Social Summit
UNIFIED was the prime sponsor and thus plenty of their team was present at the event. Especially as they drove the morning 'Social Media Summit', kicked off by CEO Sheldon Owen. Though set up on very short notice it was well attended with plenty of folks having to stand. As we warmed up for our panel in the 'green room', the discussion 'How Social Impacts Organizations' with panelists from Edelman, GE, HRBlock and Microsoft went on, so I didn't get to hear them.
Conversing



More
The main sessions started at noon, split between the main stage where the Social Summit took place and a second stage right next to the start-up booths. The proximity of booths and 2nd stage made it near impossible to understand what the presenters there said, if you didn't press your head against the speaker. And that looks silly, so I didn't get to hear any of that.However, the main stage provided plenty of opportunity to follow insightful presentations, when there wasn't a circumstantial conversation with interesting people happening at the same time which took precedence for me.
BING - yes, BING
Stefan Weitz from Microsoft told a fascinating story of how search is evolving under the BING umbrella of products. I was surprised to be surprised. But many things are really coming together to make the experience of search, discovery and exploration in the virtual world exciting and fulfilling. While the semantic web today is mostly a collection of standards to allow a structuring of the content on the Internet, Stefan goes so far as to say that Microsoft is "trying to recreate the real world in the digital world". For them that requires clearly defining:- Entities such as user profiles (1.2B today) or real world objects like restaurants,
- Geospacial Knowledge from photos (in 153PB) or 3D models (250,000), and
- Natural User Interfaces to make all of that accessible
A couple of years ago it seemed as if the bottom up creation of virtual worlds through platforms like SecondLife, combined with 3D modeling and the semantic web would get us to the most representative digital version of the real world. But each aspect stalled, probably primarily due to users loosing interest and patience to knit everything together manually, which consequentially also killed underlying business models.
However, if Microsoft (and Google and ... ?) can keep the ball rolling by recombining results from many different successful business models and user activities, we might get to amazing results.
Launch Competition
Not to be missed at any conference like this is the competition for the best pitch from a start-up. Here we mostly saw entrepreneurs showcasing offerings that just opened to the market. That showed in the maturity and thus clarity of their value proposition and uniqueness of the solution (let alone robustness). While some were much more interesting from the standpoint of how they might positively impact the world, such as overcoming typical hurdles in health care where, when unsupported, people quickly become non-compliant in their goal pursuance (e.g. eat well, stay fit etc), others seemed robust and pragmatic as they offer to solve a very clear process problem. The latter category then logically offered the winner with Seamless Docs:
and else
At the very end the FashionShow was a bit of a let down, as it took the models just 10-15 min to show what they had to show. I would have loved to see more of how tech and fashion fuses together and the stage was all set up for it. Maybe next time?!But plenty of introductions and entertaining discussions made the day very worthwhile, even though my voice started to give up as I had to overcome the noise level during the whole day. (Thanks for the advice Steve Shaheen, to actively breath in while talking)