Archive for February 21st, 2008

Apple Patent For Customized Podcasts

Written by on Thursday, February 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

Apple filed a patent January 9 that describes a method for automatically creating customized podcast mashups from various podcasts.

Here’s the Abstract on the Patent from Apple

Improved techniques to facilitate generation, management and delivery of personalized media items for users are disclosed. Users are able to influence or control content within a media item being personalized. In one embodiment, personalized media items are podcasts. Users are able to influence or control the content in or with a podcast. In other words, a podcast can be created in accordance with a user’s needs or specifications so that the content within a podcast is customized or personalized for the user.

What Apple is proposing is allowing users to sample/ take portions of multiple podcasts that meet their interests, and download a combined podcast that includes the specified extracts requested. Think like an RSS reader where you get bits from multiple sites, but in audio.

pod.jpg

In the image above, the user would pick content from a list, and that content would then be combined in the single podcast.

From the patent application again:

Besides the predetermined categories shown in FIG. 4C, the dialog screen 480 includes a custom button 482. Upon selection of the custom button 482, a user can be assisted with another dialog screen to create a category of content, namely, media content, that is to be included within the custom podcast. For example, in the case of sports, the user may desire to create a category that is specific to their interests. For example, the user may request to receive sports highlights from the weekend during the NFL season regarding specific teams or teams in the Eastern division. As another example, the user may desire to receive statistics regarding games played during the past week in the NFL.

Where it gets more interesting is the way the data is retrieved. The natural assumption is that this aggregates short form podcasts (which it will do as well), but the patent talks about stored podcast characteristics, which may tie-in with Apple’s patent for “Podmaps.” A Podmap is not unlike a sitemap, but obviously for audio, and would specify what was in a podcast when. In theory this new patent could extract audio from a larger podcast per the specs in the Podmap and place that audio in a new custom podcast besides material from other podcasts.

It’s a neat idea, but sampling data from an audio track would bypass things like preroll advertising in a podcast which may undermine the blossoming podcast advertising market. That said if this was to take off, what we would more likely see is more short form niche content that includes the ads, and possibly a downturn in longer podcasts; one hour long interviews don’t make for great sampling in a combined customized podcast as Apple is proposing with this patent.

(via Apple Insider)

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/239210476/

Pentaho Takes $12 Million Series C

Written by on Thursday, February 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

pentaho.jpgOpen source Business Intelligence firm Pentaho has taken $12 million Series C in a round led by Benchmark Capital. Previous investors Index Ventures and New Enterprise Associates also participated.

Pentaho offers commercial open source enterprise reporting, analysis, dashboard, data mining, workflow and ETL capabilities for Business Intelligence needs.

Orlando, Florida based Pentaho was founded in 2004 and has had three million lifetime downloads, with more than 20,000 registered community members. Pentaho’s customers include Cox Communications, Delta Dental, Lifetime Networks, Monsanto Corporation, Savvion, Sun Microsystems, Terra Industries, U.S. Naval Air Command, and Wachovia.

The additional funding will be used to continue Pentaho’s growth in the business intelligence market, including R&D and international expansion.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/239162884/

Logo War: Red Hat Takes On DataPortability

Written by on Thursday, February 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

DataPortability WorkGroup is a project founded in November 2007 to develop best practices towards letting users move, share, and control their identity, photos, videos and all other forms of personal data stored in social networks and other web services. After months of positive news, the group has had its first hiccup, a cease and desist letter from RedHat over their use of the Fedora logo.

RedHat says:

Red Hat, Inc. (”Red Hat”) recently became aware that on your website, located at http://www.dataportability.org, you are using art work that is identical to the Fedora Infinity design logo owned by Red Hat. Specifically, I am referring to two images on your site: the green and white logo, as well as the blue and white logo.

Both logos contain the symbol for infinity. They are above are above for reference.

What’s my opinion? I agree with Marc Canter, who writes in an email to DataPortability cofounder Chris Saad, “Do NOT spend 0.001% of your mindshare - time - or energy - worrying about a LOGO! Get a different logo.”

The DataPortability Workgroup is an important step in the evolution of social networks. The ideas are what’s important - the logo is irrelevant. RedHat should have just let it go, but you guys can’t waste mindshare on this. Have a contest and let fans create a new logo for you.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/239141096/

500 Million Downloads of Firefox (almost)

Written by on Thursday, February 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

The Firefox browser has been downloaded nearly 500 million times, says their SpreadFirefox website. Parent organization Mozilla is celebrating by raising 500 million grains of rice on FreeRice. That, says Mozilla, is enough to feed 25,000 people for a day.

Earlier this month we reported that Firefox 3, beta version 3, had been released. The browser has around 17% market share worldwide and 150 million active users.

Information provided by CrunchBase

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/239133522/

Washington D.C. based LaunchBoxDigital, a Y Combinator-like startup incubator that will invest small amounts of capital in very early stage startup ideas, is now taking applications for their first program. They’ve also raised their own first round of funding - $250,000 from Jonathan Miller (former CEO, AOL), Reed Hundt (former FCC Chairman), Raul Fernandez (CEO Object Video) and Chris Schroeder (CEO HealthCentral).

LaunchBoxDigital says they’ll invest $15,000 - $30,000 in six to ten startups, in exchange for 4% to 8% of the equity. Founding teams must spend the summer in Washington D.C. to participate in a twelve week incubation program. Applications must be received by March 14, 2008.

The model is based on the much emulated Y Combinator, which has now funded dozens of startups. London based SeedCamp and Colorado based TechStars have nearly identical business models.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/239083179/

Extend Your Brain With Evernote (Private Beta Invites)

Written by on Thursday, February 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

evernote-beta-logo.pngWe are all dealing with information overload. Some of the most useful Web startups are the ones that help us deal with the never-ceasing flow of data washing over us every day. Evernote is one of those startups. A Windows version of Evernote has been around for a few years, but it is now releasing a Web version in private beta, as well as a new Windows client, mobile software clients for Windows Mobile and PocketPC phones, and a mobile Web version. (A Mac client and mobile clients for Java phones, iPhones, and Android phones are in the works). The first 200 TechCrunch readers to sign up here can try it out before its more general release in March.

In the words of CEO Phil Libin, “The main idea of Evernote is to create an external brain.” Evernote lets you highlight any portion of a Web page and clip it, or take a picture with your camera phone and send it to your PC or the Web. evernnote-2-small.pngEach of these digital “notes” is archived and can be searched, including any words (even handwritten ones) visible in those pictures. For instance, you can search for “crazy milk sake” and all the pictures of sake bottles will come up, with the the word “crazy,” “milk,” and “sake” highlighted in yellow. (You can watch a video demo here)

Evernote has raised $9 million all from angel investors ($6 million in March 2006, and another $3 million in September 2007). It is looking to raise its first venture round of about $10 million. Tech luminary Esther Dyson and Slide founder Max Levchin are board members. The software is free for up to 5 GB of storage. The company hopes to make money by charging for premium services that will include more storage and priority access to the filtering and image-recognition technologies that power the site.

The company was founded by computer scientist Stepan Pachikov, who created the handwriting-recognition software that is in every Tablet PC. He created an even more sophisticated handwriting-recognition system for Evernote. (There is a Soviet expat connection here—Libin and Pachikov were born in Russia, and Levchin was born in the Ukraine). Levchin tells me what drew him to the startup:

The cool thing about Evernote is that as time passes it becomes inevitably more useful to its users in more than one dimension. As you age, the collection of memories not only grows, it automatically becomes harder to recall, so Evernote grows in value both with and without a user’s active involvement. That, and the handwriting recognition tech is awesome.

The handwriting-recognition capabilities are pretty amazing. Go try it out on this public Evernote page I created. Type in “Venetian” and it will find a photo of Libin holding up a CES ticket with a Post-it note that says “Stay at the Venetian” in cursive. Type in “auto collision” or “crazy milk sake” and you’ll get other impressive results. “This image technology is the only one that can pull out information from poor quality incidental images,” claims Libin.

evernote-3-small.png

Once the software is installed on your phone, you can go around taking pictures of business cards, name tags, receipts, signs, hand-written notes, and it automatically sends it to Evernote where it all becomes searchable. You can take pictures of people too and other things that don’t contain words, and Evertnote will geotag them if your phone supports that. You can also manually tag any image or note on Evernote. Says Libin:

This is a new use case for my camera phone, anytime I want to remember something I snap a picture. I wind up taking pictures of receipts. That is how I do my expenses.

It is also a new behavior that won’t come naturally to many people. People might look at you strangely if you insist on taking a picture of every single person in a meeting with your camera phone and their business cards. But I’ve seen people do stranger things in meetings. I could see Evernote being used incidentally at first and then the habit growing over time.

Evernote is not just about your phone. It is also about things you find on the Web. The desktop client and Web app come with a Web clipper that lets you add a portion of any Web page by simply highlighting it and clicking on a button on your browser. Every note gets stored chronologically, can be tagged separately, and organized into different “notebooks.” Notebooks are private by default—they are primarily for your memories, after all—but any notebook can be made public as a Website or RSS feed. A widget tool also will soon be released to make it easy to syndicate notes and notebooks across the Web with thumbnails and image search (Levchin made sure of that). Facebook and OpenSocial apps are also coming soon that will let members share notes with selected friends and embed widgets on their personal pages.

Further down the road, Pachikov is working on image-recognition technology that can identify different image types and facial emotions. Theoretically, you will be able to look for a picture of your son in a happy mood, or your wife in an angry one. That technology is still an R&D project, but as Evernote evolves there will be more and more ways to search through your memories. There are other Web clipping services out there like Kaboodle and other Web-based organizers of personal data like Twine, but nothing that quite approaches the problem the same way that Evernote does.

The big challenge for Evernote is whether it can make the jump from being a desktop note-taking tool to a true Web-based extension of people’s memories. The software still feels too personal, without enough hooks or APIs to other services. The company is working on APIs so that other sites can take advantage of its image search technology, as well as integration with blogging platforms to make it easy to publish notes to your blog. That is all great. But I have one more request. It should go the other way as well. I should be able to combine my personal and public memories in one place—my blog posts, my Flickr photos, my Twitters. I should be able to store (and search) all of those in my Evernote. Right now, the only way you can do that is by clipping each blog post, Twitter, or Flickr photo manually. It wouldn’t be too hard to accept feeds as well.

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evenote-2a.pngevernote-1a.png
evernote-web.pngevernote-win.png

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/239070360/

Microsoft Bumps Online Storage To 5GB

Written by on Thursday, February 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

wls.jpgMicrosoft has increased storage on Windows Live Skydrive to 5GB, up by a multiple of five from its previous limit of 1GB (the 1GB having doubled the original 500mb in October).

Erick compared Skydrive to Gmail in an apples and oranges comparison last time; my Gmail account sits at 6.4gb today so Skydrive is still behind, having said that I’m not sure how many (average) people would use Gmail for online storage, so the comparison doesn’t make a lot of sense.

The more notable point is that Microsoft continues to grow its online storage offering when Google simply hasn’t launched the fabled Platypus online storage solution despite years of speculation and rumors. This is one space where Microsoft has the upper hand, and a 4gb storage jump will further increase the appeal of the product.

On top of the extra storage, Windows Live Skydrive has dropped the beta tag, and is now available in the following additional countries: Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Denmark, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Finland, France, Guatemala, Honduras, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Portugal, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, and Turkey.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/238996756/

Behind the scenes at 37signals: Miscellaneous

Written by on Thursday, February 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

This is the sixth in a series of posts showing how we use Campfire as our virtual office. All screenshots from the series are from real usage and were taken during a single week.

CampfireThis time we’ll take a look at some of the miscellaneous ways we use Campfire to share information, communicate, and get things done.

Give a product review for a new piece of hardware
Mark links up his new printer/scanner and talks about its pros and cons.
one week in CF

Work the late shift
Jeremy, a night owl, commits a change at 2:30 am. Everyone else will see it when they login in the morning.
one week in CF

Show progress on a to-do list
Jamis shows his progress by uploading a screenshot of his “Things on my plate” list.
one week in CF
Make a point with photos
Sam uploads a comparison shot of different Apple products.
one week in CF

Solicit ideas from others
Ryan offers Jason some suggestions for products that offer thoughtful integration.
one week in CF

Celebrate good news
It’s a boy! Huzzahs all around for Jamis’ new son.
one week in CF

Share a funny cartoon
Mark posts a funny Dilbert strip. This sort of thing gives our CF room a nice “chatting ‘round the water cooler” vibe.
one week in CF

Other “Behind the scenes at 37signals” posts
Design
Coding
Sysadmin and development
Copywriting
Support

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/874-behind-the-scenes-at-37signals-miscellaneous

Microsoft Sings a New Tune—Wants to Play Nice With Open-Source

Written by on Thursday, February 21st, 2008 in Ajax News.

microosft-interoperability.pngWow, Ray Ozzie is really changing the culture at Microsoft. After years in denial, Redmond has finally decided to stop trying to fight open-source software. In a series of moves announced today aimed at making its products more interoperable with other software and the Web in general, Microsoft is releasing 30,000 pages of documentation for Windows (both desktop and server products) that were previously available to partners only through a trade secret license. It is making available new licenses to a large number of its software patents “on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms, at low royalty rates.” And teh company is making the following pledge to open-source developers:

Microsoft is providing a covenant not to sue open source developers for development or non-commercial distribution of implementations of these protocols. These developers will be able to use the documentation for free to develop products. Companies that engage in commercial distribution of these protocol implementations will be able to obtain a patent license from Microsoft, as will enterprises that obtain these implementations from a distributor that does not have such a patent license.

Microosft has set up a Website with more information here.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/238896087/

google-adsense.pngNine months after launching its closed beta of AdSense for video, Google is finally opening up the advertising program to any publisher in the U.S. that serves one million or more video streams per month. (Perhaps the volume requirement is a concession to advertisers who want their ads shown only on mainstream sites—and porn sites need not apply, no matter how many videos they stream).

The ads come in two formats: video and text. Both appear as banners along the bottom of the video. When you click on the “InVideo” ad (isn’t AdBrite already using that name?), the video you are watching stops and a new smaller window opens up that plays a video commercial (you can close it at anytime to resume the original video you were watching). The text ad is also a banner with a regular contextual AdSense ad triggered by tags in the video or words on the page around it. When you click on that, it takes you to the advertiser’s Website. The InVideo ads are charged on a CPM (per-impression) basis, while the text ads are charged on a CPC (per click) basis. You can see demos here and in the two screen grabs below).

In addition to partner sites that are accepted into the AdSense video program, you also will be seeing these ads on YouTube videos, including those in the YouTube Partner program. And, as we’ve previously reported, these YouTube videos, with the accompanying ads, can be placed on any Website by publishers who don’t have videos of their own or would like to supplement what they have. In that scenario, the ad revenues get split three ways between the publisher site, the YouTube partner, and Google.

Thankfully, Google is staying away from pre-roll and post-roll video ads, the video ad format that still seems to dominate because it is most similar to what advertisers are used to buying on TV. Well, the Web is not TV. And Google realizes that. These formats are much less intrusive and more contextually relevant. Although overlays are nothing new (see VideoEgg, ScanScout, AdBrite, Blinkx, Cast.Tv, etc), Google’s heft in online advertising could easily make it the standard. I am still not a big fan of the text ads, though, because they send you away from the video in mid-stream, which does not provide the best viewing experience. But at least Google leaves it up to the viewers to decide for themselves whether or not they want to interrupt their videos by clicking on an ad. Anyway, either format is preferable to a pre-roll, which hopefully will now be taken out back and shot.

adsense-video-1.pngadsense-video-2.png

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/238881603/



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