listentoblogs.com at 24 hour business camp
About 90 internet entrepreneurs gathered at 24 hour business camp. The task was to create a web/mobile based service, during 24 hours. Starting Thursday at noon, ending Friday at noon.
Team Eric Wahlforss (co-founder Sound Cloud), Henric Berggren (Sound Cloud), and David Kjelkerud, student at KTH, worked on an application they call listentoblogs.com.
Henrik Berggren was truly enthusiastic yesterday when he told CMW about the way it works:
– It is a really simple site where bloggers come and blogreaders come, not to read their favourite blogs, but to listen to them.
The idea is that you should be able to read, record and upload your or any blog at listentoblogs.com, and subscribe to it as a podcast straight to your mp3 player.
– We are supporting all big open formats. This is possible because we have built it on top of an awesome platform called Sound Cloud and App Engine. It is a glue between this kind of cloud-based services.

The listentoblogs.com team: Berggren, Kjelkerud, Wahlforss.
24hbc took place at Hasseludden Yasuragi, about 20 min drive from Stockholm.
The guy behind 24hbc is Ted Valentin, a Swedish entrepreneur, who has created stuff like: sushikartan (The Sushi Map), Wifikartan (The Wifi Map), Minkarta (My Map) and… Sites that maps different kinds of services and/or places.
- 24hbc is the place to try things out. The focus is to get things done. Not to be afraid to fail, Ted says.
The atmosphere at 24hbc is a mix of hard work, playing around and hanging out.
Erik Starck, one of the participants, said:
– It is like the punk movment all over.
The Swedish TV channel TV4 reported from the event early this morning. On Nyhetsmorgon (only in Swedish).
Tags: People, services, Sound Cloud, Ted Valentin


I am happy to welcome Gitta Wilén as co-writer/partner here at Citizen Media Watch. Gitta and I go back a long way. We first met in the 90s when the web industry was still a fairly small and manageable space to play around in. Back in the days we were both board members of OPK, an association for women in this business. We arranged seminars with interesting guests and gave eachother advice on various mailing lists. 
Alf Fransson, 69, is blogging about a small area 1.3 Swedish miles from Askersund in Närke, Sweden. By putting up his own placards at the local petrol station/grocery store, he has managed to engage the people who are living in the area to read and to give response to his blog material.
There are some musicians and authors living in Åsbro and Fransson has plans for future blogging:

A young Swedish guy is setting an example for how upcoming film directors could work online. André Hedetoft is going to make a low-budget superhero internet series, and he’s using blogs and social networking sites to get the funding and the buzz needed to get going.
What will Extraordinaires be about?

