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Archive for August, 2005

Pingoat & Other August 12 discoveries

12 Aug 2005

So here’s some things to look at, stuff that dropped in the inbox today and things I read every here and there. Best find of the day is without any doubt pingoat, which pings 50 services flawlessly with the newest update of your blog. I’ve been looking for a thing like this for ages, and finally, I think I got what I need. I’ve also listed the things I’ve posted over at Nathan’s to help him catch up with ‘news’ and ‘google’ in general. Enjoy reading.

Steve Rubel posts If Bloggers Had Been Around Throughout History by Mena Trott.

Philipp has found a cool comic strip generator.

Check out the interview with Tim Berners-Lee on the BBC.

Dana points to Mozilla Foundation who’s about to make RSS usable by mortals and n00bs.

Chicago Tribune says : Blogger’s burdens may not pay off. – And they’re right.
Don’t do it just because everyone else is. Do it because you have an objective in mind,” said Mohan Sawhney, – with figures of Forbes that are pretty negative for corporate blogs.

Engadget wonders on how to improve GMail.

Pingoat pings 50 services with your blogs url. I’ve tested it, all 50 are pinged. Great service !

Pingoat Logo

“[...] Pingoat just entered Phase 2 ! Checkout [the goatlog] for info.”

Some posting I did over at the [BlogNewsChannel], fyi. Some interesting links.

 
 

The Mobile Market

11 Aug 2005

I’m going to Rubelize the blog for the next twenty days and turn it a little into a linkblog. That’s because I’m prepping myself for some exams that are starting the 17th and I’ve got to study full time to extend my sway over interactive marketing. I’ll try to situate the link a bit, and then send you on your way to find out all about it. There’s just not enough time to write full posts about every single link.

For August 11th :

Mobile Maketing is about to explode, everybody knows that. Here’s some things that illustrate this point entirely.

* HBO & Cingular are about to bring TV to your mobile.
* Mobile Gambling has yet to launch, but it’s coming to a phone near you !
* Australian IT says Asia is going to drive Mobile Gambling.
* Digital Lifestyle says Mobile Gambling is to reach $ 7.6 billion by 2010
* The Mobile Gambling Summit for Asia is coming on October 19th-20th
* Ringtonia offers some insights in Mobile Music Marketing.
* The quarterly digital music study : Ringtone downloading jumps fourfold in past year

Movil is a starting community that focuses on SMS & MMS. Users can set up small communities for their friends and create forums for shared interests. You can send SMS messages through the interface by means of tokens. You get some for free.
When you’re registered, a code will be sent to your mobile. You need the code to enter the world of movil.
The project is beta. – [Join in, try, suggest things, help it succeed].
There’s a blog, it just started. [Right here], I’m helping it grow a little by posting stuff every once in a while. I’ll try to keep that up.

Try to list your blog in the [IndustryBlogs] directory. I’ve listed mine, and some readers have done so too already. Join the pool and send through traffic. Very easy.

Mike from [TechDirt looks a little deeper on the 'spam king issue'] and thinks the current lawsuits and punishments are far from sufficient to discourage the preachers of viagra etc.
He’s right. I’d love to win AOL’s confiscated Hummer or the golden bars though.

"A new survey conducted by Intrado, Switzerland’s University of St. Gallen, and the International Telecommunicaton Union found that over 80% of all European cellphone users reported receiving at least one SMS spam last year (in the US it’s estimated to be below 10%). More on [Engadget]

Then there’s the question of Adam Curry’s millions. I’ve read the story on a few newsblogs, and I couldn’t help wondering why someone would need app. 9 million dollars to set up a podcasting company. He’s definitely seen the light, but that’s way too much cash for starters, and I think it’s overrated. This will only tempt people over at the Podshow to let things hang loose. I wasn’t really sure of this, and I was wondering if it was just me. It’s not. You should read [TechDirt] about the issue.
This is a dangerous precedent.

A funny remark chez TechDirt : Defining Your Own Market, And Still Doing Poorly

Widnex, a mobile contents provider is launching HappyGirl SDiary, offering useful information related to women’s menstruation and biological cycle in cooperation with KTF and Whisper, a globally renowned sanitary napkin brand. [via Textually]
Well, it was about time there was an initiative like this, sizemade for (Asian only for now) teens who need to be informed. I see a market in Europe for public services like this via mobile phones, virtually empty at the time, but the example has been set. Fact is, if you want to reach out to teens, you just got to go mobile.

The href="http://europa.eu.int/index_en.htm">European Union will be discussing the idea of opening up its broadband wireless spectrum to other technologies besides 3G, which has pretty much ruled the roost for years.
Read more on [The Wireless Weblog]

Mobile Search So Far :

More items in [Engadget's comments] via [Textually]

 

Pic 2 Vid – a 3 Step Rendering Tool

09 Aug 2005

Silver Screen Tele-Reality released a beta of pic2vid on the 27th last month. Nothing big you’d think, but it’s worth mentioning. You upload a few pictures, and the images become an animated sequence. A movie. Worth a try.

The Drag-N-Drop Java Uploader module allows you to drag one picture, multiple pictures, or whole folders from your Windows Explorer. You can even drag pictures directly from another web site. Pretty nifty, I must say. Don’t forget to agree to the terms, every time you start a session. (it doesn’t ask it twice or more if you upload pics separately)

pi2vid

After uploading the pics, you can manage them very easily in the library, dragging them in the right order to appear in the film. In fact, what you are making will turn out to look like an MSN Spaces photo album. You can chose from six styles of transition for the images to be rendered.The basic horizontal, vertical, a fade, clockwise etc. Then you can modify the speed of the animation. Also comes in handy. I tried to modify my movie and get the pics to load through a fade, but it kept switching it back to horizontal. Probably a small bug?

After the images have been set chronologically you can type in a text that then becomes transformed to a spoken version. Very fluently a male or female voice then ‘narrates’ what you have entered in the box.

You can use the workbench to send Pic2VID-Mail; get the HTML code to embed the video in your webpage, blogs, or newsletter; get the link to your video; or download the video.

Very easy, very fast service. [visit my workbench at pic2vid] [join] or visit [pic2vid]

I also noticed that when you change the audio file, the text isn’t republished to match the new audio. Also a small bug, I presume. But hey, it’s a beta, and it’s working great so far ! I took advantage of that to try out the emotions of the speech-rendering-bot. ;)

via [Textually]

 
 

Nathan’s Screwed

09 Aug 2005

Talking about bad luck, have you been reading InsideGoogle lately? Indeed. Me neither. Nathan’s host is having an amateuristic period, probably because some job student’s taken over things while the staff is on vacation or something, I don’t know. Anyway, he’s missing tons of new Google things, and I’ll talk about at least two of them. Google RSS and the story of a GoogleMessenger.

Randy from R|Mail lists up the GoogleNews RSS Feeds on the KBCafe. [ Link ]
[Randy, also : Yeah.]

Links to Feeds:
Top News RSS | Atom
World RSS | Atom
US RSS | Atom
Business RSS | Atom
Sci/Tech RSS | Atom
Health RSS | Atom
Sports RSS | Atom
Entertainment RSS | Atom
“Lemurs” RSS | Atom

Go to [Google's About]

Randy also points to a good thing to wonder about :

Can you resolve this?
  1. Google: We invite you to make noncommercial use of Google’s RSS and Atom feeds on your website subject to these terms.
  2. http://www.google.com/ig makes commercial use of everybody’s RSS.

Next : Meetroduction and the rumors.

Mike from TechDirt delivered [a story] where he wondered if Google was buying another Instant Messaging/Social Networking App.

[...] “They’re rumored to be announcing the purchase of Meetroduction, a combined IM/social networking offering that tries to combine instant messaging with the ability to find someone who’s physically near you. There are a number of small companies who have been working on something similar (and they’re probably not happy right now). This isn’t a separate instant messaging product, but one that plugs into existing IM offerings which might make a lot of sense for Google,”

… and then a little (anonymous) bird flopped in my mailbox and whispered that the people over at Meetroduction have already dropped this rumor more than once and sent it out to many people. Quoting my source who repeatedly informed about the ‘realness’ of this message at Meetroduction but never got an anwser : ‘That either means that Google told Meetroduction to float the rumour or Meetroduction’s playing a dirty game to generate some sort of PR.‘ … because over at Meetroduction, everything remains silent…

 

e-Qaeda, Terror Online

08 Aug 2005

In the snow-draped mountains near Jalalabad in November 2001, as the Taliban collapsed and al Qaeda lost its Afghan sanctuary, Osama bin Laden biographer Hamid Mir watched ‘every second al Qaeda member carrying a laptop computer along with a Kalashnikov’ as they prepared to scatter into hiding and exile. On the screens were photographs of Sept. 11 hijacker Mohamed Atta.

Nearly four years later, al Qaeda has become the first guerrilla movement in history to migrate from physical space to cyberspace. With laptops and DVDs, in secret hideouts and at neighborhood Internet cafes, young code-writing jihadists have sought to replicate the training, communication, planning and preaching facilities they lost in Afghanistan with countless new locations on the Internet.

Al Qaeda suicide bombers and ambush units in Iraq routinely depend on the Web for training and tactical support, relying on the Internet’s anonymity and flexibility to operate with near impunity in cyberspace. In Qatar, Egypt and Europe, cells affiliated with al Qaeda that have recently carried out or seriously planned bombings have relied heavily on the Internet.

Read the full story by Steve Coll and Susan B. Glasser on the [WashingtonPost]

via [TriangleJuice]

 
 

Internet 3.0, WiFi and Vendi’s Dealio

08 Aug 2005

I’m really into numbers and comparing things. Really. I also like to wonder about how things are going to be in the future. Or soon. Depends on how you look at it, I guess. Just recently I heard about internet 1.0 being behind us, and internet 2.0 being here. I thought : ‘hey that’s cool, they just upgraded internet.’ A few days later, I read a post that said everybody was talking about 2.0, but in fact there’s already a 3.0 version. So I was wondering what this was about. And then I started to think about how it could become. Then I thought it’d be funny to mix some news items with these future thoughts so I took two stories and started to ‘be creative’ with them.

Let’s start from the beginning. The 1.0 version of internet. To my knowledge, the protocol for this version has been [documented by the w3c] in the February 15th, 2005 recommendation : “Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Fundamentals”. I don’t think it’s wrong to say that internet 1.0 is the web as it used to be. Internet-only. The only way to collect data was by means of a personal computer, later on shrunken to a laptop or desktop computer. The way the data was encrypted was more or less conform a coding language. (HTML, JS, PHP,ASP,…) Internet 1.0 still exists, and will stay alive, because apparently internet upgrades are sort of like Microsoft’s upgrades: in the end it covers it all. It just takes some upgrades. But the old ones still count. There’s no ‘override’.

Sort of related : the [Web 1.0 summit on Flickr] + [HTML 2.0 (September 22nd,1995)]

Last year in October there was a conference about Internet 2.0 or Web 2.0, which is seen as the birth of “The Web as Platform,” and from then on people started exploring how the Web has developed into a robust platform for innovation across many media and devices – from mobile to television, telephone to search. The conference has its second edition this year. [Tune in] for more info.

Through [IrishEyes] I read about a [Tim Bray] who says 2.0 is just a ‘faux meme’ and a ‘vacuous marketing hype’ and that actually, some are already on the 3.0 edition. Tim O’Reilly replies to him at [O'Reilly Radar], defending the 2.0 whole idea :

“While being completely right in the details (we are quite arguably on 3.0 or even 8.0 if we’re thinking about the internet compared to other software versioning), Tim is completely wrong about the big picture. Memes are almost always “marketing hype” — bumper stickers is a better way to say it — but they tend to catch on only if they capture some bit of the zeitgeist. The reason that the term “Web 2.0″ has been bandied about so much since Dale Dougherty came up with it a year and a half ago in a conference planning session (leading to our Web 2.0 Conference) is because it does capture the widespread sense that there’s something qualitatively different about today’s web.”

“[...] Web 2.0 is the era when people have come to realize that it’s not the software that enables the web that matters so much as the services that are delivered over the web.

So I’m glad we’ve sorted this out. The count ends at 2.0, officially – for now.

I’m going to cut some various news items and base a ‘web 3.0 theory’ on them, just for fun.

From Andrew Kantor from the USA TODAY, through [Yahoo!News] :

[...]“This replaces the current method, in which you hook ye olde PowerBook to a cell phone and dial up a modem in the newsroom.

What’s funny is that, as clunky as the old system was, it let you file from any spot that had cell phone service. Sure, the connection was slow and the procedure awkward, but it worked. The new Windows/Wi-Fi system is a lot slicker and faster, but because Wi-Fi only has a range of about 300 feet, you need to find a hotspot to file. “[...]

***
Kids will get Wi-Fi hotspot scanners as a present for their 6th birtday, or for the first day at school. They will be tagged by hobby, diaper-size or loudness to then become indexed by GoogleSchoolSearch and IntelliRanked on correct answers throughout the educational learning process.

Students will be urged to return to their GeoLocation immediately or else they will have to
video-conference the principal through the interactive blackboard in their classroom.
Penalties will be under the form of the inplant of a small chip that acts as a device
disruptor, thus blocking all electronical stuff to work when they touch it. That way, they can’t enjoy their portable gadgets anymore. The chip disolves in the human body, after a certain time. (let’s say: three days).

Houses will be designed and decorated with [WiFi blocking wallpaper]. Then there’s things like [Spyguard], a transparent film that blocks any and all WiFi signals from leaking out through your windows. People that don’t do it will be sued for [Electronic Harassement], and people will crave for [SignalJammers] to get some ‘real’ clean air.
***

From Antone Gonsalves at TechWeb, through [Yahoo!News] :

[...] “Once installed, the application, which is launched through an icon embedded in the browser, lets users search for product prices from multiple retailers. If a shopper is looking for a product on a site, then the toolbar will automatically ask if the person wants to see listings from other vendors.” [...] “With Dealio, you won’t have to change your normal shopping behavior. Just shop at your favorite Web sites as usual. When you view a product page, Dealio will automatically search stores to find you the lowest price for the exact product.” [...]

***
Vendio’s [Dealio] Toolbar is something, when applied to mobile search, that could affect many consumers and their buying patterns. Imaging you’re standing in a store, and see something you like. You enter it in your Google Mobile Search and have a DealioMobile installed (yet to be invented). Based on your GeoLocation Google will return sponsored stores in the hood at walking distance – customly set by user ;) – that offer the exact same item, but cheaper. Bing!

A little while ago, I posted on [InsideGoogle] a story about [The GPS Shopping List] which in fact is PlaceMail, by Pam Ludford. Suppose you could combine PlaceMail with the Dealio tool and [GoogleMobile]. That would look like this : Mom needs milk, so inserts the alert in the network. Then PlaceMail googles the item (milk, in this case) locally and returns stores that are then compared with a Dealio-alike tool. The first one in the family that passes a store that came from the results gets an alert when within a mile’s range of the address. Cheap shopping guaranteed. (this is under the hypothetical hypothesis that Google has indexed the contents of all stores in all cities and is able to return a page with prices and addressess for a local search for ‘milk’ that can be compared with other stores in that neighbourhood.)

[Dan Gillmor's already on the 3.0], so he says. Who’s informing O’Reilly? :)

 

419 – Behind the Scenes

08 Aug 2005

Finally some news from Nigeria that doesn’t start with a ‘dear friend’ or ‘congratulations’ ! Yes, it seems the Nigerian government itself is slowly turning in the right direction to combat an icky soar of the internet. The 419-scammers are battered on their homegrounds. At last. Still I’ve always been wondering what the day of such a scammer looked like. Heheh. I could picture the dusty streets with some crooked international telephone stores and internet cafes already. Some funky coloured folks sitting in chairs outside on the curb, chatting… bragging about their latest theme. And every time the outlook says ‘ding’, they race for the-recuperated-pc-formerly-known-as-western.

From [Yahoo!News]:

“Festac Town is where communication specialists operating underground sell foreign telephone lines over which a scammer can purport to be calling from any city in the world. Here lurk master forgers and purveyors of such software as “e-mail extractors,” which can harvest e-mail addresses by the million. Now, however, a 3-year-old crackdown is yielding results, Nigerian authorities say.”

“In the con that Internet users are probably most familiar with, the e-mailer poses as a corrupt official looking for help in smuggling a fortune to a foreign bank account. E-mail or fax recipients are told that if they provide their banking and personal details and deposit certain sums of money, they’ll get a cut of the loot.”

From the life of a scammer :

Kele B., who won’t give his surname, says he couldn’t find work after finishing high school in 2000 in the southeastern city of Owerri, so he drifted with friends to Lagos, where he tried his hand at boxing.

Then he discovered the Web.

Now he spends his mornings in Internet cafes on secondhand computers with aged screens, waiting “to see if my trap caught something,” he says.

Elekwa, a chubby-faced 28-year-old who also keeps his surname to himself, shows up in Festac Town driving a Lexus and telling how he was jobless for two years despite having a diploma in computer science.

His break came four years ago when the chief of a fraud gang saw him solve what seemed like “a complex computer problem” at a business center in the southeastern city of Umuahia and lured him to Lagos.

He won’t talk about his scams, only about their fruits: “Now I have three cars, I have two houses and I’m not looking for a job anymore.”

Read the entire story on [Yahoo!News] and the related entries on Coolz0r :

[Mikhail Khodorkovski Needs Me] & [419 Scam, A Bridge Too Far]

 
 

Guess The Movie, by Stella Artois

08 Aug 2005

Ed Morris, executive creative director of Lowe, the agency which created the adverts, said: “A promotion is quite a hard sell, so we wanted to aim for something big. We started out with one film reference – Superman in a phone box. Then the idea took shape and went to a grander scale. The next stage was: “What if we put 20 film references in one landscape?” – The result is one great campaign, spread over three ads. I’ll spotlight one, and link the two others.

Images nicked from AdLand. Click ad to see other bigger ad.

StellaBeach.

1. Broken Bike Lock – The Bicycle Thief
2. A Grand Piano On The Beach – The Piano
3. Hot Air Bags With Names On – The Beach
4. Helicopters – Apocalypse Now
5. Scuba Divers – Open Water
6. Shark Fin – Jaws
7. Ursula Andress – Dr No
8. Broken Deck Chairs – Quadrophenia
9. Red Table And Chair On The Beach – Shirley Valentine
10. Woman In A Black At The End Of The Breakwater – The French Lieutenant’s Woman
11. Fat Sunbather Wearing Yellow Trunks – Sexy Beast
12. Runners In Old-Fashioned Sports Kit – Chariots Of Fire
13. ‘White Star’ Piece Of Broken Wood Washed Up – Titanic
14. ‘Missing’ Pictures On The Information Sign – The Lost Boys
15. Kestrel On Railings – Kes
16. Beach Defenses – Saving Private Ryan
17. Broken Pier End – Godzilla
18. Comet – Deep Impact
19. Bhaji In The Sand – Bhaji On The Beach
20. Submarine – The Hunt For Red October

From AdLand :

“Not only has there been chatter around the web trying to solve these ads, but The Belfast Telegraph also reports “advertising executives at Stella Artois have been fielding calls from moviegoers and motorists trying to connect the iconic cars with legendary movies in their recent billboard campaign”.”

Check out the entire campaign on [AdLand] and try for yourself if you can solve the remaining two big ads.

AdRefs, by AdLand :

Creative Credits:
Client: Interbrew UK
Creative agency: Lowe London
Creative Director: Ed Morris
Copywriter: Diccon Driver
Art director: Alan Wilson
Planner: Jennifer Wirth
Media agency: Starcom Motive
Photographer: Andy Glass
Typography: Dave Wakefield