Community


During my recent trip to Calgary my friends Patrick Lor, Claudia Moore & Sarah Blue from Cambrian House and Kemptom Lam helped me organize a local blogger dinner where I got to meet some great local entpreneurs, Calgary social media & tech folks.

In attendance where Patrick Lor, Sarah Blue, Claudia MooreDavid Gluzman, Tom WestJasmine Antonick, Matthew Dorey, Nox Dineen, Matt Lonsdale, Mark Kornak, Ivan Sierralta, Fred Yee, Mark Rosenberger, and Kempton Lam.

Here is a video I shot with some of the local Calgary technology community saying hello.

 


Tom West has a great write up of the night.

One of the goals of the dinner was to help instigate (in the spirit of my friend & Barcamp/Democamp instigator grandaddy David Crow and Calgary native Tara Hunt) the Barcamp and Democamp movement in Calgary.

My friend Patrick Lor had these kind words and great announcement about Calgary’s Barcamp and Democamp kick off.

Well, he flies into town last week, and this week we have set a date for Calgary’s first BarCamp. Thanks to Austin Hill for instigating all of this. Also, huge thanks to Sarah at Cambrian House for organizing.

BarCamp Calgary will be Calgary’s premiere unconference, a showcase of Calgary’s technology community. Sign up now!

Date: Saturday, May 26th
Time: 9:00 to 6:00

Cost: Free, IF you promise to spread the word to attendees, presenters, and sponsors.

We’re also planning DemoCamp Calgary for April 24th, which is a 2 hour meeting with 4 or 5 company presentations that are strictly PowerPoint free! Why no PowerPoint? - check this out, and see how great a product presentation can be when there are no slides. Sign up here.

Kempton has written up a great report on our discussion about the Barcamp & Democamp ideas that we discussed.

The Barcamp/Democamp local community technology meetups hold a lot of promise for Canada’s technology community and I’m happy to help spread the word.  I saw some interesting companies while sitting as a judge at business plan presentation session that Patrick invited me to participate in. My take is that innovation in Calgary is like with other cities in Canada where there is more going on in our own backyards then most people realize.

I’m already involved as an angel investor in one startup that was born out of the Barcamp movement and have met two of the teams I’m mentoring through these meetups. 

With the great local entrepreneurs and community members I met in Calgary helping get this going I think something similar could easily occur in Calgary.

Just a reminder DemocampMontreal2 is next Thursday March 29th.  There are going to be some interesting surprises at this Democamp so make sure to sign up and come on out.

I admit it. I heart my Twitter. It’s fun and is forming a new way to keep in touch with my friends as I engage in an informal back channel conversation occurring throughout the day.

You can follow my Twitter conversations here - http://twitter.com/austinhill

I don’t find it distracting, with just an IM window quietly sitting there with a soft stream of interesting notes from my friends. I don’t have updates via SMS enabled so my phone isn’t ringing all the time with updates.

Many would call it a perfect viral service, but I hate that viral meme (See my Viral Manifesto) so IMHO it’s the perfect definition of an authentic service that creates emotional bonds that you just want to share with friends.

I got a chance to speak with Evan Williams at the TED conference, where Twitter sort of took off as Loic Le Meur, Jeff Clavier, Michael Parekh, Evan and I were Twittering the TED conference. (at least those were the people I was following who were Twittering. If you were there and I missed you let me know.)

Occurring at the same time Twitter groups were self organizing meetups and conversations were flowing in preparation for SWSX and all of sudden a firestorm of Twitter activity occurred.

I think Twitter hit a tipping point last week and everyone I know who is using it has quickly become addicted to it. Most of my friends I’ve spoken to it are afraid to touch it for fear of another Internet habit to occupy their already busy schedule. Twitter may just become the Tribbles of the Internet.

A number of great posts started to show up about Twitter. Here are some of the good ones I read,

There are tons of other posts as many people lit a fire of discussions about Twitter taking off.

This got me thinking about how careful the Twitter team and the community of users and developers of new Twitter tools need to be with this new medium.

There have been some great emergent uses of this tool.

  • Robert Scoble was looking for help with an introduction to the Joost team that I was able to help with which was cool.
  • Joi and I kicked up a conversation about Fatblogging and my new SwiMP3 goggles.
  • Tara asking for instant feedback and some references before a presentation.
  • Jonathan Boutelle (SlideShare’s CTO) must have Googled across my comment about Slideshare needing audio, and instantly introduced himself and let me know where their roadmap was going. Great customer service tip for anyone out there. Google your name, and instantly reach out to people talking about you. I felt incredible about the Slideshare team and will continue to play with the service as they add more features because of this simple personal service.
  • @username broadcast chat conversations
  • event organizing for conference parties at SWSX
  • backchannel discussions of audience members during panel presentations, and TED talks
  • @dictionary by Kosso (very cool)

All this attention and a remark from Calcanis on Twitter last night about commercializing a Pay-Per-Twitter idea got me thinking about how precarious this type of popularity could be for the service.

The infamous Tribbles were endearing to all who came in contact with them (well except Klingons). But they multiplied endlessly. Tribbles became a nuisance quickly as they overran the ship and ruined the party.

Twitter works for me because it’s social. My friends and followers are sharing parts of their day that interest me. I enjoy sharing parts of my day with those who read my blog and follow me on Twitter.

These activities have already created some interesting new conversations, and is bringing me closer to friends that I don’t see enough.

If someone were to start Spittering @ me (SpamTwittering) this would ruin it for me, and I would remove them. I don’t want commercial or overly self promtional Twitter users in my social network.

Like with all communities, there will be plenty of opportunities to build revenue around Twitter - but I don’t think it will be in the area of marketing. Leave marketing out of this unique conversation and the revenue opportunities will come from the community as new emergent behaviours and uses allow for premium services or unique tool offerings.

Tara has a good post about her concerns about the rising popularity of Twitter, read the comments to see some of the debate about Twitter.

I would happily pay for a premium Twitter bot construction kit that would allow me to integrate various Twitter rules & personal reminders in a Yahoo Pipes fashion to build my own Twitter services. There are a number of other premium features I would pay a reasonable annual fee for as well.

We need to think of Twitter like Flickr not like MySpace.

Small communities, within communities. Personal relationships. Emergent games and new forms of communication. Not adwords, pay-per-twits or spittering.

It’s short notice, but I’m in Calgary doing some business and visiting family until Friday and was speaking with some local friends & bloggers who expressed some interest in organizing a blogger dinner.

Shel Israel (co-author of Naked Conversations) was talking to me on Monday about how he and co-author Robert Scoble have met bloggers around the world through these dinners. 

I’ve attended these blogger dinners in Montreal and Toronto and they have been helpful in creating some sense of local tech community. 

Some Calgary people have been asking me questions about the Barcamp movement and getting a regular one going in Calgary and this might be a good topic of conversation.

If you are interested in these topics, and want to come out for a meetup let me know.

Patrick Lor and Kempton Lam have both said they are interested.  Kempton has a post up about the idea as well.

We are thinking about somewhere around Chinook mall near 7pm or 8pm Thursday evening.  If you are interested contact Kempton or leave a comment here.  We’ll announce the final details soon.

While in Toronto recently I took the opportunity to sit down with my StartupCamp Canada co-organziers and community instigators Rob Hyndman, David Crow and Stuart McDonald.  StartupCamp Canada is now a go.

We are still finalizing the date, but it will be in the last half of June in Toronto.  (The final date will be announced in the coming weeks). It will be a full day packed with some of the top Canadian entrepreneurs from all over the country and the world.  We are going to mix presenting content, doing small team coaching and providing lot’s of chances for interaction with entrepreneurs, VCs and technologists interested in the Canadian Startup scene.

Here is a quick video I shot while we were having breakfast yesterday in Toronto.

 

I was attenting the Canadian Venture Forum and frankly the entire situation was depressing.  Even some of the VCs on the nominating comittee for the conference were tellling me they couldn’t get companies without business models or revenues to be accepted and were tiring of the entire futile excercise of doing the conference.

Most of the serious venture investors I know didn’t bother to attend and if they did it wasn’t to look at companies to invest in, it was to say to hi to a few friends and they generally popped in for a few minutes and left the conference.

It was more like a meeting of aging Canadian bankers then anything I’ve come to know as a venture conference.  At every venture conference I go to, there is an engergy in the room, excitement everywhere and you can see deals being fought for in the hallways and companies leave the conference with term sheets. 

This conference was very indicative of many problems of our venture industry.   The program had some good speakers (David Lawee & his wife Lorna were great) and the Toronto Venture Group is working hard to promote Canada but I feel most of the good content was wasted on the audience and the quality of the presenting companies and venture investors to listen to them was dismal.

Instead of just complaining, we are hoping to build off the experience of Democamps, Barcamps and StartupCamp in the Valley to put together a conference based on sharing first hand experiences that helps entrepreneurs succeed.  

Some of the topics and sessions we are considering,

  • Private elevator pitch coaching with top entrepreneurs who have succeeded in raising large amounts of funds, and building great businesses.
  • Lot’s of panels with entrepreneurs sharing practical lessons on how they build their Canadian companies and the problems they faced.
  • A BoF session for early stage entrepreneurs discussing the challenges they are currently facing in building their companies.
  • What can the Canadian technology commuity, governments and entrepreneurs do to better support an early stage startup community.
  • Entrepreneurs guide to understanding early stage financing & company creation (Love money, angel money, IP rights, partnership & shareholder agreements, first VC round, strategic partners).

These will be multiple sessions and we are still working on the agenda, so if you have comments or things you’d like to see included please let us know.

Please head over the to wiki and sign up, and let any of the organizing group know if there are specific things you would like to see on the agenda.

I’m on the program advisory board for the Youth Employment Services Entrepreneur Conference which is occuring tomorrow Saturday March 3rd at the Delta Hotel in Montreal (along with my friend Mitch who recruited me to help, which I was happy to do).

 

YES the Future is Yours
New TRENDS .  New IDEAS . New CONTACTS

YES Montreal is now accepting registration for the 10th Anniversary YES Entrepreneurship Conference, which will be held on Saturday March 3rd at the Delta Hotel, Centre Ville. Over 350 entrepreneurs and special guests will be in  attendance, including keynote speaker Lino Saputo Jr., President and CEO of Saputo.
For workshop descriptions and registration forms, download the program brochure by clicking here.  Don’t forget to visit our website for updates www.yesmontreal.ca

I’m speaking at 3pm on financing and starting your company.  I’ll be be doing a series of case studies of my various startups throughout my career and how I financed them.  I’ll be reviewing the different approaches to financing and bootstrapping a company.

The program for the conference is here.  Come out if you are an aspiring entrepreneur with questions, or looking to network with other entrepreneurs.

Small correction in the program, I have been mistakenly listed as the head of strategy for Zero-Knowledge Systems :( 

Since the Gazette article where I was mentioned earlier this week, I noticed a lot of search engine traffic in my logs for “austin hill zero knowledge what happened” and similar questions.

For those interested in an update, Zero-Knowledge succesfully survived the technology melt down, flourished and became the world leader in providing managed broadband services for ISPs and changed its name to Radialpoint

They are doing phenomonal and are one of Canada’s fastest growing software companies.   (Radialpoint is also hiring and they are growing so quick there are great entrepreneurial opportunities within the company for any really bright and ambitious people.)

I left Radialpoint in June to work on a new venture called Project Ojibwe with my old friend Alex Eberts (also a Zero-Knowledge co-founder).

We just reached 600 wishes at the Gifter Wishing Well.  You can grab a coin at the Gifter.org site and drop it in the wishing well.   For each wish you make we have sponsors donating $1 to charity.   Our sponsors have already donated $6,147 to a number of worthy charities.

We need your help in collecting hundreds of thousands of more wishes.

Go make a wish and then help us spread the word with your friends.  Your wish is our donation. 

If you help us get 1,000,000 wishes - we are making sure we get the $1,000,000 dollars in donations - so make your wish today.

Update 10:30am: We’ve been getting some heavy traffic that has caused our wishing well to hicup. In the meantime you can still leave your wish by dropping the coin, but the graphic of the wishing well has become shy with all the attention and is not being generated for some reason. We will fix this shortly and your coin will appear on the wishing well. Thanks for your patience.

Update 3:00pm: We have the wishing well back in working order. There is a fresh well screen up, so if you want to make your wish please head over.

DemoCampMontreal1 will be held next Tuesday, February 27th at the Society for Arts and Technology. The SAT has generously donated their incredible space for this and other Montreal Barcamp/Democamps.

I’m helping my friend, Montreal Barcamp organizer Fred Ngo with the fundraising for Barcamp and Democamps. I’ll be announcing the sponsors for the events shortly. If you are in the Montreal technology community and would like to sponsor these events please contact me.

Jonathan Kopanas has volunteered to MC the event. He did a great job MC’ing Democamp Cusec where we had a great turnout.

You don’t have to present anything to attend. You just need to have an interest in the local Montreal technology community. Sign up on the wiki, and come out to support the community.

The presenting slots for DemoCamp2 are already booked, so your next chance to present something if you are local and want to show off your goods is MontrealBarcamp2.

Here are some great photos from the previous BarcampMontreal and the DemoCampCusec events courtesy of Simon Law and my friends at Kakiloc. Simon is a great member of the Barcamp/Democamp community, and he has an upcoming show this Sunday showcasing some of the photo’s of Montreal he has taken.

www.flickr.com

More Flickr photos tagged with BarcampMontreal
www.flickr.com

More Flickr photos tagged with DemocampCusec


Google recently released it’s RSS reader numbers and like most bloggers around the world I have a fairly large increase in my reader numbers. My RSS subscribers have jumped from about 80 regular RSS readers to 170.

Even though those readers must have been there for awhile, the increased readership is great encouragement to keep up regular postings.

In the coming weeks I’ll be starting to talk about what I’ve been working on with my various projects since leaving Radialpoint.

I also have my infamous inaugural post coming quite soon.

I’d like to take this opportunity to introduce some worthy causes to my newly discovered readers because I feel like being in the giving mood.

GuluWalk Gala Event

Joshua Fattore from SilverLining Ltd. let me know about a a fundraising event occuring in Toronto this Thursday February 22nd.

GuluWalk is focused on supporting the abandoned children of northern Uganda. They were honoured this last January by The NonProfit Times as one the ‘Worlds Best Fundraisers’.

January 24, 2007 - On Thursday, February 22, 2007, please join us as Athletes for Africa presents the ‘GuluWalk Gala’, a celebration in benefit of GuluWalk - - the worldwide movement for the abandoned children of northern Uganda.
It’s going to be a spectacular evening at the Barbara Frum Atrium at the CBC Building in downtown Toronto and will include an evening of fine food, great music, and an extensive silent and live auction.
It will be hosted by Matt Galloway, host of CBC Radio’s
‘Here & Now’, and will feature an impassioned keynote address by former Canadian Ambassador to the United Nations Allan Rock and a live performance by Juno Award winning artist Donné Roberts.
Click here for more information, including tickets, sponsorship opportunities and how you can get involved.

I’m not in Toronto this week, but this is a worthy cause and sounds like a great event. If you are in Toronto and attend, drop me a note or blog about it and I’ll post about it.

Atwater Digital Literacy Project

I mentioned in my recent interview with Julien Smith that we both are involved with the Atwater Library Digital Literacy Project.

The Atwater Digital Literacy Project gets kids and community groups using creative web technologies (blogging, audio, video, digital photos) to help them express themselves, find new ways to talk about things important to them, and to help them build their own communities.

We are going to be working to raise some funds for the pilot project which is occuring right now. The first workshops with kids is starting this week. We (our great advisory board) are reaching out to the Montreal community to introduce this project and ask for support in raising the funds to get some equipment for the project. You can donate through CanadaHelps (make sure you mark Digital Literacy Project) on your donation if you would like to help this worthy project.

I had my fair share of interesting times as a teen, and without the help and support of people who showed me how to develop some of my skills I think I could have easily ended up living a very different life then the great one I enjoy now.

Gifter.org

gifterwishingwellabout.jpg

I’ll be making my donation for the Atwater Literacy Project, and posting my receipt to Gifter.org. If you haven’t checked out Gifter.org it is our group giving project. We are collecting wishes at our Internet wishing well. For each wish collected we have a sponsor donating a dollar to charity. We recently put on a new interface and are getting ready to relaunch it. Go test out the new wishing well and make a wish.

If you’ve made a wish before, feel free to make another with the wishing well. We have lot’s of wishes available. I’d love to see 500 wishes come in the next week - so if you can help spread the word and make a wish - I’ll be donating that amount to the Atwater Digital Literacy Project and would love to see you use these wishes.

We have a major sponsor of wishes preparing to make a large contribution to a charity associated with the project and we will be re-launching the new site with some new outreach programs.

Before we relaunch we want to get some feedback on the new site, so please give it a whirl and let us know what you think of the new interface.

If blogging is a gift economy then I guess I want to make sure to give as well as I get.  For another view of blogging as a gift economy this is a great article as well.

Welcome to you my newly discovered subscribers. Thank you for taking the time to subscribe.

I don’t know how long you’ve been with me, but please feel free to drop me a comment, or contact me through the website and let me know what’s on your mind.

When I began to explore Canada’s social media scene in earnest last year, one of the first people I met was In Over Your Head podcaster Julien Smith. As many of my conversations are about using social media and online communities to improve the world we quickly connected and became friends. We have recently gotten involved in some a local volunteer project together (Thanks to our friend Hugh). His post regarding the local technology community needing to network together kick started a flurry of activity earning him the role of community instigator. (Patrick has a good take on the discussions here)

Julien is a podcaster, blogger, and entrepreneur. His podcast was among the first in Canada, and his blog was recently named among the 10 best art/entertainment blogs in the country.

Julien recently had his first manifesto, Keeping it Real published at Change This last week. (One of my favorite sites)

Always a busy guy, Julien has recently kick started a great social media project the Listen to your Kids podcast. Kids of all ages are invited to call toll free to 1 (866) 808-1212 where they can leave messages and speak freely to the adults of the world who wish to understand children better. Parents and other children are able to listen to the comments as part of the podcast.

You are one of Canada’s oldest podcaster’s and have created quite a brand for yourself. Tell me a bit about how you came from blogger to podcaster to Digital Radio Star.

I consider myself lucky to have had the opportunity to start very early with podcasting, being one of the earliest people in the world to experiment with it. During that time, I had just begun to listen to hip hop music very seriously, couldn’t shut up about it, and decided I wanted to take advantage by shooting my mouth off about whatever subject came to mind. I hated blogging then- I just had one because my friend Dave offered it to me.

I was very influenced by the podcasts of the time, which were mostly soliloquy type podcasts of people’s thoughts. Adam Curry, Dawn and Drew, and the Evil Genius Chronicles come to mind. It took me a while to develop my own style though- for a few months I was just talking back on my podcast to stuff they had said, which was a popular thing to do at the time.

I loved doing it, but for me, the real success came when I started to develop relationships with people. It became pretty evident that people could easily relate to what I did, and I developed a lot of connections on the web with podcasters, one of which was CC Chapman, host of the Reality Bitchslap podcast at the time– he now hosts one of the most popular music podcasts of all time, Accident Hash. He got me my gig at Podshow, who have helped kept me fed this whole time.

Frankly, I suspect my ‘brand’ was built on the idea of making mistakes. I never held back from being myself, no matter the consequences or the repercussions to the way people saw me. I suspect that being that much of an iconoclast has really helped people remember me as a ’someone’ or whatever.

You kicked up bit of a local Montreal discussion with your post about the lack of Montreal’s brains – how has the response been.

I think I really struck a chord with that post. People couldn’t stop writing about it and commenting. I think people are very ready to start talking about this- afterwards, about 30 people showed up at an entrepreneur’s breakfast that Ben Yoskovitz set up.

I remember last year when Hugh McGuire was doing this thing with some local social media type people- Michael Lenczner, Brett Gaylor and others were meeting and trading video and audio about what they called an Open Movement. We ended up going our own ways, but I remember thinking: “Something could happen here.” With the post you’re refering to, I was trying to bring back the same idea- smart people trading thoughts on a subject. I hope it comes back! I want to hear from more people about the state of the city; I find it fascinating.

Tell me about your new project, Listen to your Kids. What was the inspiration?

Listen To Your Kids came from the feeling of freedom I developed by letting go of basically everything on my podcast, just setting it free. I wanted to give that to kids who have a problem with communicating with their parents or whoever’s in their life.

When I started talking about it at the Podcast Expo last September, everyone I talked to was like, “that’s genius,” and swore to subscribe. It blew my mind that no one had done it yet because it was just connecting technologies together.

How has the response been?

Frankly, I think people only get a few really great ideas. For me, I think this is one of them- there’s a real need here, and I’ve got a great, unique solution to it. That’s proven by the fact that I can basically tell anyone about the idea, and a large portion of people love it and subscribe. The idea is highly sticky- everyone’s wondering what’s on the minds of young people.

That said, I’m currently experimenting with different ways to get kids involved and calling. I want to get a variety of people, different ages, etc. and that has proven challenging. I work on it a little every day, because I know that once I hit the right combination it’s all going to fall into place.

What kind of change are you hoping to create with your project?

a permanent improvement in the lives of those that decide to get involved. i think it’s self evident how that will happen, but in case i need to explain it- communication helps people- especially when you aren’t given the opportunity to talk back and/or interrupt.

What are your hopes for the local Montreal tech scene?

I want people who think of my city to not only think ’sex’, but also to wish they were a part of it because there’s so much shit going down. I really feel that we’re getting closer to that, and I’m really happy about it.

We also happen to be on the same advisory board for the Atwater Digital Library project. Can you talk about your goals in being involved with this project?

My personal aim with the project is simple: Getting involved with kids, to me, is a way of giving back. I used to teach chess to kids, and really enjoyed communicating with younger people. I hang out with people older than me normally (I’m 27 now, and a good portion of my friends are people in their 30s). I don’t ever want to be one of those people that is stuck in an older, dead generation. With the world changing faster than ever, there’s no value to being an antique.

In terms of what is given to the kids involved, I see people being able to free themselves from geographical boundaries and working on the web being the best advantage. I really hope we can give kids that.

The Atwater Digital Library Project is looking for support in raising funds and obtaining equipment and software for this summers program. If you are part of the local technology community or just interested in helping kids and community groups learn how to use social media tools then please consider donating (it’s tax deductible).

In my opinion, Julien is succeeding in the social media space because he understands the economics of abundance. He practices his own gift economy by sharing links, content, and building a personal brand of his experiences.

I told Julien that my response to his original post about Montreal’s technology community would be to show him just how many great projects are occuring in this city (and in Canada since I’m not limiting myself to Montreal projects).  I think it’s poetic that I start this series of Canada Tech Scene postings with his interview :)

My original title for thist post was: On the run since CUSEC & Democamp where I had a run in with Google but Montreal’s Mojo is Rising and me without my pants on. But while I started to write a general catch up post about what I’ve been seeing in my travels the last couple of weeks, I started to put it together some thoughts about an emerging technology and entrepreneurship community movement occuring around Canada. I see most of it in Montreal, but it’s occuring across the nation.

Things really picked up a few weeks ago with a few projects I’m involved with. Although I’ve been on the run lately I wanted write about a few of the conferences and meetings I’ve had on my travels and talk about some of what is occurring in the Montreal and Canadian tech community.

My whirlwind schedule of late started at CUSEC conference. I spoke at the event and it was a great time. There were tons of good questions from a great group of students. I also met a few really bright engineers.

I love speaking at schools for students. The air is loaded with energy, new thinking and I end up getting more out of it then most students I think. Some of my best hires in my career have been freshly graduated engineers, and I encourage any enterprising graduating student to join a good startup.

Quick side note:

Any graduating engineering student is welcome to contact me anytime to talk about finding you a hot startup job (with any of my various startup companies or with other hot startups run by my friends & other teams I’ve met across Canada). Help me help you find a position with a small startup. Join a small team and consider it your own startup. You will learn more in 2 years with a small startup then 5 years in any other company. There is a reason some great startups are created by students. Students and startups are made for each other in my opinion.

There were a few nice posts about the conference here, here and finally here. There are a bunch of great photo’s of the event up at Flickr.

I want to thank Kalu and the organizers of the conference for a great event.

This is where I ran into a team from Google who was at the career fair looking to hire for their Montreal office. I spoke with some them and welcomed them to town.

Later that day John Kopanas did a great community goodness and pulled together Democamp Cusec. I was amazed at the incredible display of Montreal talent and community involvement. Josh over at Yashlabs has the best wrap up I’ve read. Great job Josh. Looking forward to connecting soon. Did I mention his great post. Go read it now, it’s shows some of the great projects and people in Montreal.

My friend & teammate Sebastien did a great job presenting Sugar and got a lot of positive feedback.

My friend Fred has a great post up about Democamp Cusec as well.

I then spent a couple of days in Toronto doing some business with investors, friends and meeting my friends from Cambrian House who were in town.

I met with my friend and StartupCamp co-organizer David Crow. I always enjoy my conversations with David. I’m learning a lot about how to build community from David.

During our conversation I told him I thought Montreal’s bohemian culture gave us a distinct edge in creating a ground zero for social & web innovation in Canada (web deux.zero for those with a taste for bad buzzwords translated). He of course felt that Toronto had a fair chance at this ground zero role. I would say he has a lot of reasons to be confident. Check out the work he is doing in Toronto and Alec Saunders post on the recent Toronto Democamp which was packed.

David continues to do an incredible job with his community involvement and I would say has a lot to be proud of. His post on Economics of Abundance and the Wealth of Barcamp is required reading in my opinion. David and I had a discussion of the economics of abundance when I told him what Project Ojibwe is cooking up. He’s one of the few people I wanted to share the whole idea with. He’s sworn to a DNH agreement - (Do no Harm) so he can’t disclose recklessly. Only when helping me recruit :)

The only reason I think Montreal has a chance to show our strengths is because we are learning in realtime from the great examples, initiatives such as Democamp, Opencities and sharing he and the community there are doing.

I’m not sure but I believe Toronto has the most active unconference community and it shows. Canada’s version of the Web 2.0 expo the Mesh conference is organized by David, and other great members from the Toronto tech community and not some tech conference company. They worry about how to keep the event affordable and high quality by bringing out the best speakers and showcasing Canadian projects. This is a full year before similar ideas are being discussed by Arrington and Calacanis. Talk about Canadian innovation. That’s shows the power of what is going on in Toronto.

Then we have my friend Tara and our Canadian Citizen Agent who is spreading community lessons while on a peakkeeping mission to Silicon Valley (once again, it takes a Canadian). [Read her recent posts on community building, community diversity and community pt. II]

You can also see fellow Canadian and Flickr co-founder Stewart Butterfield talking communities on CNN.

I hope throughout the year, we’ll be doing some interesting things in Montreal (and Calgary where I’m going to be spending more time) that we can share with other communities. I have a number of projects I’m supporting and sponsoring that I believe will contribute to helping Canada’s technology community grow.

So imagine my surprise when I returned to Montreal and Google was back on my radar. A couple of days after Cusec the news broke in La Presse and was picked up by my friend Seb and the blog community that Google had opened a Montreal office and was hiring.

This is great news for the Montreal technology community. I think there is a change occurring in Montreal, and a little shake up on the local market for talent will be healthy for everyone.

When my friend Julien complained about the need for Montreal to show our brains, lamenting not having a hot startup scene, the community responded loudly (check out all the comments, and the follow up post).

When YULBiz showed up later that week the community show up in force and there were probably 20 local entrepreneurs that came out.

My friend Ben Yoskovitz responded when he posted this great idea for an entrepreneurs networking breakfast and got a great response. I’ll be in attendance and the event is up on Upcoming.org (Subscribe to the Montreal tag for events, I’m going to be listing more community events there shortly.)

Clearly the Montreal community is starting to come together around these events.

Fred has announced the dates for the upcoming Democamp Montreal for February 27th. Register on the wiki to attend and please come out and support the community. The event has already filled up with Montreal projects that will be presenting. Come out and see these five presenters at the great location that Fred arranged with the help of René Barsalo from SAT. It was great to see the schedule fill up so quick, just like it did at Democamp Cusec.

Democamp Montreal2 is scheduled for March 29 and surprise surprise, it has already filled up with presenters as well including what looks like 3 stealth projects being presented.

When I was at Garage Canada’s great Startup Canada event (which deserves it’s own post soon) Bill Reichert and I spoke about how in the Valley there are community events every night where entrepeneurs and engineers meet and interact, practice elevator pitches and get introduced to each other. These interactions help you improve your network, your skills and in many cases your pitches. In fact in the valley because of the density of people working in the technology field you don’t even really need to go anywhere. Everytime I walk down University Ave. in Stanford, or stop by Bucks in Woodside I’ll run into someone I know and have a chance to catch up.

Something similar is occuring in Montreal.

I think there is an incredible void in our city that beginning to be filled with people starting to discover what an incredibly rich technology community we have here. I intend over the coming weeks to begin to post about some interesting people and projects that deserve some attention.

Even the Montreal Gazette is hoping on the bandwagon and starting a local blog to cover the Montreal tech community. I think this is a great move by the Gazette, and frankly something Canadian newspapers have traditionally been very bad at. With some notable exceptions (Mark Evans and Mathew Ingram who are also not surprisingly part of the Mesh crew and active members of the community they cover), I don’t think there has been a lot of focus on discovering some of our made in Canada projects. Unfortunately most Canadian media like to wait until after our projects get some media attention south of the border, and then too often enjoy taking a skeptical view of the Canadian’s projects chance for success against US players.

I hope that this is beginning to change, but it doesn’t really matter since newspapers aren’t exactely the only media source around anymore. There is enough ability for our communities, podcasters and bloggers to promote each others great projects and gain the attention of those who will support made in Canada innovation - which is the users - not the media.

I invite anyone doing something interesting in Montreal that you feel deserves some attention to come out to one of these events. I have a few startups and special projects of my own that I’ll be announcing throughout the next couple of months, but I’m interested in what else is occuring in our community.

I have one closing question for people reading this, what local Canadian technology projects do you feel deserve some attention?

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