Slow news day

Seems reporting new media news gets a bit dreary sometimes. This from PaidContent.org: “BlogMedia Acquires The Blog Herald [by rafat] : Blog blog blog blog blag blag blah…blah. [by rafat] [Feb.27, 06]” I have to admit, the press release Rafat linked to made me yawn too. Oh well, at least the blogosphere isn’t talking about … Read more

edgeio launches with same goals as Structured Blogging

Online classifieds service edgeiojust launched. I tested the service out recently and on ZDNet I’ve posted my thoughts. I love the concept of edgeio, because it’s almost exactly the same ideal as the Structured Blogging initiative. Structured blogging means publishing different kinds of information – like events, reviews and classified ads – in a ‘structured’ … Read more

The Value of Feeds (is shifting…)

Summary: While full-text feeds are under-valued today, they will be an integral part of the content ecosystem in the near future. And that’s when their true value will be recognized. James Gross from the Feedster blog has an interesting post about how full-text feeds will provide much more value in future than today: “What has … Read more

Read/WriteWeb Filter

– Erik Benson goes “old man grey” (I knew he was wise beyond his years…) – Kevin Roberts’ Sisomo (leading edge kiwi wows the marketing/advertising world again with a beautifully designed site about his ‘Sisomo’ concept — “the story of sight, sound and motion”) – The Future of Web Apps podcasts available now (this will … Read more

Why you need a Web Office

When my post about Web Office Suite products got Slashdotted, one of the main issues amongst Slashdot commenters was: why do we even need a Web Office? This comment by Eightyford put it best: “What are the advantages of having an online Office Suite? I’d say that the disadvantages include: security issues, slow speed, dependance … Read more

30 Boxes review

This a beautifully designed web calendar. It has a lot of AJAX smoothness, which make for a very nice UI experience. It’s easy to enter events and you can change calendar views with little trouble. I’d like the option to reduce the calendar view from the current minimum of 4 weeks to just 1 week. … Read more

The Tyranny of Distance

Quote from Rod Drury, founder and CEO of kiwi web email company AfterMail (which was acquired by Quest Software for US$45 million in January 2006): “We demonstrate globally from our office in Wellington, install our products remotely and receive funds electronically. We have US phone numbers in our office. The barriers to global commerce are … Read more

Read/WriteWeb Filter

– The Return of Mr Safe (like a geeky version of Inspector Clouseau, Mr Safe is one of the enduring characters of the tech blogging world… in this latest episode he confronts his old foes Chief Inspector Funky and the evil Dr Fork) – Stowe Boyd on Advisory Capital (instead of investing money, invest expertise … Read more

Web Office Suite: best of breed products

On my ZDNet blog, I’ve reviewed the best Web Office products currently on the market. I believe some of these may be acquisition targets for Microsoft, Google or even Yahoo – as the big companies roll out the inevitable Web Office Suite. [Full story on ZDNet…] Originally published on ReadWriteWeb (archived copy)

Read/WriteWeb Filter

– TechCrunch leads Silicon Valley Web renaissance (I miss the Gatsby mansion… fun times in Silicon Valley) – Brian Oberkirch interviews Umair Haque (a nice Bubblegeneration 101 on Umair’s theories, which you should take time to grok if you’re in the new media business…) – Media Investing’s New Thing: Web2.0 (“Any traditional media company, with … Read more

Read/WriteWeb Filter

– Amazon Plans Music Service To Rival iTunes (nice opportunity for server–>device integration here… among the plans: Amazon-branded portable music players for retailers and a subscription service) – MySpace goes mobile (launching a mobile service that will let users read and post to the site for free) – Alex Barnett screencast on ‘Attention Engines’ (this … Read more

Fragmenting Attention

Excellent quote from Joshua Schachter of del.icio.us: “Aggregation is often a focus of attention (latest, most active, etc.) As the population gets larger, the bias drifts; del.icio.us/popular becomes less interesting to the original community members. Work out ways to let the system fragment in to different areas of attention.” This sums up why 2006 is … Read more

Read/WriteWeb Filter

– The Evolution of Information Grazing (more cow metaphors) – James plays the field (“Grazing, on the other hand, is feed promiscuity. No commitment.”) – Ross Levinsohn on Fox’s Digital Charge (how the News Corp. media giant is working to build a broad online base) – Dave Winer on professional media (“The pros are lazy, … Read more

The Communist Web

I’ve read some absurd things in my time, but this one really takes the cake. It’s by a ‘big media’ guy at CBS News, who has written an astonishing spiel about what he regards as ‘Web 2.0’. It’s actually the first compelling thing I’ve read about Web 2.0 all year, but it was compelling because … Read more

Personalized Clustering: It’s too hard, say developers

After my post about Personalized Megite, I got taken to task by both Gabe Rivera from Memeorandum and Nik Cubrilovic from OmniDrive – two developers who have had a lot of experience trying to develop such systems. As Gabe wrote in Scoble’s comments: “I agree with Nik that there’s a huge technical chasm to cross … Read more