Ok another insignificant search engine changes hands

Here’s a news.com post about the acquisition of the distributed online search engine Grub by Wikia.com:

‘Grub was acquired from LookSmart under the open-source project Wikia. The platform, now available for downloading and testing, is built on users donating their personal computer power. It’s meant to operate through open protocol and community collaborative added functions combined with the wiki.

Last year, Wales claimed that Internet search as we know it is broken. Grub is one of his attempts to gather open-source technologies to organize free content on the Web.’

Well actually I think that Google and Technorati have gotten better rather than worse–and even Live search can be usable.  The only thing really broken about search is that people still use Wikipedia and Yahoo and Ask.

I’d say you’re better off letting your computer help the University of California find aliens than trying to help Jimmy Wales beat Google.  Anyway the first is more likely to happen.

Wordcamp live music apparently not licensed under GPL

It seems that WordCamp 2007, an open source software gathering, is no refuge from intellectual property thuggery. Watch this movie as Andy Skelton fairly exudes greed as he lunges to claim and monetize other people’s recordings after what was billed on the schedule as a mere “musical interlude.” Actually, I would have included the actual song in the movie too without a second thought–but it sucked.

The behavior on display is strangely grandiose in this case (e.g. the joke about whether it’s a “trillion-dollar song” or the belief that people want to feature bad acoustic frat music on their blog), but I’m afraid that it nonetheless could have a real chilling effect on the free exchange of ideas and information about such events.

The key quote from Andy Skelton from the movie:

“I just want a piece of..of your pie!”

To which I say–never!

WordCamp 2007 – day 2 – Dave Winer

Dave Winer gave a very astute overview of some interesting questions facing WordPress and the overall open source community.  Here are my notes from the session:

Dave Winer: “A blog is one person’s voice.”

“Some people say, if it doesn’t have comments it’s not a blog.  That’s not true.”
2 forms of blogging
–rss title link description metadata(categories) – each blog post is an essay unto itself
–linkblogging/human aggregation(??)/microblogging (not different from linkblogging??)

“I wanted to fit in with the Netvibes/Pageflakes..” wih his RSS feed for his scripting.com blog.

“I love Twitter”

“Future-safe archives”

what about that Feedburner article (note)
open source ID sysem

“open source Twitter” — “look at the Twitter API–how can that be replicated?”

“I don’t understand Facebook…I have to accept it that people like it…don’t like that it’s a walled garden”

Wordcamp 2007

The 2nd annual Wordcamp event is happening in San Francisco this weekend. Jessica and I are planning to attend.

Some are voicing their concerns about WordPress upgradability and security issues over the last year, which is a matter that needs to be addressed.

What I’m interested in is how WordPress will deal with the range of competitive threats in the self-hosted blog/CMS market, all the way from Gelato self-hosted tumbleblogs to an upcoming open source Movable Type version to new versions of smaller competitors like B2Evolution.

The file sharing feature is what could matter for Pownce

All sorts of reviews of Pownce, a new service that has been compared to Twitter and Jaiku, have delved into the technical arguments about the Adobe AIR client, and how doesn’t Gmail send 20MB files (to Pownce’s 10MB?), and what does a pro account get you, like no ads (what ads anyway?) and 100MB file sending instead, and usually a review can’t end without an assessment of the clausterphobic world of web2.0 personalites. So I can’t compete with that here but let me add my views on the service:

(1) The single most interesting thing about Pownce is the transparent but almost intangible similarity in feel to Flickr, not a coincidence as Yahoo’s photo service is the de rigeur photo site in the web 2.0 bubble (though still not quite the most popular compared to old Photobucket in what Bob Dylan called “America”). Well the similarity in “pro accounts” stands out of course, (I think $20 to Flickr’s $25–but don’t hold me to that I don’t have a pro account now in either service) but use the web site part of Pownce for a while and see if you don’t also sense a vague similarity in look and feel.

(2) Okay, I will wade a bit into the overall debate–Pownce really is sort of a tumbleblog, but it’s not bad but not amazing, at least so far, and could work a bit like Twitter for some peoeple, and some people could use it more like AOL IM, but it really needs to be able to accept incoming feeds (the way Jaiku or Tumblr can) and have external widgets to give updates from the service on your blog. Also they need to serve up a timeline of public updates. You have to click around to find interesting pages–navigation should be done from more angles. (For now, check lead developer Leah Culver’s page for updates about the service because some of these features or others may be added–it’s in invite-only beta right now and the Adobe AIR desktop client is still in alpha.)

(3) Key among the services mentioned is the file sharing feature. I don’t have to run through the history of P2P networks like Hotline, Napster, IRC, Gnutella, Kazaa and BitTorrent here, but some of their varied histories show the vagaries of both popularity and legality of sharing files on certain networks. Pownce, on the other hand, is a new service that may offer a good deal of privacy because it works off a centralized network. Or it may not. But if it attracts a user base that makes frequent use of the file sharing feature (perhaps even files that are legal to share–if that’s even at all possible under the DMCA–I’m not a lawyer) Pownce could differentiate itself from current crop of both short messaging services and P2P networks.

pownce.jpg

Blogs step into new advertising territory

More web 2.0 cred showdown news has broken since I wrote on the front page about this advertising controversy involving blogs using Federated Media. Now crunchnotes.com is sounding this rather bitter note:

‘I’m now pissed off at every single person involved in this. Denton for bringing up a non issue to attack competitors, Malik for folding immediately and making it seem like someone did something wrong, and now Battelle, our agent, saying he wished we had made a disclosure on this.

Any competing ad networks out there want our business, and promise not to throw us under a bus whenever Valleywag attacks?’

This story seems to be breaking very quickly–and Battelle is admitting that “we certainly stepped in it.” In what? Microsoft money?

Twitter and Jaiku–which one, and where to now?

I found an interesting article on a PBS blog about the short message service blogs. Basically the writer focuses on Twitter and gives an overall outline.
I think he may have given short shrift to Jaiku, Twitter’s nearest competitor. It is a very cool service as well and actually is a close number two right now in my opinion, with potential to overtake based on how they develop.
I’ve used both services. Check out my pages on the sites:
pacificpelican.jaiku.com
twitter.com/pacificpelican
Since my text messaging on my phone doesn’t usually send out for whatever reason, I like being able to use Twitter for messaging–people that add you as a friend can receive your tweets over their cell phone. So lately I’ve had a lot of fun using Twitter to text message my girlfriend. Twitter also allows updating from a variety of online services like Netvibes and Facebook, and GoogleTalk or AOL IM. I have been using the Twitter Tools WordPress plug-in to cross-post all of my tweets (Twitter messages) on my front page as well as generating “new blog post” when I write a new Diary entry.
Both of these services have been prone to going down or having drops in service levels on either posting public timeline updates and feed updates or in receiving messages from one or more messaging systems. But overall the quality of service has been improving.

Both services allow customized photo backgrounds on user pages, 140 word updates and rss feeds. They both offer “badges,” which are widgets in JavaScript or Flash code that can be put on your Blogger or WordPress or or your Myspace page or wherever you can place code, even your Pageflakes homepage. Don’t make your URL links too long in your messages on Twitter and Jaiku, and don’t use any HTML tags–the former will become a “tinyurl.com” address, which will work but has limitations (like being replaced with a later link you send in another message) and the latter will just appear as ungainly code text on your Twitter page.
Jaiku is a more Euro-centered version, and they are second to Twitter right now I think but they seem to better understand the pure telecom angle in this–getting large numbers of people using either or both of these services could really drive text messaging revenue for telecoms. It’s not surprising that Jaiku is selling a specialized Nokia phone, the S60.
For keeping tabs on what people are saying on the services, you can watch Twittervision 3D and Jaikuvision among many others. Another service in a similar field that I have been using is Tumblr–it’s more of a short blog (“tumbleblog”) than online short message service, which can take a single link or photo as well as a short blog (showing how photos certainly have a place as well in this geo-tagging online mapping/short messages craze–as does the very fascinating Flickrvision)–here’s my page, which mainly uses feeds to track most or all of what I post online:
pacificpelican.tumblr.com
Could these and all the other new messaging platforms all manage carve out their own niche? Twitter is known as the “What are you doing” update service and has a techier feel (for example, reply is done in a “comment on this” blog kind of style on Jaiku whereas it is done by making the @-sign and then the username being responded to the initial word of the tweet) while Jaiku has a slightly better overall web 2.0 feel on the home page. I have no clear preference, but I guess I might start preferring one more than the other depending on who’s using them or which one is more convenient at the moment–for a while I really liked Jaiku, kind of thought I had done the “switch” to it, but lately the range of tools available with Twitter has pulled me back in that direction.

So what is next for the short messaging services? Well here’s one theory. Just as blogs used to be a way for one person to write simple, off the cuff messages to a handful of interested listeners and they have grown into the enormous multi-user data-base-driven CMS-included software packages of today like WordPress, B2evolution and Movable Type, the short message services will expand enormously as they look for ways to grow by incorporating a little feature here and a small one there. What would these changes look like? Well, how about more explicit group setups, allowing people to host their own Jiaku or Twitter powered page (maybe by allowing C-name record based site like Blogger.com and livejournal.com), messaging from more IM platforms (or any in Jaiku’s case), more depth to the home pages in terms of search, features and original content, tagging, and of course, at least one of them should open their source code, or maybe a really cool open source project could be built along those lines. Well, maybe I can get Qwittr out there as one of the attempts.