Refresh Roundup: Open Source Politics, Zuckerberg animosity(?), and Austin’s businesses coming together
Feb 9, 20081- Michelle Greer asks, Why Do Tech Geeks Want to Punch Zuckerberg in the Face? “With Beacon still in need of a major overhaul and all eyes on him for an IPO date, it looks like Zuckerberg has his hands full with Facebook.” you can see him at SXSW giving this year’s keynote.
- Ryan Joy likes to find his daily paper on the doorstep in the morning. However, that paradigm fails when it’s the electronic version. Check out this PHP/cron job combo that may just bring back the nostalgia of newspaper delivery.
- Andrew DuPont reports great news. Prototype 1.6 officially supports Opera. With it’s lightning fast javascript engine and DOM level 3 support, Opera is finally getting the full support it deserves… from Prototype, at least.
- Whurley posed the question, Who is the best candidate for the open source community?” to the blogosphere, Twittersphere, and Interwebs. Michelle weighs in here as does Four Kitchens. I think we all cringe at the thought that our leaders may understand the Internet as a series of tubes.
- Kevin Koym, with Bootstrap Austin, talks about building business ecosystems in Austin despite a possible recession. He argues that “Austin’s wired technology community has been organizing into … ‘Enterprise Tribes’ helping entrepreneurs build their businesses, recession or not.”
- Boone Putney is excited by the beta release of Microsoft’s HealthVault. Privacy issues aside, Boone sees it as way to “automate a lot of the processes that are notorious originators of error in the medical industry.”
- …and, of course, probably the biggest thing to come out is this week’s Refresh Austin’s SXSWi Party announcement.
That’s it for this week! If I’ve missed anything, post it in the comments.
Tags: Austin, business, Facebook, javascript, Microsoft, party, PHP, SXSW

One Comment, Comment or Ping
Shawn Hessinger
With a (possibly) looming recession it’s nice to see these economic ecosystems operating in some places in the country. Trouble is in many places, Pennsylvania included it seems, we are too focused on luring investment dollars withput creating a source of value first. Keep on with what you’re doing, Kevin. It will pay off. If you do nothing else, perhaps you can shake the paradigm that capital investment is first in any equation for economic development.
Feb 10th, 2008
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