Archive for June 15th, 2007

The Rise Of The Prosumer

Written by on Friday, June 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Mark this word in your mental diaries: Prosumer.

The word is a combination of producer and consumer that perfectly describe the millions of participants in the Web 2.0 revolution.

It’s not a new word, but it’s a word that will become the norm in the coming years. It’s already being used by companies such as Sony to describe users of video cameras.

Earlier in the week, Read/Write Web featured a video from Davide Casaleggio where Prosumer is features strongly. Video as below, other highlights include world domination by Google in 2050 and Lawrence Lessig becoming US Secretary of Justice in 2020 and declaring copyright illegal. I’ve not been able to get Prosumer out of my head since watching this video so expect it to be dropped regularly in future posts.

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



Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/125257373/

Lawyers Sue Lawyer Ratings Site

Written by on Friday, June 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

avvo.pngLawyer ratings site Avvo is being sued by lawyers unhappy with negative ratings.

The complaint on behalf of Seattle lawyers John Henry Browne and Alan Wenokur says Avvo is deceptive, unfair and violates state consumer protection laws.

It would be easy to call irony on this one, but in reality it sits far better with clichés including when you dance with the devil and when you play with fire.

From a strict consumer viewpoint it’s easy to side with Avvo, and as CEO Mark Britton writes on the Avvo blog, the service helps consumers by providing them with information that empowers their ability to make an informed choice. Yet you just know this was going to happen. Red rag to a bull perhaps?

The suit itself claims that Avvo’s rating system is flawed. Browne and Wenokur allege that the Avvo system can be gamed, citing an example of a lawyer improving Avvo ratings by including sports awards with their profile. Whilst the suit skirts the question of free speech in terms of Avvo not confirming the veracity of supplied information, it does not seem to have the potential of becoming a legal battle focused on free speech. The crux of the suit is about calculations and ratings; the only people who would be deeply concerned with the suit are Web 2.0 startups that use proprietary ratings system. The thin end of the wedge could be a precedent where service providers with negative ratings on review sites could sue those sites on the basis that the rating system itself was deceptive or unfair, and that could mean just about all of them.

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/~3/125253207/

The Long Tail Is Getting Fatter

Written by on Friday, June 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

longtail.pngThree separate news stories involving numbers this week caught my eye. iLike announced it has now has 6 million registered users and is now adding 300,000 new users a day. Apple’s Safari browser for Windows has now had 1 million downloads. Finally SpaceTime, a 3D browser we reviewed June 5 passed the 100,000 download mark.

All three may not seem obviously related, but there is something they all share: large user numbers.

It wasn’t that long ago that 100,000 users was considered huge for a Web 2.0 related business. Today a small startup such as SpaceTime can gain those numbers in two weeks. 6 million users three years ago would have seemed an impossible dream, and yet iLike joins a long and growing list of Web 2.0 sites with 1 million or more users. Web 2.0 offerings are improving their appeal to a broader audience which in turn is driving growth in the overall market: the Long Tail is getter fatter.

Although this fattening of the Web 2.0 marketplace makes it more difficult to stand out from the crowd, the marginal cost and ROI potential has now improved. Consider the SpaceTime browser. Immediately many would question the need for an alternative browser, yet this isn’t an all or nothing proposition. Every single user of SpaceTime presents a ROI for the company due to search deals. An average SpaceTime user might return $5 per month to the company by clicking on Google ads or surfing eBay; $500,000 per month @ 100,000 users. The figure could be lower or higher, but it’s still a return. Safari will be operating on a similar model for Apple. The need to find appeal has actually decreased as a percentage of the overall market. Conversely the bar to creating a sustainable business hasn’t risen in line with the number of potential users, today startups can achieve with a smaller percentage of the overall market.

From a developers or startups view, the fattening long tail should be seen for what it is: a marketplace that has improved opportunities for smart startups. A bigger marketplace makes today and tomorrow an even better time to build a Web 2.0 business than yesterday. A fatter long tail means that as a whole there will be an increasing number of success stories and sustainable startups, a win-win all round.

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



Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/125246305/

The web is littered with failed or stagnant personalized news startups. New startup Thoof is going to give it a whirl and see if they can do better than the ones that have tried it before.

The idea around personalized news: instead of showing stuff based on what an editor chooses (like this blog, or the Washington Post) or via some sort of community action (Digg, reddit), a user will see news items that the service thinks you will like, based on your past behavior compared to the community at large.

Services that we’ve covered that have entered this space in one way or another include Searchfox (deadpool, assets acquired by Yahoo), Findory (deadpool), Spotback (change in strategy) and Feeds 2.0 (no idea what their status is, site is live).

I have my own reasons for explaining why, so far, these sites haven’t succeeded. I think people usually want to read news and then discuss it with friends. So what is considered “interesting” is influenced by what everyone else is consuming that day. People flock to the big news sites because everyone else flocks there, too, and the niche audiences that really want personalized news aren’t enough to sustain these startups.

But others disagree, including Thoof founder Ian Clarke. Clarke, formerly a co-founder of video site Revver, thinks the sites that came before Thoof simply didn’t have a good solution, and users were left wanting.

Thoof is all about personalized news, and it learns over time what you want to read. But it’s also part wiki and it has Digg/del.icio.us-like attributes as well.

News is submitted by users in a Digg-like fashion. A link to a news item is submitted, along with a title, description and tags. Other users start to see the news item if Thoof determines they will like it. However, submissions can be easily be edited by other users who think there is something lacking. Any aspect of the news item can be changed, including the link, in a wiki-like fashion (see screen shot above and to left). Other users will see the change and be asked to vote on it. If enough users say yes, the changes stand. Otherwise, it reverts back to the previous submission.

Thoof determines what you like based solely on what stories you click on to read. Asking for specific feedback, like voting or rating of stories, is too much to ask of users, Clarke says, noting that only a very small percentage of people who watched videos on Revver ever actually rated them. By analyzing what you tend to click on, Thoof will return results that it thinks you are more likely to click on than others. The result, over time, is a perfectly tailored news page for an individual. See the screen shot below.

So will this work? Clarke argues it will. in an email exchange where we were debating my position (the masses want popular news) v. his (the masses want tailored news), he writes:

Historically, news has been delivered in a one-to-many manner, meaning that lots of people tend to get the same news at the same time, but I think this is more of a bug than a feature. People don’t necessarily *want* to be shown the same stuff that everyone else is seeing, but the limitations of the technology somewhat required that this be the case. They would much rather see things that are specifically tailored to their interests, its just that either that option hasn’t existed, or it has been poorly executed.

The company is based in Austin and has five employees. They’ve raised a $1 million round of financing from Austin Ventures, Ron Conway and others. They launch today by invite only. Like Gmail and Joost, active users can invite a limited number of others…we’re working on getting some invites for readers.

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



Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/125133982/

[Sunspots] The tactile edition

Written by on Friday, June 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Dean Kamen's commencement speech at Bates College

“You are moving for the first time into a world where ideas matter more than all the stuff there is. But those ideas have to come from educated people and they have to be used as a tool and not as a weapon. That’s the biggest change that’s happening…So I would beg every educated person in this world to remember, every day when you get up, that you are an incredibly small minority of all humanity. And with all the privileges I understand it gives us, I think it gives us an enormous responsibility to be leaders that do the right things for the right reasons. And remember that you can be doing good while you are doing well.”

Craig Newmark podcast interview

“Everything on the site is based on user feedback. Frankly, I have no vision whatsoever.” Other interesting Craigslist facts: Seven billion pageviews a month, the company has never had a tech quit in 12 years, they never hold meetings.

Edward Tufte takes his next book to Real-land

“No more staring at pixels on the screen. More staring at…what’s going into Real-land. Movies, books, DVDs—I don’t know. It’s called ‘walking, seeing, and constructing,’ and it’s now in Spaceland. No more representations. Instead of designing with Adobe Illustrator, I’m designing with a Komatsu excavator.”

YouTube Presidential debate

“We’re moving to a society that is video-based from one that is text-based, whether we like it or not. Candidates are starting to recognize that the only way to fight the potential of the tsunami of voter-generated video is to produce lots of video themselves. The Internet culture recognizes that Internet video is more authentic, more granular, less scripted than television, and it is an antidote to sound-bite politics.”

Having a mindset of constant criticism

“You have to reshape your mind until you’re finding fault with everything…And as you fix more and more of these little details, as you polish and shape and shine and craft the little corners of your product, something magical happens. The inches add up to feet, the feet add up to yards, and the yards add up to miles. And you ship a truly great product. The kind of product that feels great, that works intuitively, that blows people away.”
iLike on Facebook: the most rapidly-adopted technology launch in history?

“Launching just over two weeks ago, iLike on Facebook signed up a million users in its first week; then a million more in the 5 days, and another million in the next 4 days. We’re currently signing up about 300,000 new users per day.”

Xerox 1974 memo: Ethernet will fail

“Here’s a memo from a Xerox PARC (engineer, I presume) suggesting that the Ethernet approach to networking can’t possible meet the necessary requirements (notably bandwidth performance) because it’s based on an uncontrolled random transmission timing, as opposed to a controlled, synchronous sharing of the transmission medium.”

The iPhone’s big gamble: no keyboard

Don Norman on the iPhone: “The tactile feedback of a mechanical keyboard is a pretty important aspect of human interaction. If you take that away you tend to be very insecure. Apple says, ‘We’re not selling to the person who lives on his BlackBerry, we’re selling to the person who listens to music and surfs the Web.’”

Proof of concept web app for the iPhone

“OneTrip is an iPhone-optimized web application (a simple shopping list). Since third-party apps won’t be available on iPhone for a while, I thought I’d create a website you could load in Safari on iPhone to approximate having a custom widget.”

Trash projection art

“Real Life is Rubbish, 2002” | Two separate piles of general household rubbish onto which a light is projected, creating a shadow self-portrait of the artists.

rubbish

Keywashing video

“Michele read a couple webblog entries and heard an NPR story about how you might be able to clean your computer keyboard in the dishwasher. So she organized a bit of an experiment. Just like with socks in the laundry, somehow a couple of our matching keys disappeared in the process. Luckily they were F10 and F11. We never use those anyhow.”

How Jean-Luc Godard created jump-cuts in 1960's "Breathless"

“The finished film was 30 minutes too long, and rather than cut out whole scenes or sequences, Godard elected to trim within the scene, creating the jagged cutting style still so beloved of action filmmakers. Godard just went at the film with the scissors, cutting out anything he thought boring.”

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/467-sunspots-the-tactile-edition

Jingle Networks, operator of the free directory assistance service that has been emulated by AT&T, Google and others, was awarded a U.S. Patent “for providing telephone directory assistance service in which a telephone user calls to the system and the system will, based on the requested number or type of service, hear a recorded advertisement.” The patent was issued in May and is being announced by the Company today.

If the patent is enforceable, and Jingle has the stomach to try, it will be a significant hurdle for their competitors. The company has raised significant capital (over $60 million), but that is nothing compared to the resources of Google and AT&T. If those companies are serious about this business, it could get ugly in the courtroom.

When we last heard from the company, they claimed to be receiving 17 million monthly calls and had grabbed over 6% of the U.S. market for directory assistance calls.

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/~3/125111677/

Safari 3: Onload firing, and bad timing

Written by on Friday, June 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Mark Wilton-Jones has written up a detailed article on the behaviour and speed of Safari 3 in which he dives into how Safari fires onload at a different time than most other browsers, and other implementation details that mean that you can’t trust JavaScript in the page to do any benchmarking.

In Safari, it seems onload fires before the page has been displayed, before layout has been calculated, before any costly reflows have taken place. It fires before images have completed loading (this can also happen in rare cases in Opera, but Safari seems to do it everywhere), meaning that a substantial part of the load time is not included. So basically, onload is not trustworthy in Safari for checking page loading times.

It is possible to force Safari to layout the page before checking for the time. To do this, check for the offset values of any element, such as the offsetWidth of the body:

window.onload = function () {
var ignoreMe = document.body.offsetWidth;
var endTime = new Date();
};

Note, however, that this still does not include actually displaying the page, only calculating what will be displayed, so it is not perfect, but it does make it slightly closer to the behaviour of other browsers.

Mark finishes up talking about how to better benchmark the performance, and concluding that this doesn’t mean Safari is slow (it is clearly far from it), but it may not be as fast as it claims on TV :)

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/safari-3-onload-firing-and-bad-timing

HeyCosmo: Webcams Meet Group Collaboration

Written by on Friday, June 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

hc.jpgHeyCosmo, a new online video community from Mountain View, CA based Arsenal Interactive launches today with a well rounded package that blends web cam interaction with group collaboration tools

With HeyCosmo, users are able create “channels” that can include up to 10 live web-cam video participants in a group discussion. Additionally up to 50 people can listen, watch, and chat during the session on top of the 10 core participants. HeyCosmo’s technology also provides individuals and businesses monetization options for their content utilizing a fee for service model similar to Skype Prime.

The feature list for HeyCosmo is impressive, combining tradition web cam technology with virtual meeting space similar to WebEx and others; a multimedia window can display most things on a user’s desktop including videos, images and games.

Desktop presentation and sharing services tend to be more strongly focused on a business market and aren’t necessarily appealing to a broader personal consumer market. HeyCosmo delivers a more user friendly product that has the potential of building a new market for these sorts of applications.

hc1.jpghc2.jpghc3.jpg

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



Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/125088553/

Instant: The polaroid of Ajax

Written by on Friday, June 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

The prolific Christian Effenberger has released another unobtrusive graphics library. This time he has shared Instant, a library that takes your images, and replaces them with tilted polaroid-like versions in-place.

Once you include the JavaScript, you just set a CSS class of instant on an image that you want to polaroid, and optionally tweak the settings (such as setting the tilt, color, and shadow amount). Then, the library, and Canvas will take care of everything.

HTML:

  1.  
  2. class="instant itiltleft icolor000000 ishadow50"
  3.  

Instant JS

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/instant-the-polaroid-of-ajax

FancyUpload with MooTools

Written by on Friday, June 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Harald Kirschner has released FancyUpload:

Swf meets Ajax for beautiful uploads. The release of the long awaited MooTools upload widget thats allows queued multiple-file upload including progress bars.

It features:

  • Select and upload multiple files
  • Filter files by type in the select dialog
  • Optional Events to add your own behaviour
  • Show and filter useful file information before the upload starts
  • Limit uploads by file count and/or file size
  • Platform and server independent, just needs Flash 8+ (> 95% penetration)
  • Unobtrusive, since the element is replaced after the swf loaded successfully
  • Cancel running uploads, add files during upload
  • Everything is optional, documented and easy editable

You can try it out, along with Harald’s AutoCompleter and History Manager.

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://ajaxian.com/archives/fancyupload-with-mootools



Site Navigation