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One Day App Final Results

The first One Day App event is now over.  We had ten applicants, and finished with four complete apps.  It sounds like there will be continued work on some of the apps. 

The Chatterous chatroom provided a great virtual medium for us to meet and talk, Wufoo forms kept everything in line, and a combination of Twitter and Posterous kept everyone informed of the big news points. 

Below are the final apps that made it through the One Day App event, and reviews will be published early this week.

Qitika
http://qitika.com/news/
"A community managed feed aggregator"
Developer: Jamie Lewis
Duration: 7 Hours

Kiwis
http://kiw.is
Beta Invite Code: onedayapp
"Sharing a website with your own sweet twist.  Shorten and share links to websites on any medium with an attached message that stays with the link forever.  No longer rely on Twitter or Twitter messages to stay attached to your links.  Embed videos, images, audio and much more to display before any website you want to link to."

Developers: Browseology Team - Art Chang (@
kineticac) and Joe Pestro (@joepestro)
Duration: 11 hours


Doubleblind.at
http://doubleblind.at
"Conducts a doubleblind experiment: You will rate friendfeed posts by your friends which have been anonymized, and afterward we will reveal to you which of your friends made the posts you like, and which make the posts you don't like.  Afterward, we will apply some NLP and machine learning to the information collected. Based on this analysis, we will email you a followup summary of your tastes and preference, if you like."
Developers: Joseph Turian and Richard Reed

Duration: 18 hours

Agent 42
http://epcntr.appspot.com/agentfortytwo

"A generic recommendation engine. Give it a few examples of things you like, and it scours the web to figure out the other stuff you might like."
Developer: Kovak Team - Siddharth Mitra (@
sidmitra)
Duration: 23 hours

       
Click here to download:
One_Day_App_Final_Results.zip (239 KB)

Posted by Arthur Chang 

Comments (10)

Jul 26, 2009
Arthur Chang said...
Unfortunately, the formatting isn't showing very well on posterous =(
Jul 26, 2009
Joe Pestro said...
Great work everyone!
Jul 26, 2009
Joseph Turian said...
For a while, I wanted as an exercise to build a minimum viable product (http://venturehacks.com/articles/minimum-viable-product) very quickly. I also wanted to round out my web development experience, and take a project from start to completion (at least, deployed). So I participated in this event.

The day of the event, there were a handle of people on the channel who had no idea what to work on but wanted to hack something.
I was amazed to find a fellow who wanted to work with me, without knowing really anything about each other.
We just sat and coded for the entire day. I have no idea where he even lives or what he looks like.

But our work dynamic was great. We rarely stepped on each other's toes, we covered each others weaknesses, and we didn't have any arguments.
In sum total, we sat and developed an MVP and deployed it:

http://doubleblind.at

The goal is to see if enough people like to take this quiz and give us their email address, so we can get enough data to do interesting NLP and ML and bootstrap a collaborative filtering system.

We literally spent the first 6 hours (1/3rd of our entire effort) trying to get Twitter-Django-Oauth working, because we were convinced it was crucial. Instead, we should have considered alternatives (e.g. Friendfeed) earlier.

The organizers, who do browseology.com, created a new URL shortening service http://kiw.is. It shortens your URL and it gives your reader a 10 second personalized message before delivering the final link to them. Cute idea, right? But it might not get any attention if it was released on its own. So co-announcing this microapp as part of a one day app event---especially if only one or two things get built and deployed---will get them more attention than it would otherwise.

Lessons learned:

1. Django deployment isn't that difficult.

2. If you want to find a collaborator who will actually build stuff (instead of just talking about building stuff), participate in a one-day-app event. It automatically disqualifies people who cannot or will not actually make the time to hack. It's also a good way to determine quickly whether you and someone can work together effectively.

3. Any time you feel that something is 100% (or very) necessary it for your success, that should be a red flag. Examine this assumption before investing too heavily into it.

4. Twitter-OAuth-Django integration is a PITA, and cost us several hours. Conversely, simple authentication with Friendfeed was a breeze.

5. If you want to promote a microapp, organize a hackday and roll your announcement into the overall press release.

I am also discussing this event in the Eric Ries's lean-startup-circle group (http://groups.google.com/group/lean-startup-circle/browse_thread/thread/2f934d1137dd9f3), if you are interested.

Jul 26, 2009
jbwiv said...
Care to share what technology each project used? I see doubleblind.at used Django...what about the others?
Jul 26, 2009
Joe Pestro said...
Kiwis is ruby/rails
Jul 26, 2009
erikstarck said...
This sounds somewhat like the 24h Business Camp that took place in Stockholm earlier this year: http://www.24hourbusinesscamp.com
We were 90 people that worked for 24 hours to launch 52 sites. It was one of the most fun and inspiring things I've done.
Jul 26, 2009
JamieLewis said...
Qitika uses a very boring PHP/MySQL backend. Although it is built on top of a templating framework I developed some years ago which allows for easy modulising of components
Jul 26, 2009
 said...
Agent42 (http://epcntr.appspot.com/agentfortytwo), is probably the simplest of the apps. It could probably be done as a 5K app (http://fivepoundapp.com/wiki/5Kapp/).

>It was done in django, linked to Google sets using YQL. I wanted to keep it as minimal as possible, like the interface.

Jul 26, 2009
 said...
By the way i noticed the description of my app says
>"it scours the web and your browser history to figure out the other stuff you might like.", but he left out the "JUST KIDDING" part at the end. It does not look at your browser history :-).
Jul 26, 2009
Arthur Chang said...
Sorry Siddharth, I totally messed up the description! I'll change it now.

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