TechCrunch NY Party: in BED with Mike Arrington

298539779_d186d8c5f7 The big event in the NYC tech/startup world last night was the TechCrunch New York Party, held at the exclusive and sultry Bed (yes, the one you remember from the Sex and the City episode).

I showed up with an agenda in mind: to take the pulse of the NY tech scene, compare to the Valley and gauge whether there is a mania here as there is there. My conclusion is that the hype really hasn’t carried over here yet. This is healthy. We found ourselves attending an actual party— not a check-writing, high-powered, breathless deal-fest like Web2.0 in SF last week must have been— but an actual party.

298539779_d186d8c5f7 Ok, maybe more like a party amidst a lot of commercials. The length of the sponsor list rivaled the attendee list. But the venue layout served well, with the exhibitors on a short platform around the main floor, and people free to opt-out by avoiding the periphery and/or hitting the roof deck. Also, I asked around and ran into at least one entrepreneur who was ecstatic about the contacts made with the vendors. An open bar (beer and wine only— or open a tab for cocktails) at Bed can not be cheap, but at sponsorships ranging from $5k-25k (rumored) x the number of sponsors, this still was likely a successful event monetarily.

298539779_d186d8c5f7 Heavy rains were a factor, which probably helped as the attendee density was just right.

Congrats to Mike and his crew for a great party and bringin’ it out east. NYC could use more events like this.



Ken Berger is a serial entrepreneur and mentor capitalist who recently made the Valley -> Alley switch. His bio and contact information can be found here.

Posted on Friday, November 17, 2006 at 09:14AM by Registered CommenterKen Berger | Comments2 Comments

Can NYC compete with the Valley? Find out November 20th.

I just got an event invite from New York Magazine that everyone should know about, and leads with an interesting question:
Can New York compete with the Valley as the hub of venture activity?

“Hmmm,” nextNYers wonder, “Can we?”

Find out this coming Monday, November 20th, as VC blogger Fred Wilson and NY Mag columnist John Heilemann talk about the New York tech scene and what will make NYC tech firms succeed. Tickets are $15 and will likely sell out soon, so get them now.

What?

Among the announcement’s teasers were:

How to turn creative little technologies into the next killer app

When should you bet big on a new venture

Can New York really compete with Silicon Valley

This is the inaugural event in New York Magazine and the Columbia Business School Alumni Club of New York’s new series called the New York Master Class Series.

When?

Monday, November 20, 2006

6:30 Registration

7:00 Conversation

7:45 Door Prize Drawing ($500!)

7:46 Audience Questions

8:00 Cocktails

Where?

Tribeca Cinemas

54 Varick Street (at Laight Street)

Subway: 1, 9, A, C, E trains to Canal Street

How?

Find out more or get tickets here.

Posted on Wednesday, November 15, 2006 at 05:08PM by Registered Commenterinnonate in | Comments6 Comments

Hello NYC.

This blog emerged from a group called nextNY. Last February, I made the very small move of knocking over a single domino… e-mailing a handful of young people in the New York City tech community to get together to connect socially and professionally. Sending a couple of e-mails is just about the extent of credit I can legitimately take for the growth and development of this group.

Nine months later, we have almost 400 people on our listserv. We have been inside Google and on the receiving end of dodgeballs. Everyday, we help each other with lawyer referrals, hacks, best practices, and developer hiring. The organization is free, lightweight and community powered: Totally Web 2.0 compliant. It runs itself through the efforts and legwork of its members, like Anthony from Squarespace who donated a Squarespace account for this blog, Lee who got our wiki/website up and running, and Shawn and Danny from Iridesco who created the theme of our website. Lots of other people have contributed by helping to create or run events and share their ideas, because this group is what its members have made of it.

And now we’re breaking out of the listserv to jumpstart the buzz about New York City as a technology hub…not just “Silicon Alley.”

Silicon Alley.

I really hate that name.

There are a couple of reasons. One, it makes the NYC technology community seem small, like we could all fit on one street.

Granted, NYC streets with highrise buildings could hold thousands of people, but that’s beside the point. Technology lives in many places around here… within big companies and small companies, startups and universities. You’ve got financial services startups on Wall Street, and advanced technology development uptown at Columbia. Williamsburg hipsters develop the virtual world of Second Life, while a short trip on the Path train takes you to the New Jersey brainchildren of all the flying seeds from Bell Labs. Bump into an entrepreneur at Coffee Shop right in the heart of Union Square or as far afield as Stamford, CT, which is as close to NYC as Palo Alto is to San Fran. Oh, and Google hired about 250 engineers in the past two years that are now working in Chelsea. Did I mention ITP?

We might not be working right next to ten other startups on the same street, but we’re probably right down the street from the hedge fund that uses our technology, the publisher whose side we are a thorn in or even the one who wants to use what we built. If the future is about digital media—ad supported or otherwise—there’s something to be said for being in the biggest media and advertising town in the world.

Oh yes, we are way bigger than just one street or one “road” or one “route”.

The other reason I hate the term “Silicon Alley” is because it’s a knockoff. It makes us sound like a version of something, rather than our own unique environment. That’s where this blog comes in and, to a large extent, what nextNY is all about. Since the very beginning of this group, we’ve talked on our listserv about community building, but we’ve cringed when someone mentioned “building our own Valley.” We do not want to build our own Valley. If we wanted to be in the Valley, we would, but we’re New Yorkers, native or adopted and we’ve got our own thing going.

So here we are… ready to stand up and be as loud a voice as RSS will carry us. We’ll be talking about NYC startups, personalities, and events. We’re not going to compare ourselves to anyone else… we’re going to promote ourselves just as every other good startup should. Help us ensure NYC’s place in the future of technology and digital media by coming to our events, participating on our listserv, and connecting with other up-and-coming professionals in the NYC area.

I love this town.



Charlie O’Donnell is the Director of Consumer Products at Oddcast, a New York City venture backed startup whose avatar platform is used for interactive advertising and personal expression. He was formerly an Analyst at Union Square Ventures.

Contact Charlie at charlie.odonnell@gmail.com or view more articles at
www.thisisgoingtobebig.com

Posted on Tuesday, November 14, 2006 at 06:27AM by Registered CommenterCharlie O'Donnell in , | Comments8 Comments | References3 References
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