Archive for March, 2007

James Cramer Games The Stock Market

Posted on March 21st, 2007 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

James Cramer teaching us how to game the stock market, via Valleywag.

Then you call the Journal and get the bozo reporter in Research in Motion and you would feed that Palm’s got a killer it’s going to give away. These are all the things that you must do on a day like today and if you’re not doing it, maybe you shouldn’t be in the game.

Scary video, like teaching scammers how to game Adwords. Lot’s of precise examples, kind of freaking out the interviewer, who can’t believe what Cramer is saying.

When Web Sites Become Web Services

Posted on March 21st, 2007 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Read/WriteWeb dares to mention Web 3.0, or the Semantic Web. Talk about deja vu. If you’re new to the term, this is a must-read article. Also check out Freebase and Yahoo! Pipes. Otherwise it’s a nice overview of web API’s, services, screen scraping and other components and building blocks, of the next phase of the net.

I remember checking out the RDF Interest Group in 2001, looking at the basic Perl code they had released and thought to myself “better to let this bake for a while before serving.”

In the meantime, I started ProfileDoctor, which was the context of this discussion, a website to visitors from Google and a web service to members of our partner sites. The dual nature of the concept was exciting, perhaps it’s time again to revisit it.

Here’s a pointer to Esther Dyson writing about
Emergent Structure vs. Intelligent Design. She quotes David Waltz at Thinking Machines:

Words are not in themselves carriers of meaning, but merely pointers to shared understandings.

In other words, the meaning is in people’s heads. Brilliant. I will add one of my favorite comments in a similar vein. Bruce Sterling on “engines of meaning”:

Ultimately no human brain, no planet full of human brains, can possibly catalog the dark, expanding ocean of data we spew. In a future of information auto-organized by folksonomy, we may not even have words for the kinds of sorting that will be going on; like mathematical proofs with 30,000 steps, they may be beyond comprehension. But they’ll enable searches that are vast and eerily powerful. We won’t be surfing with search engines any more. We’ll be trawling with engines of meaning.

Via Stowe Boyd’s /Message.

I see the immediate need for an affiliate-style program structure for mashups and datasharing that makes it easy for sites to control and benefit (both traffic-wise and financially) from offering access to their data.

Only a fraction of the 400 APIs listed at programmableweb are opening up information – most focus on manipulating the service itself. According to R/WW, this is an important distinction.

Many sites are terrified of cannibalizing their value proposition by opening up their datatroves. Others are more open to the idea. I think it takes a third party to see the value of a mashup of services. Now that we’re all used to Google Maps being overlaid with myriad types of data, it’s time to move on to bigger ideas.

There are going to be a plethora of new startups attempting to exploit the opportunities surrounding machine readable data, tagging, web services, open databases, aggregators, RSS and so forth.I just hope the Web 3.0 moniker doesn’t stick.

A Brief History of (the rise of?) ProfileDoctor

Posted on March 21st, 2007 in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »

When I was building ProfileDoctor in 2003, I would always pitch the service as a website for consumers and a web service for online dating sites. The idea being that if you stumbled across PD from Google or an article in the paper, you were greeted with a traditional website front end, with all the expected functionality.

The interesting stuff would occur when our dating sites partners would embed PD services directly into their dating site. When users sign in, they would have PD services on every page of the profile creation process. As we learned early on during the research phase, people usually write their personal ad late at night, taking only a cursory glance at the questions and lackluster attempt at filling out questions. And photos? Forget it.

PD was a way for dating sites to provide a simple, cost-effective way to increase the quality of profiles in their database, making members happy which you would think would lead to an increase in revenue.

We convinced (paid) one major dating site to try an early version of the system. Long story short was an expensive lesson that didn’t return anticipated results. Things didn’t go as well with our 40+affiliates either, never amounting to much business. Affiliates  simply didn’t know how to market our services to their members. Throwing up a banner ad is enough, members need to be educated, and this just wasn’t happening.

Now, with the rise of the semantic web, I find myself thinking more about ProfileDoctor. Maybe it’s time to dust off the url and make a go of it again, this time with a lot of lessons learned under our belts, a more sophisticated online dating industry and a huge explosions in usage of dating sites that’s evened off (dating sites are hungry for visitors, even more so for revenue they have lost to social networks.) It’s going to take some time to get the engines fired up, right now I’m in exploratory mode, talking with dating sites about their needs, finding out how we can help, and ultimately using this information to build the next version of ProfileDoctor.

This is an ongoing story, I’ll add more information and stories over time.

Get Your Mii on your mac

Posted on March 21st, 2007 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

I have yet to play with the Nintendo Wii but I like the idea that you can copy your Mii’s to your Mac and then publsh on various Mii sharing sites.  I’ve worked with several companies attempting to deliver persistent portable identities and it’s fun to see someone doing something that generally works and is useful, unlike a lot of the stalled/failed/foundering startups trying to make a buck on your attention data.

SecondLife Embracing Voice

Posted on March 21st, 2007 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Vivox LogoBoston-based Vivox has announced it will provide SecondLife with integrated voice communication. Phil Wolf at SkypeJournal has a short clip of Vivox co-founder talking about the deal. I met Monty and CEO Rob Seaver last year when Vivox was contemplating offering voice chat services to dating sites.

Apple's New Homepage

Posted on March 21st, 2007 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Apple Home PageLooks like the iPhone is taking over the company, at least for now. Great reviews of the new Apple TV at the WSJ.

Microsoft Idenfies Spam Blogs

Posted on March 21st, 2007 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

According to the New York Times, It turns out there are two web hosts sending out the majority of spam. While most would appreciate the use of tactical weaponry to eradicate the problem once and for all, it sounds like Microsoft researchers have identified the source. I wonder if they will add them to spam filters or treat as an acquisition target?

Via MarketingVOX.

Why Online Advertising Economics Are So Messed Up

Posted on March 19th, 2007 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Scott Carp at Publishing 2.0 talks about issues surrounding the current economics of online advertising. Several good offshoot conversations as well.

New Visual Studio Toolkit for CardSpace

Posted on March 19th, 2007 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Kim Cameron tells us that Christian Arnold has created a Visual Studio 2005 Toolbox for Windows Cardspace. The ToolBox provides an easy way to use Windows CardSpace in your ASP.NET 2.0 Web-Application to register and validate your users. It´s also possible to use the controls to receive a SAML token and get the decrypted values of provided claims.

This is great news for Cardspace. I cannot wait for people to start building cool stuff with it. Integrating third-party authentication tools, dating site profiles, advertising and viral marketing are all going to be early implementations based on Cardspace.

Crunchboard VC Category

Posted on March 19th, 2007 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

emptyvccrunchboard.pngLook at the CrunchBoard VC category , surely this can’t be right.