We’re moving to Occipital.com

Posted by vikas on Aug 4th, 2008

Dear Fluxcapacity,

You might want to sit down for this. We want to tell you that we found another name - Occipital. Here's a list of all the reasons why we like Occipital, and we were even able to get Occipital.com. We've had a lot of fun here, but we all knew it was going to be temporary right? If you could get your feed readers to switch to http://feeds.feedburner.com/occipital, that would be great. You can keep all the posts we've put up here for now.  Anyways, we wish you all the best, maybe we'll see you around some time.

Vikas, Jeff. Abhishek and Shun
Occipital.com

Our spot in the Boulder County Business Report

Posted by jeff on Jul 22nd, 2008

The Boulder County Business report ran a spot on Fluxcapacity and the other nine 2008 TechStars companies earlier this week.  Our snippet is below, but click through to read about the others.

Fluxcapacity in the Boulder County Business Report

FJCore to the rescue

Posted by jeff on Jul 14th, 2008

Let’s say you’re creating a photo uploader for your cool new website. You need this because you decided that profile photos are totally the way to go. (Hey, you think, Facebook was all about profile photos and it worked for them.) You let the user select a profile photo from their computer, and then they invariably pick an 8 megapixel monster photo. (No, not a monster photo, a monster photo.)

Now you’re kind of screwed. That big photo is going to take a long time to upload. This is going to annoy your user. And it’s not good for you, either: You’re going to pay for, easily 100 times more bandwidth than you actually needed, because the first thing you’re going to do if you’re smart is resize the photo down to an itty bitty thumbnail (You thought about this, and you decided that the ittier, the better, because you’re going to have to display hundreds, if not millions, of these photos as soon as Feld decides to do a month-long series on your cool new website.)

You wonder how Facebook solved this problem, and you discover that they have a special browser plugin thingy. Crap. You don’t know how to make a plugin thingy. And obviously your website is going to be really big on all the major platforms (Windows, Mac, Linux, DOS 6.22), so you’d need multiple. But even if you had one or more thingys, you haven’t quite achieved the household name status. (Except in your household, where your name is easily in the top ten household names.) Where were we? Oh yeah, even if you had an upload plugin thingy, nobody would trust you, and you’d be back to uploading monster images.

What now?

Fortunately, you remember reading about FJCore on a bathroom stall at the bar last night. FJCore, of course, is a JPEG codec that works in Silverlight and supports JPEG resize in the browser. Sweet, so now you can shrink the profile photo before you upload it without scaring off the user. Hell, maybe you’ll even allow multiple profile photos (there’s no chance your competition will see that one coming.) You could even squish the photos together to create one ultra profile photo strip. You feel so empowered that you decide to buy the FJCore guys a beer the next time you hit up that dive bar.

What’s the catch?

Right. There’s always a catch. Silverlight itself is a Microsoft browser plugin thingy… so your users still need to have Silverlight installed. But, like Flash, we expect it to be more or less taken for granted (For one thing, the Olympics will be webcast with Silverlight.) And we’re fans of Silverlight; It can do some cool things Flash can’t do (notably, FJCore relies on the ability to access a file before upload. This isn’t possible in Flash today.) And competition with Flash is good for driving innovation.

Why are we posting this today?

We just released the full-fledged source code to FJCore (on Google Code) today, so although we've had a working example online for a while, this is the first time you can just grab the code and build your own uploader.  Better yet, you can join our open source project and contribute an uploader for everyone to use (except your competition, they are way too dumb to find it) based on FJCore.

“Is this cool?” and the importance of context

Posted by vikas on Jun 30th, 2008

Last week I went to the Attic with the guys from Ignighter and Ben from Devver. Ben told us the story of his friend who was talking to a girl he liked at a party in college. Apparently, at some point there was an awkward lull in the conversation. Instead of trying to fill the void by bringing up an interesting subject, Ben's friend pointed his thumbs behind him in a vague direction and asked the girl, "Is this cool?" I'm don't know exactly what happened after this, but it probably didn't involve an exchange of phone numbers.

We started talking about the question "Is this cool?" and we realized that the meaning varies greatly based on the context of what you're doing with your hands and body while asking the question. Here are all the possibilities we came up with (the red arrows indicate hand/body movement):

Figure 1

In Figure 1, modeled after what Ben's friend did, the asker's hands are moving around in a vague circle. The asker is checking whether the situation around the himself and the askee (a party, a funeral, a ballgame,etc) is cool.

Figure 2


The asker in Figure 2 is either checking if the drink he is consuming is considered cool, or he's wondering whether it's cool that he got another drink on your tab even though you told him he's cut off.

Figure 3

If an unfortunate confrontation has occurred and a verbal exchange has seemingly ended, one can use "is this cool?" accompanied by the body and hand movement shown in Figure 3 to certify that the situation has been resolved. It's important to note, however, that this will only work if the asker is reasonably bigger and stronger than the askee.

Figure 4


Asking, "is this cool?" in a normal, relaxed voice accompanied by the back and forth hand gesture shown in Figure 4 means that the asker is romantically interested in the askee and is wondering if the situation between them is cool. Asking, "is this cool?" with the same gesture but with a lowered, more intense voice means the asker is interested in going with the askee to her or his place for the night.

Special thanks to Krista and Austin from TravelFli, and Adam from Ignighter for being "situation models".

Collective exhale day

Posted by jeff on Jun 27th, 2008

My birthday just ended (thanks for the beers Vikas, and the 'Say It Ain't So' Rock Band production), and I really lucked out because it coincided with the TechStars collective "exhale" day, which began last night at St Julien (thanks David and Howard for drinks), and continued with a poker tournament (congrats Austin, Aziz), and a little party with Sidney's and friends (nice handstand, Kayla). I don't know about everyone else, but I think relaxing feels a lot better when it follows several days of no-letting-up intense hyper-productivity (we haz buzzwords, as PSC would say).

Andrew Hyde recently put up a clip commemorating the first 30 days for the 2008 TechStars companies in Boulder. The ten companies have come a long way in a short time. In fact, so has TechStars itself: Check out David's post detailing the inception of TechStars. Here's my summary of how well he had it figured out:

"Hey d00d [David Brown], let's lure entrepreneurs to Boulder with couches and shit."

Just kidding, sort of. We love you David.

Here's Andrew's masterpiece, but check out more on the community site:

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