Improve your resume with eMurse

July 20th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) TCDVideo, beta, internet

Props to Alex from eMurse for taking some time out of his busy schedule to get in a tech check.

Yeah, I can hear my mic too. I know it was too loud. This show was a breakneck test to see how fast I could go from nothing setup to show, and it took 30 minutes from start to finish, with another 21 for upload time. The unfortunate consequence? The bad audio level. I screwed something up in my audio settings and didn’t do a good enough mic check beforehand, which i paid for dearly after the fact.

Lesson learned.

Spammers hit for $1 billion+ lawsuit

April 26th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (2) TCDVideo, capitol hill, internet, legal, money

Project Honeypot looks to take a bite out of spam.

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Google announces presentation app

April 17th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (1) featured, internet

Google CEO, Eric Schmidt, announced an addition to docs and spreadsheets, a powerpoint competitor for presentations. Right now, details are sketchy, but Schmidt presented it as a no frills version of powerpoint focused on collaboration. Expect more coverage throughout the day, but Schmidt breezed over it at the web2.0 conference.

Now, he’s talking about doubleclick, if he talks about the presentation app we’ll update again. Nothing new here.

Sidenote: Schmidt implies they’ll get rid of doubleclick cookies.

Schmidt: Microsoft and AT&T’s claims of anti-trust with google are false. Straight out false. “They’re are a long list of reasons why they’re wrong.”

Battelle: Let’s talk about a controversial issue: YouTube and copyright.

Schmidt: Google is OK with YouTube/Viacom, hiding behind DMCA. Schmidt talks about the ABC (australia) google 16-year-old problem.

Anyone else think schmidt is gates’ good twin (or conversely, that gates is Schmidt’s evil twin?)

Google introducing a “CYC” claim your content tool for copyright holders to police youtube easier.

Sidenote: WiFi at the convention seems to be improving.

Schmidt: “We are investing billions of dollars in capital into data centers.” “We think that more applications using that are very good.”

Battelle: What about net neutrality?

Schmidt: Not concerned about telcos and cable companies as competitors, but as partners. Of course they’re supporting net neutrality… since net neutrality created google and other small comapnies. Google could survive a problem of loss of net neutrality, but any young company founders would get screwed. We get it. Everyone claps, because yes, net neutrality helps small companies. We get it already.

Battelle: “Who do you want to acquire?”

Schmidt: Mobile companies look interesting to us. We think 3g and 4g networks have tremendous power, and the mobile space is wide open, and we’re looking at partnering with companies for the mobile web. Another area: local space. Most transactions in advertising are local advertising, geotargeted ads etc. Most search engines don’t take care of local information. Quite a few companies are figuring out local search.

Battelle: “what’s the firs thting you think of?”

Schmidt: I think of my email.

Battelle: “Gates’ glasses are smudgy.”

Schmidt: “The thing I think about at google is scaling.” Talks about his forward looking scaling approach from the mid nineties. In order to win on the internet is the scaling strategy. Scaling for google means more data centers, more resources, etc. We’re really in scalings infancy.

Google: “We’ll never track your usage. Ever.” They’re working on allowing users to export their data and get out of google, as opposed to trapping users into their services.

Battelle: Last question: On the board of apple now, wtf?

Schmidt: Apple is an amazing story, as a company, technology supplier, products, etc. Some of the best people in the world work at apple. As they watch how the decisions are made, Schmidt has been collaborating with apple. Google maps inside of the iPhone.

That’s a wrap kids! Be back later!

Bezos talks Amazon Web Services

April 16th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) featured, internet

Bezos is going to talk about Amazon Web Services, so this turns into some sort of advertorial for the next few minutes.

Here are the links, if you weren’t there to listen to the advertorial.

Amazon Web Services

Keynote: Web2.0’s O’Reilly

April 16th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) featured, internet

Tim O’Reilly up on stage– apparently, it’s called “web two dot oh” so all you two point oh’s are lame.

Buzzword bingo: “Persistant computing”

O’Reilly doesn’t want to see new interfaces on old apps, but rather new apps for traditional interfaces.

Next, Bezos.

Placelessness and the advance of micropublishing

April 16th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) featured, internet

Alex Faaborg of Mozilla talking microformats.

1- what are microformats

2- what is mozilla’s role

3- what’s the UI

(something else)

Talking microformats, hit microformats.org for extra information. Microformats book, tomorrow microformats talk, and another one on wednesday.

2- why does mozilla care?

Talking web browser history, from mosaic to mozilla.

2008 hits webbrowser to switchboard.

first, the web browser was a book, then a radio with RSS< and then with microformats it’ll become a switchboard.

Each state, web browsers have been trying to keep up and being reactive as opposed to proactive. For example, RSS there are a gajillion chicklets, and a reactive way web browsers let it go.

Microformats are kind of killing us right now similar to rss chicklets. Now, we need to create hCard geo, adr and hCalendar with associated buttons.

Operator is a plugin for interacting with microformats. Get it at labs.mozilla.org.

Also, microformats could be implemented in the regular ways (rss feed icon, sidebar, or menubar)

Bookmarks (sidenote, tagged bookmarks in ff3)

Should microformats be shown in the content area instead of browser UI? Modal intervaces suck. They heard that they shouldn’t change the content area.

Microformat creation? What if end users could create microformats. Right click say new event and create that easy inside of the browser.

Why should they use microformats?

1– open standards, please don’t hurt the web picture
2– human / computer interaction
3– cross polinating

Audience questions:how do we promote sites to take advantage of microformats?

Talking at w20 is ane say way. Adding a web browser implementation of microformats would help a lot to penetrate.

how do we support previous data entered?

try to detect, before adding structured information.

how to combat spam?

Not really helping yet, since microformats make it easier to understand what email addresses are email.

Conservapedia: Conservative Wikipedia

March 5th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) Story, featured, internet

We’re not too into politics, but apparently there’s some sort of conservative need to rebuff Wikipedia. Here’s a hint, anyone can edit wikipedia! If you don’t like it, change it!

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