I’ve seen several comments lately about the trend away from the browser and how RSS may contribute to this, it can be used in an email client etc. But the trend for Usenet was towards the browser, with eGroups and Deja. Likewise, despite lacking in features, people seem to like Bloglines, it is a browser based RSS aggregator and my money is on this model. Bloglines doesn’t do what I want, perhaps Kinja will. My aggregator top ten wishlist items: 1. Search 2. Ability to pick a selection of blogs from a limited list of categories, not too many – prob like Google news. 3. Ability to do scoped search within these categories. 4. ‘More like this’ recommendations. 5. ‘People who linked to this blog’ button beneath selections. 6. ‘People this blog links to’ button beneath selctions (blogroll plus contextual) 7. Browseable list of blogs ranked alphabetically or by popularity…
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MarketingWonk, on agency snobbery towards adwords/adsense: “I’m getting negative vibes from the professional ad community, but mostly I think because syndicated text ads isn’t glamourous [sic] and it cuts out a lot of middle men and agencies.”
Ed Sim points out something that instinctively should be a truism: companies are bought and not sold. In other words, if you look to shop a company you reduce its attractiveness. So what makes the playing-hard-to-get game, different for companies than products they sell. Are products sold and not bought? Does Coca Cola’s sugared water sell itself or do they have to market it? What is happening in both cases is price – Coke play hard to get by saying that you can only have their sugared water by paying a huge premium over cost. All companies are for sale, but the price, like a discreet ad for an expensive piece of real estate, is not published – if you need to know then you can’t afford it. Everything has a price and surely, even companies need to proactively seduce their potential suitors.
John Battelle wonders if you are compelled to stare at the Bruce Clay search engine landscape chart via Kottke. If you do, you will notice that its not quite what it appears. Consolidation means that there are only 8 companies involved (I’ve highlighted them in separate colors above) and the outbound link from Looksmart has now gone, leaving only 2 3rd party providers, Google and Yahoo.
Google AdSense: A better way to make ad revenue Hmm. Update, this is even more absurd: Perhaps the strapline should have read: “Google Adwords, Ads that work unless you are in advertising and are an expert in ads in which case adwords are far too subtle” or “Google Adwords, ads that don’t always work” or “Google Adwords, as not used by Google and not suitable for advertising execs or children under 5” For the sake of brand marketing instead of ‘marketing marketing solutions to marketing people’ – as they used to say in 1999, Google should eat its own dogfood and advertising people should feed from the same bowl.
Parrot’s oratory stuns scientists: “The bird, a captive African grey called N’kisi, has a vocabulary of 950 words, and shows signs of a sense of humour. He invents his own words and phrases if he is confronted with novel ideas with which his existing repertoire cannot cope”
Richard Dawkins is surely one of the world’s foremost authorities on how the spread of information and ideas may have more than mere similarities with the evolution of viruses, having, amongst other things, coined the term meme in passing. Guardian Unlimited, Richard Dawkins: Apple of my eye: “Nothing in my 20 years’ intensive experience of programming and using computers had prepared me for the Mac. It wasn’t an evolutionary advance on its predecessors; it was a macromutational leap into the future. It is that future we are now living in, whether we use a Mac or a virus-compatible PC.” Dawkins once dismissed the world’s fastest growing virus of the mind, Catholicism, as being based on the mistranslation of the Hebrew word for a young girl as ‘virgin’. He has a wonderful knack for stating things that are controversial but provably true as a given – ‘a virus compatible PC’ –…
orkut – terms of service: “By submitting, posting or displaying any Materials on or through the orkut.com service, you automatically grant to us a worldwide, non-exclusive, sublicenseable, transferable, royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable right to copy, distribute, create derivative works of, publicly perform and display such Materials.” OK- this is not unusual, even if aggressively worded, but considering that Orkut has a great deal more personal profiling than most social network tools, isn’t it about time that people started an identity system where people actually owned their own identity. Think how useful it is for Google to have your personal profile in order to target ads at you, particularly as they go after the $25billion yellow pages advertising market. People are giving valuable information away for free as part of a game.
“In olden days the nobility would ride on the left so their sword hand–usually the right hand, of course–would be on the same side as an oncoming horseman…Napoleon switched the convention in Europe from driving on the left to driving on the right for a simple reason–he was left-handed. This meant he mounted and dismounted his horse on the right-hand side, which he naturally preferred to be at the road edge.” New Scientist: The Last Word Science Questions and Answers
GSReport:Megatrends Looking back at someone looking back at someone looking forward. “The 1957 launch of Sputnik and the first space shuttle launch in 1981 were ‘far more important to the information society than to any future age of space exploration.’”
I like America and I like France, and I am always amazed at how much the stereotypical view of one country persists in people from the other. Is France a totalitarian state barring individuality and commerce and is America a cultural desert of fast food and strip malls? No, France doesn’t look like Eastern Europe during the cold war, it functions much like America. Contrary to popular perception, the Socialists lost power in France years ago and the current government is to the right. Sure, France needs to take major steps to encourage more enterprise, but the popularity of French libertarian, Sabine Herold shouldn’t be a surprise (according to Jeff Jarvis, P.J. O’Rourke has some good insight here!). French stores are full of things to buy, with neon signs and billboard advertising and the world’s biggest retail chain after Walmart is French. Likewise, America is the cultural center of the…