekend include some sort of body practice (and am happy to lead yoga sessions) and think an information worker body practice widget, app or something (with stick figures demo’ing how to do things) could be awesome.
Finally, I’d love to see this weekend bring something into the world that offers real benefit. Much as I love twitter (and I know I’m setting myself up here…) I’m not yet seeing the “benefit” it brings the world. Let’s transcend ordinary!
(ps…I’m a lady…so…let’s dispense with the “gents” addressing, shall we? Rock.)
July 6th, 2007 at 7:24 pm
@14 suggests that the organisers want something viral. So far I haven’t seen many viral ideas so here’s one - I think…
- A browser plug-in that acts like Twitter but asks “What are you browsing?” at regular intervals. Also allow users to ask each other.
- Doesn’t auto-report the sites a user visits, as this is a concern for many users when thinking about such plug-ins.
- Instead, user simply clicks a button to respond and the current site being browsed is sent to a database.
- To get people to download, use and share the plug-in, offer two substantial cash rewards a month. One to the most active user and another to a random user who has told at least x number of friends about the tool.
- Make the tool useful in some other way(s), e.g. show a list of other sites that have been visited by other people who have visited the site currently being visited by the user.
- Make registration optional, but non-registered users won’t be eligible for a prize.
- Offer the tool free of cost and ads to the user. Instead, make money by selling analyses done on the data captured. Note that basic data should also be available to users for free, but I imagine that some interesting analysis can be done on it to yield more interesting info that can be made available only to paying members.
July 7th, 2007 at 12:35 pm
Too bad I can’t make it, here are some ideas I’ve had over the past few months, feel free to use any as inspiration!
http://www.astartupaday.com
July 7th, 2007 at 8:27 pm
[…] Everyone who attends is a founder, with equal equity. Ideas for what the company will be have been gathered since June. The weekend will be spent deciding what to build, and then building […]
July 7th, 2007 at 9:07 pm
[…] Everyone who attends is a founder, with equal equity. Ideas for what the company will be have been gathered since June. Last night the group decided which idea to pursue out of fifty […]
July 7th, 2007 at 9:13 pm
[…] Everyone who attends is a founder, with equal equity. Ideas for what the company will be have been gathered since June. Last night the group decided which idea to pursue out of fifty […]
July 7th, 2007 at 9:45 pm
[…] Everyone who attends is a founder, with equal equity. Ideas for what the company will be have been gathered since June. Last night the group decided which idea to pursue out of fifty […]
July 7th, 2007 at 10:29 pm
[…] Everyone who attends is a founder, with equal equity. Ideas for what the company will be have been gathered since June. Last night the group decided which idea to pursue out of fifty […]
July 8th, 2007 at 5:30 am
[…] part égale dans la société. Les idées autour de ce que pourrait être la société ont été recensées depuis le mois de Juin. Hier soir, la société a choisi l’idée qu’elle allait développer dans […]
July 8th, 2007 at 9:21 am
[…] Everyone who attends is a founder, with equal equity. Ideas for what the company will be have been gathered since June. Last night the group decided which idea to pursue out of fifty […]
July 8th, 2007 at 3:58 pm
[…] 嚴格來說,VoSnap並不是在本週末兩天內從無到有趕出來,今年六月,就陸續開始募集點子,直到確定為VoSnap後,挑戰用一個週末的時間把網路服務完成(7/9禮拜一上線)。很High,有沒有可能成功呢?咱們拭目以待。 […]
July 24th, 2007 at 5:29 am
[…] suo sito si possono vedere tutti gli steps fatti, dal brainstorming fino alle conclusioni finali… pecatto che alla fine non sono riusciti da ottenere quello che […]