ThinkingSpace makes it to Headstart Summer 09 finals

June 12, 2009

There is some good news!
We have made it for the finals of the Headstart Conference Summer 09 to be held on June 20.

HeadStart is one of the two premium startup showcases in India (the other being Proto) – and we have been selected to present one of our products (EventShelf) – along with 15 other startups selected from all over India.

EventShelf is still in a very beta stage at the moment and we’re still building up some features and its database – but I think we should be in a very presentable and demo-able stage by June 20.

Getting feedback and seeing if the demo and presentation sticks will be interesting.

If you are in Mumbai on June 20, please feel free to drop in, check out our stall and chat with us.
The entry is free for the demo-pit area.

The event is going to be held at (updated):
Welingkar Institute of Management Development & Research
L N Road
Matunga (Cr)
Mumbai, Maharashtra
India

L N Road
Matunga (Cr),
Mumbai, Maharashtra
India

and the demo-pit area will be thrown open from 12:30 PM till about 5:30 PM.

A map to the place can be found here.

More information about the finalists event can be found here.


Some quick updates!

October 29, 2008

We’re really sorry for not having updated this blog in quite sometime now.
But there is an explanation – which is – we were terribly caught up with tonnes of work.

We all took a much needed Diwali break and have had some time to catch up with other things.
So whats happening at ThinkingSpace of late you wonder …

UPDATE 1: We’ve been nominated for the TATA – NEN Hottest Startups Award!
Yes we have! We were at a particular time on rank 21 – but now are steadily slipping down to rank 50.
(This is out of 590 startups from India)

The ranking consists of an Experts rating (50%) and public voting (50%)
We have gotten a favourable expert’s rating and the only way we can move up is if you vote for us.

If we make it to number 30 (or lesser), we stand to gain tremendous exposure via online and offline press coverage. So we really need your help on this. Please vote for us.

Quick way (You will be charged Rs. 3): From India, send an SMS to 56767 with: “HOT <space> 327″ (without quotes)
Longer free way: Head over to this URL, sign up and vote for us online.

UPDATE 2: EventAZoo is now live!
We have been furiously working on EventAZoo and have released a live version online!
But until we have things stabilized, we’re giving out invite codes to try out the service for free to a select group of people only.

If you are interested, leave a comment on this post and I’ll send you an invite to try out our professional package – completely free for a month! (Invites open on a first come first serve basis to the first 10 comments)

Don’t know what EventAZoo is?
EventAZoo is a mind numbingly simple, no nonsense event website generator and registration taker!

Head over to EventAZoo at http://www.eventazoo.com to know more!


Presenting at the Pune Open Coffee Club

September 10, 2008

We have been graciously given the opportunity to present our startup and our products (ActiveCiti and EventAZoo) to the Pune Startup Ecosystem (The Pune Open Coffee Club) on Saturday, the 13th of this month from 5 PM to 6 PM at the Symbiosis Institute of Computer Studies and Research.

The “Startup Spotlight” is a new initiative started by the Pune Open Coffee Club (or POCC) in which, one startup from Pune gets an opportunity to come up and showcase their company to the local startup community. It is an excellent opportunity for new companies to get some eyeballs and share their experiences.

We here at ThinkingSpace are super excited and really looking forward to the event.
This will be the first time we’ll be publicly demoing EventAZoo and are really looking forward to the feedback and suggestions.

The theme for this time’s coffee club meet is “bootstrapping your startup” and is a 3 hour session from 4 PM to 7PM this Saturday.

If you are in Pune and are interested with whats buzzing in the startup eco system, do drop in.
More details about the event can be found here: http://events.activeciti.com/pocc/
Entry is free for everyone.


ActiveCiti – one of the top 9 Event Management websites!

September 7, 2008

I know we have a separate page where we list in all the press and reviews we get for ActiveCiti.
But I couldn’t help myself this time.

We just found out that ActiveCiti had made it to the list of the top 9 event management websites on the internet by Events Authority sometime earlier this year.

Really made our day at ThinkingSpace.


Hotmail email deliverability problems and how to fix it!

July 23, 2008

For our latest project – I’m in TV, we used VPSLand to host the website. We were using VPSLand for the first time, and after a few initial hiccups, we thought we had everything in place. Or did we?

About a week from launching the first private beta version of the website, we realised that our emails to hotmail accounts were vanishing into thin air! This was extremely weird – because hotmail would accept the delivery of our emails and then just eat them up.

Emails would not get delivered to the members – nor would we get a bounce email back.
Hotmail would just quietly eat up all the emails that we threw at it – and not even give us any indication. No wonder as none of the users who signed up with a hotmail account were able to verify their email addresses.

We were extremely concerned with this issue and were at our wits’ end as to what was going wrong. This had not happened before. We had to finally, temporarily suspended hotmail signups for a week until we figured out what is wrong …

We spent an entire week on researching this issue. We tried permutations and combinations of email headers, what encoding to use, sending purely text and purely html emails, validating or SPF records and revalidating them again. Trying various permutations of our SPF records — but nothing worked. We were back to square one.

Then finally, frustruated – I decide to write an email to the hotmail support staff and see what happens.
I was hardly expecting a reply back – when they actually did. I was pleasantly surprised.
A few more email exchanges later – they told us that they were blocking our IP for no apparent reason at all! Hotmail does that.
Any new IP that tries to send it email – it blocks it assuming its spam.

Finally, after letting them know of our intentions, they agreed to open up a small window to allow our emails through. They would then monitor these emails for reports of spam – and if they found nothing suspicious, they would open up access permanently.

Phew! It finally worked!
After a painful week of researching, all it took was to ask them to do it manually — add us to a temporary white list.

However, for those of you who face the same problems, here is what you need to do first before hotmail will give you that small window of opportunity. Also, the application matters.
We were actually not spamming our users. All emails sent were either verification emails, password reminders or friend notifications.

So, your mileage might vary.

Make sure your SPF records are in place and are accurate.
If you don’t know what SPF records are, check out the following links to get you started:

  1. Information about SPF and why it is important:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sender_Policy_Framework
  2. SPF Record generator tool by Microsoft
    http://www.microsoft.com/mscorp/safety/content/technologies/senderid/wizard/
  3. Validate your SPF records:
    http://www.kitterman.com/spf/validate.html
  4. Sender ID validator from ReturnPath
    http://senderid.returnpath.net/how.php

Make sure your server is actually sending mail without problems to other providers.
In our tests, GMail was a peach – and accepted everything we threw at it. Mostly in the Inbox and sometimes in the SPAM. But it did accept it and never bounced any of our emails.
Yahoo too accepted all our mail – but put it in the Spam folder. The easy way to get out of this mess is to get as many people as you can to mark your email as NOT SPAM and also add your sender email ID to their contacts list.

A cool mail relay testing tool that we used was:
http://www.abuse.net/relay.html

Make sure you are following the Microsoft Postmaster Best Practices.
These can be found here:
http://postmaster.live.com/Guidelines.aspx

Finally, if you are doing more or less everything mentioned above, and your email still refuses to go – write to the postmaster.
https://support.msn.com/eform.aspx?productKey=edfsmsbl&ct=eformts&scrx=1

This is a long form but needs to be filled.
Once you have done this, a hotmail support person will get back to you generally within 24 hours and help you from then on.

In our case, we had to make some corrections to our SPF records according to their policies and when they were satisfied, they let us through.

I hope this helps and provides some insight for all those stuck with a similar problem.
Please do note however, that this is not always guaranteed to work. It worked for us and I am posting this from my experience.


Can’t have your cake and eat it too!

July 5, 2008

If you have gone through any of these project bidding and freelancing sites like RentACoder, Guru, etc., you will definitely come across hundreds of projects in which the clients have the following requirement:

The application must be of very good quality and very cheap also.

This is generally followed by a line which states that if “you deliver timely, good quality software which is also cheap, we will give you more projects in the future”.

I thought to myself – cheap and good quality… How does this possibly work?
(In my opinion, quality never comes cheap!)

There can possibly be two reasons for people posting this:

  1. People posting on such sites have extremely low expectations of the end product.
    If their definition of good quality is something which plain works, then I guess this point holds true. There are lots of companies out there doing really shoddy work – believe me – I have seen (20+ developers) software sweatshops which produce such low quality applications that some kids learning a new technology, hashing out their first application over a weekend would do a far better job.
  2. People posting have truly no clue …
    In this case, the people really want good quality software – but they have no clue on how much it actually costs to develop it. These people would be the most disappointed of the lot because more often than not, some desperate company or freelancers choose to do the project in the measly amount they’re paying and what they get in the end is really shoddy software (which eventually drives them to the category 1 people above).

Writing excellent software is a decently intensive process with thousands of things going into it.
At a birds-eye level, you need to do your research well, work up a good architecture, code well and finally test it thoroughly.

Moral of the story is that you cannot have your cake and eat it too!
If you want to get something done cheaply, you either have to cut down on the features (a highly recommended option) or settle for something which you need to cross your fingers hoping that it does not crash and burn.


On Copyrights in India…

June 24, 2008

If you have been following our blog, you will know that sometime ago, we had filed a copyright infringement case against another Indian company from Nasik for blatantly copying the entire user interface and functionality of ActiveCiti.
I agree that imitation is the best form of flattery – but blatantly downloading pages from someone else’s web property and then just doing a search-replace to put your name in — is just wrong!

Anyways, even though many people have told us that we’ve gone overboard with actually filing a criminal case against the accused company, I beg to differ. We have spent time, money and effort in developing something and we are going to defend it to the best we can.

During the entire case – which is already 8 months old, we have learnt quite a few things about Copyrights – and more importantly, “Copyrights in India”. In this post, I want to share some of this information with you…

The Berne Convention
The Berne Convention was an international agreement governing copyright issues and India is a signatory in this. What this means is that India will respect copyrights given by other signatory countries and other countries will respect the copyrights on works that India issues.

Copyrights in India
Copyright protects the artistic expression of an idea.
To put it more simply, ideas can be patented and expressions can be copyrighted.

As software cannot be (thankfully) patented in India, the best you can do is to get your work copyrighted.

Technically, all you need to do to copyright a website is put the words – “Copyright [Company Name]. [Years for which the copyright is valid]“
However, this does not work at all in the court of law – for obvious reason.

Hence, even though it is an expensive process, we went ahead and filed an application for obtaining the copyright – the legal way. To do this, we had to send all the material that we wanted to copyright (i.e. the entire website) in triplicate to the Copyright office in Delhi.

The Copyright office is located at:
The Ministry of Human Resource Development
Department of Secondary Education & Higher Education
Copyright Office

B2/W3, Curzon Road Barracks,
K.G. Marg, New Delhi – 110001
Tel: 3384387, -2549, -2458 / Extn. 31

Once they received this, they immediately issued us a receipt for the same (stating that our application is in process). The process generally takes 3 to 4 months to complete after which you will receive your copyright certificate.

Once done, you own the copyright for your work for 60 years.

Major changes made to the work warrant another copyright.
However, we are not very sure whether making subtle changes to the original work requires this.

Anyways, the process for obtaining a copyright is slightly complicated with quite a few forms to fill.
And the only copyright office being in Delhi, it makes sense obtaining the help of a lawyer or a firm which specializes in this.


A Copyright Story …

June 17, 2008

Please indulge me while I tell you an interesting story …

One fine day (27th September 2007) last year, we were going through our ActiveCiti usage stats when we noticed that there was a sharp spike in the incoming traffic.

Excitedly, we dug into the analysis of the traffic – hoping to find lots of people using ActiveCiti to plan and manage their events online. Imagine our disappointment when we realised that all the traffic was coming from a single I.P. address.

On some further investigation, we were completely shocked to learn that the statistics were getting generated from a local desktop machine and not our servers online. It struck us then that someone was busy saving ActiveCiti pages on their desktops and running them from it.

The stats would start getting generated at about 10 in the morning everyday and the last ping from the particular I.P. address would come at around 6 in the evening. Strangely, the I.P. address was static and was active on our website only on week days – Monday to Friday.

We decided to dig deeper …

After quite a bit of analysis and tracking ActiveCiti logs and usage, we found out that a firm called Web Minds India from Nasik was happily cloning the website to sell to a Malaysian guy called Peter Foo. (Please don’t ask how we found it – its a long story – but we have all the evidence … which is now with the cops …)

As it turned out, the Peter Foo guy was himself a member on ActiveCiti along with a couple of developers from the Web Minds India company. We suspect he signed up initially innocently, liked the idea of ActiveCiti and wanted it all for himself. And to get this, went and hired this firm to clone the website for him.

Just to get things clear … We wouldn’t have cared much if they just copied the concept and idea and implemented it all from scratch …

Ethics aside, this company was pretty lazy…
They decided to download all our pages and just change “ActiveCiti” to their product name called “Xogether”. The UI, CSS, Javascript — everything! Completely ripped off.
(Please see the attached screens below. We can easily have a spot the difference challenge going on here …)

We could just login to the project by typing the URL of the company and check their progress out daily. Thats how we got all the screenshots. (More evidence with the cops)
We were definitely angry (to put it mildly) with this blatant copying.

We headed off to the “Asian School of Cyber Laws” here in Pune who directed us to our current (very brilliant) cyber crime lawyer – Mr. Gaurav Jachak. Under his counsel, we filed a case with the police under 3 sections of the Indian IT Act. The case was presented in front of a judge here in Pune and he was convinced enough to direct the police to arrest the partners of the accused firm in Nasik. All this happened rather quickly…

Though the next steps dragged on for quite a bit, the cops finally made a trip down to Nasik and landed up at the company’s (Web Minds India) office.
By this time however, they had already signed off the ActiveCiti clone project and the Xogether website was live. (We filed the case in November 07. The cops went to Nasik sometime in Feb 08)

On questioning, the partners admitted to everything – including the blatant copying of the website. They were eventually arrested and were given about 5 days of police custody in Pune.
Their company (of more than 20 employees at the time of their arrest) has since, closed down.

But as with most cases, this one too is still on – and will be a while before any results can be expected. So, watch this space for more …

Why are we telling you this now you ask?
Well, a local newspaper published a detailed report of this today — and thus we decided that it was better you heard it from us rather than third party sources.

Images below:

The index pages of the two sites. Creative work there - changing the blue bar to gray!

The index pages of the sites. (click to enlarge)

The login pages

The login pages. The similarity in the text is uncanny. (click to enlarge)

The help pages

The best part about cloning a website. All the help comes along with it – intact and free of cost!
(click to enlarge)


ActiveCiti – just updated …

June 16, 2008

We have just finished making very important updates to ActiveCiti and you can check out the website online.
If you have logged on and are wondering what the changes are (besides the opening page looking slightly different) – don’t worry. The changes are not visible :)

Most of the changes have been made to the internal workings of ActiveCiti. The UI has been changed at very few places (though expect to see changes over the coming days)

We have hammered away and tweaked at the internal gears that make ActiveCiti tick and have shaved off tremendous amounts of fat from the system which was slowing down the website at places.
You will definitely notice quite some performance improvement at lots of places.

We’ve added two new features which will help you in promoting your event!

1. Share your public event page on social content sharing websites!
We have added a widget to all the public event pages which will allow anyone visiting the page to share the page on other social content sharing and social network websites like digg, facebook, etc.
Now you can promote your event with just one click!

Share on other sites!

2. Featured Events are now Active
The featured events bar on your calendar page will now show a randomly chosen featured event every time you open up the page. This feature was a long time coming.
Incase you are organizing a public event and would like to get the word out to the ActiveCiti community, just send us a message using our Contact Us page and we’ll see what we can do.
If your event matches our criteria for being listed as a featured event, we’ll make it one so that you can have more visitors checking your event page out!

ActiveCiti Featured Events

Besides this, we have also spruced up our main page to give people pointers on what tools they can use to organize and plan different types of events. To know more, head to our main page and click any of icons at the bottom of the page.

I am sure a lot of you would be surprised at the many features we have that you didn’t know about.

We’ll be rolling out more changes and features in the coming weeks.
So stay tuned to this page …

(If you’re feeling lazy to come back and check this blog regularly, you can subscribe to it via an RSS reader or via email. The options to do so are on the bottom-right hand side of this page. Go ahead and subscribe to the blog!

We promise not to spam…)


A brand new website …

June 11, 2008

We proudly present to you – the brand new ThinkingSpace Technologies website (drumroll) …

http://www.thinkingspace.in

The website is a major, major update from our previous one – which honestly speaking, needed a facelift a long while ago.

Actually, the first website went online when we launched the first version of ActiveCiti – so as to have a company website online at the time. During that time, we being extremely busy working on ActiveCiti had no time to work on the company website as such.

We have been pretty busy over the past year (our inability to update the website is a definite sign of this). But having just completed work on the I’m in TV website, we have have taken some time off to update the main ThinkingSpace website with all that we have done over the past year.

So incase you are wondering what we have been upto, our website should answer all those questions.

Another resolution that we have made here is to update the blog a lot more often than what we have been doing. So any news, updates, etc. will be put up here.

Watch this space for more …