Category: Internet

Internet developments and advancements

  • Compare and contrast stats

    I was lucky enough to get in on Google Analytics before it shut everyone else out (can you call yourself lucky?), but anyway, I’ve been tracking my blog with both Analytics and StatCounter, as I mentioned yesterday. On yesterday’s performance alone (for an average day so far, keeping in mind that I’m picking yesterday as the stats would be available in Analytics), I noticed almost a 100% difference between the two, with Analytics reporting over twice as many unique hits and total pageviews for the day than StatCounter.

    Anyone else noticing this?

  • Google Video Open For Business

    Its been a couple of days since Google’s keynote speech at this year’s CES but Google Video is up and running (the store part of it). If you hurry now, you can nab yourself a 45 minute episode of Star Trek Deep Space Nine for only $1.99!!!

    Yes, that was sarcasm.

    Still, good to see it up and running! Wired.com is also reporting that users can set their own prices for content that they submit for sale, which could be quite interesting to some Irish organisations currently exploring options for delivering film content online? All this provided of course that the content creator gives 30% of generated revenue to Google itself…

  • Socio-Techno convergence too serious?

    Random blog surfing for the evening brought by to sem | antics where I came across this blog post, Twelve Signs You’re Taking Socio-Techno convergence too serious.

    In the short time I’ve been blogging (ok, I set up in October last but I still feel like I’m new to the whole thing, it takes a while to warm up) I was alarmed to find myself laughing along, because I knew what they were on about. You normally see these type of posts in the case were “you were a kid of the 80s if…” etc.

    Read on though, for tech bloggers it should be fun!

  • Irish Blog Awards kick off

    Let the games begin! Picked up this post today announcing that nominations are now open for the Irish Blog Awards and will remain open for a few weeks. There’s a good number of categories on offer including best blogger, best blog post, best personal blog etc. You can nominate yourself or anyone of your preference (Irish) so why not pop on over to the Irish Blog Awards and see what all the fuss is about!

  • Last chance for history

    Fair enough… I was waffling on about eBay last night but this is an auction that should yield some interest. For those of you who are familiar with the Million Dollar Homepage you’ll find this the last piece of the puzzle, for those of you not, you might want to read up a little bit.

    In brief, the Million Dollar Homepage is owned and operated by UK student Alex Tew, a 21-year-old entrepreneur, who hopes to pay his way through university by selling 1 million pixels of internet ad space for $1 a pixel. Well, he’s sold 990,000 of them and he’s put the final 1,000 up on eBay. At time of writing he was up to around €38,000, a far cry from the 1,000 he would have raised – and there’s still six days left on the auction!

    If you’re up for it, and you’ve got a spare fifty grand then head on over to his auction to check it out….

  • The Magic Of Google

    Just take a moment to look at what makes the great Google tick!

    • More thanfour billion Web pages, each an average of 10KB, all indexed and cached (copied).
    • Up to 2,000 computers in a cluster. With over 30 clusters
    • Over 60,000 computers! Yes 60,000 pc’s.
    • 104 interface languages (how many can you name!).
    • One petabyte of data in a cluster — so much that hard disk error rates of 10 to the power 15 begin to be a real problem if not planned for.
    • Constant transfer rates of 60Gbps. (Gigabites per second)
    • An expectation that sixty machines will fail every day.
    • No complete system failure since February 2000.

    Want to know what makes Google tick? Some pretty interesting stuff, a good read too! Check out the full article I found here tonight….

  • Yahoo nabs Del.Icio.Us?!

    Reading this article on TechCrunch yesterday, it was revealed that del.icio.us (such a handy tool I might add!) is being bought out by Yahoo. Have they beaten Google to the punch or are they simply trying to follow in Google’s footsteps and buy up whatever is good on the internet?

    Is there any need for Yahoo to acquire something like del.icio.us? Could this be the key to serious success for Flickr, since Google were tapping up Riya to be bought? (A previous post of mine).

    From the del.icio.us blog...

    We’re proud to announce that del.icio.us has joined the Yahoo! family. Together we’ll continue to improve how people discover, remember and share on the Internet, with a big emphasis on the power of community. We’re excited to be working with the Yahoo! Search team – they definitely get social systems and their potential to change the web. (We’re also excited to be joining our fraternal twin Flickr!)

  • Blogs 13 – Podcasts 12

    Picked up a press release earlier this morning on the findings of a recent EIAA survey, with some new interesting facts about internet usage in Europe.

    • 17% increase in time spent online across Europe
    • European super internet users revealed with 24% spending over 16 hours a week online
    • France tops Euro league spending 13 hours per week online
    • 29% of Europeans download music at least once a month
    • 10% of Europeans have made telephone calls over the web

    Whats more interesting is the figures relating to blogging and podcasting…

    Blogging is also becoming increasingly popular with 13% regularly contributing to online blogging sites while 12% are downloading podcasts at least once a month. Even very new technologies such as Voice over IP (VoIP) are proving popular with consumers with 10% of Europeans are already using the internet to make telephone calls

    Given that in the EU there are approx 460,270,935 (thats a good guess), that means there are 59,835,221 people (again, approx figure) that blog regularly throughout Europe!

    Where is everyone hiding??? Visit the EIAA website or read the article in full.

  • Google reader… eh?

    Ever heard of Google Reader?

    If not, you’re missing yet another one of Google’s beta releases as an online RSS aggregator. Anyone familiar with using gMail will be at great ease in using it as it carries some of the same functions – starred entries, all the usual search facilities etc.

    Not only that, but they’ve lobbed in keyboard shortcuts, active on the website – pretty quirky function.

    The real benefit for managing your feeds is that you can import them (and export them) from any OPML file (i mentioned OPML in this previous post). Adding a feed it a breeze, click ‘Add Feed’, enter the URL, preview and subscribe – nice and tidy.

    If you’re away from your copy of Firefox or your desktop, its yet another handy tool to have on the road making sure you don’t miss any posts!

  • BitTorrent Says No To Hollywood

    Bram Cohen is saying “NO” to Hollywood. And by “NO” I mean an agreement has been reached between the seven major Hollywood studios and Cohen, the creator of popular P2P utility BitTorrent, to prevent popular Hollywood movies appearing on the Torrent search list.

    The agreement represents the latest effort by the entertainment industry to discourage illegal internet downloads. It also demonstrates Cohen’s sensitivity toward Hollywood’s piracy problems, making him potentially more attractive to studios for future deals related to movie downloads.

    Cohen revealed that back in September his company had raised US$8.75 million in venture funding to develop commercial distribution tools for media companies.

    The BitTorrent technology pioneered by Cohen – used by an estimated 45 million people – assembles digital movies and other computer files from separate bits (hence the name) of data downloaded from other computer users across the internet. Its decentralized nature makes downloading more efficient but also frustrates the entertainment industry’s efforts to find and identify movie pirates.

  • And Writely So

    Word processing, preparing documents etc. was, and is, something you do on your PC, from the comfort of your own computer. You’ve got everything around you, your copy of Word or Works – whatever tickles your fancy.

    This site was brought to my attention this morning, having launched privately back in August of this year. The reason is came to my attention is that they just announced support for the OpenOffice format. I’m big on OpenSource software and all the things ‘it’ can do for the greater good.

    Writely is a web word processor that provides simple and secure document collaboration and publishing on the web using only the browser.

    What exactly does Writely do?

    • Upload Word documents, HTML or text (or create documents from scratch).
    • Use our simple WSIWYG editor to format your documents, spell-check them, etc.
    • Invite others to share your documents (by e-mail address).
    • Edit documents online with whomever you choose.
    • View your documents’ complete revision history and roll back to any version.
    • Publish documents online to the world, or to just who you choose.
    • Download documents to your desktop as Word, HTML or zip.
    • Post your documents to your blog.

    It’s best feature has to be the collaboration factor, which is done in almost realtime. You can share any documents that you like with your friends, you are sent a notice online when someone is editing one of your documents and the changes are reflected every few seconds in front of your eyes.

    While its in beta, its free. There is a 500k limit per document which is pretty good, and you’re allowed up to 2mb per embedded image, outside of the document size.

    Anyway, if you’re interested, it doesn’t hurt to click and visit Writely!

  • Riya : Next Best Thing?

    Google are out shopping again so it seems and rumours are abound that they’ve just purchased Riya, a tech startup in the US specialising in facial recognition software. When one company spends $40,000,000 on another very small company, it has to raise a few eyebrows. It raised mine, and for those of you who don’t know what Riya is, here’s the lowdown.

    I first took an interest in this line of software through a project in Waterford IT last year which involved adding facial profiling to a dating website (getting a match to someone of your tastes based on their facial features as opposed to their own attributes), but this is pretty clever material.

    Our face recognition technology automatically tags people in photos so you can search for just the photo you want. In your album. In your friend’s album. On the web.

    Sounds like magic stuff, certainly gives it a similar sound to Flickr based on the whole tagging element – but here’s where it gets interesting.

    Riya users train the software, which requires a downloadable Windows client, by identifying, or tagging, individuals in their photos.

    As Riya learns who’s in your pictures, it begins to auto-tag the snaps itself, quickly scanning the rest of your photos and identifying each person it recognizes. Riya also uses text recognition to read street signs and other text in photos.

    Not only that, but it can decipher genders, locations (based on street signs), family connections and more.

    Photos can and will be made either public or private. My only worry about this type of service is the information thats available. If Riya recognises other people’s tags and not just your own, then we got ourselves an invasion of privacy to a global level. You wouldn’t need to ask for names any longer, just take someone’s photo, upload it, and *presto* – Riya tells you who they are and if the person next to them in the photo is a relation or not…

    Nevertheless, its miles off, it’s still alpha – but Google can see its certain potential – can you?

  • Base : A Second Look

    Earlier in the week, possibly only yesterday (time has no meaning any more!) I posted that Google Base had launched. Upon delving into the depths of base and exploring existing content as well as my own little profile page it occurred to me that this could get pretty big.

    Perhaps, a little too big. Fair enough, content can exist for the 31 days, but if every Google user submitted one article alone you’ve got a wave of information to sift through to get something worthwhile.

    In an interesting article I read this morning at ZDNet, I would like to just highlight the following which I completely agree with.

    Google could in fact be building the world’s largest database of structured shite.

    Well worth a read for those of you interested in Google Base. Click here for the article

  • 13 Reasons To Switch To Firefox

    Get Firefox Now!While out doing the browse on the tea break, this little ditty surfaced. Nice take on the whole Kill Bill theme… but moreso, it provides 13 reasons to switch to Firefox In summary….

    1. You’ll only see porn when you want to.
    2. Your kids will only see porn when they want to
    3. Your computer won’t spend its free time telling the world about Viagra soft tabs.
    4. Mozilla doesn’t inflate prices and use the money to vaccinate children in Africa.
    5. If we knew web designers would hurl themselves off it, we wouldn’t have put the Golden Gate bridge so close to San Francisco.
    6. Keep squinting and your eyes will get stuck like that, stupid
    7. It will make Bill Gates soooooooooo mad.
    8. Mozilla has never made a talking paperclip.
    9. Ritalin is fun, but A.D.D. is not.
    10. It’s like switching from dating a 14-year-old to dating an 18-year-old.
    11. Reduce your weekly family & friends tech support load to 8 hours.
    12. More effective than throwing pies.
    13. Because the Department of Justice Lacks Balls.

    For the matching descriptions and explanations, which are worth a read in themselves, check out Kill Bill’s Browser

  • Back To Basics

    A busy week for Google, so it seems. But when is it never busy in that place?

    Their latest offering is Google Base (beta). Another free service if you’ve got a Google account or gMail address. What are they running with this time? “Help The World Find Your Content”.

    To be perfectly honest, its hard enough to find my own site on Google. I can find my ICQ profile from 1998. I can find my deviantART print store. No sign of my domain there. But thats another matter altogether. What I’m more interested in is that if people keep continuing submitting their sites to Google and you can’t find them – how on earth are you expected to find that Chicken Korma recipe you wrote yesterday, or that ad you posted looking for a temp for the office?

    Social tagging!

    Is Base a jazzed up version of del.icio.us?

    Google Base enables you to add attributes that better describe your content so that users can easily find it

    So I tested it out myself. Base allows you to submit ‘people profiles’, so I throw Ken McGuire up in a profile… a short while later, bang – there I am. Search ‘Ken McGuire’ on Base and you’ll find me! Search on Google and you’ve no chance.

    What kind of items can you put into Google Base?

    • Description of your party planning service
    • Articles on current events from your website
    • Listing of your used car for sale
    • Database of protein structures

    At least it works in the sense that your details are published almost immediately. Whatever you post, does expire after 31 days max, which is good for keeping content fresh – though you can choose to reactivate it at a later date. It’s supposed to integrate with Froogle but if it can help improve a search result on Google then I’m all for it!

    Update:

    I’m impressed with the relative speed and ease at which material goes up on Google Base. They are touting it as a great research tool for students, parents etc (isn’t that what the Internet is!?), I just hope it doesn’t become overcrowded with junk. Want to see my little entry…. click here.

  • API-ece of the Pie

    So yeah…

    eBay are finally opening up their API’s eh? No more charges on developers looking to access them. Good news for certain projects? Good news for certain developers? Or have eBay finally woken up to the realisation that allowing that extra openness is just good for business.

    The upside for eBay?

    • More sales, more conversions, more exposure…
    • New ideas, new business opportunities for the great marketplace that is!

    The downside? Well, I’m not sure if its a downside at all but it does mean for certain that there’s gonna be an awful lot of new auction sites popping up – but its all good for eBay. They’ve enough money to throw around these days anyway, buying VeriSign, buying Skype…. at least they’re giving something back to the community even if they’ll surely reap the rewards for it now!

    WebServices are the way forward, there’s surely no doubting that. Having been involved in developing simple web services over the last 12 months you get to see first hand the benefit of having them in place. Amazon do it, Flickr do it, eBay had been doing it – but at least now they’re doing it for free!

    Interesting times ahead….