Archive for June 11th, 2008

A month after announcing his resignation from Personal computer World magazine, tech journalism veteran Harry McCracken has announced a new venture: Technologizer, an online destination for general technology news and analysis.

John Battelle, founder, Federated Media Publishing

(Credit: Courtesy of John Battelle)

The new site will be launched later this summer …

Source [The social]

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Yaaaay! Stephen Colbert on Hulu!

(Credit: Comedy Central)

This post was updated at 11:01 AM PT on Tuesday to clarify wording: television content from Viacom is nearly exclusively handled by MTV Networks.

In an unexpected move, video site Hulu will be getting some political loudmouths just in time for …

Source [The social]

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NEW YORK–If there were a meter of World wide web “fameballing,” as Gawker likes to dub those fine folks who get famous on the World wide web for something and keep getting more and more notorious although most people aren’t really sure why, it would’ve been flying off the charts on …

Source [The social]

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Russia Ends Showcase Econ Event With $14.6B In Invest Deals Last Update: 6/8/2008 12:55:13 PM ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (Dow Jones)–During its showcase economic event of the year, Russia has harvested $14.6 billion in investment deals, Elvira Nabiullina, the country’s economic development minister stated Sunday. Some of the deals have been pre-announced earlier, but their signing was orchestrated to take place during […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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I’m heading to the Launch Silicon Valley 2008 conference later this morning, where 30 new (or newish) companies will be doing the usual pitch to investors, analysts, and jaded journalists like me. But I did pick out seven new-to-Webware companies from the lineup that I want to learn more about. These are the most interesting ideas from my Web 2.0 perspective.

Cognisign does image matching. It can tell if two images are related by content, or pick out from a pool of images one that matches an input picture. Could be useful for organizing pics or enforcing copyrights.

Dayak is a service that helps employers find not people to employ, but rather recruiters to work with, who then find people to employ. In other words, it’s a middleman site for middlemen. Wins my Chutzpah 2.0 award for the month. And it’s probably a great business.

Dial2Do is a text-to-speech service that front-ends your e-mail app, Twitter, a dialer (like JahJah). Will have to try this one. See also: Jott.

Emphasis Search helps medical professionals generate appropriate referrals for their patients. Need a good podiatrist? Instead of relying on internist to hook you up with his squash buddy, this system will match your medical needs with a provider’s expertise, location, availability, and so on. Smart.

Modiface "after."

Modiface will make you look superior. It’s a tool that takes your pictures, and then smooths your wrinkles, slims you down, adds body to your hair, etc. It is being marketed as a tool for medical professionals and stylists, and will likely also be used successfully by all manner of snake oil salesmen. Somewhat related: Big Stage.

Previmed is being built to coordinate information about overseas medical care for people considering “medical tourism” to address their needs. Booming business. Very smart. However, barriers to entry for Previmed are not very high.

uTest collects the crashes of the crowds. It’s a service that software developers can use to get just the beta testers they need to pound on their products. uTest coordinates all the bug reports and helps developers track them.

Vault Street helps users store their financial documents. You contract with it and then it acts as your proxy to collect bank and other financial statements for you. Better than having all those statements go to your e-mail, and much superior than trying to keep them all in boxes in your basement. I don’t know what it can do about the documents you already have, though.

Companies at this event that we’ve already covered include: Capzles, Triggit, and Zuora.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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SocialCalc is coming to the enterprise wiki, SocialText.

(Credit: SocialText)

Corporate Wiki software company SocialText is adding a spreadsheet to its wiki product. The new feature, SocialCalc, grants users to collaborate on spreadsheets the same way they do in the company’s text-based Wikis. The product is based on Dan Bricklin’s open-source Wikicalc.

For spreadsheet jockeys this is both good and bad news. On the positive side, SocialCalc spreadsheets inherit wiki-style revision tracking, which is an automatic audit trail that’ll arguably be even more important on spreadsheets with financial and other hard data on them than it is on text-based wiki pages. “There’s no inherent audit trail in Excel,” SocialText chairman Ross Mayfield reminded me.

Users can also easily embed data from other SocialCalc sheets in their spreadsheets, or for that matter data from any SocialText wiki page or Web URL. This could make building workgroup-wide, or even company-wide spreadsheets possible. Assuming, that’s, everyone in stated workgroup or company is comfortable using SocialCalc instead of Excel.

Which brings us to the negatives of this new product. The biggest is that it isn’t Excel, and it will require the most re-learning from exactly those people who would find its collaboration functions the most helpful: heavy spreadsheet users. And it’s not just the interface that’s different, it’s the features. Like many Web-based productivity tools, SocialCalc doesn’t have all the analytic or presentation features of its mature standalone counterparts. I predict this will frustrate people who want to use SocialCalc to build complex company-wide models on it.

Mayfield told me that coordinating work is “at least eight times as important” as providing a complete Excel-caliber feature set on SocialCalc, and I agree in principle, but I have the ability to still see a few heavy Excel users in a company raising a very loud stink if they’re forced to use a tool that doesn’t do everything they are accustomed to.

The other downside to SocialCalc is that it doesn’t allow real-time collaboration like the spreadsheet in Google Docs does. While some people see live multi-person spreadsheet editing as a gimmick, in fact the more people who need to contribute to a worksheet the more important that feature becomes. It removes the awkward need for users to wait in line to edit a document if someone else has it open.

SocialText will provide professional services to make the adoption easier by its customers, and the tool will no doubt be welcomed by infrequent spreadsheet users. It’s a good addition to the SocialText lineup; I just don’t expect it to be an simple transition for everyone.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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Lehman Shares Fall Below $28 Price In Capital-Raising >LEH Last Update: 6/10/2008 11:50:06 AM DOW JONES NEWSWIRES Shares of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (LEH) continued their fall, dropping over 6% Tuesday as their month-long swoon resulted in the brokerage shedding 40% of its market value. Monday’s projection of a $2.8 billion quarterly loss deepened anxieties that banks and […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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In the mid seventies, “Mad Magazine” put a picture on its back inside cover of a “scene we love to see.” It was a friendly milkman delivering a bottle of milk to the stoop of a home in an idyllic neighborhood.

On the back outside cover was a “scene we’d hate to see.” It was of two other delivery men delivering bottles of “clean water” and “fresh air” to the same stoop. In the ecologically-awakening nineteen seventies, this was being done for laughs, since few ever imagined Americans paying for clean water and fresh air.

Fast forward to today, when water is the number one selling beverage in the country, and air purifiers hum in millions of homes. The Mad jokesters weren’t too far off.

Could it be that modern water paranoia is creating a self-fulfilling prophesy? Are we undermining our treasured national water supply by bypassing the tap on the way to the water bottle?

After all, America’s tap water is the envy of the world. It’s just as safe and, in some cases, even safer than bottled water. It’s held to higher standards than bottled water, and tested for contaminants much more often.

You can find out details about your own water supply from a search site such as the one at the Environmental Working Group, a watchdog organization or from American Water Works Association which represents municipal water companies.

On a whim, I searched for a water quality report for a major U.S. city. I found an incredibly detailed analysis of the municipal tap water in Oklahoma City that beats anything I’d find about Aquafina bottled water (which is nothing more than filtered tap water).

Sometimes, the high-priced bottled water we’re buying is actually just tap water in disguise. You can filter your own water at home just as thoroughly as the Large Boys at Coke and Pepsi do buy installing a countertop water filter in your kitchen.

Home-filtered water reaches your faucet mostly via gravity, not trucking or shipping, so it comes with no greenhouse gas-producing strings attached. Nothing “Mad” about that.

ifeWire provides original and syndicated content to web publishers. Jay Weinstein, a chef trained at the Culinary Institute of America, is a New York based food writer, editor, and cookbook author. His food articles and recipes have been featured in The New York Times, Travel & Leisure, Newsday, Time Out New York, National Geographic Traveler, and numerous other publications. His latest book, The Ethical Gourmet, focuses on ecologically sustainable fine foods. He’s currently working on a book about sustainable use of water.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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NEW YORK–If there were a meter of World wide web “fameballing,” as Gawker likes to dub those fine folks who get famous on the Internet for something and keep getting more and more notorious even though most people aren’t really sure why, it would’ve been flying off the charts on …

Source [The social]

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