Archive for July 27th, 2008

A look at Flixster, with a Meebo IM window in the bottom right corner.

(Credit: Meebo/Flixster)

Web-based instant-messaging company Meebo has taken a new step forward: bringing its IM technology to partner sites. This fall, Meebo will begin powering IM “buddy lists” on a handful of social-media sites so …


Source [The social]

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The game development platform du jour might be the iPhone 2.0 software, but News Corp.’s MySpace hopes to make a splash with a new contest in its Asian market: TheGame08, which pits developers against one another in an attempt to create a hit social game that runs on …


Source [The social]

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MTV might’ve strayed away from music these days–My Super Sweet Sixteen, anyone?–but the entertainment mainstay’s latest project aims to both bring it back to its roots and propel it into the social Web. Ambitious, yes.

'The Hills': Now telling you what you want to …

Source [The social]

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A look at Flixster, with a Meebo IM window in the bottom right corner.

(Credit: Meebo/Flixster)

Web-based instant-messaging company Meebo has taken a new step forward: bringing its IM technology to partner sites. This fall, Meebo will start powering IM “buddy lists” on a handful of social-media sites so …


Source [The social]

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I don’t spend a lot of time thinking about celebrities. I’m generally more interested in professors at MIT than actors in Hollywood. But each once in a while, our friends at Ecorazzi will post something that catches my eye.

Apparently Johnny Depp purchased an island for around $3,000,000 a while back. And, since there aren’t exactly power lines running to the tiny island, he had to figure out how to power his (ridiculously posh) home. For the green-minded Depp, diesel generators just weren’t an option.

So he turned to Mike Strizki to help him build a system that would produce enough power to quench his celebrity-born thirst for decadence while not throwing off large amounts of greenhouse gas. The result is a solar system that stores excess energy as hydrogen for use at night or during cloudy times of day (not too common in the Bahamas, but still).

The system, to me, seems vastly inefficient. Hydrogen gas is terrible at storing energy in a small space unless it can be compressed a great deal. But Strizki’s system uses propane tanks to keep costs low. The result is that 10 thousand-gallon propane tanks are needed to store enough hydrogen to get the island through the night. You can see a video of his less-exotic system (in New Jersey) here.

Power storage for renewable systems is a huge deal. But this strikes me as a rather inelegant solution. But a high-pressure tank would be costly, and of course require an energy-hungry compressor. So maybe Depp’s system is the best we’re going to get.

In any case, it’s hard to call any of this green when the excesses of owning your own island are so obvious. But I suppose it’s better than complete disregard for the environment…

Via Ecorazzi

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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When questionable economics makes for good business.

Years ago, for my wife’s birthday, I bought her a terrarium for her orchids. You know where I got it? Terrariumsale.com. Because that’s what showed up in Google. Now, Terrariumsale.com is not a business unto itself. It’s one of several front-ends to a catalog of goods sold by FineWebStores. I was reminded of this this day when I got a pitch for FreeShippingOn.com, a site that helps you find items available for sale online that you can get without paying shipping fees. I wrote back to the person who sent me the pitch: “You’re kidding. That’s a whole business?” It’s not, of course. But it’s a great strategy.

The idea of shopping by shipping cost is dumb. (Better bet: use a shopping service like NexTag that calculates total price for you including tax and shipping.) But that’s not for me to judge. If people want to buy items based on shipping cost, and FreeShippingOn can get those eyeballs and those affiliate dollars, more power to the person who launched the service.

And that person is Jonathan Lieberman, president of Deallocker, and a man who runs focused sites for consumers, like TypoBuddy (for finding deals based on misspellings in eBay and Craigslist postings), the new Buy-discount-gift-cards.com (a front end to Lieberman’s eBay sales of gift cards), and the “Secret Amazon Discount Finder” section of DealLocker. None of his sites is technically ground-breaking. And, like FreeShippingOn, some are based on the erroneous economic proposition that getting dollars off a retail price is more important than the actual out-of-pocket dollars the product costs you. But as I stated, that’s not the point. The point is that people look for very specific things on the web, and the businesses who know the mind of the consumer–and not necessarily what’s right or sensible–are the ones that make the bucks.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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However, realize that production of crude from shale produces an intensely low Energy Returned on Energy Invested (EROEI) that is magnitudes lower than typical drilling processes. It also requires tons of water to produce the shale. Considering our shale is located in some of the driest areas of our country that are far, far away […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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Stock Rating Reiterations: MMM ATVID AFFX AEM ALO Last Update: 7/25/2008 10:30:00 AM Rating reiterations for July 25 from Briefing.com: Company                Ticker   Brokerage Firm           Rating Change 3M                     MMM      Argus                    Buy Activision Blizzard    ATVID    Kaufman Bros             Purchase Affymetrix             AFFX     Lehman Brothers          Equal-Weight Agnico-Eagle Mines     AEM      RBC Capital Mkts         Sector Perform Alpharma               ALO      Roth Capital             Buy Ball Corp              BLL      Longbow                  Purchase Belden                 BDC      Stifel Nicolaus          Purchase Benchmark Elec         […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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PodTech, a video podcast network that had taken over $7 million in venture funding, has been sold–and the price may have been a downright embarrassing $500,000.

The news was reported this week by Eric Eldon at VentureBeat, but Valleywag’s Jackson West was floating the rumor with less detail …

Source [The social]

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I’m an expert on pit bulls! Really.

I just wrote a knol, a Web article akin to an encyclopedia entry, using Google’s new Knol publishing platform launched publicly on Wednesday.

With Knol, Google is encouraging people to create more authoritative content that can be indexed by its search engine and monetized with ads. Unlike blogs, which tend to be casual and opinionated in tone, knols are supposed to be fact-based, informative, and well-sourced articles on a specific subject.

The author's knol on pit bulls.

Google is dismissing the notion that Knol is its Wikipedia killer, but both operate under the premise that Web users can collectively create a knowledge base that can be searchable and vast.

The difference is that while anyone can edit a Wikipedia entry, which can lead to pages and pages of edits and contradictory revisions and accusations of bias, knols have an author’s name attached. A knol author is responsible for the content and can choose to allow others to edit it, or filter suggested edits or even block public editing entirely.

I decided to try Knol out. First I had to figure out a subject I felt I knew enough about. I walk dogs as a volunteer at the local animal shelter where there happen to be a lot of pit bulls. I’ve learned a lot about the dogs and have become interrupted by the amount of misinformation that circulates about them. So I did some research and wrote a knol titled “The pitfalls of stereotyping pit bulls.”

The hardest part was the research. But given that I do that each day for my job, it wasn’t all that tough. I wrote the item in Microsoft Word and then cut and pasted it into the Knol page. It was easy to use the editing tools and add images. However, I think the page looks rather easy and dull. The system lacks the ability to add background colors and other stylistic flourishes that give blogs that individualistic panache.

Once I published the knol using the default “moderated collaboration mode,” a colleague logged into his Google account and suggested an edit to my knol. I, in turn, rejected that edit (it’s irrelevant that ex-Atlanta Falcons player Michael Vick, who I mention in the knol in reference to his dog fighting charges, wasn’t that great of a quarterback). The system didn’t notify my colleague that I snubbed his edit; he had to go to the page and keep checking the site for himself. It would be nice if the system were to notify people of the status of their recommended edits. Later, I found out that when an edit is accepted, the person who suggested it will be listed as a contributor in the contributor’s list on the page.

My colleague, Tom Krazit, recommended an edit to my knol, which I subsequently rejected.

It also took a few hours for the system to index my knol so it could be searched via the main Knol page and even then, it only initially showed up when I searched by subject (pit bulls) but not by author name. By the next morning, I could search also by author name. The knol has yet to show up on the Google search page using both subject and author.

A Google spokeswoman stated it takes time for the company to index new knols, but didn’t say how long.

After some digging around I figured out how to add advertisements through Google’s AdSense program, but I won’t see any on the page for a while (it can take up to two weeks, the system said).

Adding a New Yorker cartoon was easy. I was directed to the on the web New Yorker Store where I searched for cartoons dealing with pit bulls and found one. But when I added it into the blog it automatically inserted it at the top of the text and above the other image I had chosen. It didn’t look right, so I removed it. If I had had the capability to determine where on the page the cartoon should go, I would have used it closer to the bottom of the page.

This New Yorker cartoon, while it was appropriate to the subject matter, was removed when I learned I couldn't control where it appeared on the page.

(Credit: The New Yorker)

I felt an odd sense of power, and responsibility, creating my knol. It gives me the capability to publish anything I want, without having to run it past an editor like I do at CNET News. And once it is published, it is a permanent record and has an air of legitimacy that editorializing and gossipy blogs don’t have. It’s a Google knol–”a unit of knowledge” as the Web site describes it, lending it at least the illusion of propriety.

But what if I wanted to write something inaccurate or defamatory? Already that question has been put to the test with a knol written by Rachel Marsden, the ex-girlfriend of Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales.

Her knol is titled “Jimmy Wales (Jimbo Wales)” and the summary describes Wikipedia as an “online libel board,” that “any loser can use to smear people who are more successful than them.”

I asked the Google spokeswoman about this situation and her response was: “Knol will be subject to our general content policies and terms of service, and knol content will be treated under those policies like any other user-generated content for which we provide a distribution platform. In particular, we will provide community flagging tools and the usual legal notification processes, so that we can comply with applicable laws and regulations. In addition, because knols are attached to verified author names, we think that the structure of Knol will actually provide something of a disincentive to defamatory or other harmful content.”

It will be interesting to see how the Marsden-Wales fracas plays out on Knol. Google’s response didn’t give me any confidence that the system won’t be widely abused. And it’s likely that people who disagree with my knol will create one of their own with contradictory conclusions.

In an interview on Wednesday, Knol Product Manager Cedric Dupont stated Google won’t be determining the legitimacy of knols or verifying the authority of their creators. “We are not editors in any way,” he said.

“We think we make it very easy for the user to determine the trustworthiness of the content.”

I’ve deemed myself an expert on pit bulls by writing the knol. We’ll see if the reader reviews and ratings advocate otherwise.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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