Archive for the ‘news’ Category

Slate’s 2008 Democratic Primary in 8 Minutes Video

Sunday, June 8th, 2008

It’s funny:

Update:

Here’s another great video (thanks Geoff):

Come With Me If You Want To Live

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

Arnold and McCain

(Picture from the nytimes)

The Tom Cruise video isn’t crazy

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

I’m not one for defending Scientology or celebreties, but this Tom Cruise Scientology video has everyone saying he’s crazy. He seems enthusiastic about helping people and making a difference in a way he thinks is good. Why is that crazy? Rush Limbaugh today went off on Obama as a being great at giving vapid speeches. It seems like whenever someone is trying to do something good (whether it’s really good or not, but certainly harmless), cynics have to come and destroy it. So what if he’s happy about his religion, good for him. Go get your own  life.

Layoff Pain at AOL

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

AOL

Silicon Alley Insider has live coverage over the blood letting happening at AOL. They’re quoting laid off employees, and it brings home the conflicted emotions that come with working what is a well-known brand, but with a tarnished reputation:

“I bid adieu, AOL. It’s been (bitter)sweet. Finally, I can go do some work for a company whose name I won’t be ashamed to mention in casual conversation. A company whose products don’t routinely get mocked in the popular vernacular. A company that doesn’t lay off employees twice a year.”

The downfall of AOL has left me feeling satisfied after the decade long barrage of Free AOL! cds littering our homes, stores, and streets, but I feel bad for these people. Employees always end up having to pay for the stupidity of their ‘betters.’ I’ve been through lay off’s once, and I’m sure not the last time either. It’s not any fun.

Time Magazine Is Out of Touch

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

Time Magazine

If you’re not with us, you’re against us, and Time is not with us. Us being people who use the internet. I don’t know who edits that weekly paper/website/whatever, but their new Top 10 Websites for 2007 list is telling. While everyone else is going gaga over the iPhone being declared the number one gadget of the year, let’s take a look at this list:

  1. Lemonade.com
  2. AskSunday.com
  3. Wink.com
  4. TechPresident.com
  5. goodreads.com
  6. MenuPages.com
  7. DontForgetYourToothbrush.com
  8. VolunteerMatch.com
  9. Fatsecret.com
  10. Indeed.com

I’ve never heard of a single one of these. Must be because I’m out of touch with the web. Not enough hours put in I suppose. I’m all for new discovery and such but a top ten list should have top websites? I don’t necessarily mean traffic, but at least importance in our lives, buzz, gradients-rounded-corners-glass-reflection ratio? Even if the list were Top Ten NEW Websites for 2007, this list is out of touch. While goodreads.com and Wink.com, and possibly even Indeed.com are marginally interesting, this list fails to excite. A real top ten list would include Twitter. Could be Time’s intended audience, you know the non-tech savvy ‘regular people’ that are still using IE6 and bugging you for computer help because they clicked on a link in a phishing email.

Ask.com AskEraser Looking Like a Hit

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

Ask.com

Ok I’m not paid to be a company shill, I’m just an engineer/UI guy, but it’s hard not to be positive about working for such a cool company. The press coverage for AskEraser seems to be mostly positive. Here are some of my favourite blogs’ comments/reviews:

Henry Blodget, my favorite blogging genious says that “IACI’s Ask.com continues to have the best search engine in the business” but that AskEraser is irrelevant and that “features won’t win the search business. And neither does advertising.” Heh. In a subsequent post today about search engine marketshare he predicts bad things for Ask: “Ask is going to get squeezed out of the search market. Its only hope is to focus on a niche or sell itself to Google, Yahoo, or Microsoft.” Well shit.

paidcontent.org, one of the coolest blogs ever, as always only reports the facts (and don’t editorialize them like other blogs do, which is why they’re so awesome), but get them wrong, and so see me jump to the rescue in the comments and look they corrected it with a strike through. I should get paid for this.

Mashable, the blog that paid me $100 to troll them, likes Ask.com’s new feature, and are so happy about it they forgot to spell check: “However, this is a good move by Ask.com; if you can’t be better than Google as far as search is concernet [sic], find some area where you can actually show that you’re better than the competition and capitalize on that. It all adds up in the end.”

The whole thing is big news today and Blogrunner and Techmeme are doing a great job tracking the whole thing. Technorati’s new meme tracker…not so much. I don’t know how they track things, but at best it’s confusing and opaque, and at worst, well…heh.

Slate takes Yahoo! Answers to Town

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

Yahoo! Answers

I used to love Slate, until they started having videos on their home page start on auto-play, but a recent reddit link let me to this funny article, titled “A Librarian’s Worst NightmareYahoo! Answers, where 120 million users can be wrong.

Here’s a quote (emphasis added):

“While Answers is a valuable window into how people look for information online, it looks like a complete disaster as a traditional reference tool. It encourages bad research habits, rewards people who post things that aren’t true, and frequently labels factual errors as correct information. It’s every middle-school teacher’s worst nightmare about the Web.”

That’s all true, but man it’s so addictive to try and get your score up. When I was playing with it, I figured out how to get awarded the ‘right’ answer most of the time. You search for questions that are about to expire that have no answers, and then come up with a half way decent answer, and BOOYA: 10 points awarded. Not very good for ‘authority’ or ‘accuracy’, but hey, it’s fun! ;)

Ask.com Adds AskEraser

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

Ask.com

Ask.com, the best search engine ever, also my place of employment, just added AskEraser which allows you some privacy safeguards other search engines don’t. I didn’t get to work on it much, but I know guys and gals who did and they busted their butts trying to get this in before the holiday, so hats off to all of them. And hats off to you for checking it out. Check it out:

Ask Eraser
Ask Eraser

Better check out the FAQ page on the details. Also watch the Ask.com blog for any updates.

Read More:

The New York Times: Ask.com Puts a Bet on Privacy

AP @ Yahoo News: Ask.com to unveil new privacy control
Search Engine Land: Ask.com Launches AskEraser Giving Searches Ability To Search Anonymously

LinkedIn Adds Developer Platform, Redesign, Other Stuff

Monday, December 10th, 2007

LinkedIn

LinkedIn has launched a redesign and a developer platform. The redesign includes its fair share of rounded corners, but they seem to have laid off the gradients. Good for them!

LinkedIn Home Page

It is a very clean and crisp new look. I especially like the new menu, it’s very simple and kind of beautiful.

LinkedIn Menu

In addition to a developer platform (a link to which I can’t see) there are also a Facebook style news feed (which has been on my LinkedIn page for a few weeks now), and some kind of Articles section.

New LinkedIn Article Section

Interesting how they’ve tied me into the Ask.com network, even though I never had to validate my network via an email like I had to with Facebook. Maybe they figure it out from my contacts? Or maybe you can just change your info and it let’s you be a part of a network even though you don’t work for the company? Not really sure.

I wonder if this module section is where you add custom made applications:

LinkedIn Module
LinkedIn Module Info

Well done LinkedIn! I probably spend more time on LinkedIn than any other social networking site. It just seems to be more relevant. I really have taken an effort to find people I used to work with, and I’ve never tried to connect people actively on MySpace or Facebook. I’m interested in what my past co-workers have been up to. There’s also a real value in staying networked, you never know where you might get your next opportunity. Also I’ve received notifications from recruiters (not third party) about positions. (No thanks by the way I love working at Bloglines and Ask.com). But I see very real value in LinkedIn that I don’t really see in Facebook. I can connect to friends via email and blogs and what not and a bunch of meaningless (but fun) widgets made by developers, I don’t need a Facebook. But LinkedIn offers so much more, including a pretext to stay connected with past colleagues.

I’d really like to see more about this new developer platform. I think its exciting and I wouldn’t mind making a ‘lil something for it.

Read More:
LinkedIn Blog: Announcing LinkedIn News, Redesigned Homepage & more
LinkedIn Blog: LinkedIn’s Intelligent Application Platform
Venture Beat: LinkedIn launches platform — a better business social network
TechCrunch: LinkedIn API and New Homepage Drawing Near

Is Maureen Dowd Talking to Herself?

Sunday, December 9th, 2007

The New York Times

Of course she isn’t, however, sometimes it seems that way. You see I wish I could leave comments on online column posts of hers like this one (probably requires registration). I think a lot of us are reading blogs so often, you must agree that it seems strange to go from a blog to a news site based on print that doesn’t allow comments. The New York Times has excellent blogs that do allow comments, but why haven’t they enabled them for other articles? Why can’t I comment on a news article? It all seems so dated. It seems especially bizaare when you come to an article like Dowd’s and it seems like she’s just talking to some kind of invisible audience. Of course she’s widely read, but still the indirectness is…kind of creepy?

While I think The New York Times is one of the few old media companies doing things that ensure their survival, in many ways they’re still having problems. It is time for them to treat the paper product as an ancillary and not the website (even if for now the former makes most of the money).