TweetWallPro on RTBF for election day

June 10th, 2010 by Sam Piroton 1 comment »

It has just been announced: TweetWallPro, webmission 2010 alumni, has been selected by belgian national TV channel RTBF to be part of next sunday election coverage.

Belgium will vote sunday to elect a new government. The end-afternoon and evening will see RTBF propose a full coverage of the day news. 

Part of the coverage will be provided by our friends of TweetWallPro, who get a unique opportunity to reach a global audience for their product and bring the best of belgian Twitterers reactions on air.

Congrats to Vincent & Pascal!

Webmission media coverage: Twizz radio

June 10th, 2010 by Sam Piroton No comments »

During our stay in San Francisco, and right after SF NEwTech, Twizz Radio interviewed Antoine Perdaens. You can now listen to it, right here!

Twizz interview

Webmission pictures by Pascal Alberty

June 8th, 2010 by Sam Piroton No comments »

Time flies, we are all back in our day-to-day life. Let’s take 5 minutes and jump back a few weeks ago. Here is the picture set Pascal Alberty has online. Enjoy!

CBS Interactive and Seesmic visits

May 31st, 2010 by Sam Piroton 1 comment »

Friday was the last webmission day. After Google IO, one would think the program would be less interesting. Though, thanks to our hosts, it was again another great day. Let’s start with CBS interactive. Located on 2nd Street, CBS i is in charge of bringing CBS content online; that means coding, programming, designing. We started our visit with a walk through the various brands (Bnet, Cnet, Chow,…), podcasting facilities. We than had a Q&A session in which we covered the mobile vs normal coding; the website redesign approach (test groups…); the way JAVA is implementend on the pages; ads integration, debugging; etc…

Thanks to Neil for having organised that meeting.
Our next stop was Seesmic, on Bryant street. That name probably means more to you than CBS. With Loic Le Meur as founder, Seesmic has been an interesting case study for us european. Once a video-message platform; Seesmic had to shift direction a couple of years ago. Althougn the tool was really interesting, as it allowed very personnal, engaging discussions (i was able to meet Zac, Freida, Thierry Weber…), it was also a expensive one: codec licences fees, storage fees involved with video are quite heavy for a starting company, with no real monetization at sights. So, Loic Le Meur was smart, and decided to focus on another aspect of “web discussions”. Seesmic was to be known for becoming a cross platform, cross social networks discussion enabling solution. As of today, Seesmic is present on Iphone, Android, Blackberry; on desktops with 3 solutions: Seesmic Desktop, Seesmic for Windows, and Seesmic Look (only windows); and finally online, with Seesmic Web. Through Seesmic, you can update your status on Twitter, Facebook obviously, but also on more than 40 networks via their most recent acquisition, ping.fm. Now, with all these networks and platforms, it was interesting to have a Q&A too.
seesmic visit CBS Interactive and Seesmic visits
We sat down with Johan (their CTO) and Marco Kaiser (PM; Twhirl dev). For more than 1 our, we talked about servers, split-team development, user experience, management experience, fund raising, company focus, cultural differences… It was a really open-minded talk, really, really interesting.  
We, the Webmission team, have to emphasize on that. Imagine a group of 20 foreign people asking you to visit your offices. Not a done deal, right? More, Seesmic, planned for tuesday, was cancelled (Google IO – new Android release; then Iphone version release); and re-scheduled. Quite unexpected, though, for Marco. And still, he opens the Seesmic books for us.
So again, a big thank you for that great discussion!

The Webmission experiment

May 31st, 2010 by Sam Piroton 2 comments »

In may 2009, Laurent Eschenauer opened a new experiment for the belgian web-ecosystem. I’m not going to tell you again about how it happened; but let’s try to talk about what we have reached so far.

In 2009; 14 of us travelled to San Francisco. It was quite easy, informal; no really organised visits. Set up in 3 weeks. Yahoo, MySpace devJam, Citizen Space, Sf NEwTech, Google IO. It was more a question of opportunities than a real planning. Being a smaller group also meant it was easier to move around the city, etc.

In november, another group travelled to Sevilla for the Evento Blog. Some of them were part of the first webmission, others not. That meant the initiative was interesting more people. In organising stuff for the community, and in participating.

webmissiongoogle The Webmission experiment

Now. May 2010. 30 people travelling to the city by the bay. That doubles the size of the group (yeah, i know, i’m good in maths…) It also brings a level of complexity. Various hotels, different flights; differents arrival times. On the other hand, it also helped to set up a good agenda, as we all have our contacts. Let’s talk about it.

We, the Webmission Team, don’t own the agenda. The only thing we did was being the core unit, centralizing datas, setting up the communication channels, and reach out to the community. Now, this is how the agenda was set up. Last year, we met a cool belgian guy named Jeremy Le Van. As a web designer, Jeremy decided to move to SF to graduate. He joined us for our visits in 09 and was really happy to see that something was happening in Belgium (you know, Betagroup was in the lift, then the Webmission…). This year, we also had Xavier Damman in SF. And finally, popping up from London, Laurent Duchateau. Let’s see who did what.

Jeremy helped us get in touch with Kyte, CBSi and of course Seesmic
Xavier helped us with Twitter and SF NewTech
Yves Hiernaux had contacts with Microsoft
Laurent Duchateau offered us his contacts in Google and Orange Labs
Vincent Battaglia organised the Facebook meeting; he also met Adobe
Gregoire Hoin had contacts with Happy Cog people

Thanks to them, all we had to do was getting in touch with their contacts, organising the agenda. Again, the companies involved, quite surprisingly, gave us their OK’s. So did their security agents.

A community stuff, for the community.

If we now look at how it worked in San Fran, i have to admit that with such a big group, technologies played their role, and mostly… e-mails and Twitter. Some people had belgian data plans, others bought US 1 month data plans, then we had this nice Google IO device, and of course our laptops and hotel Wifi. It’s obvious that we couldn’t simply call each other for each meeting. So, Twitter played a big part in our various meetings.

Finally, the Webmission also helps the people to know each other. Although we meet at the Betagroup, or Café Numérique, it’s not the same as living together for a week.

I cannot, and will not talk for Antoine, Jenny or Xavier, but i have to admit that it’s cool to see what we can reach, as a group. And that something is on the move in Belgium. Being part of it makes me happy. And i’d like to end this post by quoting Xavier : “Forward payback”. The Webmission 1 gave me friends and great events, i now feel the duty to communicate about it, and help others join this experiment. Reach beyond their borders. I hope you will all join me in that!

Rencontre avec TweetWallPro

May 30th, 2010 by Sam Piroton 1 comment »

– Sorry for our english-speaking friends, that video is in french –
A l’issue de la Webmission, nous avons pris quelques minutes pour discuter avec Pascal Alberty et Vincent Vandoorne. Avec, déjà, un regard sur la semaine écoulée et ce qu’ils retiennent de cette webmission. Pascal et Vincent sont les 2 visages de TweetWallPro.



Interview : Rudy Demotte after SF NewTech

May 30th, 2010 by Sam Piroton No comments »

After SF NewTech, we asked Minister President Demotte how he feeled after the presentations, and his opinion about the Webmission. French comments.



Webmission videos : TweetWallPro

May 30th, 2010 by Sam Piroton No comments »

You want to promote your event? See it go viral? Mix it with Twitter? Then Tweetwallpro is what you need. It’s a twitter wall, with great features. Check it out.



Webmission videos : Musescore

May 30th, 2010 by Sam Piroton 1 comment »

Very important to us, the belgians aspect of the Webmission. It’s not only about Wallonia or Brussels, but also about Flanders. So, thanks Thomas and Nicolas for joining us! Here’s Musescore presentation.



Webmission videos : RAZ*WAR

May 30th, 2010 by Sam Piroton 1 comment »

This is a special video. Because of the company. RAZ*WAR is not about tech stuff, no, it’s just about Shaving As A Service. Have a look!