Archive for the 'Technology' Category

More Reviews for Kinzin

Wow - a whole series of reviews have come out in the wake of Kinzin’s new photo finishing subscriptions. Here’s a small sampling:

Three Kid Circus says:

For the delivery service alone, Kinzin is going to make me look like a rock star. But the online hub for interested family and friends is really cool, too - and keeps all those (photos from my) “Mommy Weekends” safely segregated.

Pumpkin Products chimes in with:

Kinzin allows you to upload pictures and stories to your page. You can create memory books, journals, family newsletters, and even more, all on Kinzin! But my favorite feature of all, by far, and the one that has initiated a truce of sorts with the grandparents, is that you can sign up for an additional service that mails your best 10 photos from every month to the address/es of your choice(…) No one has anymore excuses for why they don’t have pictures of your children featured prominently on their mantle. Plus, it’ll help out those non-computer literate members of your families (we all have ‘em). Zero effort from you, and voila! You’ve kept everyone up to date!

Modern Mama Marvels loves that the invitation process doesn’t require your relatives to go through a cumbersome sign-up process:

It’s an easy, private photo sharing site that even my most technologically-dumb family members can navigate. I was easily able to share our account with them and they were easily able to (…) view the pictures that we uploaded.

Ebony Mommy surprised her Mom with the Kinzin prints:

I chose a surprise tactic in the actual sending of my pictures just to get my family’s first reaction to receiving the images. Each grandmother was thrilled to get pics of their grandsons- one was so excited she called me immediately gleeful in the surprise of these recent pictures. She stated that while she enjoys getting pictures online having the real tangible photographs is something she really treasures. Getting through the protective layers of wrapping to get the special pictures of her boys made the moment even more exciting. Her strong hint that this is the perfect gift idea for families who live apart from grandchildren and loved ones definitely let’s me know we’ll be using Kinzin again…

It’s wonderful to get some positive feedback. We were a little nervous having the reviewers be the first people in to use the new print functionality, but it seems to have worked just as designed (thanks to the best development team ANYWHERE - I love working with these guys).

Blog Talk Radio: Kinzin Is The Better Choice For Privately Sharing Photos

Listen to Motherhood Uncensored on internet talk radioLast week Blog Talk Radio featured an episode about photography and kids with “Taking Better Pictures of Your Kids”. The show featured Tracey Clark and Kate Inglis from the newly launched site Shutter Sisters, a photo blog full of passion and beauty in imagery and words, giving away their tips and tricks in photography. Inevitably, a question from a listener came up about online privacy and the security of posting pictures of your children online. The show’s host, Kristen Chase, refers to Kinzin as a great choice if you’re looking for a private network to securely post photos of your kids, saying:

“… there are a bunch of really great private websites out there… called Kinzin.com and they are invitation-only access”.

Kate goes on to mention some of Michael Fergusson’s thoughts on online safety in photography: to say the internet is inherently bad is the same to say that kissing is inherently bad because it can spread disease. True enough. You can listen to the show on Blog Talk Radio in its entirety. (The Kinzin mention comes at about the 22:00 minute mark of the show.)

From “Launch” to “Garage”, techy event speaking.

Kinzin "These Are My Kids" at Launch Party VancouverThe Kinzin team spent the better part of their Friday evening at Launch Party Vancouver 03, showing off the application These Are My Kids. If you haven’t read or heard what this latest app is all about, please read more here.

It was a fantastic evening, to say the least. Michael, Frank, Julie and Paul held court all night to the many new fans wanting to find out more, take a look at the interface and have a spin for themselves. We are extremely grateful for the interest and enthusiasm for These Are My Kids from those of you who attended, and we very much appreciate the time that each person gave to learn more about it. It is an incredibly rewarding feeling to have such a great tech community come to such an event and to support the work that is being produced. It was inspiring and exciting.

A quick, but very necessary thank-you to the organizers of LPV: Maura, Danny, Dimitri; and to the sponsors as well: Sun Microsystems, Strutta, Techvibes, Layer7, QC Docs and Growthworks. This event is a treat. Looking forward to the next.

And onto the next…

Monday night, Michael Fergusson will be at the Vancouver Facebook Garage Event at the Vancouver Film School. There may just be a little room left on the event page, so add your name and come check out Vancouver’s newest and hottest Facebook applications. There are amazing things happening in this city, and this event shows off the best of what’s being developed for Facebook, and beyond…

And if you can’t make it out, just follow along on Miss 604’s live blogging rendition, and watch the night unfold before your very own monitor-watching, live-streaming eyes. :)

Joyent Accelerators Work: Kinzin’s Proof Is In The App

Joyent Accelerator
Today Joyent announced their new Facebook developers program, Joyent Accelerators. Kinzin is well acquainted with Joyent’s infrastructure - it’s what has made the scalability of the “Are You Normal?” Facebook application manageable and successful. The app has jumped to half a million users in a month, has been one of the top apps on the “Recently Popular” Facebook list (more than once), and continues to add tens of thousands new users every day. Joyent’s full case study and more details on the app can be found here.

Joyent Accelerators is “free, fast and scalable hosting”, as quoted by Facebook Senior Platform Manager, Dave Morin.

Joyent has partnered with Facebook and Dell to deliver this sophisticated, scalable, on-demand infrastructure. For developers, it means a quick and efficient launch of Facebook applications that are capable of scaling to millions of users - FOR FREE.

You can read plenty more about this announcement and partnership on a number of our technologist friends’ tech news sites: Read/Write Web, Innovation Creators, Rootly, Social media today, Information Week.

  • Thank-you to Kristie Wells, Mark Mayo and the Joyent Team.
  • Kinzin’s Paul Prescod At Vancouver’s First Facebook Developers Garage

    Facebook Developer Garage Vancouver Oct 2007

    Last night was all about the app.

    Vancouver, or more recently referred to as “Techcouver”, held its’ first Facebook Developer Garage event downtown at the Vancouver Film School. The event was completely “sold-out” by over double the capacity of the space, so there wasn’t a seat to be had. Once the Nazi-tech guy made his way from the floor back to the booth for the main event to commence, people began to fill the isles and find space wherever they could. It was a packed house.
    Facebook Developer Garage Vancouver Oct 2007

    There were about 9 Facebook applications in all that were on display over the 3 hours. Each developer, or team of developers, grabbed the spotlight for a 10-minute overview of their respective app and covered any technical aspects worth mentioning and sharing, followed by a brief Q and A for each. David Morin, Senior Platform Manager for Facebook (nice title buddy) was meant to be joining us in the flesh for our inaugural evening, but had to cancel 48 hours in advance due to some “big meeting” at HQ. But he was kind enough to take a few minutes out to appear via Skype Video, as he said a few nice words, opened it up to the floor for some questions, when sadly, the connection was lost.

    Facebook Developer Garage Vancouver Oct 2007
    Paul Prescod, ‘DAD’ at Kinzin, shared the “Are You Normal?” app with the crowd. When he gave the current-users statistics (now over 114K in 3 short weeks), there was a gasp as a hush fell over the room. Well, maybe that’s a bit of a stretch. But nonetheless, impressive stuff! Johnny Bufu and Boris Mann wrapped the night with a few words on the open web. Facebook? Open??

    There is a complete breakdown of each presentation on the live blog post from Miss 604, and on Roland Tanglao’s Jaiku Channel.

    Front Page News: Our Facebook App In “24 Hours Vancouver”

    Are You Normal? front page of 24 HoursAsking the question Are You Normal? is front page material today on Vancouver’s 24 Hours daily. Writer Darcy Makwana caught up with Kinzin’s Michael Fergusson for all the skinny on our Facebook application, “Are You Normal?” that hits 100, 000 users today.

    Read the full article here.

    Paul Prescod, the application lead developer will be giving a demo and will present the technical aspects of the app at Vancouver’s first Facebook Garage event, tonight at 5:30 - it’s first come, first serve at the door, so get there early to find a seat!

    AYN?’s Paul Prescod At Vancouver’s First Facebook Developer Garage

    Vancouver Facebook Garage 2007Tonight in Vancouver, Kinzin’s Paul Prescod will be giving a demo on our new Facebook application “Are You Normal?” and will be speaking about the technology and implementation of the application.
    Gerald Bauer, one of the organizers of the event, wrote a post on the developers group site, introducing the app.
    If you haven’t already done so, sign up on , the wiki and/or the Facebook event page.

    Word is that the night is very over-booked, so it being an ad-hoc event, get there early enough to get in!

    “And You Thought Diamond-Studded Handbags Were Valuable.”

    Tod Maffin's Nerd Bling PicTod Maffin has to be one of the hippest, cool-geek tech columnist dudes out there. He’s been in the broadcasting world for centuries, and we should be lucky enough that he also happens to be a thoughtful and entertaining podcasting guru. His work is exceptional.

    This week, Tod speaks about Facebook applications and features a few that have been developed by Canadians. He sat down with “Are You Normal?” leader-of-the-pack Michael Fergusson, as well as speaking with the makers of MyBus, another Vancouver-born Facebook app.

    At the time of the interview with Michael, a mere 3 days ago, “Are You Normal?” had about 26K users that had added the app (within the first 2 weeks since launch). Pfff. It’s now been 2 weeks and 3 days, and we’re quickly approaching the 50, 000 mark. Wowzaaz.

    Thanks to Tod for having Michael as part of the show, and yes, we do in fact believe that diamond-studded handbags don’t even come close!

    Listen To “todbits” Podcast Here.

    Photo credit: stolen from todbits

    Are You Normal?: Our Day In The Sun

    our day in the sun, by Pickersgill Reef. Creative Commons, via FlickrYesterday “Are You Normal?” was listed on the front page of Facebook’s “Recently Popular” apps page which was a great surprise and fantastic exposure for AYN. But it meant that the development team had to accelerate a whole host of optimizations that we had planned. It is a little bit like a restaurant getting a surprise review in the New York Times. Everybody shows up at once and lines up around the block. Your kitchen has to serve five times as many meals as it is used to. The wait staff needs to juggle more tables. The host needs to deal with irate customers tired of waiting in line.

    There is one big difference though: a restaurant with a long lineup outside is sort of glamorous. A website with slow page load times is sort of embarrassing.

    surfing in white water, by eye-see. Creative Commons, via FlickrSo what did we do to handle a sudden influx of five times the load? Basically, everybody scrambled to do their part.
    The two major categories of levers we can pull are “hardware” and “software”.

    We were helped tremendously on the hardware side by our relationship with Joyent. Within minutes they were able to allocate more memory to our database box. Within hours we could double the number of virtual machines allocated to our web server front ends running Ruby on Rails. Joyent uses some sophisticated Solaris (ZFS) tricks to move or duplicate machines with little or no downtime. (I say “little or no” because it depends whether you are moving an app server or a database server.)

    Joyent’s Mark Mayo walked us through the process and did the parts that required Joyent admin access (configuring the load balancer, instantiating new virtual machines). Although we hope and expect to see more automation on the Joyent side in upcoming months, the personal service provided went far beyond copying files and configuring devices. Mark helped us find and analyze hotspots based upon vast experience with similar apps both within the Facebook platform and elsewhere. Mark helped us to quickly reconfigure our database server (both hardware and software) to increase performance. That freed my team to focus on the application logic.

    DSC_0015, by nicolette wells. Creative Commons via FlickrWhat my team focused on was primarily caching. We wanted to make sure that we never asked the database the same question twice. Caching is tricky though, because sometimes you can ask the same question twice and get legitimately different answers. For example, consider asking a weatherman the current probability of precipitation. You don’t want to ask once a minute. Humidity tends not to fluctuate that quickly and it’s probably better for him to spend his time doing something predictive. On the other hand, if you only ask once a week then you’ll spend many rainy days at the beach. So you need to decide what is the right middle ground between accuracy and workload. Even more tricky is to determine which events completely invalidate your answer. For example, if the wind changes direction, does that mean you should throw out the prediction of POP?

    So caching is important and fairly simple to understand but challenging to implement. That makes it all the more admirable that one of our developers, Ian Suda, was able to do it with relatively few mistakes, despite the stress of the rush and a pre-existing migraine headache. We already had some caching in place and planned more, but the Facebook deluge forced us to think quickly and accelerate our plans.

    Things are a bit quieter today, but we picked up thousands of new users and will use the new capacity to cope with the “new normal” level of activity. We’re also planning for that next burst of activity. We look forward to future traffic challenges: as any restaurateur will tell you, being too busy is better than being ignored.




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