Archive for June, 2007

Jon Thornton, Tech Whiz

Live from New York, it’s ParkWhiz!

June 25th, 2007
by Jon Thornton, Tech Whiz

For those of you living in the New York City area who’d like to see a live demo of ParkWhiz, today (well, tomorrow) is your lucky day. I’ll be giving a quick demo of ParkWhiz at the Web 2.0 meetup at 7:00pm on June 26. The event is being held at Slate Plus at 54 W 21st Street. For more info, check out the Web 2.0 New York meetup page.

If you feel like braving the tail end of rush hour and driving, here’s the nearby parking:

Jon Thornton, Tech Whiz

Advertise With Privacy

June 19th, 2007
by Jon Thornton, Tech Whiz

One of the big advatanges of advertising parking on ParkWhiz over craigslist is that people can actualy find your parking if you list it on ParkWhiz. Have you ever tried to shop for a monthly spot on craigslist? While it’s nice that anyone can put up a listing and add as much or as little info as possible, it makes sorting through those listings a real drag. To remedy this problem, all ParkWhiz listings need a specific address and a contact phone number.

Now as we all know, “On the internet, no one knows you’re a dog.” What if you don’t want some random dog seeing your address or phone number? We’ve built privacy-protecting features into ParkWhiz for just this reason.

When listing your parking for sale, you have the option to have interested drivers call or email for more information. The “call” option will display your phone number, but the email option will just create a message box on the listing page that people can use to contact you. The email communication goes through ParkWhiz, so your personal email address is kept hidden.

We’ve also added an option to not reveal your full address. For example, if you listed parking at “31 Main Street” but were concerned about displaying your home address, you could choose to have it displayed as just “Main Street.” Only when someone has purchased a parking reservation is the full address revealed. This poses little inconvenience to people searching for parking, while protecting your privacy.

These are just some new features; ParkWhiz has always valued your privacy. We want to help you buy and sell parking – on your terms!

Jon Thornton, Tech Whiz

Braintree? FOUR for you Braintree. You go, Braintree.

June 6th, 2007
by Jon Thornton, Tech Whiz

Merchant accounts are not fun. There’s the complex pricing schemes ($.32/trans + 2.9%*trans + $29.99 account fee + $? misc charges = huh?), and the weird reselling structure, whereby the company you pay isn’t the one actually doing the payment processing. Nevermind the fact most merchant account provider websites appear to have been designed by someone who has been without an internet connection for the past 9 years. This company’s site has a bad SSL certificate! Are you kidding me?

When we started designing the ParkWhiz payment system, I was not looking forward to picking a merchant account provider. I expected it to be something like the Douche and Turd episode of South Park. Except less funny, because it wasn’t a cartoon and it was happening to me.

braintree ParkWhiz was competing in the U of Chicago NVC at the time, and by some stroke of luck one of our fellow competitors was a merchant account provider called Braintree Financial. Their business was focused around cutting through all the crap associated with typical merchant accounts. I’m not a religous man, but my prayers had been answered.

After working with Bryan and the rest of the team at Braintree for the past two months to get the ParkWhiz payments set up, I’m happy to say that Braintree lives up to it’s promise. They delivered the complex payment solution we were looking for, their manage console is well desgined, and the service has been fantastic.

Braintree won the U of Chicago NVC a couple weeks ago, and rightfully so. If you’re looking for a way to process credit cards or work with e-checks on your website, check them out.

Jon Thornton, Tech Whiz

Buy and Sell Parking – Online!

June 3rd, 2007
by Jon Thornton, Tech Whiz

The ParkWhiz Marketplace has been helping people find parking for a couple months now, but it was missing one key piece – payments. While you could see prices and other information online, it didn’t change the parking experience too much. You decided where to park, and paid when you got there.

I’m pleased to announce that has changed now, with the introduction of an integrated payment system for the ParkWhiz Marketplace. What does this mean?

For drivers: Never again worry if the garage accepts credit cards, or whether you’ll be able to find a parking spot next time you head downtown. You can reserve parking ahead of time and pay for it with your credit card. Then just drive to the parking spot, present your ParkWhiz receipt, and be on your way.

For parking owners: Offer your customers the unique service of reserved parking and get paid ahead of time. ParkWhiz offers sophisticated tools to help you advertise your parking and manage reservations, whether you’re renting out your driveway or operating garages in several cities. Learn more here.

We’re really excited to be offering this new service, and I’ll be posting more later this week about what’s next.