Archive for February 8th, 2008

Yahoo Shelves Meebo Competitor myM

Written by on Friday, February 8th, 2008 in Ajax News.

Yahoo has killed off their web chat ambitions, we’ve heard. The six person team that was working on the unlaunched myM service are now working on the webmail product.

Chris Szeto, the director of product management for Yahoo Messenger, oversaw the project but has since moved on to join Sequoia-backed Meebo. From what we hear, myM was going to basically be a Meebo clone. But the team has dispersed, and the software has been shelved indefinitely.

It joins the deadpool. For posterity, we’d love to see a screen shot of what the service looked like. If you were a beta tester and have one, please email it to us (editor at techcrunch).

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/231954056/

Fast Company Goes Social

Written by on Friday, February 8th, 2008 in Ajax News.

fast-company-social.pngToday, Fast Company relaunched its Website as a business social network, putting blog posts, comments, and questions from its readers front and center. Readers are now are encouraged to sign up, create a profile, and “join the business conversation.”

Over the past few years, the print version of Fast Company has been brought back from near-death (thanks largely to the efforts of top editors Bob Safian and Will Bourne, both of whom were editors of mine years ago at Fortune). Now it is trying to shake things up on the digital side. You might have heard that guy Scoble is starting FastCompany.TV.

Next, it wants to tap into social media. A magazine’s readership is not a social network, but it is a community of interest. And Fast Company seems to understand the difference between the two. Edward Sussman, the president of Mansueto Digital, explains this in a post:

First off, here’s what it’s not: It’s not a pure social network. . . . You go to Facebook or MySpace and find the friends and co-workers you already know. The real world gets reproduced virtually. Maybe you meet a friend of a friend.

We’re not that.

We’re an entirely new community of people brought together because we want to share ideas about business. We like business. We think it’s important. Work gives more meaning to our lives. We believe business profoundly helps define our culture.

On FastCompany.com, you can now start your own blog, join a group, post a video, comment on articles, or suggest a “Fast Talk” question to start a debate. Articles from the print publication are interspersed with blog posts from readers, experts, and staffers, and are arranged in a blog-like chronology on the front page.

The idea is to make it easier for readers to interact with staff writers and contributors, and write their own thoughts, which might be featured prominently on the site. Every contribution a reader makes gets collected on his or her profile page, tagged, and placed into one of the eight sections on the site (innovation, technology, leadership, management, design, social responsibility, careers, and work/life balance). The site is built on top of the open-source content-management software Drupal. And it will support OpenID.

During the dying days of Business 2.0, I remember sitting in editor Josh Quittner’s office brainstorming about how we could do pretty much the exact same thing to save that magazine. We never got beyond the brainstorming. Whether or not this will work for Fast Company depends on how smart its readers are and how willing they are to contribute. But any media site that does not listen to its readers and, indeed, allow them to take over the conversation at times, is doomed for the dustbin.

We saw this with the recent relaunch of the Industry Standard, which tries to engage readers to predict future business events. And we will continue to see it moving forward. As a result, mainstream media and the blogosphere will become harder and harder to tell apart. It will just all become part of the bigger conversation.

fast-companyscreen-small.png

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/231871205/

Softbank, Rustic Canyon Put $3.5 million Into DanceJam

Written by on Friday, February 8th, 2008 in Ajax News.

Put new startup DanceJam, a “YouTube for dance videos” down for another $3.5 million, bringing their total to $4.5 million raised. They’ve closed a Series B round of financing from Softbank Capital, Rustic Canyon Partners and a number of new angel investors. Note that I am an investor in this startup.

The company, founded by M.C. Hammer and Flock’s Geoffrey Arone and Anthony Young, is in private beta but should be launching shortly. Users will be able to upload short clips of themselves dancing; other users can rate those clips. Aggregate votes will be used to show top dancers by geography and dance type around the the country and the world.

In addition to the funding and the upcoming public launch, the company says they’ve signed a number of key business development deals to assist with distribution and marketing.

Wired Magazine wrote a good overview of the company here.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/231836435/

Alltop Thinks My Boss Has a Big Ego

Written by on Friday, February 8th, 2008 in Ajax News.

Guy Kawasaki has just launched a news aggregation site called Alltop that displays headlines from a preselected set of “top” sources. The headlines are broken into categories such as celebrities, gaming, and politics.

Which category displays headlines from our very own Michael Arrington’s personal blog CrunchNotes? Egos.

Now all of us around the office already knew Mike had a particular affection for himself, but we weren’t about to launch a website promoting that fact. Thanks for doing it for us, Guy.

Alltop gives homage to its inspiration, popurls, and serves as a kind of preconfigured Netvibes except only for RSS feeds. I wonder, however, why there’s no technology category. We found the site via Brian Solis.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/231845412/

New CrunchBoard Up and Running

Written by on Friday, February 8th, 2008 in Ajax News.

We’re pleased to announce that we have launched a new version of CrunchBoard powered by Personforce.

There are already several new positions posted by highly visible Web 2.0 companies. Digg has posted listings for VP of Business Development and Business Development Manager. JibJab is looking for a Ruby on Rails Software Engineer, a Web Designer, and a Senior Systems Administrator. And Tokbox wants a PHP/LAMP Software Engineer to join them.

In honor of our new partner Personforce, we are offering discounts on bulk listing purchases over the next 30 days. Please email jobboard@techcrunch.com for additional details.

We’d also like to thank all of the many job board providers who reached out to us following the announcement that Edgeio had been sold to Looksmart. Although there were many qualified and eager candidates, we were attracted to the dedicated sales effort that Personforce will add to our own efforts.

Personforce powers VentureBeat as well as the boards at a number of leading colleges and universities (Stanford, Harvard, Princeton, Yale, and more). They also moved expeditiously to get a new board up and running within 48 hours of Looksmart unexpectedly pulling the plug on our old board (nice one, guys).

Thanks for your patience as we made this transition. And look for more exciting developments between Personforce and CrunchBoard in the coming weeks, including new boards for TechCrunch UK and TechCrunch France.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/231821158/

A Radical Option For Yahoo: Out-Open Google

Written by on Friday, February 8th, 2008 in Ajax News.

Yahoo is between a rock and Google. As Yahoo’s board decides today whether or not to accept Microsoft’s $44.6 billion offer to buy the company, we’ve argued that it really only has two choices: accept the inevitable and go with Microsoft, or outsource search to Google. Both, are in their own way, admissions of defeat and riddled with potential problems. There is another option to consider, though. That is to hit Google where it hurts by truly opening up search. I will explain what I mean below, but first let’s go through the two obvious options.

Giving up search to Google might boost profits in the short term—because Google squeezes more than twice as much money out of every search—but it would set Yahoo on a long-term path towards oblivion (see, AOL). Merging with Microsoft is clearly the better option, but it may not be enough.

Big mergers tend to fail more often than not, especially when companies are trying to combine operations as opposed to adding on new standalone capabilities. One of Microsoft’s biggest mergers was Great Plains Software, which was a success specifically because Microsoft pretty much left it alone for a couple years and let it operate independently. That is not an option with Yahoo. the merger is a collision waiting to happen. Integration is going to be rough and will slow down the merged company. Nobody believes that a combined Microsoft-Yahoo will be a nimbler competitor than either bureaucratic organization is today on its own.

Not that any of this matters from Microsoft’s perspective. The logic of the deal is to gain scale as an advertising platform and as a Web publisher. the two go hand in hand. The more Web pages and traffic you have, the more ad inventory you have to sell. Everyone is focused on search, because that is where Google is so dominant today. But remember, while search ads make up about 40 percent of Internet advertising revenues, display ads still make up about a third. And that is where Yahoo is strongest. Microsoft needs to bulk up on display ad inventory before Google’s DoubleClick deal goes through. If it can fix search, that would just be a bonus.

A combined Microsoft-Yahoo will help it compete against Google in display advertising, which is still an open game. But giving up on search is not an option. Those display ads are becoming just as contextual and targetable as search ads, and soon the market will no longer separate the two. Advertisers will want to buy both as part of the same campaign. And Yahoo actually has an advantage here because it’s advertising system is set up to do that.

Which comes back to the question of how does Yahoo, or a combined Microsoft-Yahoo, make inroads in search. Every quarter Google adds to its market share in search. It seems unstoppable. Combining Yahoo’s and Microsoft’s existing search efforts won’t do much to reverse that trend. After all, two dogs don’t make a right. But there is a long shot Yahoo can try that could just turn things around. That is to open up search in a radical way.

The only way to fight Google is to use its own weapons against it. Google enters new markets by embracing open standards in areas where it does not currently compete. But when it comes to search and advertising (how it makes money), it is a black box. If Yahoo were to truly open up search, it could rally the efforts of hundreds of thousands of outside developers to take on Google on a hundred thousand different fronts.

While it is debatable whether or not they would collectively come up with a better algorithm than Google, they most assuredly would come up with better algorithms—better search engines geared towards specific types of searches (informational versus transactional) or particular niches (health, travel, business). Entrepreneurs could also use Yahoo’s index as a foundation to create entirely new ways to search (semantic, social,etc.). And over time, Yahoo could cherry pick the best of these and incorporate them into Yahoo’s official search engine, or simply sell search ads on thousands of different search engines across the Web. Imagine each Website, with its own customized search geared towards its audience. This has been tried before but has failed for several reasons.

As one former Yahoo executive tells me: “Yahoo should just open up their search APIs and let anyone take their search without ads, and hope the ads come later. Out-open Google.” What do they have to lose?

But wait, don’t both Yahoo and Google do this already? Not exactly. Yahoo does have open APIs for search, and one of Yang’s turnaround tenets is to open up Yahoo to developers more generally. But those search APIs are limited to 5,000 search queries per day. Anything above that, you have to negotiate a special deal with Yahoo. One startup CEO who has a such a deal with Yahoo tells me, “If we had more exposure to their raw data and better access to the paid search results, including conversion rates and the data behind them, it would help us a lot. We are limited in the amount of information we actually have.”

Also, while the APIs make it technically possible to mash up Yahoo’s search results with other results, or tweak them with your own algorithm, Yahoo prohibits developers from using any “non-Yahoo sponsored search elements.” As for Google, it has its own search APIs as well. But if you take Google’s search results, you are not allowed to re-order them, and you must also show Google’s ads alongside the results.

Letting other people re-order the rankings is the key to moving the ball forward on search. Yahoo has a very valuable asset in its index of the Web and its basic search algorithm. Letting others improve upon these is the only way to beat Google in the long run. Google’s greatest strength, its almighty algorithm, is also its Achilles Heel. Opening up its search results to all comers would destroy its business model. Yahoo has less to lose and more to gain. It would still have to be careful not to give away so much information that people would be able to game its regular search results, but there are technical ways to do that.

This would not be an easy road and would require a long-term commitment that is unlikely to come from Yahoo’s shareholders at this point. Yahoo’s board seem to have already lost patience with Yang, Decker, and the rest of Yahoo management, and might lack the confidence in Yang & Co. to pull this off. But here is an even more radical idea: what if Microsoft were to adopt this strategy post-acquisition?

Openness is certainly not in Microsoft’s blood. Yet Microsoft can afford to open up search even more so than Yahoo because it makes up such a miniscule portion of its current revenues. Again, the key to using openness as a strategic weapon is to be open in areas where you don’t compete, or don’t compete effectively. If Microsoft is truly serious about this being a “transformational” acquisition, then it should take the opportunity to try to transform the search industry, not just chase after Google.

Embracing openness would also transform Microsoft in another way. Even though, startups are not as scared of Microsoft as they are of Google, they still don’t trust Microsoft. A sincere commitment to opening up search would go a long way towards winning over the hearts and minds of those “developers, developers, developers.” Yes, it would go against pore in Steve Ballmer’s body, but it would also reinvigorate Yahoo, reinvigorate Microsoft, and maybe even reinvigorate Silicon Valley.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/231763113/

I’ve been a supporter of the open source movement since I first got on the web in the early 90s. Almost everything I’ve learned about the web and programming, I learned from downloading open source software and giving it a try, then hacking it to customize it to my own needs.

Source: Emily Chang
Original Article: http://www.emilychang.com/go/weblog/comments/whos-the-best-presidential-candidate-for-the-open-source-community/

Six Sells

Written by on Friday, February 8th, 2008 in Ajax News.

Dubner invites you to write a new six-word motto for the US.

Some fun ones in the comments include:

  • Still Using Fahrenheit, Feet, and Gallons.
  • Hubris: it’s not just for Greeks!
  • One Nation, Over Weight, Over Budget.
  • Our worst critics prefer to stay.
  • The world’s scapegoat except in emergencies.
  • America: Our poor own big screen TV’s.
  • No Lobbyist, No lawyer, no service.
  • We’re mostly corn. Check the label.

Need inspiration? Check out Six-Word Memoirs by Writers Famous and Obscure:

From small sagas of bittersweet romance (“Found true love, married someone else”) to proud achievements and stinging regrets (“After Harvard, had baby with crackhead”), these terse true tales relate the diversity of human experience in tasty bite-sized pieces. From authors Jonathan Lethem and Richard Ford to comedians Stephen Colbert and Amy Sedaris, to ordinary folks around the world, everyone has a six-word story to tell.

Can you sum up your life so far in six words?

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/846-six-sells

[Sunspots] The trust edition

Written by on Friday, February 8th, 2008 in Ajax News.

David Pogue: How can companies churn out such bad design?

“But you don’t have to have an M.B.A. to understand that refusing to compromise on design, for any reason, can lead to fantastic commercial success. Look at Apple, Google, Sonos, R.I.M. (makers of the BlackBerry), or (in its glory days) Palm. So what goes through the minds of executives who don’t sweat the small stuff? Don’t they realize that critics and bloggers will find and publicize the limitations? Don’t they realize that customers nowadays can compare notes, can warn each other away?”

You need to sell things which can not be copied

“When copies are free, you need to sell things which can not be copied. Well, what can’t be copied? There are a number of qualities that can’t be copied. Consider “trust.” Trust cannot be copied. You can’t purchase it. Trust must be earned, over time. It cannot be downloaded. Or faked. Or counterfeited (at least for long). If everything else is equal, you’ll always prefer to deal with someone you can trust. So trust is an intangible that has increasing value in a copy saturated world.” [via MH]

Trent Reznor: Why won't people pay $5?

“And then Reznor ended the hoopla last week when he reported on his blog that 154,449 people had downloaded Niggy Tardust and 28,322 of them paid the $5 as of January 2. In the blog, Reznor suggested that he was ‘disheartened’ by the results.”

Daring Fireball’s “Translation From PR-Speak to English of Selected Portions of Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang's Company-Wide Memo Regarding the Microsoft Takeover Bid”

“We very much want to say ‘no’ but can’t figure out how without triggering a shareholder revolt.”

A message to MacBook Air haters

“Some journalists get so close to the truth it hurts, yet miss the large print. ‘OMG! The unit is all sealed and self-contained like the iPod!’ Yes… the iPod. That huge failure. Also, the iPhone. Stunning disappointment that it was. I mean, jeebus, why would Apple make ANOTHER device incredibly simple? Clearly the market has spoken, and it wants tons of ports and screws and geegaws and flippers… no, wait, no it doesn’t.”

Online PO Boxes from Earth Class Mail

“With an online PO Box you’ll manage your postal mail as easily as your email View scanned images of your sealed envelopes online, then choose to have your mail securely scanned into a PDF document, recycled, shredded or forwarded to you or someone else.”

Fast Food: Ads vs. Reality

“Each item was purchased, taken home, and photographed immediately. Nothing was tampered with, run over by a car, or anything of the sort. It is an accurate representation in every case. Shiny, neon-orange, liquefied pump-cheese, and all.”

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/845-sunspots-the-trust-edition

Mayor Daley gets his rant on

Written by on Friday, February 8th, 2008 in Ajax News.

Vote NO and get an earful.
That’s how it works in Chicago.
Via Gapers Block

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/844-mayor-daley-gets-his-rant-on



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