Web fosters prolific product reviewers: “I’m rethinking things,” says the prolific 43-year-old Epinions.com free-lance writer. “I’ve written 664 reviews. It’s a book, and I didn’t really get paid for producing it. I should really be getting royalties for all that work.” If product reviewers all had weblogs, and a weblog tool that had forms for posting information specifically for product reviews that syndicated review metadata, then you would have the same functionality as Epinions, in decentralized form. The difference would be that traffic would go back to the reviewers’ site where they could control things like ad revenue. Weblogs allow all the social advantages of a distributed system: control over individual identity, branding and revenue. Pings to central servers and metadata enriched RSS syndication allow for all the technological advantages of a centralized system – real-time updated search and structured querying. Isn’t this decentralizing of publishing and centralizing of aggregation,…
Ping Identity – who are sponsors of the SourceID open source identity project has secured $5M in Financing from General Catalyst Partners – who Jeremy Allaire is involved with.
Phil Wainewright has a very thorough and thoughtful piece on Loosely Coupled. Phil looks at Webmethods’ recent acquisitions within the broader context of what happens when enterprise software all starts to communicate through standardized web services based API’s, rendering a whole industry (EAI) obsolete.
Its an interesting mirror of what is happening at a grass roots level with syndicated content and standardized API’s for weblog style publishing systems. RSS aggregators beware – the future is not in aggregating or aggregation tools, but services building value-add on top.
One of the benefits of ‘CPC’ based online advertising, where you pay for clicks rather than impressions, is that if the advertiser works out the average number of clicks that result in a sale she knows how much a click is worth for it to be profitable. Tracking this kind of ‘conversion’ used to require custom code, or use of a third party service such as GoToast, but now that Google have built it into Adwords, things should be a lot simpler. In theory, if you have an ecommerce site you should be able to setup Adwords so that you are guaranteed not to lose money. Google Adwords: Conversion Tracking FAQ
PC Advisor has an interesting use of text ads – certain keywords are green, underlined and show text ad boxes when moused over. Rather like the defunct MS Office contextual links system but for paid for links. This would be very interesting in the blog context as it would allow ads that are correspond to individual posts. On the downside it breaks the church and state separation of ads and content. PC Advisor
PC Advisor: “Apple looks set to introduce its long-awaited iTunes music download service for Windows users on 16 October at a special event in San Francisco”.
Article in the Guardian on the use of RFid in the UK. “in the early summer, at its superstore in Newmarket Road, Cambridge, Tesco began the world’s first trial of a so-called “smart shelf”. Razor blades are one of the most frequently shoplifted items. Small but relatively expensive, they can be slipped into a pocket. The smart shelf was designed to house packets of Gillette Mach 3 razor blades, each augmented with a tiny RFid tag. The shelf contained a reader and – controversially – a small CCTV camera. Each time a pack of razors was removed, the tag triggered the camera and a picture was taken. Tesco began the trial without much fuss but within weeks, a determined knot of protestors appeared outside the store…” Labour Member of Parliament Tom Watson (who has a weblog) “has applied for a parliamentary debate on the use of RFid. What he will…
I wanted to send an email to Jon after having watched the webcast of his aggregators session at BloggerCon but unfortunately can’t find it. In the presentation Jon said that RSS was one possible step towards solving the problems in email, something that was perhaps worth $1Bn. I am personally interested in being the proud owner of a billion dollars, so was paying attention. Since the question I wanted to ask via email was on the very topic of how RSS really offers something different than email then if Jon reads this through his subscription to this weblog, then perhaps this will illustrate the point. The problem is this: the email channel is too noisy for people like newsletter publishers to use. Assuming for a moment that RSS readers are commonplace in email clients. For pure opt-in Newsletters then RSS works, (Jon is subscribed to this weblog, so he has…
A few weeks ago I posted a piece on the threats of a software monoculture, a New York Times journalist saw the post and interviewed me: ‘Was I an expert? Er – no, its not a new idea and its kind of obvious if you look at argriculture’. Thankfully the CCIA then published a report which levelled the same argument but from a much more authoritative stance. Michael Gartenberg, a Jupiter analyst, posts that the monoculture threat is groundless. His argument: “The fallacy is that diverse systems will not have security issues or holes”. Nobody has claimed that diverse systems would not have flaws, but diverse environments are not prone to the same catastrophic failures that monocultures are susceptible to. Thankfully Gartenberg is a Jupiter analyst and not a farmer.
A new report by Perseus has some interesting statistics: Weblogs updated less than once every two months: 66% Weblogs updated once a day: 1.2% Active blogs (as defined as those which are updated more than once every two months) are updated on average every 14 days. 26% percent of weblogs created are never used more than once. Weblog freshness, like weblog linkedness, follows a power law, something that is important when designing a weblog aggregator, see: ‘Blog Metrics’.