Monthly Archive for June, 2010

Tokyo Drift

It was never planned but a friend of mine with a corporate job at a big German car manufacturer is sent to Japan for a couple of months to improve some processes at a Japanese subsidiary.

I will take that opportunity and make a 6-week trip to visit him in Tokyo from July to middle of August. I will live with him in his paid apartment (thanks!), work on different projects during the daytime and in the evenings and on the weekends we will discover Tokyo and Japan.

Photo by Joi

It will be an awesome experience to discover Japan. Please get in contact with me if you have any tips for events happening at that time that are mobile, web or startup related.

さようなら

Updates on Past Work & Activities

I was very busy while working on our former startup Tagcrumbs and almost never updated the blog. The development of the platform, the iPhone application and other work left me hardly any time. So in this post I want to provide a short wrap-up about some of the things I should have blogged about.

Mobile World Congress Barcelona

Thanks to Ewan from Mobile Industry Review and Blackberry I was able to go to the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona for the third time as I received an invitation to attend the event without any costs. 600 Euro for a ticket would have been too much for our startup budget.

The event was – as in the previous years – very exciting. It had a hall that was completely dedicated to mobile application development on many different platforms (“App Planet”). I was able to attend many great talks on mobile development from Blackberry, Sony, Vodafone, Motorola and Google. The WIP Jam on the last day made a perfect end of the App Planet.

Besides the main event I attended many other great meetups in the evenings, such as the final of the Navteq Challenge 2010, Mobile Sunday, the Mobile Premier Awards, GoMo News Blender, Swedish Beer Party and Fring & FON’s Late Night Party.

BW Goes Mobile

The iPhone application I created for Tagcrumbs received a “Mobile Talent Award” in a competition called “BW Goes Mobile” that was held by the local government. Unfortunately I had an important meeting in Berlin so I was not able to attend the event where the winners were announced.

Deutsche Startups

Quite some industry blogs asked us to contribute guest posts on mobile development and marketing of mobile applications. I wrote a German article for a major German Blog called “Deutsche Startups”. The article covered the basics on what time, knowledge and resources are required to create an iPhone application for your own startup.

Many people rambled in the comments why I suggested to not use 3rd party tools like MonoTouch, DragonFire or Adobe Flash CS 5 to create your applications, as Apple could block them at any time. My advice seemed to be correct, just about 2 months later Apple changed its iPhone Developer Program License Agreement and prohibited the use of any such third party tools.

Deciding What To Do Next

The Tagcrumbs time is over and I had to decide what to do next. I am still very interested in founding my own company but was kind of burned out after working day and night for Tagcrumbs, so I wanted to take a step back for some time and not work my ass off for a similar project, even if I am having many good ideas.

An option I considered was going back to university to get a master’s degree. But when I look back at my time at university while studying Business Computer Science I have mixed feelings. It was very good to have a formal education on accounting, economics and the like, but many classes were just a waste of my time. The lecturers were often boring and didn’t enjoy their job, so sometimes I could listen the whole day and not learn anything new.

Except for extraordinary good lecturers I felt that I could have learned much more if I would have taken the same time and studied books myself. And this is how I already taught myself most things. Only a very minor part of the knowledge and skills that were required to do the work for Tagcrumbs came from university.

I feel that I don’t need any more formal education on computer science, up to today I was able to solve every problem I had myself and my next venture will most definitely not be a pipe flow analysis in a CAD/CAM system. Additionally, many startup veterans speak against MBAs at startups, as they teach you almost exclusively skills that are needed in large companies, so this was not an option either.

I basically faced the same decision before founding Tagcrumbs, as I was also thinking of going to university after quitting my job at HP. I don’t regret doing Tagcrumbs at all, as it was an immense learning experience and I probably spent way less money for much more education than if I would have gone back to university. So again, I decided against university, but what should I do next? Go work at a big company? Currently, this is not an option either.

There was a friendly freelancer in my local Cocoaheads group (a Mac and iPhone developer meetup) so I asked him questions about freelance work… and it all sounded very interesting. I would still be independent, work on many different projects and finally earn some money again to cover my expenses. This was the way to go, so I am now working as a freelance software engineer for iPhone and Ruby on Rails projects. In the future, I might extend those services and also offer general consulting for web and mobile projects. Working as a freelancer gives me the advantage that I can still work on my own projects if I want to and that I can slowly shift from selling my time to selling a product. And while freelancing, I can still self-study many topics in my spare time.

I am currently quite busy with current and follow-up projects, but if you want to hire me you can take a look at my recent work. Maybe we can find a way to work together in the future.