Archive for August 23rd, 2007

Why Darwin Beats Danny Carlton

Written by on Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

Danny Carlton writes a little known personal blog under the pseudonym “Jack Lewis” at jacklewis.net/weblog. But don’t try to visit the site if you use Firefox, because he’s banned users of the popular browser from visiting his site. Firefox users are now redirected here.

Why? Because he objects to the fact that some of those Firefox readers are using an ad-blocking extension to block ads showing on the site. To counter the problem, he’s thrown the baby out with the bathwater and kicked 13% or so of the Internet off his site.

While Carlton is certainly enjoying his fifteen minutes of fame, in my opinion this is not a good strategy to build a blog. Users are solid gold. Even the ones that block ads. They sometimes write comments, which is free content. They link to you from their own blog. And they tell friends about your site. All that leads to more readers and, ultimately, more revenue. If a user wants to skip the ads and is willing to go to the trouble of installing ad blocking software, so be it. I still love ‘em. And I gladly hand them my content for free.

Carlton doesn’t agree, apparently. Although I wonder why he continues to provide a full content feed, sans ads, at jacklewis.net/weblog/atom.xml (and it has been reposted here). Those users are “stealing” his content, too. What about them? Perhaps he’ll now turn his attention to the evils of RSS.

The Internet will certainly be a less colorful place without Carlton’s passionate editorial. A perusal of his blog posts (via Safari) tells me he thinks Barack Obama is a communist and that “fourth graders can be lied to and told the Theory of Evolution is a fact.” The problem is, Darwin was right. Only the fittest survive. And Carlton just made his blog an endangered species.

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

Click Here

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/147535690/

Wikipedia Edits Cause Australian Political Scandal

Written by on Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

The Australian Prime Minister’s Office have been caught editing Wikipedia, the latest in a growing line of Wikiscanner entrapments.

Staff from the Office of Prime Minister and Cabinet (PMC) edited Wikipedia entries that were damaging to the Goverment, including pages covering the Children Overboard Affair and Mandatory Detention. Other edits included deleting the nickname of “Captain Smirk” from the Wikipedia biography of Australian Treasurer Peter Costello, and a range of bizarre edits, including the addition of the line “Poo bum dicky wee wee” to a Wikipedia article on Bubishi, a book related to Martial Arts.

Australia faces a Federal Election by November this year, and the edits have become major news locally. Opposition Leader Kevin Rudd accused the Prime Minister of directing public servants to change history to suit the Government and that the behavior was “odd.” Notably though, Rudd admitted that his own staff might have edited Wikipedia “for factual changes.” The truth I guess is in the eyes of the beholder.

The Australian press also discovered that staff from the Australian Department of Defence were the most active Wikipeda editors among Australian Government Departments, having made over 5000 Wikipedia edits. DOD edits included changes to pages ranging from the 9/11 Truth Movement, the Australian Defence Force Academy and the Vietnam War-era Pentagon Papers. A Defence spokesman said that the Department would move to ban access to Wikipeda for all staff.

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

Click Here

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/147522643/

New York Times Launches…MyYahoo

Written by on Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

The New York Times took their personalized home page product out of beta today - see it here. The look and feel is about the same as it was a a year ago when it went into private beta - Think MyYahoo, Pageflakes or Netvibes, with the New York Times logo and without the widgets.

There’s an argument that the product will bring customized home pages to the masses, although frankly Yahoo has already done a good job of this with well over 50 million users. This will be particularly useful for people who live, eat and breathe the New York Times, but others may find it a bit much.

Users can also add pre-selected non-NYT content or their own favorite RSS feeds, and modules can be dragged around the page, just like every other customizable home page.

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

Click Here

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/147516950/

CrowdStorm Revamps, Seeks Wisdom Of Your Crowd

Written by on Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

crowdstormlogo.pngSocial shopping site CrowdStorm has launched a beta trial for their new site revision. It’s been seven months in the making. CrowdStorm always had a social bent, with users supplying the listings and reviews for products listed on the site. However, the new version is a significant upgrade that incorporates content pulled from around the web with relevant reviews intelligently selected from other users. You can sign up for the trial here.

crowdstormsmall1.pngBefore, the site was entirely dependent on user submitted products and written reviews. The new site adds a host of other review sources, such as expert reviews (Cnet, TrustedReview, Stuff …), buyer guides, video links, and q&a sessions. Users can bookmark their own relevant product review content on the site. It also brings in new price search engines such as Amazon, eBay, and Shopping.com.

CrowdStorm hopes not only pull content from the web, but also let you take your content with you. You can take your reviews and post them to other blogs, review sites, or online stores. The hope is that CrowdStorm will function as a hub for review content instead of a walled garden.

The more significant change is how it takes advantage of user generated content. CrowdStorm has a new algorithm that ranks user reviews in aggregate and for each user based on the quality of reviews, the similarity between users, and social network relationships. The idea being that similar users closely linked to you have more relevant and trustworthy reviews. The algorithm can also generate a relevant crowd of experts you can ask questions.

It’s very similar to what VibeAgent is doing with their travel review system. Analyzing the social network graph has become a sensible way to deal with the potential spammyness of user generated sites and I expect to see it incorporated into even more products.

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

Click Here

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/147510433/

Who wants to live in The Real World?

Written by on Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

The Real World must be a truly depressing place to live. It’s apparently a realm where new ideas, unfamiliar approaches, and foreign concepts always lose. I’m told that the only thing that works in The Real World is what its inhabitants already know and already do. No matter how flawed or inefficient that way may be.

People who live there are said to be living Real Life. An existence filled with pessimism, despair, and every shade of pitch black imaginable. Yet strangely, these people living Real Lives seem not to be interested in getting out. They are not looking for a change of scenery of the dreary Real World.

Instead, they’re actually trying to recruit! In arguments everywhere, they’re trying to convince those of a sunnier demeanor that they must convert to Real Life or perish. That resisting the Real World is futile. This call persists even in the face of contrary experiences. Tales of people who actually did things differently and still lived to see the sun rise in the morning.

Please don’t be fooled, there’s nothing even remotely attractive about The Real World. It’s a bleak mirage suitable only as a place of communion for those who have lost all hope.

Related: Definte the real world in 10 words or less

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/578-who-wants-to-live-in-the-real-world

Facebook Integrates Book Swap Feature into Marketplace

Written by on Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

Facebook has developed a book swap feature for its Marketplace application called Marketplace Book Exchange that enables users to buy and sell books from and to each other. Books are identified by buyers and sellers by their ISBN numbers, and curiously it looks as though there is no way to view all of the books offered in a particular network.

On the one hand, this appears to be a smart move for Facebook, as college students are fed up with buying expensive textbooks from their college bookstores. The Social Graph certainly lends itself to buying and selling items from others within a localized market, such as a college campus.

However, Facebook is not the first to try helping college students find better deals online. There are several websites, such as Campus Books and eCampus, dedicated to this purpose. There are even two applications developed on the Facebook platform - Swap Roll Book Exchange and Campus Book Exchange - meant to help Facebook users find books and other items that others currently own and are willing to sell or trade.

While these Facebook applications have a combined total of less than a thousand users each, they may have experienced a surge of growth as students return to campus this Fall. Now that Facebook has developed its own application for book-swapping purposes, these independently developed applications don’t have a chance. Moral of the story for Facebook application developers: if the idea behind your application is any good, expect to Facebook develop its own application to supplant yours. Don’t expect them to just sit on the sidelines and watch.

Thanks for the tip Noah.

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

Click Here

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/147476393/

Interview With Facebook’s Joe Hewitt, iPhone God

Written by on Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

The Facebook iPhone application was a one-man job. Joe Hewitt joined Facebook when the company he co-founded with Blake Ross, Parakey, was acquired last month. He quickly got to work on the company’s iPhone app, which was released just a month after he joined the company.

Hewitt has been one of the key figures in figuring out some of the hacks around iPhone applications - dealing with no keyboard, the flip screen, etc. He has been a major contributor to the iPhone discussion group at Google and released his own framework and sample code, called iUI, that dozens of other developers have integrated into their own apps.

Nik Cubrilovic and I spoke with Hewitt for 26 minutes late last week to get his thoughts on the challenges and opportunities around iPhone web application development. Hewitt also talks about some of the features he’s like to see to make the iPhone an even better user experience.

Download it at TalkCrunch or listen to it in the embeddable player below.

Listen Now:

MP3 Standard Podcast: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
document.getElementById(\’podPressPlayerSpace_6699_label_mp3Player\’).innerHTML=\’Hide Player\’; document.getElementById(\’podPressPlayerSpace_6699\’).alt = \’mp3Player\’;

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

Click Here

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/147457928/

SpiralFrog: Free Music Alive And Hopping

Written by on Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

Remember SpiralFrog that free music download service that announced itself nearly a year ago? Well, after slowly releasing invites to Canadians, we received a private beta invitation.

SpiralFrog originally made a splash when they sealed a deal with Universal BMG to give away free downloads of some of their songs in exchange for a share of on-site ad revenue. Later they closed a deal with EMI and have since added a bunch of smaller labels totally over 700,000 songs. However, now we know a little more about how their free system works.

spiralfrogsmall.pngSongs on SpiralFrog are not ad-supported through interstitial advertising or free in the sense that you can bring them anywhere. Instead, you get DRMed songs (WMA) leased to you for a free 30 day membership (or you can buy on Amazon). You can renew your membership, and the lease to play your songs, by answering survey questions (# concerts per year, how you discover music, etc). All that data helps SpiralFrog know what kind of ads to serve on the site.

To keep the whole system secure, they’ve locked down the download process end to end DRM controls. First you have to get a download manager, and then ensure you have Windows Media Player 9.0 or up. The system is kind of annoying and only works on Windows machines since it uses Microsoft DRM. Although, Microsoft DRM has already been cracked. The DRM requirement also means the songs only play through Windows Media Player, making them unportable. Unlike other DRM setups, though, there doesn’t appear to be a limit to the number of computers you can download to as long as you set SpiralFrog up on them.

Once the system is in place, you can search for artists and download their songs/videos individually. The songs are queued in a download manager and stored locally by artist and album in your SpiralFrog folder. The system seems to have intentionally been crippled so you view more advertising, with downloads happening one at a time and only while on the site. Using the site, I was able to download a bunch of songs and play them with no problem, but other early beta user have had trouble.

I don’t know if SpiralFrog will be able to sustain their business off of on-site advertising and affiliate music sales. A lot of other services are simply going DRM free, not download free. Blogmusik also recently went legit in France, but the US courts and music industry are a lot harder to sway. However, limiting the lease time on the songs means they can continuously tweak what hoops their users need to hop through to keep playing the music they download. For now it may be a simple option if you want a (legal) source of free tunes.

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

Click Here

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/147444541/

A real estate myth: The buyer’s agent is free

Written by on Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

There is undoubtedly a time and a place for a buyer’s agent when purchasing real estate in the US. Maybe you don’t know the market, exactly where you want to look, or even what to look for. Getting an agent to help you out can certainly ease your search.

But don’t for a minute buy the baloney that your agent is free. In Chicago, the buyer’s agent picks up 2.5% of the sales price. And that’s how the myth of free lives on, since it’s the seller that actually pays for your services (don’t even get me started on how lopsided that is). The thinking goes that if you’re not using an agent to buy, the seller’s guy gets the full 5%.

Right. Just like everyone actually starts their bidding at the asking price. Of course that fee is negotiable. And by “negotiable”, I mean saying “I’m not represented by an agent, but I want the commission due none the less” and the seller saying “Sure!” (as based on anecdotal, personal experience dealing with 4 sellers in Chicago).

To fellow Danes — and I assume many other countries in the world with no defacto price-fixing on real-estate commissions either — this comes as no surprise. We never had a wide-spread concept of buyer’s agents.

For US buyers who know where and what they want and are willing to do a little work yourself, I suggest you ignore the myth and pick up that $10,000 commission check on a $400K house yourself. That’s probably the best hourly rate on work most people will ever see.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/577-a-real-estate-myth-the-buyers-agent-is-free

Stéphane Mallarmé: “A Painter’s Poet”

Written by on Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

I stumbled across this poem by Stéphane Mallarmé recently…

le hasard

…and was impressed that the innovative layout was created back in the 19th century.

Some digging revealed Mallarmé was a French poet who often used interesting layouts and “typographical idiosyncrasies” as part of his poems. His style wound up greatly influencing how words were displayed in poetry and beyond.

His fin-de-siècle style anticipates many of the fusions between poetry and the other arts that were to blossom in the Dadaist, Surrealist, and Futurist schools, where the tension between the words themselves and the way they were displayed on the page was explored. But whereas most of this latter work was concerned principally with form, Mallarmé’s work was more generally concerned with the interplay of style and content. This is particularly evident in the highly innovative Un coup de dés jamais n’abolira le hasard (‘A roll of the dice will never abolish chance’) of 1897, his last major poem [above].

une constellatione Mallarme.com offers further description of his “word music.”

According to his theories, nothing lies beyond reality, but within this nothingness lies the essence of perfect forms and it is the task of the poet to reveal and crystallize these essences. Mallarmé’s poetry employs condensed figures and unorthodox syntax. Each poem is build around a central symbol, idea, or metaphor and consists on subordinate images that illustrate and help to develop the idea. Mallarmé’s vers libre and word music shaped the 1890s Decadent movement. For the rest of his life Mallarmé devoted himself to putting his literary theories into practice and writing his Grand Oeuvre (Great Work). Mallarmé died in Paris on September 9, 1898 without completing this work.

soit

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/576-stphane-mallarm-a-painters-poet



Site Navigation