Archive for October 3rd, 2007

Pixsy To Power Search On Veoh

Written by on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

logoMedia search platform provider Pixsy have announced a strategic partnership with video sharing service Veoh Networks that wil see Veoh adopting Pixsy’s media search platform to offer enhanced video and image search functionality on Veoh.com.

Pixsy’s appeal to Veoh is the ability to deliver near-real time search results, allowing Veoh users to search videos and images with content updating to the minute.

Dmitry Shapiro, Founder and Chief Innovation Officer of Veoh Networks said “Pixsy’s vast index and ability to organize their breadth of video and image content in a way that maps to our users’ interests will meaningfully enhance the viewing experience on Veoh.”

Since taking an additional $26 million in funding back in June, Veoh has seen an increase in traffic whilst facing an increase in lawsuits as well. According to Alexa, Veoh has now broken into the Top 100 sites online, and is edging towards the Top 50. On the other hand their popularity has come at a price, with Veoh being sued by Universal, Viacom and NBC, and perhaps just to keep the lawyers busy, Veoh filed a counter suit against Universal in August.

For Pixsy, the deal will see their technology being used by Veoh’s more than 18 million monthly viewers, validation that their search capabilities not only work, but can scale as well.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/165022248/

UC Berkeley Puts Courses On YouTube

Written by on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

berkeley.jpgThe University of California Berkeley has started uploading video recordings of course lectures on to YouTube.

The initial round of lectures covers 300 hours of video on subjects including Chemistry, Physics and Non-Violence, with more content to come. The move by Berkeley is claimed to be a first by some, however some of the videos have been previously available elsewhere, including iTunes and Google Video; perhaps it’s a first for YouTube.

A full list of the content can be accessed here. Although most of the content is dry (well to me anyway), Berkeley also offers Search Engines as a study, with the first video in the series being a lecture from Google’s Sergey Brin (as below). The list of search engine course videos can be viewed here.

(via SMH)

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/164973843/

Earthmine Aims to Index the Real World with 3D Panoramas

Written by on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

You’ve probably tried the “Street View” feature in Google Maps, the one in which you can actually view 3D panoramas from the street level of several cities including San Francisco, Las Vegas, Denver, Houston, and New York. Earthmine is working to bring that concept of visually mapping the real world to a deeper level by improving the quality of virtualization and by enabling the indexation of objects found in landscapes.

Imagine for a second that you could notify your friends of something cool or noteworthy that you see when out on the town by simply pulling out your cellphone, bringing up a panorama of your location, and tagging something (a store, a parking spot, an historic landmark) with a note that is automatically shared with your friends. Then imagine you’re a restaurant owner who wants to entice potential customers by tagging the outside of your diner within a 3D panorama with menu information and digital coupons. None of this is possible yet, but Earthmine will provide the technology that could very well make it all a reality.

Like Google, Earthmine collects its data by driving vehicles equipped with special cameras around urban areas. Earthmine co-founder John Ristevski says that the company’s custom camera “uses a stereoscopic system with extremely wide angle lenses to capture full spherical images of the urban environment.” Webware has a good photo of one of these babies strapped to the top of a Pathfinder (it can also be seen at the beginning of the video embedded below).

Ristevski says that, unlike Google, Earthmine uses a data calibration process that preserves the camera input as an unfiltered data set, which contains a higher level of detail because scenes are stored in “pixel for pixel array[s] of ‘depth’ points.” The result: Earthmine panoramas look better. But they are also more useful, because more detail = better indexable data. The company is called “Earthmine” not because it wants to make Google Street View prettier, but because it wants to the “mine” the Earth’s data.

What this all means is that Earthmine’s system can keep track of the objects found in the real world and attribute information to each of them (a process known as “asset mapping”). The latitude, longitude, elevation, and other attributes of garbage cans, telephone posts, manholes, and trees can be recorded and tracked in a pseudo-3D virtualization system. The information can be exploited within Earthmine’s software or exported to GIS or CAD systems. Alternatively, the information stored in preexisting Geographic Information Systems (GIS) can be brought into Earthmine.

Not interested in using computers to identify and tag all of the objects you could just point out on the street? That’s okay, because Earthmine isn’t necessarily focusing on you, the casual consumer. The company has its sights set on bigger customers, like the government and enterprises (which is a little scary if you are a Big Brother conspiracy theorist).

That said, Earthmine is working to make mapping technology more accessible and efficient. Ristevski claims that cities the size of San Francisco can be mapped in less than 30 days. Once Earthmine takes care of the mapping, it plans to license out its 3D inventory to customers such as city governments, branches of the national government, PG&E, big insurance companies, transportation companies, and even other technology companies like RedFin or Zillow. Earthmine hopes to make its software easy to use and affordable enough for a wide-range of consumers who are not necessarily all that technically literate. Ristevski draws parallels between what Earthmine is doing for real world mapping and what Sketchup did for 3D modeling.

Earthmine presented at DEMO this fall but has not released its product yet. The company is based in Berkeley, California and has so far operated on $1M of seed money.

Check out our coverage of other companies who are innovating with 3D technology: Photosynth, Everyscape, and Fotowoosh are developing technologies that convert 2D photographs into 3D models; Microsoft has developed advanced 3D modeling on top of its Live Search Maps product, and has also implemented Photosynth technology; and VisualSize is developing a system for accurately measuring the dimensions within 2D photos.

The following is a demonstration video for Earthmine:

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/164971063/

Google Transit Graduates From Google Labs

Written by on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

googtransitlogo.jpgGoogle Transit, Google’s public transport mapping feature, has graduated from Google Labs.

The service is now fully integrated into Google Maps, with users now being able to select “Take Public Transit” as an alternative to driving instructions.

Google Transit doesn’t cover public transport everywhere, but the list is growing. According to Google recent additions include transit maps for the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority, and Hampton Roads (VA) Transit and the Bay Area Rapid Transit System. Non-US transit mapping is also available for China, Japan and parts of Europe.

googtransit.jpg

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/164963710/

picture-180.pngCall it social finance. A bunch of investing sites, from Motley Fool CAPS to Social Picks to MarketWatch, let investors create fantasy portfolios and track their performance. The idea is to compete against each other, celebrity investors, and the overall market. The best investors, whether pros or schmoes, rise to the top and collect a following. It’s the online version of the old stock-picking newsletters. One of the most recent additions to this group, Covestor, takes the idea one step further. It links your online portfolio to an actual brokerage account. So there is real money at stake. Since the site’s launch in June, all of the members who have signed up now collectively manage $100 million worth of their own funds.

It takes guts to bear your investing acumen (or lack thereof) to the world. For instance, here is VC Fred Wilson’s Covestor page (down 1.47 percent since he joined about a week ago—Fred, get out of oil and precious metals already!). You can even put a Covestor widget on your blog to further gain a following.

The idea is that eventually, the best investors will emerge, and Covestor plans on creating ways to invest in their “funds.” They are actually just going to be selling the data and linking it to the brokerage accounts of people who choose to be followers. The investing stars who arise from this social soup will be able to offer their trading data for a fee once they build a track record or give it away for free and enjoy the notoriety of being an investing whiz. Covestor will take its cut as a management fee. The New York City startup has raised angel money from the founders of Seekingalpha, Betfair, Tribe.net, and Wallstrip.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/164893424/

Seven Steps to Graphing Your Facebook Strategy

Written by on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

This guest post is written by Dave McClure: startup advisor, angel investor, PayPal alumnus, and Master of 500 Hats. Dave is organizing next week’s Graphing Social Patterns conference on Facebook, covering many of the topics and companies mentioned below. He’s also a rookie instructor for a new Stanford class on Facebook apps, and an unapologetic Facebook Fanboy and social networking addict. Sections on virtual currency and ad networks contributed by Susan Wu, Charles River Ventures and Sundeep Ahuja, AppFuel.

For nostalgic hippies in the SF bay area, this was the 40th anniversary of 1967’s famous Summer of Love. But for every Silicon Valley developer, entrepreneur, and VC who has a pulse it’s been the Summer of Facebook.

While it’s easy to put aside geeky exuberance over the latest insanely great technology, it’s impossible to ignore the growing size and scope of Facebook, and the impact it’s having on internet startups and traditional businesses alike. Over half of Facebook’s 43 million users visit every day, spend an average of 20 minutes on the site, and view over 54 billion total page views per month.

In a few short months Facebook has quickly become one of the most impressive user acquisition channels on the web, rivaling SEO & SEM strategies for priority with new startups. Over 60 Facebook applications have more than 1 million total users, and over 40 have at least 100,000 daily users.

With the groundbreaking launch of the Facebook Platform this past spring, and the subsequent runaway growth of Facebook Apps adopted by millions of users this summer, the question on everyone’s lips (including Google and Microsoft) has been: “So what’s your Facebook strategy?”. If you’re still scrambling to figure out yours, read on.

Seven Steps to Graphing Social Patterns on Facebook

Personally I’ve become addicted to Facebook, and in particular with the Facebook Platform and the News Feed. I’ve spent hours upon hours experimenting with new ways it provides to connect and communicate, and recently began teaching a class at Stanford with Professor BJ Fogg on how to build Facebook apps. In this article i’ll explain how to use Facebook to make a big impact on your business, and why it’s substantially different than any other social network that’s come before.

Here are seven major aspects of Facebook you can use to increase the visibility of your startup, business, product or service:

1. Set Up Your Graph: Profiles & Privacy
2. Make Connections: Networks, Groups & Events
3. The Need for Feed: Your [Shared] Social Activity Stream
4. Share Your Content: Share & People-Tag Your Stories & Media
5. App to the Future: The Facebook Platform, APIs, & Applications
6. Pay to Play: Ad Networks, Sponsored Stories, & Paid Distribution
7. Show Me The Bunny: Gifts, Points, & Virtual Currency

I’ll explore each of these items in more detail after the jump. For developers and marketers interested in learning more, we’ll be covering these topics in depth next week in San Jose at Graphing Social Patterns, a conference on the business and technology of Facebook and social networking.

(more…)

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/164787239/

Amazon Takes Another Step Towards The Web OS With Dynamo

Written by on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

wvernervogels250.jpgAmazon chief technology officer Werner Vogels just released a very technical paper about a Web storage system being tested internally at Amazon called Dynamo. As applications move to massive grids of computers on the Web (like the ones that power Amazon’s e-commerce site or Google’s search engine and online apps), a new type of Web operating system is developing that treats all of those connected servers as one big computer. (Engineering types can download a PDF of the paper or read it online at the Dynamo link above).

Dynamo is not an alternative to S3, Amazon’s publicly-available data storage service, or competing Web hosting/storage services like Nirvanix and Flexiscale (see previous post). There are no plans at this point to offer Dynamo as a Web Service. It is an internal-only project that sounds like a rethinking of what a relational database should be when computing scales to massive Web proportions (i.e., systems running on tens of thousands of computers).

As Nick Carr puts it:

At the start of the last century, the great engineering project was the creation of an electric grid that could deliver power to millions of users with a reliability and an efficiency that were previously unthinkable. Today’s great engineering project, of which Amazon’s Dynamo is but one manifestation, is to build a computing grid that can achieve similar breakthroughs in the processing and delivery of information.

The race to create a Web operating system is heating up. It is such a huge undertaking that there are only a few companies—Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, IBM— that can tackle it. But this time around, it is unlikely that any one of them is going to own it outright.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/164754191/

TiECON Midwest on Oct 5 in Chicago

Written by on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

A quick last minute upcoming speaking engagement: I’ll be on the Business Model Refinement panel this Friday from 4-5pm.

This panel is part of the TiECON Midwest conference at the Hyatt Regency in Chicago on October 5th. Tickets are $50 for TiE Midwest members and $75 for non-members.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/634-tiecon-midwest-on-oct-5-in-chicago

eBay Desktop moves to public beta

Written by on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

eBay’s San Dimas project has finally moved to public beta. The application, developed using Adobe’s AIR runtime, provides the ability to manage your eBay experience via a well-designed desktop interface:

The product has also graduated to public beta, thanks in no small part to the enthusiasm and support of all of you. Whether or not you installed San Dimas, you can now download eBay Desktop, for free, from http://desktop.ebay.com

eBay Desktop works with eBay US, and in the coming weeks and months we will be extending support to other countries. You can continue to use San Dimas to shop on any eBay site in the meantime. The response to San Dimas worldwide was incredible, and we are committed to bringing this desktop eBay experience to everyone.

The application team made substantial changes for this release to ensure a more personalized feel. Changes included:

  • Revamping the home screen to dedicate more area to highlighting your eBay activity — your watch list, bidding list, recent items, recent categories, and favorite searches.
  • A new browse feature
  • Favorite search feeds allow you to automatically pull down items that match a favorite search
  • Ability to run in the background even when the application itself is closed, so that you can get reminders or outbid alerts at any time.
  • Performance improvements
  • Numerous bug fixes

eBay Desktop is a free download and all you need to use it is a valid eBay account. You can download eBay Desktop from http://desktop.ebay.com

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/164736163/ebay-desktop-comes-out-of-beta

The business version of an internal affairs cops

Written by on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007 in Ajax News.

How many companies would let one of their own openly attack and criticize its actions in public?

That’s the job of The NY Times’ Public Editor, a “readers’ representative” who investigates the actions of his own paper. His job is to follow up on reader complaints and make sure everything at the paper is on the up and up. He’s like the journalistic version of an internal affairs cop.

He’s given a wide berth to call it like he sees it too. For example, he recently took issue with the paper’s decision to run a discounted ad from Moveon.org criticizing Gen. David Petraeus.

The ad violated The Times’s own written standards, and the paper now says that the advertiser got a price break it was not entitled to…

For me, two values collided here: the right of free speech — even if it’s abusive speech — and a strong personal revulsion toward the name-calling and personal attacks that now pass for political dialogue, obscuring rather than illuminating important policy issues. For The Times, there is another value: the protection of its brand as a newspaper that sets a high standard for civility…I’d have demanded changes to eliminate ‘Betray Us,’ a particularly low blow when aimed at a soldier.

I won’t get into the politics of this specific issue, but I do think it’s refreshing to see this level of transparency from a big media company. After all, a newspaper’s job is to serve as a watchdog that tracks the hypocrisies and abuses of power taking place in big government and big business. So it better be able to take a long, hard look at itself too. What’s good for the goose…

There’s a lesson here for non-media businesses too. The age of secrets is dying. It’s all going to be out there. If you report on yourself and tell the truth about both your successes and failures, you get ahead of the curve. Sure, sometimes that might mean taking a short-term PR hit. But in the long run, you make it back in spades by earning long-term credibility.Similar jobs exist in other media companies too: The NPR Ombudsman is the public’s representative to the station.

Even a rigorously managed programming organization may inadvertently depart from its own standards and practices, and abuse its freedom and power to inform and entertain. NPR is dedicated to identifying such transgressions if they occur, correcting them, and acting to prevent repetition.

And Charles Warner, professor at the University of Missouri School of Journalism, recently wrote about ESPN’s ombudsman.

ESPN should be praised for having the guts to have an ombudsman…Can you imagine the Fox News Channel or MSNBC publishing a critique of the fairness or accuracy of its news coverage and bloviators? By having an ombudsman, ESPN sends the signal that it cares about providing accurate, fair, and balanced coverage of sports. It gives this signal with action and behavior, not with Orwellian marketing slogans.

ESPN’s ombudsman helps maintain that balance and keep its reporting journalistically sound. But, more important, it sends a message to its audience—on TV, on the Web, and on radio—that it is making an effort to be fair and balanced and that it is providing an open mechanism for getting feedback from its audience. Being open to feedback and to comments from an audience is important to younger, Web-savvy fans and to higher educated, upper income fans, which is good business because a credible medium provides a much better environment for advertising. There is a credibility rub-off factor from believable content to advertising.

Update: Many non-media companies have them too. Here is The Ombudsman Association Standards Of Practice. Organizational ombudsman is explained this way at Wikipedia

Using an alternative dispute resolution (ADR) sensibility, an organizational ombudsman can provide options to whistleblowers or employees with ethics concerns, provide mediation for conflicts, track problem areas, and make recommendations for changes to policies or procedures in support of orderly systems change. One particularly important function is to pick up “new things”—that is, issues new to the organization. This is particularly important if the “new thing” is “disruptive” in the sense of requiring the organization to review and possibly improve its policies, procedures and/or structures.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/630-the-business-version-of-an-internal-affairs-cops



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