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Archive for the ‘Corporate News’ Category

If you Think This Blog Moves Slow

19 Oct 2005

… then you might want to know I’m also posting stuff on other places, which leaves me not that much time to post other interesting things here, since I have issues in real life that kind of need some devoted attention. Tomorrow I’m going to interview the guy who reads my blog but doesn’t know the url. A common disease with people that work their ass off all the time. :)

That interview needs to last at least 45 minutes, and I have to video-capture it and put it on dvd to hand it in with my teacher of qualitative market research. I have to prepare that a little. School, isn’t it just great :)

Okay so what have I been posting around every here and there?

Nathan’s off for a few days again, so I’m taking over the BlogNewsChannel’s main blogs.

the Google section :

* Blogspot Under Fire
* Measure Map, Coming Soon To A Blog Near You
* ProgrammableWeb & Movil
* Yo, Google, Pass Me The Milk
* Yahoo Acquires WhereOnEarth
* What Is It ?
* GMail’s Spam Filter On Vacation ?
* Secret AdSense API
* MS AdCenter Live (cross-posted on Microsoft)
* Pimp My GMail

the Microsoft section :

* RealNetworks Goes Shopping With Microsoft’s Cash

Over at Movil, our blog on mobile & wireless technology :

* ShoZu Your Pictures To Flickr
* In Comes 4G (3G’s for losers)

Want to know what I’ve posted there in the past? Here’s a Google Shortcut :

for google.blognewschannel.com & for microsoft.blognewschannel.com
and last but not least for the movil blog.

 

Facts, Figures & A Bunch of Links

16 Oct 2005

It seems the more things you have to do in real life, the less time you have to post about it. That too goes for reading an RSS reader, or cleaning out your inbox. I’m going to summarize the interesting things I read recently and point out some places that have good stuff going on.

Philipp thinks computer keyboards can also be used as terrorist’s tool because “By entering letters into this input device, digital messages can be created to speed up communication between different terrorist organisations. Among other things, this may be used to discuss potential targets.” Too funny ! Also check what he writes about the post-it notes! Really :)

[SearchEngineWatch] reports on 2 reports that researched how we search. :)
“40 % of those conducting online research go to search engines first. Still, 57 % use retailer Web sites to research products before making a decision.
The study also found that the same number of people — one-third — search by brand as much they do by general category of product and/or service. Men use search engines more when researching a product: 69 % compared to 65 % of women.” – [Read more]

Google now lets you submit Flash-based advertisement for your Google AdWords campaigns. via [BestingAdwords]>[InsideAdwords]

Yahoo is testing a new approach to delivering news search results, combining traditional media sources with “citizen journalism” from blogs and images from its Flickr photo sharing site.” So now News, Blogs & Flickr are all scanned for results when you enter a query. via [SearchEngineWatch] -
[Submit Your RSS Feed to Yahoo] and get included.

The new Bluetooth-enabled Apple Remote, a new Mac user interface for navigating your media collection called Front Row & the New iMac G5.

Google has silently added a Bookmarks feature to My Search History, enabling you to quickly tag and comment any web page you’ve visited. [InsideGoogle]

courtesy of the google blogoscoped guy
Just the Noise.

“Best of all, sites in the Spam Google index try to rip you off by being relevant to your search. And isn’t that what Google is all about, relevancy?”
Heheh :) [Check out SpamGoogle] and have a blast ! via [Philipp]

The Netcraft “October 2005 Survey” found 74,409,971 sites, an increase of 2.68 million sites from its September survey. The gain makes 2005 the strongest year ever for Internet growth, with the Web adding 17.5 million sites, easily surpassing the previous annual mark of 16 million during the height of the dot-com boom in 2000. [eMarketer] > [LVB.net]

“Never moon a werewolf” and other funny oneliners on [NetScrap]
“Ever wonder if illiterate people get the full effect of alphabet soup?” and other great quotes by comedians, also on [NetScrap] > [Blogium]

I’m worth : $219,960 says [Nathan], now to make that clear to the bank and investors team so they can balance me out. I could do with some wheels. :)

SorryGottaGo is the perfect alternative to end ANY phone conversation you want to stop. Tired of those telemarketeers calling you? Tired of listening to your mother in law? When you’re looking for a good excuse to end it : [Here's Your Answer] – via [GoogleBlogoscoped]

Pimping the IMDB [InternetMovieDatabase] from Amazon with [SearchEngineWatch] came in very handy for some reviews I was doing.
College Life, Powered by Google. “You spend your life dealing with information. A lot of it is academic, a lot more is personal, it all matters, and you can probably use better tools for handling it effectively.” On this page, Google likes to introduce you to a few of them. via [InsideGoogle]

Blogging Predicted in 1837? A talented, prophetical Russian prince by the name of Vladimir Odoevsky (1803-1869) apparently predicted the internet and described the process of what we call ‘blogging’. [Read]

Ultimate R|Mail : Scott Kingery used R|mail to post his del.icio.us links via FeedBurner onto his blog. Are you using R|Mail ? Let us know how, and tell us what you experience.

 

Paying & Sleeping Around in The Web 2.0

09 Oct 2005

Paying web 2.0 style :

Google Video to Offer Paid Content

Jennifer Feikin, Director of Google Video, was at a We Media panel in which she said that “what has happened in the past 15 years is pretty phenomenal” and user-generated content “really is just the beginning.” The Internet enables new ways of building upon collaboration, and Google Video is part of that. Google Video has until now dealt with free content, but ‘there will be the ability for people to pay for content.” Google “will enable that payment mechanism” and it is “just another step in Google’s effort to try to enable access to more information.” “We’re really trying to facilitate that connection between users and the content owners.”

Produced by Jason Schramm for [AppleWatch] on the [BlogNewsChannel].

Sleeping around web 2.0 style :

go see where I nicked this

Produced by Shelley Powers on [BurningBird] – via [iBLOGthere4iM]

 

Open Source With Yahoo

03 Oct 2005

“For over ten years, Yahoo! has been building some of the Internet’s most popular content and services on an Open Source platform. Yahoo! uses a lot of Open Source Software (OSS) internally including Linux, FreeBSD, Apache, Perl, PHP and MySQL. Jeremy Zawodny says that OSS helps them to “remix” and configure the software to their needs.

OSS has good support from mailing lists and online forums. Commercial support is available from distribution vendors and recently commercial support is available from independent service vendors such as spikesource. OSS software has good documentation as well as well commented code which is a great help when reconfiguring and modifying the software to fit Yahoo!’s needs. Also many open source applications are available on a variety of platforms like FreeBSD and Linux.

Yahoo! is trying to become a Web 2.0 company. It recently acquired Konfabulator and Flickr as a part of this plan and OSS helps Yahoo! to move in that direction.”

Jeremy Zawodny is Yahoo’s resident MySQL Geek. He is also the lead author of High Performance MySQL. He has been using MySQL in various capacities at Yahoo! for over four years and has written numerous articles for Linux Magazine and has been speaking about MySQL at conferences since 2000.”

Resources:

[Tune in at ITConversations] – [Donate & Help Keep ITC Alive]

 

Update From The Land Of Search

03 Oct 2005

Google is testing Advertise on this site links on certain pages using Google AdSense. Clicking on the link (which is always positioned next to the actual AdSense ads) will take you to a special Google AdWords page reading Advertise on example.com (example.com being the domain the AdSense ad appeared on). – Read more on [GoogleBlogoscoped] & [SearchEngineWatch]

According to a Media Daily News article: Feedster to Release New RSS Ad Product, placing advertising in Feedster RSS feeds will become even easier in the next few weeks when the RSS search tool launches a new, “self-service” program (aka AdSense like) as compared to the RSS ad program Feedster currently provides. – [SearchEngineWatch]

Welcome to the Google Hacking Database (GHDB)! We call them ‘googledorks’: An inept or foolish person as revealed by Google. Whatever you call these fools, you’ve found the center of the Google Hacking Universe!

Here are some search syntax basics and advanced tricks for Google.com for 2005.

Google will soon be offering enhanced access to its AdWords API, along with membership in a newly formed AdWords Developer Council, to commercial developers who have pushed up against the limits of the existing program.

Google has provided free access to its AdWords API since January. It’s most often used by AdWords customers who handle multiple accounts, such as agencies and search marketing firms. API access allows developers to extend AdWords functionality to do things such as automatically generating keywords, ad text or custom reports, or integrate with other databases, such as inventory control systems. – Read more on [SearchEngineWatch]

MSN Shopping adds Search Refinements for hundreds of product categories.

Yahoo Site Explorer is a place to see which pages Yahoo has indexed. After clicking “Explore URL” you’ll find the number of pages found in the Yahoo Index and also the number of inlinks. You can sort pages by “depth,” submit URLs, and quickly export the results to CSV format. Site Explorer is also supported via an API. – via [SearchEngineRoundtable]

 

Good Things, Bad things & A Ticket To The Sun

09 Sep 2005

This morning I went to school to find out about the results of the ten exams I’ve been doing between the 17th of august and the 1st of september. I made it ! I’m going to the next and final year of my studies of interactive marketing. Nothing to redo, only new stuff to come. I’ve swept it off with a overall total of 65%. And yes. I could’ve done better I know. I’d like to thank all the teachers that believed in me during the deliberation. So : thanx, really appreciate it and I’ll try to improve myself next year (too).

This also means my school related temp job at i-merge can kick off for real now. No more maybies (?) no more buts. Time to build up something.

On another note : I crashed my mom’s car a bit today. It started drifting when I was making a U-turn and it doesn’t have the ABS thing to control the breaks automatically. Pumping didn’t work. It happened so fast, yet so slow. I was doing 10 miles and hour or something, but there was a construction thing going on right around the corner and the street was filled with very fine white sand. The tires just lost their grip and the car just ’skated’ sideways. Man ! That’s gonna cost me. The hood, the bumper and the radiator frame were dented, one of the lights is broken. It still works though, but it looks crappy. I felt really ridiculous. The little pole I bumped into didn’t have the slightest scratch on it and the people that were drinking on a terrace nearby said : ‘We haven’t seen anything, just drive along ! Nothing’s broken, we’ll shut up.’ But I didn’t trust them for a penny, so I called the cops myself. I don’t want to come home from Mallorca with some cops looking for me because I fled the scene of an accident. Even if no one’s hurt, you still should report it. It’s common sense.

So my mom wasn’t too pleased when I told her what happened. It’s going to cost me a few hundred Euros I think, but we’ll see. Maybe we can find a way through the insurance or something. I don’t know. I’ll let my dad figure that out. That’s one of the things he’s very good at : finding fitting solutions. He’ll come up with something. I have good faith in that.
Despite the small accident, both my parents were very happy I made it to the third year, and since it’s the first time I had an accident in the few years I’m driving the car, they’re not too pissed off at me. Thank God for that. Otherwise the vacation-mood would have melted away in the sun I ‘m heading for.

In four hours my plane takes off to Mallorca. I’m going to tune out for a fat week :)
Thanx a lot for tuning in. If you’re bored and looking for videos to see, check out the YouTube post I made recently and go have a blast.

 

Dell Improved

08 Sep 2005

A close friend of mine just recently decided to order a Dell laptop. Since he’s not into blogging and ‘the innernet’ he had never heard of the story of Jeff Jarvis and his encounters with this rather corporate thinking company. He paid for the portable box of fun using his Visa, and thus 1200 Euros were substracted from his account with the debit card (the word credit card is so optimistic: to credit is ‘adding money’ since the card is used for spending, I think debit card is more appropriate). Dell promised him the laptop would arrive the sixth of september, the foreseen time, and that UPS would deliver the goods. So far so good.

Yesterday (the 7th) he still didn’t receive the laptop, so he checked the status of the goods with the live tracking system UPS has on their site. There it stated the laptop had been dropped off in Brussels (airport) and got signed for on delivery – being september 6th, 2.05 PM CET in Lier, our very quiet home town. Very strange. Since he wasn’t home at that time, he couldn’t possibly have signed for the package, so he called UPS. Overthere they said ‘Mister x (real name on argumented request), you have signed for the laptop and we have delivered it so to us there is no problem. X started arguing and explaining he received nada, and he’d love this to be cleared out immediately. UPS then said they’d check it out and promised they’d get back to him.

Then he went one floor down, to check with the other guy living in the block (there’s three appartments) but he denied having heard or seen anything. Same story on the ground floor. X went back to his appartment, feeling ripped off – as you could imagine. Ten minutes later, he heard his neighbour leave his flat, only to have him show up at his door another ten minutes later, carrying a broken-sealed box from Dell, stating he had found it in the basement. All hell broke loose. Some shouting commenced… you know how that goes.

X went to the cops, but they said he didn’t have the evidence to cuff the bast*rd living on floor 1, and that there was no case. As x left the police department he saw his neighbour standing at the corner of the street. Maybe to verify X would really go to the cops to file a complaint? Definitely not a coincidence, that’s for sure. Since the box stated you shouldn’t sign for the package when the seal is broken, he called Dell and explained the situation.

Here’s where Dell kicks in : Over at Dell’s they immediately jumped on the case, and an inspector would come and visit X to check the situation and take the laptop with him. Without even waiting for the result of this case, Dell promised him to ship another laptop right away and that a personal follow-up by an account manager would swiftly follow to clear out this matter. Dell stated this kind of things are very important to them, and that they would solve this. The laptop is supposed to be on his way at this time.

X called me up to explain the situation and I suggested I’d come over to check the laptop for any evidence at all, since the guy living under him had it already for a day. When I arrived, X’s father was there (I think the laptop was for him, I don’t know that) and as we were discussing the matter on the curb (we coincidentally met, arriving at the same time) I saw the whining liar from floor one peeking through a gap of an opened window. So he was listening in. Tssss. He has no life. We started laughing real loud, looking up and letting him know he was a very bad spy. He stepped back and closed the window a bit more. What a fag.

People who do this incredibly stupid stuff usually are so stupid they’d never wipe out their traces, let alone know how to do that. I plugged in the laptop and went looking for documents or files. As expected no files where ‘physically’ present so there was no real evidence the cops could use. Then I thought about the temp folder. Windows keeps ‘a copy’ of everything you open, so there should’ve been some traces of activity there… and bingo !!! He’d been browsing through pictures on the DVD-writer (comes along with the Dell) and yesyesyes there were pictures of him and his ugly girlfriend. Now THAT is stupid.

Nailed !
– X will go to the cops later on today to show them what we’ve discovered. UPS is currently running an investigation within the company, interviewing the delivery boy (girl?) that dropped off the laptop and getting a description on the person that signed for the goods.
Dell is on the case too, with this personal inspector/account manager who will take care of this matter. I think the tenant of floor 1 is busted big time ! Don’t you?

So. What are we going to sue him for?

  • Fraude with official documents and signatures
  • Impersonating X
  • Deceiving UPS, Dell and X
  • Theft from X, UPS and Dell
  • Being a jerk

Why this post? Dell has received a lot of negative publicity lately. Initiated by Jeff Jarvis the stream of comments kept on coming, silencing the words of positive writers, pushing those positive things way back in the result pages of any search engine. Well it had its consequences and Dell reacted and – by the look and feel of it – also changed a lot in the way they deal with customers. Even if it’s in a tiny dot called Belgium. I just wanted to mention it, because I was quite surprised to hear they’ve assigned a personal inspector/case handler for X and directly offered him to send a new laptop saying ‘it speaks for itself we’ll take back the laptop and send you a new one. You’re entitled to a product that comes straight from our company, only this way we can provide you with a decent service. A new one will be sent to you right away and we’ll investigate this matter personally.‘ I’m not going to say this is all because of Jarvis, but I’m pretty sure it has a lot to do with it. I’ve been in touch with Dell a few times myself for people I know that ran into a little this or that, mostly helpdesk stuff. A few times I felt being played with and sensed some disrespect. I think those days are over.

Of course X can’t file a complaint for UPS or Dell, but I’m pretty sure they’ll go for the jackass too. I never had a Dell myself. I used to refer people to Jeff’s story when they thought of becoming a Dell-patient (as I called them) – but I think I’m going to rethink this. This service is improved, better and damn good.

 

Google’s RSS Reader in Beta

08 Sep 2005

Google Reader is a web-based feed reader that’s supposed to make it easy to find and subscribe to online feeds. With the Reader, users are supposed to be able to organize and stay current with the ever-increasing amount of web information they consume every day.

Reader Reviewer’s Guide (PDF – 1.3MB)

I think it’s far too early to have a decent review, because the beta is too fresh. But I’ll give it my first impression and tell you what I encountered. Adding feeds is easy, but if I add mine it says all of my entries are posted on October 7th. I have no entries for that day. Small bug.
The other feeds I entered looked fine.

Then I wanted to search through the added feeds for some topics, but that doesn’t seem to be possible yet. I also noticed something I know from Gmail, which is the ability to label things, but that seems I bit unneeded. I’m not going to use that, although possibly somebody else will think it’s brilliant. I haven’t got time to label everything I read.

I don’t use an online feedreader like Pluck or Bloglines or NewsGator Online, but Randy predicts that once Google has optimized this tool (umm how long is an average beta at Google?) it could definitely mean the end of this ‘other’ online readers.

Sorting by relevance or date returns exact the same thing. Maybe I should try adding other feeds to see what this actually does, but I just don’t want to.

I can star entries, but I don’t know why I should do that. (same for the labels)

It looks Googly, and that’s a good thing, because you sort’o feel ‘at home’. But I don’t think I’ll be using it. I wonder if they will eventually remove entries, or if it’ll be like GMail, and everything ‘cached’ and gathered will remain in the reader. Then I could have like hundreds of starred entries and a load of things I’ll probably never read again. Slick but buggy. They should’ve waited longer before they released this, but the world was begging (bugging) Google for it, so I can understand that given the circumstances or context, they needed to show us they were actually busy creating this. I hope the release of the beta doesn’t mean they’ll put the development on hold.

Philipp, over at [GoogleBlogoscoped] has a nice ‘how to use this tool’ tutorial and says :

“The look-and-feel of Google Reader is similar to Gmail and Google Groups 2. You can add a star to topics. There are keyboard short-cuts (“j” for next, “k” for previous, “r” for refresh, to name a few). Categorization is implemented via labels, not folders. There are soft shades of blue and green, and round corners. Related ads aren’t included yet, but may certainly follow. There is a lot of DHTML, and use of Ajax/XMLHTTP. Ajax allows to update page content without a full server round-trip. Of course, this is intended to speed up things, none of which can be seen at the moment as the server is nearly down.”

He also posted a screenshot of a podcast-feed and that shows a cool embedded player.
” Google Reader supports RSS with media enclosures (like MP3s, or video formats).”

see where i stole this.
[image nicked from googleblogoscoped]

Philipp is quite optimistic about this. Nathan on the other hand encountered a totally Boogle experience. He’s an Opera user and the reader’s not compatible, for starters.
Other remarks at [InsideGoogle] :

“I’m thinking Google tried to reinvent the wheel, and what it wound up with was a square. Revolutionary, maybe. But squares don’t roll. I don’t like this form factor. It is a far cry from the ease of Bloglines. If Bloglines adopted this interface, I’d switch. Maybe new users will like it, but I can’t.”

Read it at [GooglePressCenter] – pdf link from [GPC Reviewer's Guides]

Read what [SearchEngineWatch] said about this.