Archive for November 22nd, 2007

Google Maps Street View Heads Overseas

Written by on Thursday, November 22nd, 2007 in Ajax News.

omg.jpgGoogle’s occasionally controversial Street View product is heading outside of the United States.

Google Street View cars have been spotted in the United Kingdom in September and in Canada, where the privacy aspects of Google capturing street images resulted in a lot of talk as to whether it was legal or not to walk down the a street in Toronto, take a picture and post it on the internet.

Australia looks likely to be the 4th Google territory with a Google Street View car spotted in Sydney, according to the SMH. Google Australia spokesman Rob Shilkin confirmed the sighting, saying that the images taken will be added to Google Maps some time next year.

The Street View program has not been without its critics in the United States as well, particularly when Google has shown pictures of people entering adult book stores and doing other things they’d rather not have on the internet.

Google Maps Street View competes with Microsoft’s Streetside and startup Everyscape, the latter also taking pictures inside of buildings as well as from the outside.

image credit: SMH)

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/~3/189119920/

Social Actions Aggregates P2P Fundraising Efforts

Written by on Thursday, November 22nd, 2007 in Ajax News.

socialactions.jpgOnline P2P fundraising services have continued to grow in popularity this year as giving has gone Web 2.0. A sure sign of maturity in any market is an aggregation site that pulls data from many of these sites: Social Actions does just that.

Powered by Drupal, Social Actions indexes the following sites: BringLight, Change.org, ChangingthePresent, DemocracyInAction, Firstgiving, Fundable, GiveMeaning, GlobalGiving, Kiva, PledgeBank, Razoo and SixDegrees. The index can be searched in traditional search engine style, or users can pull up fundraising efforts by Platform, Theme, and Location. The site has a Digg style voting feature that allows users to vote on various fundraising efforts and if users prefer Digg itself, direct links are provided to Digg for that very purpose.

The site comes from Montreal based Peter Deitz and is a one man effort for now. Deitz is currently building extra functionality for the site, including widget support that was launched earlier this week.
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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/~3/189078169/

The Secret Strategies Behind Many “Viral” Videos

Written by on Thursday, November 22nd, 2007 in Ajax News.

This guest post was written by Dan Ackerman Greenberg, co-founder of viral video marketing company The Comotion Group and lead TA for the Stanford Facebook Class. Dan will graduate from the Stanford Management Science & Engineering Masters program in June.

Have you ever watched a video with 100,000 views on YouTube and thought to yourself: “How the hell did that video get so many views?” Chances are pretty good that this didn’t happen naturally, but rather that some company worked hard to make it happen – some company like mine.

When most people talk about “viral videos,” they’re usually referring to videos like Miss Teen South Carolina, Smirnoff’s Tea Partay music video, the Sony Bravia ads, Soulja Boy - videos that have traveled all around the internet and been posted on YouTube, MySpace, Google Video, Facebook, Digg, blogs, etc. - videos with millions and millions of views.

Over the past year, I have run clandestine marketing campaigns meant to ensure that promotional videos become truly viral, as these examples have become in the extreme. In this post, I will share some of the techniques I use to do my job: to get at least 100,000 people to watch my clients’ “viral” videos.

Secret #1: Not all viral videos are what they seem

There are tens of thousands of videos uploaded to YouTube each day (I’ve heard estimates between 10-65,000 videos per day). I don’t care how “viral” you think your video is; no one is going to find it and no one is going to watch it.

The members of my startup are hired guns – our clients give us videos and we make them go viral. Our rule of thumb is that if we don’t get a video 100,000 views, we don’t charge.

So far, we’ve worked on 80-90 videos and we’ve seen overwhelming success. In the past 3 months, we’ve achieved over 20 million views for our clients, with videos ranging from 100,000 views to upwards of 1.5 million views each. In other words, not all videos go viral organically – there is a method to the madness.

I can’t reveal our clients’ names and I can’t link to the videos we’ve worked on, because YouTube surely doesn’t like what we’re doing and our clients hate to admit that they need professional help with their “viral” videos. But I can give you a general idea of who we’ve worked with: two top Hollywood movie studios, a major record label, a variety of very well known consumer brands, and a number of different startups, both domestic and international.

This summer, we were approached by a Hollywood movie studio and asked to help market a series of viral clips they had created in advance of a blockbuster. The videos were 10-20 seconds each, were shot from what appeared to be a camera phone, and captured a series of unexpected and shocking events that required professional post-production and CGI. Needless to say, the studio had invested a significant amount of money in creating the videos but every time they put them online, they couldn’t get more than a few thousand views.

We took six videos and achieved:

  • 6 million views on YouTube
  • ~30,000 ratings
  • ~10,000 favorites
  • ~10,000 comments
  • 200+ blog posts linking back to the videos
  • All six videos made it into the top 5 Most Viewed of the Day, and the two that went truly viral (1.5 million views each) were #1 and #2 Most Viewed of the Week.

The following principles were the secrets to our success.

(more…)

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/188981105/

The 2007 Ajax Turkeys

Written by on Thursday, November 22nd, 2007 in Ajax News.

Dietrich Kappe has posted up a list of what he feels are the Ajax Turkeys of 2007:

Every American school child has heard vague rumors that Ben Franklin once suggested that the Turkey would make a better national symbol than the Bald Eagle. What they haven’t heard, of course, is that the Turkey is “though a little vain and silly, a Bird of Courage,” compared to the Bald Eagle which was “a Bird of bad moral Character.” I wouldn’t put too much stock in old Ben’s suggestions, though. After all, he once proposed that the Rattlesnake was the most appropriate symbol of America’s temper and conduct.

So in the end it is still appropriate to use the Turkey as a symbol of failure or incompetence.

His list includes GMail 2.0 & ECMAScript 4 so he’s not holding back any punches here. :)

Check out his posting for the full list and the reasons that he feels that they’re not up to snuff.

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/188890770/the-2007-ajax-turkeys

Happy Thanksgiving, And The Gillmor Gang Is Back

Written by on Thursday, November 22nd, 2007 in Ajax News.

Happy Thanksgiving!

It was almost a year ago exactly that Steve Gillmor left Podshow and the technology focused Gillmor Gang podcast shut down (the last show was recorded the day before Thanksgiving).

Steve recently brought the group back together, and we’ve recorded four or five shows so far. He’s created a Facebook group to host the podcast files, and the RSS feed is here.

There are a handful of people that are invited to participate every week. Some make it every time, others only occasionally (I’m on about 80% of the shows). There’s good commentary from a variety of journalists and bloggers about current tech events, and usually one or two good emotional rants as well. If you were a fan of the Gang in previous years, you’ll recognize it as vintage Gillmor (meaning no editing). See you there.

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/~3/188853224/

Chronoscope: GWT based charting library

Written by on Thursday, November 22nd, 2007 in Ajax News.

Ray Cromwell and the Timepedia team have released Chronoscope, a charting and visualization platform for Google Web Toolkit, as open source.

Chronoscope provides a rich Java API for you to play with:

  • Canvas abstraction for drawing vector graphs
  • Graph Style Sheets abstraction for configuring the look-and-feel of charts
  • Scalable multiresolution rendering supporting up to tens of thousands of points
  • Zoom and pan at interactive frame rates, from centuries to milliseconds
  • Auto-ranging, auto-layout of chart axes and ticks.
  • Auto-legend, and mini-chart Overview
  • Add pushpin markers, domain and range markers, and overlays like Google Maps
  • Bookmarkable chart state, works with Back button
  • JS interopability. GWT API can be used by pure Javascript programmers
  • Microformat support. Charts can be configured without programming.
  • Server-side Font assistance. Render rotated text.
  • Portable, Chronoscope is not tied to GWT, can be used to render from servlets, applets, or other environments.

Chronoscope Demo

We also have a piece over at devphone on GWT and Android: A marriage made in heaven?

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/188808754/chronoscope-gwt-based-charting-library

News Corp May Be Looking To Buy LinkedIn

Written by on Thursday, November 22nd, 2007 in Ajax News.

rup.jpgNewscorp is said to be talks to buy business social networking service LinkedIn, according to TechCrunch UK. Full story here.

Mountain View based LinkedIn has approx. 12 million users and has taken $27.5 million over 3 rounds from investors including Sequoia, Greylock and Bessemer Venture Partners. The site has been faced with the rise of Facebook as an alternative business networking site, although as TechCrunch commenter’s enjoy pointing out: it’s not the same. LinkedIn is also an OpenSocial partner with Google.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/188771709/



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