Archive for March 8th, 2007

My Yahoo! Beta

Written by on Thursday, March 8th, 2007 in Ajax News.

The YUI revamp of Yahoo! properties keeps on chugging along with the latest My Yahoo! Beta.

For the three people who do not have Yahoo! ids or if you just want to take a quick gander, you can check out a screencast.

The new feel doesn’t seem as revolutionary as the some of the other upgrades. It is more subtle… and this will probably work to their advantage. There isn’t going to be a backlash of “oh no I just want to always keep my old My Y!” and instead more of a “huh that is nicer”.

You will see lots of inline ajax touches such as editing portlets, bubble tooltips to show more info on an item, quick links, and drag and drop. Drag and drop is still foreign enough that I prefer it when the targets are explicit (a la netvibes and others).

Ben and I have talked about portals, showing My Yahoo!, for a couple of years now. It is great to see what they came up with. My guess is that there is a lot still to come, and once we are on this version they can get more and more creative.

What do you like/dislike from a developer stand point? What would you do differently?

My Yahoo! Beta

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/my-yahoo-beta

Confirmed: Microsoft Building Google Apps/Zoho Competitor

Written by on Thursday, March 8th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Most of the good forward looking product information we get out of Microsoft is from the many blogs written by its employees. And when a post is deleted by one of those bloggers, it’s a big alarm bell to seek out and find what they originally wrote. See, for example, our post from last year confirming that Microsoft is working on an online storage product. Today the deleted blog post strikes again (although in this case it’s an altered blog post).

Microsoft developer Tod Hilton wrote a blog post that says it’s his last day with Microsoft’s Global Foundation Services. He’s now moved to the Excel Services team, he says.

Hilton originally posted information on where the product is headed, then quickly removed it. The original text said”

The product has tons of potential and will probably be competing with the likes of Google Spreadsheets, DabbleDB, Zoho and JotSpot Tracker. It’s a really exciting time to be working on this product!

He then removed those sentences and said:

update: I removed some of my personal opinions from this post. I do not want to confuse anyone who might take them as prophecy.

While this doesn’t give away a whole lot, it’s clear that the team is looking to compete directly with Google Apps and Zoho, something they don’t do now. That implies that they are building an online reader/light editor at least for Excel.

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/100373689/

Amazon to the TV before Apple

Written by on Thursday, March 8th, 2007 in Ajax News.

The Amazon/TiVo partnership announced last month has officially rolled out. Nearly 1.5mm TiVo subscribers can now buy or rent digital movies (and buy TV shows) from Amazon’s Unbox service and download / watch those movies on their TV via their TiVo. Nearly 600,000 of the 1.5mm compatible TiVo boxes are connected to broadband Internet connections. Amazon/TiVo are offering $15 in free movies and TV shows to get users to try the service.

This is the second time that Amazon has beaten Apple to the punch — you’ll recall that Amazon rolled-out their Unbox service one week prior to Apple rolling out their own service for selling digital movies / TV shows. That didn’t seem to matter, as Apple has rolled over Amazon with digital movie and TV show sales.

This might be another one-week head start that Amazon has to gain some ground with their digital movie / TV show downloads service to the TV, considering the much-anticipated Apple TV is expected to release later this month. However, Apple has all their passionate iPod users (60 million strong) and have also sold millions of digital movies / TV shows that users will easily be able to watch on their new Apple TV device instantly.

Amazon also offers movie rentals, whereas Apple still does not, despite rumors. Amazon appears to offer nearly 1,000 videos for sale and nearly 500 for rental. A movie download to the TiVo appears to take an hour (from one perspective), whereas consumers can still get pay-per-view or video-on-demand movies instantly — however they offer a limited selection of titles.

Competitors loom, with Wal-mart entering the digital movie downloads market last month and others have existed for awhile — Guba, CinemaNow, and Movielink.

Editor’s Note: This post by Steve Poland, whose blog Techquila Shots brainstorms web start-up ideas. Steve will be at SXSW this weekend if you want to chat about web start-ups.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/100320288/

All New My Yahoo

Written by on Thursday, March 8th, 2007 in Ajax News.

There’s an all new My Yahoo (upgrade URL) launching today at 11 am PST. This is the web’s most popular customizable home page by far, with 50 million or so worldwide users and half of the total market (the other half is controlled by Netvibes, GoogleIG, Pageflakes, Live.com and others). So when they make a change, it affects a lot of people.

I had the opportunity to meet with Tapan Bhat (VP, Front Doors) and David White (Director, My Yahoo) and see a demo of the new product yesterday. There is also a screencast of the demo here, led by White.

The new My Yahoo has been redesigned to look more like the recently updated Yahoo homepage. But the most significant changes are are under the hood. Instead of presenting a default set of content to new users to start them off, My Yahoo is now analyzing known data about the user (zip code from IP address and the areas of Yahoo that the user visits often) to create a customized version right at signup. So, for example, if the user tends to go to the Yahoo Movies property occasionally, a Yahoo Movies module will be auto added when they create a new My Yahoo account.

Yahoo is also adding new sharing features. Any page that a user creates can be shared with other My Yahoo users via email or IM. If accepted, that page is added to the new user’s My Yahoo account as well. In the future, the team says, they’ll be allowing users to publish their own pages, as Pageflakes does today.

Users can also choose between a 2, 3 or 4 column layout and a number of themes.

There are a couple of areas where My Yahoo is still lagging competitors like Netvibes. Widgets cannot be added to the site, although that is coming eventually, the team says. Users also can no longer have bookmarks linked right from the main page - that feature has been moved to a drop down control panel. That makes some sense from a user interface perspective, but I’ll miss being able to access bookmarks with a single click. Finally, My Yahoo has a large ad unit on the site that cannot be removed - something none of the other services force on users.

Overall this is a very welcome step forward for My Yahoo. And from what the team is saying, there are a lot of additional features to be rolled out in the near future as well.

Like most Yahoo product upgrades, this is being rolled out to users slowly. If you’d like to test it out, you can create an account or upgrade your existing one at cm.my.yahoo.com/upgrade.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/100306550/

Yahoo Answers Add Simple Social Networking Feature

Written by on Thursday, March 8th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Yahoo Answers dominates its category, but there are a lot of complaints about spam and other useless content. Yahoo made a simple change to the product today that could help fight that spam. Users can now track others who tend to provide excellent answers.

This won’t reduce the amount of spam on the site, but it will help highlight the better content and allow users to create social networks within Answers. To use this, users simply mouse over the avatar of a user they like and click “Add to My Contact.” Recent content from contacts appears in a user’s home page and profile page.

This won’t directly help users who are searching for content or asking questions, but it will certainly bring better content to the foot of users who simply browse the site.

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/100313210/

What do you want to know?

Written by on Thursday, March 8th, 2007 in Ajax News.

We try to share a lot about our business, how we think, what we do, why we make the decisions we make, what we think works and what doesn’t work, etc.

What haven’t we talked about that you are interested in? I can’t guarantee we’ll have an answer, or be able to share the answer, but we’ll answer what we can.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/307-what-do-you-want-to-know

Four More on The Deck

Written by on Thursday, March 8th, 2007 in Ajax News.

The Deck, our premier advertising network for creative, web and design professionals, is expanding again. It’s obvious that the independent publishing efforts of our four new members come first and foremost from the heart, and we’re happy to be able to support them and happier still to count them as friends.

Khoi Vinh is the Design Director for The New York Times online and he joins the net with his beautiful, measured and insightful Subtraction.com. Tina Roth Eisenberg is the force behind Swiss Miss, a design journal of infectious enthusiasm and unrelenting good taste. Greg Storey has a rare combination of skills. He’s a clear, concise and conversational writer and you could also use the same adjectives to describe his trend-setting modern web design work. You can find Greg at Airbag Industries. There is only one Zeldman, although with the amount of stuff he’s involved in, that fact seems more and more improbable every day. Z has been publishing about his life as a designer and writer at zeldman.com since 1995. He is also a founding member of The Deck, through his stewardship of the mighty A List Apart. Welcome all.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/305-four-more-on-the-deck

Apple stores get the last laugh

Written by on Thursday, March 8th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Apple: America’s best retailer is a great article about Apple and its stores.

The critics were way off…

“Sorry Steve, Here’s Why Apple Stores Won’t Work,” BusinessWeek wrote with great certainty in 2001. “It’s desperation time in Cupertino, Calif.,” opined TheStreet.com. “I give [Apple] two years before they’re turning out the lights on a very painful and expensive mistake,” predicted retail consultant David Goldstein…

Saks, whose flagship is down the street, generates sales of $362 per square foot a year. Best Buy (Charts) stores turn $930 – tops for electronics retailers – while Tiffany & Co. (Charts) takes in $2,666. Audrey Hepburn liked Tiffany’s for breakfast. But at $4,032, Apple is eating everyone’s lunch.

The stores were prototyped like a product…

“One of the best pieces of advice Mickey ever gave us was to go rent a warehouse and build a prototype of a store, and not, you know, just design it, go build 20 of them, then discover it didn’t work,” says Jobs. In other words, design it as you would a product. Apple Store Version 0.0 took shape in a warehouse near the Apple campus. “Ron and I had a store all designed,” says Jobs, when they were stopped by an insight: The computer was evolving from a simple productivity tool to a “hub” for video, photography, music, information, and so forth. The sale, then, was less about the machine than what you could do with it. But looking at their store, they winced. The hardware was laid out by product category – in other words, by how the company was organized internally, not by how a customer might actually want to buy things. “We were like, ‘Oh, God, we’re screwed!’” says Jobs.

But they weren’t screwed; they were in a mockup. “So we redesigned it,” he says. “And it cost us, I don’t know, six, nine months. But it was the right decision by a million miles.” When the first store finally opened, in Tysons Corner, Va., only a quarter of it was about product. The rest was arranged around interests: along the right wall, photos, videos, kids; on the left, problems. A third area – the Genius Bar in the back – was Johnson’s brainstorm.

Hotel concierges were the inspiration for the genius bar…

“When we launched retail, I got this group together, people from a variety of walks of life,” says Johnson. “As an icebreaker, we said, ‘Tell us about the best service experience you’ve ever had.’” Of the 18 people, 16 said it was in a hotel. This was unexpected. But of course: The concierge desk at a hotel isn’t selling anything; it’s there to help. “We said, ‘Well, how do we create a store that has the friendliness of a Four Seasons Hotel?’” The answer: “Let’s put a bar in our stores. But instead of dispensing alcohol, we dispense advice.”…”See that? Look at their eyes. They’re learning. There’s an intense moment – like when you see a kid in school going ‘Aha!’”

The stores fight clutter in products and elements…

The most striking thing, though, is what you don’t see. No. 1: clutter. Jobs has focused Apple’s resources on fewer than 20 products, and those have steadily been shrinking in size. Backroom inventory, then, can shrink in physical volume even as sales volume grows. Also missing, at the newest stores, anyway, is a checkout counter. The system Apple developed, EasyPay, lets salespeople wander the floor with wireless credit-card readers and ask, “Would you like to pay for that?”

The interiors, too, have been distilled to a minimum of elements. “We’ve gotten it down so there’s only three materials we’re using: glass, stainless steel, and wood,” says Johnson. “We spent a year and a half perfecting that steel. Stainless steel can be cold if you don’t get the finish right.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/304-apple-stores-get-the-last-laugh

Primera: 3D Communication World

Written by on Thursday, March 8th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Sebastian Garcia has spent a year on Primera and I think it shows.

Primera is a multiplayer environment where you control an avatar that
moves around an isometric-scrollable map and you are able to see what
other people are doing/saying, and it runs entirely on dhtml.

Primera has been developed from scratch. The server side engine is Perl and all other libraries
are pure javascript and html/dhtml including a javascript sprite library and an isometric sprite/map engine.

The windowing dhtml framework is called GFZ and the graphics are from various resources (e.g. map graphics are taken directly from Ultima 8 - Pagan, avatar sprites are from the Toolkit Zone, etc.)

Primera

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/primera-3d-communication-world

Another way to get around ActiveX silliness

Written by on Thursday, March 8th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Eric Anderson has written his own script to get rid of the annoying “Click here to activate” IE now puts on all ActiveX controls (including Flash).

There are other solutions such as UFO and SWFObject that we have discussed in the past.

JAVASCRIPT:

  1.  
  2. if (navigator.appName == “Microsoft Internet Explorer”) (function() {
  3.         var onload = window.onload || function(){};
  4.         document.body.setAttribute(’onload’, null);
  5.         window.onload = function() {
  6.                 onload.apply(this, arguments);
  7.                 var tags = [’object’, ‘embed’, ‘applet’];
  8.                 for( i=0; i<tags.length; i++ ) {
  9.                         var elements = document.getElementsByTagName(tags[i]);
  10.                         for(j=0; j<elements.length; j++)
  11.                                 elements[j].outerHTML = elements[j].outerHTML
  12.                 }
  13.         }
  14. })();
  15.  

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/another-way-to-get-around-activex-silliness



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