Category Archives: First Impressions of Earth

First Impressions of Ignite …. The StartupWeekend of TED Talks.

Last Tuesday evening I attended Ignite #12…

It never ceases to amaze me how amazing the buildings are, in which tech, startup, and hacker events are held. I wrote awhile ago about LeLoop, a Hacker Space located in a squatter space – a beautiful, abandoned office building. This evening I found myself down the street from The Opera, walking into what was clearly the carriage entrance to a wonderful courtyard at one point. Following the signs to Ignite, and joined by my ‘posse’ of tech-geeks (we had all come straight from the Silicon Students event across town), we entered a small class room.

Willy had explained to me what Ignite was on the metro as we had come over – speakers sign up and are given five minutes and a 20 slide maximum to share an idea. The ideas can be about whatever you want, but, more or less, it seems to be in the same spectrum as TED Talks. These aren’t pitches, or plain old life stories, but innovative talks – or at least, that’s the premise.
As we sat in the back of the classroom, I couldn’t help but be more interested in the document of various Wifi usernames and passwords that Willy was sending me than in the topics above. Talks started out with premises such as “the 20th century was the Pre-Google century…” – As if that made any sense.

“Enlighten Us…But Make it Quick.”

While I couldn’t help but make snide comments in the back about the presentations, I also could help but thinking “This is the best idea ever!” I have friends that are Startup Weekend addicts – they go every time one’s going on in France (which, by the way, is like EVERY weekend! W00t second most active Startup Weekend country after the US) – I can TOTALLY see people becoming ‘Ignite Addicts.’ I can tell you that I didn’t enjoy the first event I went to, but I went because it came with an awesome recommendation, and it left me wanting more.
My suggestion: spend the next week or so thinking about an awesome idea, and come to Ignite #13 and rock the house. I think that an event like this provides a great medium for people to bring great ideas forward. Who knows… I might even take the stage for five minutes next time.


First Impressions of Mash Up… oh and How to Go to Le Web for free!

Divers (3).jpg by Olivier Ezratty

Walking into the foyer of Epitech, I felt a little too much like I was back in college. Overly dressed up students awkwardly searched for eye contact, groups that came together huddled together, and older gentlemen in suits tried to blend in – seriously, had I just walked into Orientation? I navigated through the crowds, who of course had huddle in front the sign-in table, not knowing where else to go, and I quickly saw a list of differently colored name tags. I was asked if I was searching for a project, had a project, or was just ‘curious.’ I said I write a blog, and was given a non-discriminate, white badge. I say ‘non-discriminate’ because it was at this time that I realized that the badges were not organized alphabetically, but by type and color. Red badges went to those who had a product, yellow to those who were curious, and green to those who were looking for a project/internship. This wonderfully reminded me all too much of the Stop Light parties at UCSD, where guy/girls would wear red, yellow, or green colored clothing depending on their availability (taken, curious, available) – of course, just as in these parties, yellow nametags were everywhere.

“…giant graffiti art covered the walls…”

Having scouted for familiar faces in the foyer for a few minutes, I followed some wanderers down a garage entrance, not too sure if they knew where they were going, and discovered the foyer with the check-in was just that. Down in the garage of Epitech, giant graffiti art covered the walls, with the corners drapped with oversized chairs, abandoned basketball hoops, and miscellaneous pieces of wood. In the middle of this giant garage stood 250 chairs all faced around a quite decorated stage. I took my seat in the ever-empty front row, occupied by a few photographers with whom I have become quite acquainted.

An event simulcast across France

The event kicked off with a few announcements, most of which were news to me.The event was being simulcast in various major cities in Paris (Bordeaux, Lyon, Toulouse, etc.) and from the looks of Twitter, the groups there were quite active. Because audiences were spread out across France, they made use of the Balloon app, which polls audience members for questions – I personally don’t find this to be too good of a method of taking questions, but I applaud the effort to include remote audiences. From what I understand, the primary interest in remote audiences comes from the fact that Mash Up is currently looking to expand outside of Paris, having completed three events with relative success.

The Suit and The Jeans…

Christophe Cremer et Alexandre Malsh (2).jpg by Olivier EzrattyFor the first hour, two entrepreneurs put on the gloves for a Q&A and story-sharing experience that ultimately excluded the moderators. MeilleurTaux founder Christophe Cremer, “The Suit”, sat opposite Melty founder Alexandre Malsch, “The Jeans”. The Suit took every occasion to re-read his work history to the crowd, his responses can be summarized and paraphrased to “I’m pretty awesome – I’ve raised a bunch of money and experienced everything.” Meanwhile, Jeans, young and fresh, made an attempt to connect with his ‘peers’ in the audience, debunking common myths and talking about how Tech people and Sales people think differently. The questions coming from the audience signaled that of an audience unsure of where in the ocean of the startup world they should dip their toes, and the responses came back equally as vague – after all, ‘vague’ is the ‘unsure’ of the confident. While it is enjoyable to listen to Entrepreneurs recount their experiences, Alex and Chris seemed to stereotype their differences, disagreeing and competing for the microphone at every question.

Most commonly used phrase – “…if I could just add a little story to that…”

After the panel finished up, Mash Up jumped into the pitches. A few Clones came through, a few familiar faces, and a lot of undeveloped ideas. I personally enjoyed hearing the pitch of Chef Jerome, as I had met the pitcher months back at a talk at LeCamping, and was happy to see how they had developed. Jerome offers a very simple interfact that allows you to take a recipe on a website and turn it into an online shopping list for any of the large French grocery stores. 3 Day Startup was also there announcing their first event. If you are unfamiliar with 3 Day Startup, they have a similar concept to Startup Weekend and BeMyApp, with their differentiation coming from the fact that you must sign up and be accepted into the day – through this, they hope to groom the participants into the most efficient division of labor, with only the most interested candidates. Sign up will be between October 15th and November 15th, and the event will take place January 20th-22 and ESCP Europe. 40 Participants will be accepted, and mentors and sponsors will be around intermittently throughout the weekend.

Going To Le Web….. For Free!

Divers (1).jpg by Olivier EzrattyThe best announcement came at the end of Mash Up, where they announced that Mash Up will be giving away two tickets to Le Web – more details are available on their website, but one if for recent graduates contributing to the Startup World (ME!!!!!!) and the other will be selected by a Mash Up Jury (me?). Starting October 15th, contestants can post on the wall of Mash Up’s facebook page, and whoever receives the most likes will receive the ticket – you can all be forewarned that I will be harassing you thoroughly for likes. I apologize here and now.

As I have spent the last month going event to event across Western Europe, I don’t think I was able to fully appreciate this event. Its target is students (events take place at universities), and provides a first look for students into the world of entrepreneurship. One particular part that I enjoyed were the Pitch summaries and Job Offers of companies attending that they handed out at the event. I hope that the speakers debunked a lot of misconceptions for the audience, and that some Reds found some Greens, and some Yellows jumped off the fence and into the startup world.


First Impressions of The Cube in London

This week I’m in London on vacation, although most of my time will be spent researching Coworking Spaces as well as networking as much as possible..


My first time alone in the Underground, I tried my hardest not to laugh at words like Picadilly and Cockfosters. Old Street lies in the Shoreditch region of London, which is home to the Silicon Roundabout. Deriving its name from the Silicon Valley, the region is the tech startup hub for the city, and I was there to find me a Coworking Space.

After a quick wi-fi check-up at the Shoreditch Grind – where the coffee is good, but the wi-fi disconnects every two minutes – I found my bearings and set off. The Silicon Roundabout didn’t look like Palo Alto– why would I have expected it to ? – but the statistical likelihood of someone wearing a suit decreased and the likelihood that they looked like a hipster or a programmer went up – that’s how I knew I was in the right place.

Located amidst rundown buildings behind a reinforced delivery truck gate, The Cube had all the familiar characteristics of a Coworking Space. White iPhone’s, flannel, and macbooks filled the room and the patio outside, and I already felt in the right place – not to mention the ping pong table. Having already announced my pending arrival on twitter, I was greeted by a staff member by name. I was asked what kind of computer I had (wifi choice), and told that an application would be printed out that I could fill out. I didn’t want to object – afterall, When in Rome.. – but I felt a little weird filling out an application to be in a CoWorking space for one day. Even worse was when I was told I could only pay by PayPal.

With paperwork behind me, I climbed the stairs to what reminded me of an arts and crafts room from primary school. Long wooden tables with chairs on either side of them streteched out from the wall, although the finger paint and craft paper was replaced by laptops and headphones. When entering, I asked if there was an area a little more noisy, as it was so quiet I could hear the echo of my heels bouncing off the walls – this was the first realization to me that perhaps some people come to CoWorking spaces expecting, or even looking for silence. My theory had always been that background noise was the best white noise to block out getting distracted.

At lunchtime, I asked the staff there what was good to eat in the area. Normally, I ask this question to staff at a restaurant, as a way to both gauge whether anything is particularly good, as well as to gauge how much the employee cares about the place they work for. I received the ‘I don’t care’ answer of ”everything is good” and so I smiled and ventured off down the road with the most cars on it.

The Cube made me homesick for La Cantine. Perhaps because I know more people there; however, I think there was something lacking in the atmosphere. What cannot be denied is the suitability of this CoWorking space’s name. It’s atmopsphere is rigid, with all walls similarly bland, lacking both flaw and character – it was a cube.

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Check out my other First Impressions or the other London Coworking Space that I reviewed.