Archive for August 2006
Comeks mobile comics
1 Comment
by Daniel Appelquist on August 31, 2006

Comeks is a great Series-60 application that lets you take camera phone images and enhance them with comic-book like artwork, speech bubbles and other effects.

You can then assemble these images into a comic strip which can be MMS’d (or saved back into phone memory for upload to your favourite photo-sharing site).

I first saw Comeks in action when one of its creators demo’d it to me at the Mobile Monday Global Summit event in Helsinki. I thought the application itself was fun, but what really impressed me was how the slick UI made it to create comic images, add text, borders, position bubbles, etc…

The people at BulbOn who produced this application really understood mobile usability. Unlike the sterile content creation environments that often ship with these devices, the Comeks application is actually fun to use and experiment with.

In my view, content creation is one of the key challenges of the mobile platform. Content consumption is becoming a non-issue, but content creation remains a bit issue, and it’s examples like Comeks that are showing what can be done in this space. It’s also a great example of mobile innovation that bypasses traditional distribution channels.

You can download the Comeks app over the “Mobile Web” by pointing your Series-60 Web browser at Comeks.com

For more great examples Comeks creations, search for “comeks” on Flickr. I think we can expect more exciting applications from these guys in the future.

Skype 2.6 Beta available
1 Comment
by Sam Sethi on August 31, 2006

Skype has just released version 2.6 of its web phone software as a public beta. So what’s new? 

The new version makes a big deal of Skypecasts which I have not really taken too so far. The new ‘Live’ tab lists imminent events about to start, which could be anything from language lessons to dating services. Hopefully I can also filter the skypecasts or turn it off completely.

There’s a new browser plug-ins for Internet Explorer and Firefox which mean that phone numbers on web pages will be recognised and Skype users simply click the number to call it using SkypeOut. This is a very good feature but I thought this was already in the previous build when I loaded the Skype toolbar.   

Also new is the ability to add links to mood messages. Your contacts will see the link alongside the buddy icon in their Skype interface.

Finally, Skype is making use of its global user database by adding a feature that reminds Skype users when any of their contacts has a birthday, assuming they have entered that information into their profile.  It’s my 40th birthday soon so I will see if it works.

Talking of birthdays Skype was three years old this week! They had 7 million concurrent users online. Well done Skype

The beta is available for download from the Skype website.

Flickr has taken the #1 slot in the UK
1 Comment
by Sam Sethi on August 31, 2006

Hitwise UK is a great site for keeping track of global as well as UK web trends.  They have just posted about Yahoo! Flickr once again becoming #1 website, in the Hitwise Photography category, based on share of UK visits.

Top 10 Photography Sites.png

It seems softporn search queries has something to do with the sudden rise in Flickr traffic?

In the past three months, whilst Flickr’s market share of UK visits has increased 39%, Photobucket’s has decreased 17% and Community Webshot’s has remained flat.” said Heather Hopkins, VP of Research for Hitwise UK . “The top terms sending visits to Flickr are searches for the brand (”flickr”, “flickr.com” and “flicker”) and soft porn terms (”boobs”, “transvestite” and “nudity” to name a few tame terms)”.

According to LeeAnn (Hitwise Director of Research in the US) in the US Photobucket is ranked #1 whilst Flickr came in at #6. So why is this so different in the UK. It seems MySpace was a huge effect on the number of visits for Photobucket in the US, as it does in the UK. “MySpace accounted for 22% of Photobucket’s upstream UK visits last week, compared to only 1.45% for Flickr” but the MySpace effect is much more important in the US than in the UK.

MySpace recently became the #1 ranked website in the US, based on share of US visits and therefore pulls through many of its ecosystem partners, yet in the UK, MySpace ranked #12 last week behind Bebo at #10.

On a separate point, although my Yahoo! ID is the same for both Yahoo! Photos and Flickr, I cannot still seamlessly import/export my photos from one service to the other?

Why would I want to do that? The reason is because all of my photos are in Flickr but it still lacks an online UK photo development partner(s) and yet Yahoo UK & Ireland photos does have an online UK photo function? I guess printing out digital photos must be very 20th century these days ;-)

   

The little Browzar that hides everything?
5 Comments
by Sam Sethi on August 31, 2006

The Yorkshire Post has a story about Freeserve founder Ajaz Ahmed’s latest venture browzar, “a new internet browser which allows users to surf the web without leaving a history of websites visited and protects against leaving personal details on computers.”

I did wonder why someone would create such a browser, considering the dangerous times we live in with paedophiles, criminals and terrorists; who would love nothing better than to hide their digital footprints, but Mr Ahmed gives some valid points as to why he felt the need to create his new browser.

He said: “browzar will do for surfing and searching the web with privacy what eBay did for auctions and My Space did for social networking. It is the first in a range of products that we’ll be rolling out this year”. I’m not sure I agree but he added, “We divulge masses of information about our habits, hobbies and financial dealings while online, often unknowingly, and there are times when all of us would rather this was kept private. Using browzar, anyone worldwide can surf the web privately in the knowledge that no-one will stumble across the sites they have visited when using the same computer.

Maybe if the mainstream browsers did a better job of protecting our privacy and making it easier for the non-technical user to change their privacy settings, then products like browzar would probably not be used or needed. Personally I use both Firefox 2 and Internet Explorer 7. They both have similar privacy protection features within them that enable me to protect my privacy, clear my browsing tracks etc.

But as the average web user never changes their homepage from MSN or whatever preset it came with, it’s highly unlikely they will change their privacy options from the default settings which don’t clear out your digital footprint automatically at the end of each session.

Not everyone agrees with Mr Ahmed. Stuart Bruce, who alerted me to this story, has some strong views on this browser. “I bet the security folk love that as assorted terrorists and weirdos flock to browzar to try and cover their tracks.”

Again according to Mr Ahmed, “browzar does not interfere with information stored by internet service providers about sites visited which can be made available to authorities investigating suspected illegal activities.

According to Peter Cole it’s not even a browser. “it is a simple wrapper on the IE web browser control in which they have (probably) turned off storage of files in the cache.”

So does it really do anything more than what a half tech-savvy user could do themselves? Isn’t it really just aimed at the non-technical user who might want to protect their bank details but don’t know how to do so. I probably will download this on to my dad’s computer, as it’s only 264k in size and tell him to use it instead of IE when checking his online banking details or buying a book from Amazon.

Of course there is a dark side to human nature and those bad people who use the web for evil means will possibly use this browser wrapper, but that doesn’t make the web a bad thing just or browzar isn’t a bad thing. In fact I am sure it will be very popular with 14 year old boys!

In terms of making money, browzar will generate revenues via ‘pay-per-click’. Browzar will be paid by the internet search engines every time a user clicks on a sponsored link.
Mr Ahmed said that “while payments are small, if browzar is being used worldwide then they would be significant.”

As one of the UK’s better known and most successful entrepreneurs who have to think he has got a cunning plan in mind.

Real Extate search engine makes extensive use of tags but not hListing.
1 Comment
by Sam Sethi on August 31, 2006

Extate.com is a nationwide property search engine developed BytePlay Ltd, a privately funded London based technology startup.

Extate works by crawling all of the largest national estate agents websites every 24 hours to provide home buyers with up-to-date search results.

It uses a natural language search query function to make it easy for anyone to find the right property. i.e “Cookham Dean properties over £800,000 with four bedrooms”.

Once you are happy with your list of properties you can save them and share it via email with others.

What I like about extate is the simplicity of the application and the speed with which you can further filter the search criteria by making use of the extensive metadata tags. For example by clicking on the “Garage” tag it instantly redisplays the search results with only those properties that are tagged having a garage. This dynamic filtering appears to be using a simple list extension but I cannot find the xml namespace in the client-side code.

There are a couple of things I would like to see in a future version of extate. The first is a better integration with a mapping solution. Clicking on the map link simply brings up a new browser window with the multimap location. Competing sites like OnOneMap and Zoomf make extensive use of Google’s mapping mashup capability to combine the data.

The other functions that would be nice to see is the support for the hListing and geo microformats. Microformats are tiny bits of markup in web pages that label contacts, events, reviews, addresses, geo-locations, and other commonly published chunks of information. Microformats are often published on blogs and in feeds, but are increasingly published on other types of web pages as well such as event databases, social network profiles, reviews sites, and contact information pages.

The hListings microformat enables items for sale to be marked up so that microformat search engines such as Technorati or classified sites like Edgeio can help people easily find them using the semantic markup. Other real-world examples of sites supporting hListings include Craigslist, eBay.com and Match.com (hListing Extended Examples)

“While descriptions of products and services are common on the Web, particularly on e-commerce sites, we are proposing an hListing microformat for sharing, searching, and syndicating the information that helps match up buyers and sellers. This proposal follows the common practices of trading sites such as Edgeio, Craigslist, eBay and newspaper classifieds.”

In many ways extate, OnOneMap and zoomf could all be examples of hListing microformat classified websites but they are not and its “not” their fault because there are NO UK based estate agents currently publishing their housing details with a hListing microformat. If they did, then all of them could simply use the new microformat ping service – pingerati – to dynamically capture the published housing information.

How long will it take for estate agents to use the hListing microformat depends on how long it will take web designers to integrate microformats into their clients sites. To make it easier Dreamweaver have just released a microformat extension to help create them.

This article published on 28th August explains more about microformats and the chicken and egg situation that currently exists whereby people say “why should I embed microformat markup if there is no immediate benefit to the end user, in the form of search engine or browser support”. It’s coming and hopefully soon.

BT Business gets blogging.
1 Comment
by Sam Sethi on August 30, 2006

ITWeek are reporting that BT Business has launched a new blog to give firms information and advice on how to build their online presence, and provide a channel for feedback and interaction with its experts.

Three experts from BT together with blogging expert Ian Fenn will contribute regularly to the blog, which aims to cover topics including web site design, how to reach customers online, and network security.

To date all the content on our portal has been one way – BT to its customers,” said David Morgan, head of online business services. “Whilst we did have a feedback mechanism we wanted to get much more of a conversation going with our customers so we could really understand what’s important to them.”

Hard hats on and thick skins at the ready then chaps!

Tesco is fast becoming the new WalMart.
1 Comment
by Sam Sethi on August 30, 2006

The supermarket giant Tesco, today announced it was launching on the 6th September, a non-food home shopping service called Tesco direct, which it promises will end the misery of waiting in for deliveries all-day.

The supermarket giant promised quicker delivery and shorter and more reliable slots than are currently provided by other high street retailers.

It’s other direct-to-home food shopping business has already become one of its most successful ventures in recent years, with Tesco.com making profits of £56.2 million last year.

One report, earlier this month, forecast that Tesco would become Britain’s biggest nonfood retailer in 2006, over taking the owner of Argos and Homebase, ARG. I suppose every little bit helps the bottom-line.

Coull Vlogger [Interactive Video] links to Google AdWords.
1 Comment
by Sam Sethi on August 30, 2006

Bristol based Coull have two very ”cool” applications to help brand owners create their own user generated video portals and interactive video content.

Coull vlogger is the first application which is their unique all-in-one video blogging solution. It provides end users with a basic video editing capability in conjunction with a video uploading option to a hosted whitelabel UGC portal. In addition, branded vlogs can also be sent directly from mobile phones to the brand owners UGC portal. 

This solution is very good for brands looking to take advantage of the current trend in user generated content creation.  Coull vlogger has already attracted brand clients including Lycos, TEAMtalk, ITV and most recently My Sportal. To see how vlogger really works have a look at this demo or visit one of their branded partner sites.

 

 

Coull interact is the second product which is a powerful and free interactive video production tool. Coullinteract is a simple to use application enabling content owners and end users to create genuinely interactive online videos by embedding tags and hyperlinks into objects within a video.  This then turns the video into clickable regions which are linked directly to web pages, surrounding the video, containing further information.

Coull interact has already attracted clients including Rolls Royce, Girls Aloud and the British Army. Once again the best way to see how interact really works is to have a look at this demo and click on some of the embedded objects when prompted. 

When I first saw this product I was amazed because I could see how it might give website and content owners the opportunity to sell products online based on the video content. A company like VideoJug, with their how to … videos, would certainly make a perfect partner for this product.  

Coull have recently added in support for Google’s Adwords, so now when users click on video objects they get contextually paid for search results relevent to the video content.  

In June 2006 Rupert Hambro and Partners recently acquired a controlling stake in Coull in order to help the company to expand.

Fedafi offer an easily managed RSS business solution for everyone.
1 Comment
by Sam Sethi on August 30, 2006

Fedafi is a Glasgow based, UK company - pronounced fee·da·fi (’fi’ as in hifi)  – aims to democratize RSS by making it possible for anyone to create, manage, market and track valid RSS and Podcast feeds, as part of their business strategy.

Fedafi is a self-funded startup with just two people right now. Fedafi hope to grow their business by providing the basic tools that every business needs to adopt RSS as a viable marketing and communication channel.

Currently a lot of companies still send out emails as part of their marketing campaign. I have a couple of issues with email marketing.  Firstly it’s very web 1.0, it’s often costly to buy in email listings, more often than not they are out of date and thirdly if its unsolicited it’s illegal spam.

Often marketers will happily report they have sent out thousands of bulk emails but how many are actually read by the intended recipient? My anti-spam filter thankfully traps most of them at the server level and my desktop email filter has a second go by dumping them into my junk folder. Even assuming that I do get the spam email newsletter in my inbox, then my human filter does the rest and just deletes it.

On the other hand RSS is a much better way of marketing communication. As the customer, I choose to receive the information I want, so it is not treated as spam by me. The information is delivered where I want it and when I want it, either in my integrated email reader or browser reader or standalone RSS reader and if I don’t like it I can simple unsubscribe from the feed.

From a marketers perspective reporting the number active subscribers is a better metric of success. Fedafi offer two versions of their product that differ slightly as the table below  shows.

Yahoo! Go for [windows] mobile.
2 Comments
by Sam Sethi on August 30, 2006

Yahoo! Go for Mobile was first launched earlier this year for mobile devices running the Symbian operating system. From today, it’s now available on any Windows Mobile-powered phone running either Microsoft’s mobile OS version 2003 SE or Mobile 5.0.

Yahoo! Go for Mobile integrates services such as Y! Mail, Search, Photos, Address Book and Calendar, and Y! News, Sports, Finance, to give consumers quick access to their personalized content on their mobile phone and is free for consumers in the following countries – US, UK, FR, DE, IT, ES, AU&NZ, IN, ID, MA, PH, SG, Other (Int Eng).

In addition Yahoo! has announced today they have also formed global distribution deals with leading device manufacturers including Motorola, Nokia and RIM to reach millions of additional consumers by embedding Yahoo! Go for Mobile on selected devices.  For example Motorola will pre-load and prominently feature Yahoo! Go for Mobile on optimized handsets worldwide starting in the first half of 2007.

During the Web 1.0 battle between MSN, Yahoo and AOL, the goal was winning consumers hearts and minds to become their default browser portal on the desktop.  With the advent of broadband the need to have everything in one place has dissipated.

Today the mobile device is the new battle ground between Google, Yahoo and MSN (GYM club). Once again slow [mobile] access speeds mean that consumers are again happy for the GYM club to offer an aggregated mobile portal as their default homepage in order to save time and money.

In the past, distribution deals with Windows Mobile OS manufacturers have ensured that MSN has always had a sizeable customer base on the Windows mobile platform. This announcement today will significantly challenge MSN ’s mobile dominance.

At the moment there is nothing online explaining clearly what Microsoft’s strategic response will be or what we can expect with Windows Mobile Live. Today there is a loose federation of MSN Mobile services and some Live beta applications – spaces, maps, search.

As for Google, London is their main mobile development centre. Google’s Web n Walk search strategy has worked well with T-Mobile here in the UK but consumers are still wary of surfing the web using their mobiles due to the high data costs associated with browsing.  They are also still frustrated by the experience due to the slow access speeds even with 3G handheld devices. The battle for the hearts and minds of the mobile customer has only just begun.

In my opinion, Round 1 went to Google with their web n walk campaign, round two therefore goes to Yahoo! with today’s announcement who or what will win then next round?  

     

 

Viagogo are open and touting for your business.
1 Comment
by Sam Sethi on August 30, 2006

Viagogo is an online ticket exchange that allows people to buy and sell live event tickets in a safe and guaranteed way.

Viagogo’s mission is to bring efficiency and transparency to what has traditionally been a murky market place, thus allowing consumers to buy and sell tickets in a safe and guaranteed way. Viagogo, the UK’s first legal secondary ticket website for football tickets, opened for business only a few weeks ago. “With over $20 million funding in hand [from Index Ventures], Viagogo is launching into Europe’s ticket-reselling market as the first to offer consumers legal access to secondary football ticketing”, said CEO Eric Baker, “Viagogo will move its American formula into the budding U.K. and German marketplaces”.

So how does Viagogo work? If there’s a ticket on sale for £100. The buyer will pay £110 to purchase the ticket, factoring in a 10 percent commission to Viagogo. The seller receives £85, thanks to a 15 percent commission on the other end. But Viagogo doesn’t just sit back and collect its profit; the company actually takes care of the shipping labels itself, tracks the package, and holds the entirety of the payment until the deal goes through.  

“There really is no service like Viagogo that exists–that is a safe, secure place where you are guaranteed to get the price that you want and that it will be delivered on time for your event,” said Danny Rimer, a general partner at Index Ventures who joins Viagogo’s board as part of the deal.

Of all the companies I have looked at in the last few months, Viagogo screams success. The idea and business model fill a market need.  The management team appears very experienced. The money is in the bank to make this company grow rapidly. The advisory board reads like the who’s who of the UK’s web 1.0 success stories, with Brent Hoberman Founder and former Chairman of lastminute.com, Dr. Simon Murdoch Former VP Europe of Amazon.com and of course Danny Rimer General Partner of Index Ventures, he being the investor behind deals such as Video Island, Skype and most recently FON.

And finally they already have signed exclusive supplier deals with Chelsea and Manchester United, although I personally won’t be buying my tickets just yet until they sign up Liverpool FC.  ;-)

It will be interesting to see what happens on the search engine sites that often have adverts to buy tickets for football matches. Will they remain or not? In fact I used one of these sites recently to get my tickets to Chelsea v Liverpool.  I hope they turn up? I suppose with Viagogo I would haven’t to hope.  All I would have to hope for is can we beat Chelsea!   

 

British designers blogroll.
1 Comment
by Sam Sethi on August 30, 2006

I recently came across this interesting website called “stuff and nonsense” don’t ask me how or why – I don’t remember but I did bookmark it instantly because it contained a wonderful blogroll of links to British designers and developers who share a passion for web standards and accessibility.

BCMA IPTV event series
1 Comment
by Sam Sethi on August 30, 2006

The Branded Content Marketing Association (BCMA) is running a series of paid for events in September at The Arts Club, London, focusing on the topic of IPTV.

Following the recent acquistion of HomeChoice by Tiscali and imminent launch of BT Vision, IPTV looks set to become one of THE hot topics in the UK over the next few years.  

 The BCMA are running the following three events:

  • Part 1: IPTV & the Future of Branded Content  – 6 Sep 2006
  • Part 2: IPTV & the Future of Mobile TV - 13 Sep 2006
  • Part 3: IPTV & User Generated Content - 20 Sep 2006

Feedmailer manages your RSS via email and on the go.
2 Comments
by Sam Sethi on August 30, 2006

FeedMailer is a [free] new RSS service launched by John Slater and Chris Richardson, based in Leeds and self-funded, their aim is simply to keep people updated via their e-mail!

You select the RSS feeds that interest you, add them to your feedmailer account online and then sit back as feedmailer does the rest.

The first interesting thing about Feedmailer, is the ability to set the feed frequency update level. Basically you can configure whether you want to receive your updates every hour, every day or every week! In these days of information overload not everyone wants to have a “river of news” constantly updating them.

Of course there are a number of desktop email clients due to offer a similar RSS integration functionality; Microsoft with Outlook 2007 (beta) client, Firefox with Thunderbird and variety of other RSS email add-ins, such as Attensa and NewsGator etc. to name but a few but these tend to store your RSS feeds in a seperate sub-folder.

But what if you just use plain old Hotmail, Outlook Express or a host of other email clients that don’t support RSS integration, then your only choice is to use a seperate RSS aggregator which means you now have to maintain two information repositories, unless you have FeedMailer.

The second interesting thing about FeedMailer is its ability to integrate RSS with your Blackberry or Mobile 5.0 push client because the RSS feed has already been converted into an email. This to me is a really simple solution to get your RSS feeds pushed to your handheld device but still at the fequency level you require. 

Most of the other mobile RSS aggregators solutions either require you to once again install a seperate mobile client or require you to access your RSS feeds via the phone’s mobile browser which therefore removes the benefits of push email. 

Web filtering: computer says no?
1 Comment
by Sam Sethi on August 29, 2006

Instead of focusing on the job at hand, have you been checking the football results while at work, getting in a bit of online shopping or just simply chatting to your friends on IM? Well if its not related to your job, then some employees may soon be trying to put a stop to it by using web filtering technologies to block your access to websites or applications they deem inappropriate.  

Bloxx®, based in Scotland, is one such Internet filtering company who have developed technology allowing organisations to have better control over their employees, pupils, etc. use of the Internet. Bloxx is currently celebrating after winning the ‘Innovation and Technology’ award at the Edinburgh Evening News Business Excellence Awards but is web filtering at work good news or bad news?

This thorny issue of employee trust versus control was recently discussed during the keynote opening at Microsoft’s Tech.Ed, in Sydney. Anne Kirah, Microsoft Senior Design Anthropologist (?) said:

Companies all over the world are saying, oh, you can’t be on the internet while you’re at work. You can’t be on instant messaging at work…” she said. “These are digital immigrant ideas.”

Kirah defines ‘digital immigrants’ as people who were not born into the digital lifestyle and view it as a distraction rather than an integral part of life. The younger generation of workers have been using computers and mobile phones since birth and she calls them ‘digital natives’.

Kirah believes the conflict often arises because the employers’ benchmarks of productivity are based on something that doesn’t exist anymore.

 ”In the old world we measured productivity by just sitting your butt down 9 to 5. We were coming to work 9 to 5, what else would you do at work except work? And I’m still of that mindset myself because I am of the older generation. I find it very difficult when I’m bombarded by instant messages, I find that I just fracture, but that’s just me. But what often happens is that we translate our own experiences and say ‘well, I can’t do it so nobody else can do it. If they’re doing it, it must mean they’re not focused.”

“What we actually find is that these kids have grown up with it; they have grown up learning how to be social and work at the same time, that’s what they did when they did their school homework before they got their first job.” 

“I think the whole point is that there’s a cultural change going on. And it’s not really a complete change because if you remember back to the 9 to 5 job, you’re still placing calls to the doctor because you can’t call [the surgery] after 5 pm, because it’s closed. Or you want to call the store up to find out if they’ve got something. Or you might get a call from a friend or make a quick call. The thing is, when it’s visible it becomes more obvious.”

“In the UK, somebody had been fired because they were reading a newspaper online and doing these behaviours that are considered wrong. The judge actually went in favour of the employee, saying: ‘what’s different between what that person is doing online and what we’ve always done, which is read the newspaper for five minutes during a break? What’s different from us making that phone call?’ So he couldn’t see the difference. The measurement of productivity is what you produce not how you spend your time.”

Source: APC Start

Some companies like Virgin Money have decided to address this issue head-on in a unique way by replacing the traditional tea break with a new “e-break”.  The company has introduced the 15 minute employee “e-break” in addition to a lunch hour. It means that employees are allowed to go shopping and other online personal tasks daily at 11am. Its scheme followed an independent survey of 1,223 office staff which showed 56% bought or sold goods over the net during work time. 

In the same keynote, Microsoft’s Australia’s Group Manager of Technical Communities Frank Arrigo said

people were so frustrated with limited internet access at work that they were finding their own workarounds anyway. People were increasingly making use of anonymous proxies that couldn’t be easily blocked by corporate firewalls, bringing in their own wireless broadband services for use with a personal laptop or with a work PC or accessing instant messaging via mobile phones and PDAs.

Bill Gates said years ago that if you worry about internet productivity, you’re worrying about people stealing pens from your stationery cupboard… there are bigger things to worry about.”

Recently I was working on a client site that blocked nearly all access to the internet. The developers in their frustration would bring in their own laptops and tunnel back to their home PC’s in order to get full and free access to the web!

I understand there is a need for a balance between trust and control but which end of the spectrum does your company choose and can it actually hinder productivity by blocking access to legitimate sites which then involve lengthy calls to the IT department to remove the blocked access.

Hopefully your computer doesn’t say no!    

 

Flickr supports “Geo” Microformat
6 Comments
by Sam Sethi on August 29, 2006

There is a lot of coverage on the web today about Yahoo! bringing together a bunch of its properties — Flickr, Yahoo! Maps, Upcoming, and Yahoo! Local and finally adding in support for “Geo Tagging” in Flickr. Back in June, at the Content 2.0 event here in London, SVP of Yahoo! Bradley Horowitz mentioned they would “soon provide geo tagging support“. 

But of course their competitor Zooomr has had this very useful feature for a while now, as has Multimap.com, one of the oldest mapping companies here in the UK which has been supporting the geo microformat to mark up the latitude and longitude of values on their map pages. 

Reading the through the volume of coverage, one thing that seems to not have been mentioned is the support for Microformats that Yahoo are quietly building into all of their products and this is just another example of that support.  

  • Upcoming.org – vevent
  • Yahoo! Local – hcard
  • Yahoo! Tech – hreview
  • Flickr -hcard, geo

Adding in “geo tagging” support to Flickr means that in the future people will be able to use the underlying ”geo” microformat to search and better discover new location based data.  

So what does the geo microformat markup look like. If your Geo location is: N 37° 24.491 W 122° 08.313, then your geo markup would look like this and it would display like this on a web page. N 37° 24.491 W 122° 08.313. 

 

Technorati is one of the first companies with a semantic search engine. It currently enables people to search for hcard, vevent and hcalendar microformat markup but doesn’t currently support the geo microformat, I expect it will soon. Below is an example of a search for the “Geek In The Park” event held this week in the UK which was marked up with a number of microformats.

This search was done using the hcalendar microformat which enabled me to add the event details – date, time , location etc – to my calendar without having to cut and paste or type the content in manually. (Note: In the coming weeks I too will also be marking up the UK events here on TechCrunch using the hcalendar microformat and all reviews will be marked up using the hreview.)    

 

 

So what is the benefit then? Well as more microformat content is created and more semantic search engine support appears, hopefully it will make it easier to find the things we want quicker and reuse the content.  Microsoft announced that they will soon be launching a product called Live Clipboard which enables you to cut and paste data between sites or applications whilst retaining the underlying structure.

How many times have you been to a companies website and wanted to copy their address into your contacts database but using the current cut and paste method, you find yourself manually adding in the data to each relevant field. Well with Live Clipboard and microformats you will be able to cut and paste the data directly to your contacts and have the software populate the correct fields for you because of the underlying semantic structure.

What we are seeing with microformats is just the start of the semantic web. One thing I have wondered for a while is when will Yahoo! buy Technorati. Yahoo! clearly like the idea of microformats and are showing this in the support they are building into their products.  What’s missing right now is a way to search for microformats using Yahoo Search.

Once Microsoft launches Live Clipboard I guess people will begin to add this functionality to their sites.  How long before we hear the term Microformat Mashup?

Note: Calvin Yu has written a web service that will allow you plot and describe places on a Yahoo Map easily using hReview and geo.

UPDATE: from Flickr 

Geotagging – one day later  —  The First Day  —  “When we were doing our projections for how many photos Flickr members would geotag, we though that we’d hit a million in the first month, maybe even as fast as two weeks.  Instead, 24 hours in, there were 1,234,384 geotagged photos …

Desktop browser applications anyone?
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by Sam Sethi on August 28, 2006

Earlier this year I came across the work of Peter Nixey and his prototype web service, eventsites which demonstrated how users could create mini-websites for events such as parties or meetups. At first glance it looked like just another web mashup, combining Google Maps, Flickr and EVDB, but on closer inspection I soon realised that eventsites was quiet unique because it uses no server-logic and stores no data of its own?

“Eventsites is simply a client to other web-services. Eventsites uses EVDB for authentication and data storage, Google Maps for mapping and Flickr for photos. All the interface logic is done using AJAX in the browser. Since the heavy-lifting of Eventsites is done by EVDB, Google and Flickr, we can afford to do something unique with it.”

What eventsites is in fact demonstrating is the impending emergence of desktop-like browser based applications. i.e Google Spreadsheets, Zoho , Zimbra, ThunderBird linking to web services.  

“By outsourcing all of our secure logic, we can afford to move the interface logic from the server into the browser. By doing this, we have in essence created a desktop application that simply happens to be delivered via the web.”

At the moment eventsites still remains a prototype but it could easily become a viable commerical application by generating advertising supported revenues to offset any commerical API licensing costs.

In the coming months browser based applications will certainly take center stage, in the fight for developers hearts and minds, as Windows Vista, IE7 and Firefox 2 near final shipment. Earlier this year Microsoft announced their XBAP application strategy (XAML Browser App) and the Firefox camp has been promoting their equivalent XUL strategy for sometime now. In fact Firefox’s user interface is just one of several applications already written in XUL.

But it wouldn’t be the internet if there weren’t incompatible competing standards and of course XBAP and XUL are not compatible. To make matters worse Microsoft even has competing technologies of its own for developing web broswer applications, ranging from XBAP, Atlas & ASP.NET to WPF/E.  Ian Moulster, a Microsoft UK evangelist, has a good piece on his blog about where and when Microsoft thinks developers could use their different technologies and Channel 9 has a video on XBAP.

Fundamentally whether its XBAP or XUL or somewhere in between, its all about the size of the audience you want to reach and richness of the application. As ever, the less standardised the cross-platform browser support i.e XBAP is only going to work on IE7 and XUL on Firefox – the smaller audience you will reach.

The move to desktop browser applications is certainly heating up with the announcement that Google will launch “Google Apps for Your Domain this week” (aka Google Office 1.0). A software bundle aimed at small and midsize companies. The free, ad-supported package combines Google’s E-mail, calendar, and instant messaging with Web site creation software. It will be hosted in Google’s data center, branded with customers’ domain names, and packaged with management tools for IT pros. - review on TechCrunch.com

If you would like to discuss eventsites with Peter or the broader discussion around desktop browser applications, then he is speaking at the Beers & Innovation event on the 14th September.

Update: The B&I event is now sold out. Deirdre Molloy is operating a waiting list so email her (deirdre . molloy @ nmk.co.uk) if you want your name added to it; and likewise if you’ve booked and can’t make it. 

London Geek Girl Dinner
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by Sam Sethi on August 27, 2006

London Girl Geek DinnersThere is another London Geek Girl Dinner this week. (29th August) Obviously it’s strictly for women but there is one way chaps to get in according to Sarah Blow:

“If you are male and wish to attend this event you must bring a female with you or be brought by a female. NO FEMALE, NO ENTRY!!!! Sorry Guys! (We will keep the numbers balanced!) And ladies, one date only please!”

Right now there is only one place left on the wiki but I am sure Sarah will be organising LGGD8 soon if you are too late this time.

New book about Mobile Web 2.0
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by Sam Sethi on August 27, 2006

Ajit Jaokar and Tony Fish, two well known UK speakers on topics concerning the mobile web, have just finished writing their new book “Mobile Web 2.0” Below are some of the hot topics this book covers.

  • Mobile content and the changing balance of power (The power of user generated content)
  • I am not a number, I am a tag (The impact on the telecoms industry’s management of numbers)
  • Multilingual mobile access (Everyone, Everywhere with a phone running .. )
  • Mobile web 2.0 and Digital convergence (Mobile web 2.0 is a driver to digital convergence)
  • The disruptive power of Ajax and mobile widgets
  • Location based services and Mobile web 2.0 (LBS has never quite taken off. Will mobile web 2.0 help?)
  • Mobile search : Much more than Google on your mobile phone.

Most if not all of these topics will certainly be discussed on this blog at sometime or another in the future as I also plan to review UK based Mobile Web 2.0 start-ups. Therefore I have asked both of the authors to become guest contributors from time to time and I am pleased to say they have agreed. ;-)

In addition, I have also asked Daniel Applequist, another well know UK-based Mobile expert, to become a guest contributor here. Besides his work as a Senior Technology Strategist at Vodafone, Daniel is also the chair of the W3C Mobile Web Initiative and organiser of the Mobile Monday events here in London (MoMoLondon).

If you are interested, the next MoMoLondon event is on the 4th September.

Further background on authors:

Read More

BloomBox is a mint of an idea.
6 Comments
by Sam Sethi on August 27, 2006

About a six weeks ago I was kindly invited to attend an event here in London called UGTV06 by Andy Bell. It was a very good seminar talking about how mainstream media in the UK is embracing the “user generated content” age. It was the same evening that MTV UK announced the launch of their own UGC project Flux. Later that evening Tim Morgan previewed Bloombox a white-label web application that makes it easy for television producers and broadcasters to make shows based around user-generated content. Although it wasn’t mentioned, I guess, MTV were supporting the launch of BloomBox because their own channel Flux uses the technology?

Tim’s presentation was very funny and the highlight of the evening, as he told how his friend in Wales had created a user generated advert to promote the only Indian restaurant in the village. Using Bloombox he was able to easily upload and view the video clip as well as tag it. And because BloomBox incorporates social network features, Tim’s friend could share the video clip with his friends and neighbours. They in turn can then view the video clip prior to rating it.

Mint Digital plan to launch the service in September and will be presenting the product at the following events.

London Media Summit
Topic TBC
Andy Bell
27th October – London

Digital Hollywood
Web 2.0 – Blogs, User Generated Media, Mashups, Social Media as Agents of Change
Tim Morgan
1st December – London

 

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