Archive for June 5th, 2007

TechCrunch Party at August Capital on July 27

Written by on Tuesday, June 5th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Update: Ok, tickets are selling faster than we thought. We’ve sold 300 in about 45 minutes. We are going to shut down the list for now and re-open it in a few days.

After a long hiatus of old-fashioned social networking (a.k.a parties), we’re pleased to announce our second annual TechCrunch Party on the fabulous outdoor patio of August Capital on Friday, July 27, 2007, in Menlo Park, California.

Like last year, the party will be held at August Capital. They have the best outside deck on Sand Hill road, and have graciously agreed to co-host the party with us again this year. Photos from last year’s event are on Flickr.

We have room for a dozen demo stations for companies to show off their products. There are also a number of sponsorship opportunities for the party. If you are interested in supporting the event, please contact Jeanne Logozzo.

Since we have limited capacity of 500 attendees, this year we’re asking a $10 cover charge to help manage the attendee list and minimize no-shows. We’ll be donating 100% of the ticket proceeds to Kipp Bayview Academy, a public elementary school in southeast San Francisco, for the purchase of computer-related equipment. Attendee identification will be checked at the door.

Details
Date: July 27, 2007
Time: 5:30 - 10 pm
Location: August Capital (Maps: Google / Microsoft / Yahoo)
Register here through EventBrite, limited to 500 guests

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/122521115/

SpaceTime: 3D Browser Eye Candy

Written by on Tuesday, June 5th, 2007 in Ajax News.

spacetime.jpgNew York based SpaceTime has released SpaceTime 3D, a web browser that literally takes tagged browsing 3D.

SpaceTime allows users to map out their browsing progress in a visual timeline, treating each site as an object that can be manipulated and rearranged within the 3D environment. Users can alternate between a 3D and 2D perspective as required.

SpaceTime’s search functionality loads multiple search results as a stack of separate pages, simultaneously loading 10 results at a time, each in its own window. Users can the flip through results, re-arrange the pages or manipulate them. SpaceTime search currently supports Google, Google Images, Yahoo!, Yahoo! Images, Flickr, eBay and others.

It’s difficult to describe the user experience. It’s pure eye candy, sort of like Second Life meets Firefox. As a standalone browser SpaceTime 3D lacks most of the extras you’d expect from a browser. There’s no bookmark support, there’s really nothing aside from the 3D rendering and search. I can’t see people abandoning their traditional browsers to embrace this; however the barrier to success comes not from millions of users, but from enough users to see a return through direct deals with Google and others through search affiliation fees, the same model used for Flock and Firefox.

spacetime1.jpgspacetime2.jpg

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/122519268/

New Service To Create One Of Those Picture-A-Day Movies

Written by on Tuesday, June 5th, 2007 in Ajax News.


flickadaylogo.png
Last August Noah Kalina posted a video on YouTube (embedded above): it features nothing more than daily photos of himself over 6 years, set to music. The video has been viewed over 6 million times, inspiring many spoofs and similar postings. The amount of work that went into the video is staggering. Taking the photos, organizing them and then editing them into a movie would have taken hundreds of hours in aggregate.

FlickaDay is a new Boston-based startup that makes this whole process much easier. Use the site to take a photo of yourself every day using a connected webcam or camera. Flickaday will organize the photos and will let you publish it as a Flash widget on another website.

FlickaDay uses Flash to hook up to your web cam. Each day you can sign in and snap a photo through your web cam and write your mood. You can only snap one photo a day, which is stored to your account. You can then show off these photos on your FlickaDay widget, which lists your most recent photo and mood. Viewers can also look through archived photos using a calendar or play through the whole set to a song you uploaded. You can adjust the frame rate, but the default is a comfortable 8 frames a second.

The service is dead simple easy to use. They even offer to remind you daily by email to come and take your picture. Emo kids and narcissistic bloggers will love this. Example to the right.

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/~3/122489360/

Ask.com Commercial: Now on YouTube

Written by on Tuesday, June 5th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Ok, we got a copy of the actual Ask.com TV ad we mentioned earlier today and uploaded it to YouTube. This will supposedly be broadcast on TV tonight for the first time. The basic idea of the ad is a guy singing “I got what I was looking for,” with singing women in the background singing “He got what he was looking for.

I guess what he was looking for was a bunch of singing women with swords.

The ad also briefly shows some of the features from Ask3D, which was released last night. Still no word from Ask PR on our request for comment, and I don’t think we’re going to be hearing from them.

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



Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/122480957/

I can’t guarantee these are authentic, but a tipster sent us these photos of what they say is a new television campaign by Ask.com that should be showing starting tonight.

This seems to be another provocative ad from Ask.com - it includes half-dressed women dancing with swords on some kind of stage. I’m not sure what, if anything, this has to do with the Ask search engine, but it certainly shows that the company is committed to seeing this campaign through.

I won’t comment until I see the whole ad myself. If anyone comes across it, please let us know.

Ask.com did not respond to a request for comment.



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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/122452478/

New Fan-Created iPhone Ad

Written by on Tuesday, June 5th, 2007 in Ajax News.

I told you so: the hype is just getting started.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/122457379/

[Fireside Chats are round table discussions conducted using Campfire.]

The latest chat is with three people who visualize data in fascinating ways…

Jonathan Harris (Daylife, We Feel Fine, etc.)
“My work uses the Internet as a means of studying the human world. It’s one part anthropology, one part computer science, and one part visual art.”

Aaron Koblin (The Sheep Market, Flight Patterns, etc.)
“I’m not a scientist, not a statistician, not a graphic designer…I suppose that makes me an Artist.”

Marcos Weskamp (Flickrgraph, Newsmap, etc.)
“I think the reason why infoviz is so interesting for me is because it gives me a little bit of every world…art, visual problem solving and engineering.”

Moderated by Matt from 37signals.

Matt
to get started, why don’t you guys each describe for our readers what you do.
Jonathan
My work uses the Internet as a means of studying the human world. It’s one part anthropology, one part computer science, and one part visual art.
Jonathan
A good example of these ideas is We Feel Fine
Jonathan
WFF
Jonathan
It’s a study of human emotion, using large scale blog analysis
Jonathan
It scans blogs to try to understand how different populations of people around the world are feeling
Aaron
Sometimes it’s tricky to describe what I do concisely. Last year I received an award from the National Science Foundation titled first place in “non-interactive media” It surprised me that the category was more well-defined by what it wasn’t than what it was. Sometimes it seems like that method of describing my work is more appropriate. I’m not a scientist, not a statistician, not a graphic designer, … I suppose that makes me an Artist.
Marcos
well, I’m an Interaction Designer with a really strong interest in information visualization. My background is basically in Graphic Design and Architecture. I think the reason why infoviz is so interesting for me is because it gives me a little bit of every world, art, visual problem solving and engineering.
Jonathan
Yes, I think the nature of this space is that it’s difficult to describe to people, as it blends many disciplines.
Matt
If someone asks what you do, what do you show them?
Marcos
Though a little bit old and rusty, I think Newsmap would be the first thing I’ll throw out.
Marcos
Newsmap

Aaron
Aaron
faa
Jonathan
Newsmap is a classic. I still hear people reference it all the time.

Matt
Were you guys surprised when the sites you’ve mentioned gained such a large audience?
Aaron
I was (and continue to be) shocked…
Aaron
Mostly what surprised me was the wide appeal. I never expected to create something of interest to the NSF, the Cartoon Network, and Art festivals.
Jonathan
It’s funny. I find it can be hard to predict which projects will resonate with people and which won’t. Marcos and I talked about this in Barcelona last spring. It can require a "perfect storm" of factors, all happening at once. Good ideas have a lot to do with timing, and what’s happening in the world.
Matt
Yeah, it’s funny trying to watch big companies try to manufacture something viral. Seems like so much of it is chance and timing.
Jonathan
For instance, Newsmap came out at a time when RSS wasn’t widespread, so the idea of repurposing news information was really novel.
Marcos
thanks, yeah, the time I put newsmap out there, around 3-4 years ago now, there was probably not a lot going on in the ‘mash up’ world I guess. You could surf the web for tons of research papers.
Jonathan
In many ways, projects like Newsmap help to prod along the rest of the industry, showing them a vision of what’s about to happen widely.
Marcos
exactly. Not even google news was giving out their content in RSS, so I had to resort to screen scraping.
Marcos
4 years later, I’m still eating googlenews html to produce that viz.
Jonathan
I see the role of people like me, Marcos and Aaron to continue to put out these ideas that are just ahead of what everyone is doing, but which are largely inevitable. Then we move on, and make something else.
Jonathan
And the world catches up.
“Our role is to continue to put out these ideas that are just ahead of what everyone is doing, but which are largely inevitable. Then we move on, and make something else.”
Marcos
well, Jonathan you’ve done a ton of work since then. I’m really impressed at how productive you’ve managed to stay during the years!
Jonathan
Timing is essential. Look how the Beatles changed musically throughout their career. Their music was always just ahead of — but not too far ahead of — everything else that was happening in music.
Jonathan
Thanks. I just stay curious.
Aaron
I remember seeing newsmap for the first time. It definitely stuck a chord with me. It was such a clear example of how much more information could be conveyed visually on the web.
Jonathan
I think one thing that Newsmap demonstrates, which is important, is the fractal qualities of good design. For instance, you can glance at the grid and instantly see the largest stories overall, and the relative importance of sport vs. business, but then you can move closer and see the individual stories that compose the grid. Those orders of scale are important.
Matt
What are you seeing now that you think will take others time to catch up to?
Jonathan
What I see is an enormous amount of humanity on the web. The humanity is hiding in data. I don’t think enough people have been able to bring data to life, both visually and empathetically.
Jonathan
What I find interesting is applying the principles of a piece like Newsmap — the fractal qualities — to all of the human world. What are its great stories? What are its patterns? But also, what are the individual experiences that compose those patterns?
“What I see is an enormous amount of humanity on the web. The humanity is hiding in data. I don’t think enough people have been able to bring data to life, both visually and empathetically.”
Aaron
I completely agree… I think there are several major emerging trends that we are only beginning to understand the future of. One is what Jeff Howe calls crowdsourcing, using the power of the masses to tackle tasks.
Matt
Jonathan, your attitude reminds of an idea i’ve seen attributed to michelangelo: the sculpture is already in the stone, he just takes away the parts that don’t belong.
Matt
In this case: The humanity and interesting data is on the web, it just needs help getting displayed properly.
Jonathan
That’s right, Matt. But it’s not as simple as carving stone, in the sense that the data is not hiding in its finished state. It needs to be rearranged, analyzed, brought to life.
Jonathan
As in http://www.thesheepmarket.com/…Great project!
Jonathan
Sheepmarket
Aaron
Thanks Jonathan… that was exactly my hope in creating The Sheep Market… to express the individuals within the vast dataset.
Marcos
oh that is beautiful
Jonathan
Lovely blending of the online and the offline. This is another big trend I see coming. The dissipation of the boundary between online lives and offline lives. It’s all just life. Lived by the same people. We leave digital footprints just as we leave footprints in the mud.
Aaron
There is so much humanity online but it currently exists in such a visually sterile form
“There is so much humanity online but it currently exists in such a visually sterile form.”
Jonathan
Indeed.
Matt
Where do you get your inspiration from? Where does the idea for something like Newsmap, We Feel Fine, or Flight Patterns come from?
Jonathan
My inspiration comes from really simple questions I ask myself about the world. Like, I wonder if men or women feel heartbroken more often? And then I try to think about ways I can use data to find an answer (turns out women feel heartbroken three times more than men).
“My inspiration comes from really simple questions I ask myself about the world. Like, I wonder if men or women feel heartbroken more often? And then I try to think about ways I can use data to find an answer.”
Jonathan
Right now I’m working on a book about We Feel Fine, titled "The Encyclopedia of Human Emotion", and it’ll be full of observations like that.
Matt
JH: I wonder if women are just three times more likely to outwardly communicate their heartbrokenness.
Matt
maybe both genders feel it the same amount but one expresses it more.
Jonathan
Good point. That’s certainly possible. And that’s something that must be understood when working with the web—the medium doesn’t yet reflect the "human world" at large.
Marcos
Usually it comes from different sources. Newsmap was definitively a need that I had. I’m originally from Argentina so my first language is spanish. I learned english when I was in school there and later japanese when I moved to tokyo around 9 years ago. I’m really interested in understanding other people’s points of views, and I remember spending very long hours going to international online newsmapers to read about the same story being reported from different backgrounds.
Marcos
when google news came out I was dazzled. It was not just a news aggregator, but it was a smart one, it’d group stories into clusters whenever it realized several newsmapers where talking about the same story.
Marcos
It was still not enough for me, as I later found myself clicking through the whole aggregator and its international sections to understand what was happening.
Aaron
I have to give credit where it’s due. For Flight Patterns it came from extremely interesting dialog with my collegues at UCLA Scott Hessels, Gabriel Dunne and Mark Hansen. Their interest in man-made infrastructures intrigued me to really dig into the data. Much of my inspiration has come from great conversations with amazing minds. There is so much data in the world though,… I’m constantly seeing things that I’d love to play with.
Jonathan
Aaron, funny you should mention Mark Hansen—his piece, Listening Post, was a huge inspiration for me (and for We Feel Fine).
Jonathan
Still remains my favorite artwork I’ve seen.
Matt
Lpw-b

Coming soon: Part 2.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/445-fireside-chat-jonathan-harris-aaron-koblin-and-marcos-weskamp-part-1-of-2

SynthaSite: WYSIWYG Site Editor

Written by on Tuesday, June 5th, 2007 in Ajax News.

SynthaSite has joined the crowd of tools that are trying to marry online tools with WYSIWYG simplicity.

Instead of creating a website offline, and sync’ing it up to a server, you edit and create the site online.

At this point, I would settle for a tool that lets me work in standards mode, and puts in all of the cross browser hacks to make it work throughout. This is after spending way too much time recently futzing with CSS.

SynthaSite

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/synthasite-wysiwyg-site-editor

EJS: Embedded JavaScript Client Side Preprocessor

Written by on Tuesday, June 5th, 2007 in Ajax News.

As we develop richer and richer applications in the client-side logic, we inevitably run into the short-coming of HTML inside of JavaScript.

Edward Benson has created EJS, a port of Ruby’s Erb to the client side.

Example

HTML:

  1.  
  2. [% var title = "Items to buy!"; %]
  3. <h4>[%= title %]</h4>
  4. [% [’cupcake’, ‘hardware’].each(function(item) { %]
  5. <li>[%= item %]</li>
  6.  
  7. [% }); %]
  8. </ul>
  9.  

Usage

JAVASCRIPT:

  1.  
  2. var compiler = new EjsCompiler(ejs);
  3. compiler.compile();
  4. var compiled = eval(compiler.out);
  5.  

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/ejs-embedded-javascript-client-side-preprocessor

Freshlogic Studios Folders

Written by on Tuesday, June 5th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Jacob DuBray and Freshlogic Studios have a new Ajax application out in the wild:

Folders allows you to work with your files on the internet, the same way you work with them on your desktop. We’ve turned months of research and development into a simple, modern website that allows you to upload, manage, and share your digital photos, music, movies and documents with your friends. Upload your files, browse through your friends’ folders, even search to see what other people are sharing.

Folders also has RSS syndication built right in, giving you what we call “one-click podcasting”. Easily evangelize your thoughts and ideas to the world.

Freshlogic Folders

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/freshlogic-studios-folders



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