mark zuckerberg
Spotted in an alley behind the offices of SocialText were a group of Facebook employees participating in a team building exercise:
They were chanting something about "Team Redrum!" "Team Redrum!" "Team Redrum!" loud enough to distract from yogurt sales at Fraiche. We think the guy in the cape may be Zuckerburg, but can't confirm it.
The caped character is also wearing a mask, which would fit with the shy Zuckerberg's profile — especially in Palo Alto, probably the one place in the world where he'd be recognized instantly. As for the exercise itself, Kurt Vonnegut once coined a term for the capacity of human beings to instantly bond into tribes over completely arbitrary divisions: "
Granfalloon." This tendency has been exploited by management to bore employees and distract them from real work ever since.
Update: No Zuck for you today.
your tax dollars at work
Websites are cheaper to build than ever. Cheaper, that is, unless you're a government body. Word of the cheap revolution has not reached Palo Alto's City Hall, where officials have signed off on a $240,000 website redesign, with a contractually obligated $25,000-a-year "maintenance fee." For all that, you'd think you'd at least get a functional, efficient, easy-to-navigate site, especially if you're the capital of Silicon Valley, right? Think again.
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real estate
Is
Facebook the new Google? In one respect, yes. Just like the
ever-
expanding search engine, Facebook is gobbling up prime Silicon Valley real estate, setting its sites on downtown Palo Alto's office space. In addition to their main offices at 156 University Avenue and 164 Hamilton Ave, they recently opened up a third office across the street at 151 University, and will expand into another building on Hamilton sometime this fall. Add to that its $600-a-month subsidy to employees who live within a mile of the office, and the company's affecting rents, too. With 300 employees, and more being hired, Facebook's expansion is no surprise. But most tech hacks, writing from the comfort of their San Francisco desks, have only noted the company's cultural impact. If you're a Peninsula dweller, it's hard to notice the physical — and economic — impact. Here's what the influx of fresh-faced Facebookers means to you.
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silicon valley users guide
I found myself at home in Palo Alto the other day, involuntarily offline thanks to a wonky broadband connection. So I headed to Coupa Cafe to get caffeine and log onto its Wi-Fi hotspot. And, just maybe, overhear an entrepreneur and venture capitalist doing the Sand Hill Road mating dance. Greylock's David Sze
likes to hold meetings there, as does LinkedIn founder and angel investor Reid Hoffman. But it's gotten so popular and so packed, that I wasn't able to find an empty outlet — let alone a seat. What to do?
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breaking
The 300 block of University Avenue in downtown Palo Alto is aflame, according to Megan McCarthy, who's on the scene. "Flames are shooting 20 to 30 feet into the air from the rear of the building," reports
Palo Alto Online. Threatened by the blaze: The Peninsula bureau of the San Jose Mercury News. A block away: Accel Partners, the VC firm which funded Facebook and BitTorrent, among others. Anyone know of other businesses that might be affected? Leave a comment, and Megan will update us if there's more news.
aol
- AOL's Netscape team explains its process of preventing users from gaming the site. Meanwhile, AOL's Weblogs, Inc. team games Netscape competitor Digg. (One Weblogs, Inc. writer tells me that Weblogs, Inc.'s internal mailing list is clogged with requests for Digg/Netscape/Reddit/Del.icio.us votes.) All's fair in love and war, right? [Netscape and Diggforlife]
- Palo Alto, the movie: in which four friends remember the hardships of growing up in the hundredth-highest per-capita-income city in America. [Pictured; Official site via Adam Hahn]
- Best summary of a tech-based musical ever: "I think that Google: The Musical wasn't really about Google. It was more about the zombies that attacked the main characters." [Google Blogoscoped]
- The country of Cameroon finds its true economic calling: making millions off exploiting the ".cm" domain name. [CNET]
- For those who are keeping track, Ted Leonsis creeps ever closer to achieving his entire list of life goals (presumably updated since he posted it in January). Noticably absent is "not sound kind of like a prick by posting already-achieved life goals." [Ted's Take]
kids
Ah, so this is what Palo Alto is doing with the money that would have gone toward universal pre-school. They're training little investors! The Palo Alto Weekly describes a scene in Jordan Middle School's "Money, the Market, and More!" class, where rising sixth-grader Anu Rajan says:
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