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a guest post by Yorgos Dedes, winner of the contest for a semi-free LeWeb ticket
Another LeWeb has reached its end. LeWeb 08, Paris – the major annual international internet conference in Europe, organized by Loic Le Meur (founder of Seesmic) and his wife Geraldine, has been a controversial event. More than 1700 participants from all over the world, a cast of international names, a start up competition, big sponsors, demo rooms-workshops, two French government ministers and two after-show parties can sum up what Le Web 08 was all about.

This event didn’t meet the expectations of many of its participants. That was obvious. Some people called it “No Web” since you had to pray for some minutes of internet. Room temperature for the first day was too low to survive without wearing your coat. The food was really tasty if you had the luck to taste it. Loic describes the problems much better than me and I really like the way he does it. Except for the infrastructure issues, Loic got critised about his softball interviews, especially these ones regarding the sponsors.

But still, Le Web is about networking. Le Web is people from around the globe, gathered in the same place in order to meet old friends and make new ones. A place where you can meet in personal people who you only know through the web, pitch your ideas and get feedback. So, for a newbie like me, Le Web was a great experience! The content may not have been always of high level, but there were times that I really enjoyed being there. I feel really lucky for attending Le Web and I want once more to thank opencoffee.gr who gave me this chance.
So, let’s go through the highlights of Le Web 08. On day one, David Weinberger with his presentation entitled “leadership at the end of the age of information” pointed out that leadership is property of a network. In the past information naturally flowed up to the leaders, at the top. Now information is everywhere and available for everyone. So, a leader nowadays has to get the best of the best network.
Helen Fisher gave a long presentation trying to explain how love works and how important it is for us to clear this out. One thing among the many points that caught my attention was that after experiments, love and coccaine activate the same part of the brain!
Then, Paulo Coelho, the famous Brasilian author and blogger, made clear that “You’ll have to share in order to get some revenue”. He has tested this policy, against his publicers willing, and he found out that people download the book but don’t read it, they just wait for the hardcopy.
In what was probably the OpenCoffee session with the most startups or projects (to play along with recent complaints that the term ‘startup’ is used rather loosely) presenting, here’s what you missed if you didn’t make it to the event – nor tuned in its live coverage.
First of all, there were 3 presentations from the by most accounts successful Athens Startup Weekend. Blognudge to begin with is trying to solve the problem that some bloggers (hint, hint) fail to update on a regular basis and (nudge, nudge) even weeks intervene between their posts. What this service does is that it simply allows you to install a widget/button on your blog that visitors can push to urge you to write a post. Although this is the only feature offered at the moment, future versions will allegedly include the option of suggesting a topic, donating to the blogger or donating to a charity. A number of revenue streams have also been thought of for Blognudge including a monthly charge on bloggers using it, requesting a cut from (non-charity) donations and also exploiting the statistics and the data generated by the ‘nudgers’.

howsocial.ru is a service that aims to measure the combined social impact users of social media have on their online environment of followers and connections and rank them accordingly. Their goal is to include all important platforms starting with Twitter, FriendFeed, Facebook and the blogosphere – although at the moment the service operates using just Twitter as a proof of concept. The business model is based on the fact that knowledge of the most influential nodes in the social graph (i.e. how people are interconnected in the various platforms through following etc) is highly valuable to anyone who would be interested to get their message across. As such possible paying customers of this service are marketers, startups or even individuals willing to identify who to approach for their promotion goals. At the same time, analytics on particular topics/keywords will be provided under the lens of who propagates such information – and their importance. (Disclaimer: I am a member of the Athens Startup Weekend team that put together this project.)
We initiated kind of an experiment yesterday night, trying to come up with a list of the Open Coffee Athens XVII participants and extending the network effect in the dimension of time. So, we created a typical form and asked whoever wanted to go and submit her details (name/title (required), url, twitter and a short message, plus her email if she wanted to be submitted in our mailing list to receive announcements of our future events).
It’s clear that the process wasn’t flawless and the bottleneck in the one laptop receiving all submissions was significant, nevertheless the list of a small portion of the attendees follows here, while the rest of you may submit your details now, or leave a comment (the post will be updated). And, of course, we’re waiting for your feedcack on this very rough idea!
Κλείνουμε το 2008 με μία συνάντηση αντίστοιχη της κινητικότητας που έχει δημιουργηθεί -με τον ένα ή τον άλλο τρόπο- στην ελληνική σκηνή του τεχνολογικού επιχειρείν. Το event θα λάβει χώρα την ερχόμενη Τρίτη, 2 Δεκεμβρίου στο Divani Caravel και πάλι, αυτή τη φορά ωστόσο προετοιμαστείτε για τον τελευταίο όροφο του ξενοδοχείου και μία ζεστή αίθουσα με μοναδική θέα στην Ακρόπολη και τη θάλασσα, ένας ακόμη λόγος για να βρεθείτε εκεί.

Οι ομιλίες θα είναι περισσότερες από ποτέ. Κεφαλαιοποιώντας την μοναδική εμπειρία του Athens Startup Weekend, δίνουμε την ευκαιρία σε 3 από τις προσπάθειες που ξεχώρισαν να παρουσιάσουν τους καρπούς της ωφέλιμης εργασίας ενός σαββατοκύριακου, εντός 3 λεπτών:
Η παρουσίαση των νικητών του event εκκρεμεί για επόμενη συνάντηση, τα όποια συμπεράσματα μεταξύ εφικτού και ανέφικτου δημιουργίας μίας ικανής start-up από τον καθένα μας, προεκτείνοντας τις συνθήκες των 2,5 ημερών στον άξονα του χρόνου, είναι δικά σας. Οι υπόλοιπες ομιλίες έχουν ως εξής:
Όλοι αυτοί και όλοι εμείς, θα βρεθούμε το απόγευμα της Τρίτης 2 Δεκεμβρίου στο ξενοδοχείο Divani Caravel (Βασιλέως Αλεξάνδρου 2, δίπλα από τον σταθμό Ευαγγελισμό του μετρό, δείτε και χάρτη). Για τις ομιλίες θα βρεθούμε στον τελευταίο όροφο, για τους καφέδες και τα ποτά στην αίθουσα και στην βεράντα του τελευταίου ορόφου ή στο εκλεκτό bar του ισογείου.
Το ακριβές πρόγραμμα παραμένει ως συνήθως:
Ο τρόπος προσέλευσης είναι ιδιαίτερα πολύπλοκος, όπως πάντα: Απλά έρχεστε (η συμμετοχή είναι δωρεάν και ανοικτή για όλους). Αν θέλετε να επαληθεύσετε την παρουσία σας, αφήνετε ένα σχόλιο εδώ (ή και στο σχετικό facebook event), ενώ σε περίπτωση που επιθυμείτε να παρουσιάσετε σε επόμενη συνάντηση, στέλνετε ένα email στο opencoffee.gr(παπί)gmail.com.
Το πιο cool και ψαγμένο κοινό της πόλης, τα πιο ανοικτά και δραστήρια μυαλά, περιμένουν να σας γνωρίσουν και να τους γνωρίσετε, να ανταλλάξετε ιδέες και εμπειρίες, προτάσεις και επαφές, χωρίς απροσπέλαστες γραβάτες ή δήθεν. Μεταξύ εσάς και άλλων, nerds και marketers, bloggers και δημοσιογράφοι, venture capitalists και developers, νέοι επιχειρηματίες και πεπειραμένοι PRs, θα είμαστε όλοι εκεί, στο ανεπίσημο και διαδραστικό social network που δημιουργήθηκε και παραμένει πρώτα απ’όλα χειροπιαστό και real world. Σας περιμένουμε.
The following is a detailed account of the Athens Startup Weekend experience.
Pettycards is a system and logical device for making micropayments by using prepaid cards that are attached to your cellphone. A really great idea, and one of those that in our humble opinion stood out of the rest from the first moments.
There is ofcourse a bittersweet feeling. Every contestant would feel that their baby is prettier than those of the others. Still the pettycards project won fair and square.
Advice to the rest: Don’t be dissapointed. Your idea just didn’t fit the profile of the VCs. Keep working on it, add more value, and you will either have a successful product on it’s own, or justify an investment.
The experience overall was just great. Everything in the hosting department except for WIND’s wifi was very finely tuned. Congratulations are in order Andrew Hyde for delivering the idea, and Alexandros Pagidas for bringing Andrew here. For the hosts, I’ll quote Pagidas, who said that the reception in part of the Innovation Center changed his perception of Microsoft, later explaining that he expected at least some rules about incorporating Microsoft’s software in the startups being built. I think that’s true for many of us. Congrats are also in order for Patrick and Lydia for really providing assistance and catering to our needs. Finally a congrats are in order for the GIVE foundation. The promise of a 20.000 € investment, which was after all a significant drive for the competition and excellence of the projects.
You can also see the viewpoints of others that attended the event, such as John Nousis’, Dimitris Athanasiadis, Alex Georgiadis, George Tziralis, Stavros Messinis . Please leave a comment if you were there, we’re still trying to backlink as many of you as possible.

So the Athens Startup Weekend came and went and I think it’s left a most positive impression to everyone involved and about all its aspects. Andrew and Alexandros were there with us to show us how starting simply from an idea you can turn it into a startup within 2.5 days. Patrick and Lydia from Microsoft which hosted the event in the offices of the Microsoft Innovation Center made sure all our technical and maintenance (i.e. food and drinks) needs were met – thank you both for that! Apart from the participants, a number of people with a background on business, law and PR (as well as a few possible funders) were also invited to contribute their expertise to the event – ensuring each team had access to all the disciplines necessary to make their product work. And of course, everyone collectively contributed to create an excellent atmosphere choke full of creativity, ideas, positive vibes, effectiveness and above all results.
Speaking of which. the startups that presented in the end were the following:
And of course we’d like to wish all the best to pettycards who managed to stand out from the rest and attract the promise of the GIVE fund to take a closer look in their project and hopefully invest seed money in them. Congratulations guys! And congratulations to all who participated and helped make the weekend a success.
(Tag for content on twitter, flickr, YouTube, etc is #asw – and sometimes #aws)