Archive for Software & Services

2 reasons the web is getting exciting for the 3rd time

In late 2005/early 2006, the web industry got exciting as it went through this whole ‘2.0′ thing - a revolution of sorts. At it’s height so many fantastically unique applications and websites were emerging, based on truly new techniques and technologies.

Then earlier this year, frankly, it got boring.

More sites than ever were being launched, but they were all so samey - nothing new, nothing interesting - just variations on a theme: local stuff, event planning, a social network for yet another niche, digg clones, sharing opinions, map mashups, and more bloody widgets than you could shake a stick at.

But in the last couple of days two things have really grabbed my attention.

They’re technologies really, but ones with really clear applications that I think will have a profound effect on the way web companies conduct their business, probably on a par with AJAX. I’m serious - this is really exciting stuff.

  1. Google Gears - take your application offline (in a good way).
  2. Facebook Platform - reach the social masses - the network is now a commodity.

I’ll post a some more in depth information soon, but in the meantime take a look and have a think about they could apply to your business. If you’re not a techie yourself but you have developers working for you, then get them to have a nosey for you.

If you’re not interested, then you’ve probably only just woken up to social networking - sorry, you missed the boat!

For help on web technology and business strategy, or just for somebody to bounce ideas off, do give me a call.


PS: Fairly unrelated to the web, but Microsoft Surface got me quite excited too…

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Google Gears: Bye Bye Adobe Apollo?

Google have announced the launch of their latest beta product, the oddly named Google Gears (what happened to clear beats clever?), which seems to be a direct competitor to Adobe’s Apollo and to the recently announced plans for Firefox 3.

Google Gears is an open source browser extension that enables web applications to provide offline functionality using JavaScript APIs.  These will allow web-based applications to store data locally using a fully-searchable relational database (powered by SQLite), with full use of AJAX.

The first Google app to get the offline treatment will be their RSS feed reader.

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Facebook Platform is the future

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, Facebook is the new Google.

BrandRepublic have some good coverage of the new Facebook Platform launch. Their API has been around a while and lets third parties develop applications that interact with facebook data and functions, but the Platform goes beyond this. Facebook Platform lets you build applications that live within facebook. Facebook is the platform. And with the site growing very fast now, it will be the platform if you want to build an application that lets people interact with the friends. Otherwise you’re just re-inventing the wheel and forcing users to re-create their friend networks all over again.

On second thoughts, forget Facebook being the new Google. Perhaps it’s the new Internet? (Albeit a privately owned Internet…)

Mashable have very kindly created a list of 30+ Facebook Platform applications available now, which include some of the usual web 2.0 suspects such as iLike and Magnolia, but some old schoolers are playing too, such as Forbes.com.

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26 New Web 2.0 Start-ups - Another Web 2.0 Showcase

Following on from my post earlier this year, 84 Websites You Might Not Have Heard Of, here are another 26 websites you might not have heard of - aka Web 2.0 Showcase 2.0. This time I’ve done round-ups on social recommendation sites, event planning, media sharing, music and health with a couple of social networks and applications thrown in.

Event & party planning

  • SetDot - party/event invite tool - it’s in private beta, but you can sign up for an invite. Not had a chance to play properly but first impressions are good - it’s basically a better version evite.com
  • Socializr - awful looking ‘event and party sharing’ site… apparently created by the founder of friendster and has had some good press, but it looks like it was designed (I use the term loosly) by a perl hacker.
  • Renkoo - cutesy looking event planning with email, IM and SMS integration, which helps you get together with your existing friends - social events where you know who you want to hang out with, but you don’t know when and where. Unfortunately it looks like it was designed for five-year-olds.
  • Evite - the ‘original’ event planning and party invite site - and as such it’s a bit more web 1.0 than 2.0… but it’s still more popular than the new up-starts.
  • Planyp.us - it’s got the silly name, so plus points there and it definitely looks the part with lots of shiny and rounded corners. It works by notifying your friends by email, sms, rss, or by integrating into your online homepages and calendaring tools, so everyone always knows what’s going on.
  • EventWax - more about organising semi-pro events than personal parties - it lets you create e-tickets (free or paid) and manage your attendee list - it’s a kind of CRM for event organisers and works very well indeed.
  • UpComing - a community for discovering and sharing events - to find stuff to do, discover what your friends are doing, or let you keep private events online for your own reference. It was bought by Yahoo a couple of a years ago and last week they relaunched a new version with Yahoo integration.
  • BestPartyEver - event planning tool with a focus on helping you find ‘party vendors’ - eg venues, DJs, caterers, party supplies and fancy dress - and with a database of 88,000 vendors in the US they should be able to help!

Recommendations - social shopping, recipes, places, etc

  • GroupRecipes - a recipe sharing community site, its USP being their “food prediction algorithm” which suggests recipes based on your tastes - a kind of StumbleUpon for recipes.
  • TrustedPlaces - a London-centric community for those with or seeking opinions about places - often restaurants, bars, etc.
  • TrustedOpinion - shared recommendations from friends on a wide variety of subjects - movies, nightclubs and restaurants for example.
  • CrowdStorm - a start-up from the founder of Kelkoo UK, CrowdStorm is a social shopping network that helps you find what to buy by measuring the buzz around products, and by getting recommendations from friends. They define buzz as reflection of the interest the community shows in a product, as determined by the activity (ie recommendations) around that product. And an excuse to get attractive girlies wearing bee costumes

Media Sharing

  • ShareA - a privacy centred online community for sharing photos, blogs, videos etc, securely.
  • PikSpot - social media sharing but focused around ‘groups’. Shows how the same tools can power quite different sites (aka groups) eg YouLaf and UndoTV. Unfortunately for you, it’s in private beta.
  • Yedda - a questions and answers site, similar to Yahoo Answers, except it apparently personalises topics for you and pro-actively seeks answers.
  • DrumTable - aimed at people in their ’second half of life’ who want to share their life experiences through stories, images and videos. Sounds a bit boring to me.

Health, moms, etc

  • RevolutionHealth - AOL founder Steve Case’s health community site. If you’ve ever wondered what a $125m website looks like, this is it… It came out of beta last week with some well made tweaks.
  • CafeMom - yet another community for moms… but quite well executed.
  • OrganizedWizdom - health-focused social networking site with doctor-reviewed information on 6,5000 subjects supplemented by user-generated ‘wisdomcards’ - inspirational stories, practical health tips and actionable wisdom that usually comes from first-hand experience or deep knowledge of diseases, conditions, medications or health procedures.

Applications

  • Twitter - on the one hand, a piece of frivolity for you to update your friends on what you’re doing every 5 minutes - on the other hand, a powerful platform integrating SMS messaging, Instant Messaging , Email and web based updates. Touted as the next flickr.
  • FotoWoosh - web based system to convert 2D photos into 3D worlds - looks totally amazing but you have to take their word for it at the moment as it’s in private beta - but check out the video.
  • CrazyEgg - website user tracking tool which lets you visualise exactly where people are clicking on your site. Tools like this can be incredibly useful for improving usability and information architecture but used to come at a premium. CrazyEgg is one of many start-ups in the space but is apparently one of the best.

Music

  • NoiseTap - a music community owned by TicketMaster, with digg-style voting, the aim being to share the latest news, rumours and opinions.
  • iLike - Social Music Discovery, a bit like last.fm, the difference being iLike has an artist community called GarageBand

Social networks

  • NurseLinkup - the first of apparently 500 websites that social networking company itLinkz plans to launch, each centred around a certain demographic, profession or interest group.
  • UbiPlanet - a social network targeted at those who want to communicate with existing friends rather than the wider web, developed in France but also (mostly) available in English.

If you’d like to keep an eye on all the Web 2.0 startups then check out Go2Web20.net, Dexly.com and Mashable.com - but be warned, there are dozens of new sites launching every day and nearly all of them are worth watching..

More next month!

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What is OpenID and why should you care?

For many of us, the thought of not having to create new usernames and passwords evokes images of the heavens parting and angels trumpeting.

One of the major talking points at last week’s Future of Web Apps Conference was OpenID - in fact Kevin Rose of digg.com announced at the conference that they are planning to adopt itMicrosoft and AOL have both already announced their support.

ClaimID screen shot

I was going to do a write up to explain why OpenID gaining traction could herald the next semi-revolution, but over at the AOL developer network they’ve written an excellent article called OpenID and the Value of Connected Identity. In summary:

  • OpenID allows you to securely log in to a website without having to create a new username or password.
  • You can keep your identity information in the place you choose without trusting the next random start-up with your password - you can even run your own server.
  • There’s no need to worry about your preferred login name not being available - it’s a URL so it is always uniquely your identity - eg http://claimID.com/paullomax.

And just to prove it’s going to go mainstream, The Times Online also has a write-up - although their strap includes a word that is almost the antithesis of OpenID [my emphasis] :

Companies are competing to introduce a single, secure login that would work for all bank accounts, shopping sites and other web activities.

I think OpenID really does have a future, particularly once it goes to 2.0 which promises to solve a few of the potential issues such as phishing and generally making the whole system a bit easier from a user perspective.

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84 websites you might not have heard of - a Web 2.0 showcase

Below is a selection of websites considered by many to be part of the Web 2.0 revolution. Believe it or not, it’s a relatively small selection. Some have been around five or six years, and others make up a few of the dozens of start-up sites that launch each day and have been around about five minutes – but all do something quite different to the ‘old school’ websites you have probably come to know and love. And almost all of them have silly names.

Social Networking
Connecting with friends and whatnot

Social News
News by the people for the people 

  • www.digg.com  – the biggest, full of geeks but covers many subjects
  • www.slashdot.com – web1.0 survivor and the original article – but only tech
  • www.inform.com - world affairs and politics specialist
  • www.newsvine.com – also a serious slant – the pitch is you create your own ‘column’ 

Social Bookmarking / Search
Not only can you keep your bookmarks in one place, you can see other people’s fave sites 

Media Sharing
Searching for ‘funny cats’ on youtube is an hour’s entertainment 

Localisation
Making the global village local 

Knowledge Sharing
Share your experiences, expertise, thoughts, or anything really 

Blogging
Blogging is one of the web2.0 cornerstones – making the Internet a truly read/write medium 

Start pages
Make these your homepage and you’re one click from all your favourite content 

Widgets & Symbiotic sites
Making stuff to stick on other sites 

Web Based Applications
Stuff that might put Bill Gates out of a job? 

Social Music
Share your music, and your tastes - legally!

  • last.fm - simply amazing - free radio and it learns what you like!

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Matthew Ogston - Will Yahoo buy Flock?

I’ve just started reading up on and playing with Flock, the ’social web browser’ - so more soon - but in the meantime Matthew Ogston asks, Will Yahoo buy Flock?

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Mobile video to web widget service betas

Abazab are betaing a web-based messaging “widget” which allows anyone with a standard camera phone, PDA or computer to send video, photo and voice messages directly to any web page.

Any community site or personal web pages that can accept HTML snippets can use abazab. For example, a member of a community site can use her phone to send video of a concert as it’s happening back to her personal page, allowing her friends to share in that experience just moments after it occurred. Her friends can access that rich content from the widget through any web-enabled PC, Mac or PDA. In turn, they can post their own rich media responses via computer, PDA or camera phone. No software or plug-in is needed.

Press release at http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/060504/sfth058.html?.v=54.

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Google Homepage API

Google have just announced the release of an API for Google Homepage

I swear by the google homepage these days to keep on top of the dozens of blogs and news sources I read. Annoyingly quite a few have been saying ‘information unavailable’ of late, but I’m wondering if that’s just for people who do RSS through feedburner. So I may have to look into this API further. Google have built a couple of examples to show what it can do.

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Maybe I should have chosen wordpress :-)

Maybe I should have chosen WordPress instead of Serendipity - About.Com are, apparently… :-)

UPDATE: I switched in 2007!

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