Archives For Web 2.0

This from the SMH:

“It is the fundamental right of all Australians to access the internet free of pornography and offensive material,” a Liberal senator, Guy Barnett, said yesterday. He was one of 62 members of the Coalition parties who signed a letter to the Prime Minister last year calling for a ban on offensive web sites.

Wrong Senator Barnett. It’s the fundamental right of all Australian’s to have free and unfiltered access to the internet..after all what I consider as offensive is different to what you might, and I’d think adults are grown up enough to make that decision….but it could be worse, you could be supporting the ALP plan to filter the content via ISP, aka The North Korea plan.

First time I’ve seen this: Dave Winer has posted he’s dropping feeds that include the Feedburner extra’s such as “email this” and “add to de.licio.us” which he calls “feeds of evil”. Personally, I don’t use Feedburner because I’m not willing to give up control of my feed….but I’ve never though of it in terms that some people find the bits underneath annoying….something new for a Monday, any way 🙂

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Issues at 9rules?

June 16, 2006 — Leave a comment

This from a former 9rules Channel editor:

I left 9rules because I can’t associate my writing and my faith with an organization wherein the leaders are purposely building their personas around vulgar and demeaning antics. ScrivsTyme is just too closely related to 9rules. I know, “to each their own.” I agree 100%. I’m just choosing not to associate my life’s work to “another’s own.” This is the number one reason I left. There are others, such as traffic, purpose, and benefit. I will avoid going into those as they are not the main reason. I love the crew, but I simply don’t agree with the direction. I own that as my own problem and wish them all nothing but the best.

This speaks for itself, so I won’t add any comments.

I need not bother repeat the news that Jason Calacanis has launched the new Netscape portal in beta, nor will I bother reviewing it, after all 500 million other people already have (and I’ll say this, aside from being a Digg clone is does look very good), but I ask this question:

Is the new Netscape being powered by the unhealthy? Is it indeed Junk(food)scape?

Check this pics out from Jason Calacanis’ blog, obviously J-Cal hasn’t yet subscribed to the theory of feeding your employees healthy food yet!

netscape

netscape

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I’ve always though Scoble was a bit of a lackey, but today I read something that gave me a new found respect for the guy, a guy who’s willing to take a (real) risk and give something a go, from Slashdot:

Q: What would have kept you at Microsoft? Money? Relocation? More Channel9 cameras/staff? Free HDTVs?

A: Actually they offered almost all of that stuff (they didn’t try the HDTV’s) and it still didn’t work cause I wanted to do something completely different than what I was doing here. I also wanted to see if I could build something from scratch. Yeah, money and being close to my son played into it too, but when I looked around I didn’t see something that would keep me excited.

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Mike Arrington raves (yet again) about the Flock Browser at TechCrunch with word that the company has launched a public beta version, so I thought I’d give it a try again (I’d previously played with the developer version).

I’m still not all that impressed.

Sure, it’s a whole lot better than the developer version (which is fair enough), but unlike Mike who claims that it’s now his browser of choice, I just don’t see any reason, as yet, to switch from Firefox.

The Good:

There is some good in the beta release of the Flock browser, which is more than I can say for earlier releases. It’s fairly clear that Flock have done a deal with Yahoo! which is probably where their business model indicates revenue (remember that Mozilla gets paid a percentage of ad clicks in a similar way to Adsense (but not the same way) for every person who searches Google), and this means very, very nice integration with Flickr and Del.icio.us. The ability to drag stuff into Flickr is a very, very nice touch. It’s a shame in a way that Yahoo! doesn’t roll out these sorts of tools themselves (please, please, I want a tool like Picasa from which I can upload pics to Flickr!). I didn’t play with the Del.icio.us integration because I don’t really use the service that much, but it certainly looks nice.

The Bad:

It’s still not as quick as Firefox itself, at least from my playing with it. I went to a number of sites that wouldn’t have been cached in Firefox to test, it feels slower, but it could just be my perception of it.

And then there is the blogging tool, which is apparently one of Flocks big selling points. It’s very, very basic I’m afraid. Sure, if you want a quick blogging tool you’ll find it ok, mainly if you don’t know about other blogging tools in the market. But compare it to BlogDesk or even Performancing, it’s a very poor second. No image editing, no Technorati tags, no ability to even add a category to your blog post. For all but the most feeble of bloggers, this isn’t going to be useful.

As a business:

As a business idea though, I can see what Flock is doing now. When I first wrote about these guys at The Blog Herald last year, I couldn’t see where they could make money, but of course since then the world has discovered that search firms will pay you money to direct users to their sites (ala Mozilla and Google) on a rev share basis based on ad click thrus. The question of course then becomes: is the long tail long enough for Flock to make a decent quid and make their VC people happy? Time will tell, but at this stage I’ll probably say yes. There is a market for this, and if they go on to improve the browser by their official 1.0 launch, they should be able to get enough users to make a decent buck or two, but on this release, they’ve still got some work ahead of them.

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Google has announced the beta launch of Google Earth 4, and I’ve got to say its very nice. On the home front they’ve updated their satelitte images of where I live so you can actually see stuff, where as before all you got was a distorted, poor quality images, but it now comes with clouds….oh yeh, and it’s at least nearly 2 years old.

Shot 1: where I live. There is still a tree on the block right where my house stands today. We bought the block in the October of 2004 and the tree went for memory in the November. There’s building in Stage 2 of the Estate I live in, but nothing in Stage 3 (the stage we bought into) but the earth works and roads are completed, but no road works in Stage 4, so I’m guessing September-October 2004:

google earth

Shot 2: give me clouds, lots of clouds, over the greater bunbury region….dont cloud me out….

goog earth

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No word from the man himself yet, but Tom Foremski reports at Silicon Valley Watch that Microsoft blogger Robert Scoble is leaving the uber-software company to work with podcasting firm Podtech. All the best Robert, I’m sure this will be a much better working environment for you.

Check out Macrus of Plenty of Fish’s Adsense Cheque:

adsense cheque

$991,773.04 for two months…..wow!

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Pageflakes, apparently yet another Web 2.0 online-OS startup, has resorted to spamming people in an attempt to get their RSS subs button up on blogs. I received this email from Pageflakes on 5 June:

From: Tegan Harris (Pageflakes) tegan@pageflakes.com
Reply to: tegan@pageflakes.com
Date: 5/06/2006 8:58pm
To: nichenet@gmail.com

Hi Seth,

My name is Tegan and I am part of the Pageflakes team. I have visited your Blog and noticed that you offer a RSS subscription service to your users. May I suggest that you add the Pageflakes RSS subscription feature, too?

You can then use this button http://www.pageflakes.com/subscribe2.gif in combination with the link below:

http://www.pageflakes.com/subscribe.aspx?url= (followed by your Feed URL)

If you have any questions or suggestions please do not hesitate to contact me.

With kind regards

Tegan Harris

www.pageflakes.com – The Web at your Fingertips
Latest News: Check out our sharing feature http://tinyurl.com/zgla5

Disappointing really, that a Web 2.0 startup would resort to spamming, particularly when they can’t even use their you beaut Ajax driven tech to actually get my name right in their spam email!

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