Archive for May 3rd, 2007

I am at a dinner event with Brad Garlinghouse (Yahoo SVP Communications & Communities) and Stewart Butterfield (Cofounder Flickr) are sitting at my table and told me that they will announce the closure of Yahoo Photos tomorrow. The actual closure will occur over the next few months, they say. The service will be shutdown in favor of the newer and more modern Flickr, which they acquired in March of 2005. There has long been an issue at Yahoo! where newer services have competed with older services, and Yahoo! have finally taken some strong action to getting their house in order with a consistent set of product offerings.

If you are a current Yahoo! Photos user, you will be given the option to export all your photos into Flickr (a one-click process) or you will be able to export to a few other services such as Photobucket or Shutterfly. Yahoo is currently one of the largest photo sharing site on the Internet, with around 2 billion stored photos. Flickr, by comparison, has around 500 million photos. But Flickr is also growing much faster than Yahoo photos and co-incidently has just exceeded Yahoo! Photos in traffic, according to comscore.

flickryahoocomscore.png

Also, according to Comscore, Flickr had 7.9M uniques in March and Yahoo! Photos had 7.4M, so if Yahoo manage to combine all the traffic at Flickr they will be a lot closer to both Photobucket and Facebook, who currently rank at #1 and #2 respectively, in terms of traffic. Below is a table of the current rankings of the major photo sites where you can clearly see that a combined Flickr and Yahoo! Photos will be close to top position.

Site Unique Visitors(M)
Photobucket 18.0
Facebook Photos 16.0
Eastman Kodak 8.0
Flickr 7.9
Yahoo! Photos 7.4

Update: In other news, Butterfield has confirmed that Flickr will have support for video ’soon’.

Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/114041877/

PR Newswire and Umbria Team Up for Blog Tracking

Written by on Thursday, May 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

prnewswire.jpgPR Newswire has announced a partnership with Umbria, a market intelligence company that specializes in blog research and consumer generated media for a new product by the name of “MediaSense Blog Measurement”, that allows clients to assess the impact of online conversations about their company, products and brands.

The new service builds on PR Newswires existing relationship with Technorati, and provides a graphical assessment of the conversational tone and participant demographics.

“Bloggers are thought leaders and opinion-shapers, so tracking who and how quickly they pick up on various news items has become critical for brand and PR professionals,” Howard Kaushansky, president of Umbria said in their media release. “If it’s positive, you want to know. If it’s a mushroom cloud of negativity, you definitely need to know. This partnership gives that knowledge to PR Newswire clients”.

Whilst the continued growth in companies tracking consumer generated media is a positive indication of the continued maturity and acceptance of one of the most important drivers of Web 2.0, the question must be asked: why?

Why do PR Professionals need a service to find out what bloggers are saying about their clients by a third party?

Media monitoring services still play an important role in supporting PR, but this old school model comes from a day before the Internet where national media monitoring via a third party was essential, simply because there wasn’t an alternative, and in many cases, for print, radio and TV there isn’t an all inclusive alternative today. And yet blogs and consumer generated media are the children of a new age, an online age where information is accessible online anywhere in the world at the touch of a button.

Many PR Professionals contact and read TechCrunch so perhaps we can get some answers: is it that some PR Professionals cant type “Insert Clients Name here” into Technorati or Google Blog Search?

How difficult is it to set up feeds from services such as Google News, Yahoo News and Topix which deliver results based on corporate brand names?

Isn’t the whole point of engaging with and participating in a Web 2.0 world one to one communications, removing the middle tier of information dissemination?

Having said that, if you’ve got a full corporate expense account and prefer your information spoon fed, then these sorts of blog tracking services are ideal.

 

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/114056232/

SuTree: User Aggregated Instructional Videos

Written by on Thursday, May 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

sutree.jpgIsrael-based internet company, E-learning Knowledge Solutions, recently launched SuTree.com, a video aggregation service where users can add and categorize instructional videos from across the web, providing a directory of video that would often be buried under the weight of competing content on sites such as YouTube and MetaCafe.

The service is similar to Scouta, in that instead of being primarily machine aggregated content, users on both services are encouraged to add the content themselves, tag or categorize it, comment and add to a larger directory to be shared by others, although SuTree does lack at this time any ability to automatically suggest video.

The site has over 5000 videos indexed across a broad field on interests, ranging from Kids through to Pets, Electronics, Food and Business. I was particularly impressed with the variety of source material, its not just the usual collection of YouTube videos that a prevalent on many aggregation sites, but from a much broader field including video from specialist content providers within each area of interest.

It would be easy to bag the site in terms of it Web 2.0 credentials, navigation is very much old school and doesn’t jump out and hit the casual visitor with a flurry of Ajax and DHTML goodness, but for its target audience of beginners, mothers, those with hobbies or seeking to learn something new it provides a nice rounded package that utilizes user generated inputs for the delivery of some great knowledge to many.

sutreess.jpg

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/114025357/

Guy Kawasaki’s Newest Venture: Truemors

Written by on Thursday, May 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

The secret startup Guy Kawasaki has been working on will be called Truemors, a source tells us. The site is currently password protected, but Kawasaki has recently posted on his blog saying he’s looking for “people who are in the flow of interesting and true rumors.”

The service will be a “rumor reporting bulletin board with twitter-like capabilities.” Look for a launch later this month.

Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/113995691/

Create a Simple Contact Form with Contactify

Written by on Thursday, May 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

Contactify is a new service to create a simple “Contact Me” form that let’s people send you emails without knowing your email address. Create an account in a few steps and get a URL back that points to the contact form, which contains a captcha to reduce spam. It works well, but it would be nice if they widgetized this to allow people to add it to their MySpace page or blog without sending people off to the Contactify website. There also appears to be no way to turn the form off, so once people know the URL it’s almost as good as having your email address.

The privacy policy for contactify is also too generic. They need to make a statement that emails collected will not be used for any purpose, period.

Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/113988153/

Census: RIA Data Loading Benchmarks

Written by on Thursday, May 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

James Ward of Adobe has created a Flex application that is able to run benchmarks on various RIA technologies called Census.

The benchmark renders a large data table using:

  • Ajax: HTML, SOAP, XML, JSON
  • Dojo: JSON to Dojo filtering table
  • Flex: SOAP to AS and E4X, XML to AS and E4X, AMF3, Paged

The benchmark results will tell you the time taken for server execution, transfer, parsing, and rendering.

The output itself is a large table that you can play with to feel the speed of filtering on the client. For the HTML versions James uses an iframe that he hides to a 1×1 version to the top right.

Run some tests on your own browser and play with the results. To show you that it is cool, it is black. All of the cool interfaces are black these days.

Census

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/census-ria-data-loading-benchmarks

Ambassador Publications announces Dojo-based app

Written by on Thursday, May 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

SitePen has noted that Ambassador Publications announces a Dojo-based app that they helped create:

From a technical perspective, the platform was a significant challenge to build, with over 700K of JavaScript in a single-page application, over 50 different custom Dojo widgets, auto-save, auto-sync, and a custom server-side platform to integrate with the various ad networks and other business operations and third party services.

We’ve pushed and pushed and pushed on the browser, contributing fixes back to Dojo as appropriate. From day 1, Ambassador Publications understood the value of contributing code back to open source projects that made their platform better, without sacrificing the commercial advantages of the proprietary portions of their business.

Nice work guys. I am looking forward to a case study at some point ;)

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/ambassador-publications-announces-dojo-based-app

Freja 2.1: XSL and JavaScript

Written by on Thursday, May 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

Freja is a specialized JavaScript framework for creating template-based, single-screen web applications. It relies on browser-side XSL Transformation to render the user interface faster than any other Ajax-based method, and is built on top of Sarissa.

This simple example shows inline editing and is explained in this tutorial:

JAVASCRIPT:

  1.  
  2. display.behaviors[”editLink”] = {
  3.         onclick : function(n) {  
  4.                 edit.render(menu, “content”, {itemid:n.id});
  5.                 return false;
  6.         }
  7. };
  8.  

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/freja-21-xsl-and-javascript

45% of Europeans watch TV online

Written by on Thursday, May 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

motorola.jpgA new study from Motorola has found that an amazing 45% of Europeans now watch television online.

The survey covering the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy and Spain found that the French lead Europe in terms of online television consumption with 59% of people choosing to watch previews and episodes of their favourite shows via the web with the Germans trailing at 33%.

The survey did not ask where the respondents obtained the content, ignoring the reality that many were possibly downloading television shows from Bittorrent or similar services.

The results further strengthen the business models of startups such as Joost, that seek to target a massive potential audience through the use of streamed content over a P2P network, but with the safeguards of DRM and imposed advertising delivery built in.

The survey also found that 45% of Europenas expect to be making video calls via their home TV’s by 2012.

“Viewers across Europe are no longer satisfied with fitting into schedules dictated by broadcasters and are turning to the choice and flexibility offered by TV over the internet,” Motorola’s Karl Elliott told the BBC.

“We are witnessing a nation of citizen schedulers who are in control of their entertainment, allowing them to watch what they want, how and when they want it.”

The convergance of Television and the Internet, despite recent false starts with products such as Microsoft’s Windows Media Center, looks set to continue.

Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/113839995/

DomAXh: Ajax for Dommies

Written by on Thursday, May 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

“Ajax for Dommies”. That is nice and corny. DomAXh is a simple Ajax library that allows you to kick off requests to xhtml data and have it placed into your document.

The homepage itself has arrows that flip through content:

JAVASCRIPT:

  1.  
  2. function substituteContent(obj, url){
  3.  obj.showResponseContent= function(originalRequest){
  4.  // This is the actual call to the dom translator..
  5.  domaxh(originalRequest,this); // Here is where the magic happens
  6. }
  7. // Ajax request using prototype.js
  8. obj.myAjax = new Ajax.Request(
  9.   url, {
  10.     method: ‘get’, onComplete: obj.showResponseContent.bind(obj)
  11.   });
  12. }
  13.  

DomAXh

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/domaxh-ajax-for-dommies



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