Archive for the 'Web 2.0' Category

28
Feb

A cure for e-mail attention disorder?

Corporate managers concerned about the amount of time employees spend sifting though mountains of unwanted e-mail may soon have World of Warcraft to thank for providing a solution. That’s because a Palo Alto, Calif.-based start-up called Seriosity has come up with an e-mail management system that borrows heavily from the virtual economies and currencies found in WoW and other large-scale online games.

Known as Attent, Seriosity’s system is essentially a new currency–called the Serio–that corporate e-mail users spend to indicate a message’s importance: the more important they believe the message is, the more Serios they spend on it. Recipients keep the Serios in the messages they get.

Similarly, when someone receives a message with Serios attached, they can indicate how important they believe it is by responding with an appropriate number: none or very few if they think the message wasn’t valuable, an equal number if they want the sender to know they appreciated the message, or more than the original number to show they agree that it truly was crucial.

But Serios is a currency, and therefore a scarce resource, so people get a limited amount. The idea is that they have to spend the currency wisely, always making sure they have enough to send more with future messages.

And while the system, strictly speaking, is enterprise software, it was directly inspired by the virtual economies of online games like WoW. There, players accumulate gold or platinum pieces or some other form of currency and can spend them on weapons, armor, dwellings and the like that have real monetary value as demonstrated by what people will pay for them on auction and third-party sites.

Ultimately, the point of Serios is to help large enterprises manage their employees’ attention.

“The real value of the 21st century organization is in its people, and the organization only does what the people put their attention on,” said Edward Castronova, a leading expert on virtual economies who is consulting for Seriosity. “Yet in the age of e-mail, pagers, IMs and cell phones, our attention is like roadkill. My argument was that if a synthetic currency gets people to trade gold pieces for (virtual items), it could get them to trade Serios for attention. When you pay for a (virtual item), you’re just asking for attention: ‘Cast this spell on me’ is the same thing as ‘Read my e-mail.’”

According to a study by Basex (PDF), the total cost to the U.S. economy of attention-management problems caused by e-mail and other online tools is $588 billion a year. Seriosity says it has a corporate client–which it would not name–for whom the problem costs about $1 billion a year.

And while Seriosity doesn’t believe it can solve that entire problem, it is hopeful that businesses that purchase Attent and have significant numbers of employees using Serios can see substantial decreases in time and money wasted by e-mail and attention mismanagement.

“Let’s pretend that we can solve 10 percent” of the problem, said Seriosity CEO Ken Ross of his company’s major client with the $1 billion e-mail management problem. “That’s still a huge savings.”

Under Attent, people would receive weekly allowances of Serios, most likely 100. That number would be the same for everyone, no matter who they are. But the idea is that managers and higher-level executives would accumulate more of the currency because they receive more messages. That means, in turn, that they have more Serios to spend on responses.

Further, people can sort messages by numbers of Serios attached, allowing them to sift through the hundreds of e-mails they may get every day and see which ones that senders have deemed the most important.

And while people cannot tell how many Serios someone else has, they can see the average number of Serios the person to whom they’re sending receives. That, Ross said, allows a sender to get a sense of how many Serios to send to be sure to get the recipient’s attention.

“If I see that Jonathan is getting an average of five Serios,” Ross said, “and I send 20,” he will understand the importance.

Ross and Leighton Read, a Seriosity co-founder and board member, said they intend for Serios to be a single currency, regardless of which company uses them. That’s partly because they understand many employees are contractors who work for several clients and who might eventually want to use Serios they accumulate in multiple corporations.

This means that a so-called secondary market for Serios–perhaps on eBay or other venues–is almost certain to develop as the real value for the currency evolves. That’s because some people would be sure to accumulate more than they can use, while others would want more than they have.

That’s particularly true, Ross suggested, because while Attent is currently Seriosity’s only product, the company sees other future uses for Serios such as auctions of desirable parking spaces, allocation of equipment or prioritization of IT resources.

Naturally, Serios have no value and Attent is meaningless unless Seriosity clients have a significant number of people employing the system.

“A tool like this will only be really effective when it’s adopted by a lot of people,” said Ron Meiners, who works in developer relations for virtual world platform developer Multiverse Network. “Which means it not only has to be useful, it has to be clearly useful, and popular, so that people will adopt it.”

Meiners said he believe the system is “exciting,” particularly because of the way Seriosity is attempting to help companies organize social information.

For his part, Nikos Drakos, a research director with Gartner, said he sees Seriosity’s system as a “novel approach” to the burgeoning corporate e-mail management problem.

“I think it’s very well worth experimenting with it,” Drakos said. “I don’t know that there’s enough evidence that it will have the desired effect. And even if there is, I don’t know that Seriosity is the right company.”

But he, too, said he found Seriosity’s system “exciting” and that he and others at Gartner are keeping an eye on the company to see how Attent works out.

Seriosity, which currently has 12 employees, is functioning off of a $6 million investment by Read’s Alloy Ventures and is seeking a second round of funding. The trick for the company will be not only to prove that Attent works, but to manage its newly formed virtual economy.

“It’s important because this is an economy, and we don’t want to have inflation,” Ross said. “We don’t know what the (inflation management system) is going to be. We think there will be some taxes on wealth because you don’t want people to accumulate Serios.”

Ultimately, for Castronova, the creation of a new economy for managing e-mail overload is no different than the creation of any new economy. And that’s why he believes the system can work.

“Never again will you read the e-mail warning you to take your food out of the company refrigerator by Friday,” Castronova said. “It will be forever relegated to the bottom of your inbox, because with the Serio, you can quickly and easily sort the thousands of messages and read only the ones that they really care about–the ones they put Serios on.”

28
Feb

The User Revolution: The New Advertising Ecosystem and The Rise of the Internet as a Mass Medium

Piper Jaffray & Co. Internet Media and Marketing research team today published an in-depth, comprehensive research report titled, “The User Revolution,” discussing the new advertising ecosystem and the rise of the Internet as a mass medium. In the report, the team outlines its expectations that global online advertising revenue will reach $81.1 billion by 2011, representing a 21 percent compound-annual-growth-rate (2006-2011).

The report defines user revolution as a major trend that is happening primarily with consumers, who are taking control of content consumption and branding. “The historically passive consumer is changing rapidly, not only becoming more informed and confident about purchase decisions, but also increasingly taking control of the consumption of information and content that used to be distributed by networks, studios, publishers and retailers,” said Safa Rashtchy, senior research analyst at Piper Jaffray. “We believe this will cause a significant rise in prominence of the Internet as a major content consumption and marketing medium.”

There are 12 key themes discussed in “The User Revolution” report:

  1. Global online advertising revenue to reach $81.1 billion by 2011
  2. Communitainment: Internet has increasingly become a principal medium for community, communication and entertainment — three areas that have collided and are impacting each other’s growth — generating a new type of activity: communitainment. Communitainment is taking time away from other, traditional, types of content consumption on the Internet.
  3. Usites — The increasing popular category of user generated sites, which we are calling Usites, are driving traffic away from other destinations and pose a challenge to the advertisers and publishers.
  4. The Internet is now a mainstream medium: The web is the leading medium at work and the second leading medium at home behind television. Internet usage patterns are changing, favoring Usites, communitainment sites, search, and away from traditional portals.
  5. User Generated Brands. The consumers are taking control of content consumption and branding.
  6. Media Fragmentation: Advertisers increasingly will need to buy more inventory, from nearly all types of media, especially the Internet, to have the desired impact.
  7. The Golden Search: search has become the new portal.
  8. Google’s dominance is likely to expand, partly fueled by a wide variety of non-search related products that create a virtuous cycle of brand affinity for Google.
  9. Video ads will be the driver of the next major growth in brand advertising and getting additional dollars shifted from traditional media to online.
  10. Ad networks are experiencing increased demand due to increasing Internet fragmentation, desire for more targeted inventory, increasing usage of networks for branding and increased site visibility.
  11. Agencies are rapidly evolving into more sophisticated, technology-savvy entities that combine best of breed offerings.

The report also lists the most important companies to watch during this revolution, companies that are likely to benefit most, or be highly impacted by these trends. These companies include: Google (and YouTube), Yahoo!, Disney, News Corp., Time Warner, Microsoft, InterActive, Facebook, Craigslist, Brightcove, Yelp, SINA Corp., Baidu, aQuantive, ValueClick, 24/7 Media, Netflix, Wikipedia, MobiTV, Digg and Hakia.

“Like many major social trends, the changes will not happen overnight and we expect the User Revolution, which has just begun, to last several years before the new regime is fully established and the old statues have all been toppled over,” said Rashtchy.

27
Feb

xFruits Teaches Your Feeds New Trick

Want to play with RSS feeds? Try xFruits, where, according to tech enthusiast Steve Rubel, you can “teach your feeds all kinds of new tricks.”

He’s not kidding around, either: you can create a PDF file from an RSS feed, send an OPML to your mobile, aggregate, and lots more. I played with it a little bit and was suitably impressed by all the options; it looks like they’re even adding the option to create RSS feeds for your desktop files soon.

27
Feb

WPF/E Album Viewer

Dan’s album viewer sample that queries the Amazon.com web service for album information based on a given artist has now been posted live on his xmlforasp.com site.  Click the image below to run the sample, which includes a link to the source code.  Dan’s original post about this sample includes a video overview of how he created it.  This is a great example showing how WPF/E can be used to visualize mash-up output.

27
Feb

Using WPF, Virtual Earth, and WPF/E together…

from MSDN Blogs by Public Sector DPE Team

A while back, I blogged about using WPF/E & Virtual Earth together.  The post is here.  I’ve also blogged about adding Virtual Earth in a Windows Forms application here (last paragraph).  What about WPF?  Given that the Virtual Earth v4 Map Control is delivered as a set of JavaScript libraries, the same approach we used in Windows Forms applies to WPF.  However, WPF does not ship with a “native” control with the same functionality as the WebBrowser control which ships with the .NET Framework 2.0.  The good news is the good folks in “WPF Land” thought about these types of dilemmas and created a really nice interoperability layer for WPF/Windows Forms.  There is a class called WindowsFormsHost in the System.Windows.Forms.Integration namespace which allows you to host Windows Forms controls in a WPF application (See Supported Scenarios in Windows Presentation Foundation and Windows Forms Interoperation).  One problem solved.

The next problem you will very quickly discover (or read about in the “Supported Scenarios” link) is that a “hosted Windows Forms control is drawn in a separate HWND, so it is always drawn on top of WPF elements.”  Oh oh, that means you can’t overlay WPF elements over the mapsmile_sad.

WPF/E to the rescue!  Even though WPF & WPF/E have completely different runtimes, they share the same markup language.  WPF/E markup is a subset of WPF markup.  Therefore, you can target both technologies with one definition.  WPF/E is targeted at augmenting existing web technologies (works great with ASP.NET AJAX as well as other AJAX, DHTML/JavaScript applications).  The Virtual Earth v4 Map Control fits into this category (it’s a JavaScript control which employs AJAX techniques).  I showed the two working together here.

WPF/E is a perfect workaround to the WPF/Windows Forms interoperability limitation.

The picture below shows a WPF application defined using XAML, which uses the WindowsFormsHost control to host the .NET Framework 2.0 WebBrowser control, which in turn points to an html file which uses the Virtual Earth v4 Map Control (JavaScript).  When you click the “Add Pushpin” WPF and then hover over the pushpin, you will get a popup with WPF/E elements (vector graphic, text, and video) defined using XAML.

Continue at source

27
Feb

Corporate logos Web 2.0 style

Corporate logos Web 2.0 style:

21
Feb

Scrapblog.com

This one’s for my girlfriend, who said six months ago that scrapbooking never goes online. And if it is online, nobody wants to use it (And she’s a frequent scrapbook fanatic!)

http://www.scrapblog.com

If you love sharing photos like we do, you’ll love Scrapblog. With Scrapblog, you can easily create stunning multimedia scrapbooks featuring your photos, videos, audio and a bunch of creative elements. We made Scrapblog drag-and-drop-easy so that everyone can tell their stories and share them online or turn them into high-quality photo books and DVDs. Best of all, it’s free and there’s nothing to download.

16
Feb

Teqlo: Do-It-Yourself Enterprise 2.0 Mashups

f you’re one of those people who’ve been waiting for  somebody to create a tool that would let ordinary mortals without programming expertise mix and match applications and create their own mashups, today’s your big day.Jeff Nolan, the brave young man who runs Teqlo, a startup that makes widgets work together and allows you to combine and integrate useful web services, has decided to skip the usual private beta and do a public beta instead.  That means you can run over there right now, sign up, and build your first monster mash before lunch.

Two key things to remember:  this is a demonstration of the technology, not the business; it’s still a little rough around the edges (that’s why they call it beta) and, alas, it only works with Firefox.

“Please keep in mind that this is a development release and we have much more to come that will define how the business is built around it,” Nolan says.  “Also, in the interests of setting expectations appropriately, there are only a small number of widgets that you can use and that means you shouldnt expect to do anything productive with this. This release is intended to demonstrate how the core technology works and get your feedback about where we should go with it.”

Source: FASTForward Blog 

Check also this blogpost at the Teqlo blog about how to turn a Yahoo Pipe into a Teqlo application!!!!!!!!

Hope that I’ve time to play wit Teqlo, the pipes are ready :-)

16
Feb

Web Discovery Moves to The Next Level

In conjunction with DEMO 2007, Trailfire, developer of software and services for the social Web, has announced a new solution that will take discovery on the Internet to the next level. Trailfire has married four technologies — Web annotation, user created navigation, commentary, and a social discovery engine

Anyone with a Web browser can create their own path on the Web. The annotations, or “Marks,” that make up a “Trail” appear as a note on Web pages that can be viewed in a browser without the need for an extension. Trailfire combines these technologies with a capability that lets people start and participate in conversations on any Web site, at any time, on any topic.

“The Web is an enormous, vibrant source of information. However, due to the amount of content available, it is increasingly difficult to find relevant information. Social discovery, which is the process of leveraging a community’s collective knowledge and commentary, helps alleviate this challenge,” says John O’Halloran, Trailfire CEO. “We bring a unique combination of technology, tools and community involvement to enhance the discovery process.”

O’Halloran went on to explain that with Trailfire there are four vectors for discovering a Trail. On the Trailfire site itself, anywhere on the Web, while browsing and in serach engines.

The Trailfire.com Web site is organized by category, date, popularity, and user ratings and gives users multiple ways to filter content so they can find exactly what they are looking for.
Because each Trail has its own unique URL it can be posted and discovered anywhere on the Web. For instance, one might find Trails on blogs and other social Web sites, such as Digg or del.icio.us. Individuals can also e-mail Trails to friends, family and colleagues.

Trailfire’s browser extension allows Trails to be discovered “in the wild,” while browsing a Web page where someone has already placed a Mark on the page. People who download the Trailfire extension are likely to come across Trails on a variety of sites while browsing the Web. As more content is added by the Trailfire community, the value of this type of discovery will continue to increase.

Each Trail has its own “Trail summary page,” which is indexed by search engines, such as Google, Yahoo and MSN. The Trails created by the Trailfire community are more valuable than simple URLs and Web pages because they are the results of someone’s prior research, complete with annotation and feedback from the community.

“This is an exciting time in Web 2.0,” says Tim Bajarin, President with Creative Strategies. “Developments such as those from Trailfire, are empowering online users and social communities to have more freedom on the Web.”

Source: Tech2.com

16
Feb

Microsoft creates Digg-like sites in Norway and Belgium

Microsoft has launched Web sites in Norway and Belgium that allow people to submit news headlines and blog postings that other people can vote on, similar to the Digg model. The Microsoft sites are called MSN Reporter.

One site is in Norwegian, and there are two versions for Belgium, in French and in Flemish. Planning on other rollouts has not been finalized, a Microsoft representative said.

An individual’s votes are used to generate various views tailored to that user. People can browse through the latest headlines, scan the most popular, and see which are climbing to the top rank the fastest or which have incited the most comments.

Users can subscribe to the different views via RSS (Really Simple Syndication) or though their personal Live.com site. The top four fastest climbers are displayed on the home page and channels of MSN Netherlands.

Yahoo also launched a new user feedback site called Yahoo Suggestions. The discussion board offers a way for people to provide feedback directly to Yahoo, according to an official Yahoo blog.

Suggestion boards have been launched for about 15 Yahoo properties, including its Autos, Answers, Travel, Real Estate and HotJobs sites. They use a thumbs-up icon like Digg does for the button that people hit to vote in favor of a user comment.