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Is Vancouver Canada's greatest startup city?
The air quality is great, we have some of the world’s most prime real estate in development, the arts and restaurant scene is thriving, the natural scenery is captivating and Whistler, host of the 2010 Olympic Games is only a few hours away.
Dick Hardt Answers a Question OpenID and Digital Identity

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Flickr icon for sillygwailo
Submitted by sillygwailo on Mon 2010-03-08 10:46 #

This photo adorns an article in French about how to protect your digital identity.

The above comments will not display in the recently updated section because they are syndicated directly from the Flickr photo.

Vancouver OpenID Mashpit

I wasn't going to go, but at the last minute I decided that attending the Vancouver OpenID 2.0 Mashpit would give me the opportunity to see Sxip's downtown Vancouver office and also run into people I knew, not to mention meet some others and learn a little about digital identity. (I was rewarded with a free hotdog and snacks. And a t-shirt.) I need to know this stuff, at the very least cursorily, so that I can support it when the time comes. The two days after the event, which featured a brief presentation by Dick Hardt—and a demo that didn't go so well (Simon Willison's OpenID screencast is a great visual introduction to the emerging standard)—and some "lightning talks" by Sxip and Bryght employees on what they've been working on. Heavily developer-centric, much of the discussion, especially with regards to trust, went over my head.

Steven Wittens, Boris Mann, and Dick Hardt Talk About Identity and OpenID

Dick did not say at this event the phrase "trust is social" like I'd hoped, but he did at least suggest trust was in part a business problem, not only computer science problem. If I'm understanding what he was trying to get at correctly, Boris was trying to suggest that we need a way to measure trust empirically, i.e. a way to store the concept in a database and represent it onscreen. The ensuing discussion sounded a lot like yak-shaving, and that's not a criticism, as I'm inclined to agree much about identity is a multi-layered problem.

In short, I wasn't the target audience of the mashpit, and I'm still left with lingering doubt about a) this is a problem in the first place: we need this when identity is, for many, disposable and b) how to explain to my friends that usernames and passwords are the past and that in the future you will use your URL to login everywhere. To say nothing about the fact that, almost necessarily because it was developer-centric, the event had no women speakers.

Here are the recaps of the Vancouver event I came across.

There's gotta be more. If you posted about the mashpit, please add a link in the comments.

James Walker Talks About OpenID in Drupal

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Flickr icon for sarahfelicity
Submitted by sarahfelicity on Thu 2007-01-18 13:15 #

Hottie. Even though I didn't get what he was talking about. ;)

Flickr icon for walkah
Submitted by walkah on Thu 2007-01-18 13:15 #

No worries, neither did I or most of the rest of the room ;)

Flickr icon for sillygwailo
Submitted by sillygwailo on Thu 2007-01-18 14:22 #

I understood right away the email verification part, but Dick didn't explain it very well. The whole discussion of trust was way over my head though.

The above comments will not display in the recently updated section because they are syndicated directly from the Flickr photo.

group: Bryght

Vancouver Is a Fine Place to Start a Business

Boris Mann points to Jeff Griffiths who writes about Caterina Fake's widely-linked essay explaining why she thinks 2006 is a bad time to start a company. John Gruber sort of misquotes David Heinemeier Hansson (also widely-linked), who says it's a great time to start a business: “You know, the kind that develops a product or service and asks money for it.” Also: “You don't need to live in San Francisco to make it big.” That's Boris' point: ActiveState, eBusiness Applications, Sxip and even EZ Systems are relatively successful Vancouver-based businesses or businesses with a Vancouver presence (hi Zak!). I don't claim to know how to start a business, but the ones around me seem to be keen on filling unmet needs, or at least creating products that have the semblance of a business model—and a business plan—behind them.

(In fairness to John, he did correctly title his link. But his comment places the emphasis on 'company', where David placed the emphasis on 'business'.)

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