eConsultant

eConsultant - Sanjeev Narang - writes notes on technology, personal growth, personal MBA, productivity and time management.

Monday, February 28, 2005

AOL Opening Up AIM Community to Third Parties


Slashdot | AOL Opening Up AIM Community to Third Parties: "DaffyD writes 'Refocusing its vision for AOL Instant Messenger, America Online is endeavoring to revitalize the service by opening up its community and presence to third parties. In addition to partners such as CareerBuilder, AOL is seeking to enlist independent developers to build extended AIM services and hopes to offer a plug-in architecture by the end of the year. ICQ recently added such functionality through its open XML-based Xtras feature. Maybe AOL is feeling the heat from alternatives such as Gaim and Adium.'"

Firefox is slowing down ...


Web Analytics - WebSideStory - DataInsights - Internet User Trends - Data Spotlight: "WebSideStory: Firefox Gains Beginning to Slow

Feb. 28, 2005 — The growth rate of Firefox’s usage share on the web has slowed slightly in recent months, according to the latest U.S. data from WebSideStory (Nasdaq: WSSI), a leading provider of on-demand web analytics. Firefox grew 0.74 percentage points in the last five weeks and 0.89 percentage points in the previous six weeks before that. This compares to a jump of 1.03 percentage points between Nov. 5 and Dec. 3, which coincides with the release of Firefox Version 1.0 on Nov. 9. WebSideStory Media Inquiry Form »"

EFF: Cooking with EFF: KnoppMyth r5a5 and pcHDTV for DTV Liberation

Thursday, February 17, 2005
Create your own PC Video Recorder

EFF: Cooking with EFF: KnoppMyth r5a5 and pcHDTV for DTV Liberation

Gmail as Journal

Wednesday, February 16, 2005
Gmail as Journal

I was recently inspired by a post that Merlin Mann had created on 43 Folders about using a web based mail account as a “punching bag“. Remembering an old skool Gmail tip about keeping notes in your mail account, I thought these two ideas could combine nicely to allow you to use Gmail as a personal journal. I signed up for a new Gmail account called “aw.journal". (Please don’t mail it, I don’t intend to use it for anything other than what I describe below.)

WordPress 1.5 is available

Tuesday, February 15, 2005
The latest stable release of WordPress is 1.5

Napster for 14 days = 252 80 minute CD

Monday, February 14, 2005
Spread the word ... DRM will be defeated ... sooner or later ...

marv on record, archive

Burning through Napster's collection, free

Hundreds of music CDs, zero dollars*, obtained legally.
*Not including the cost of blank CDs

Practical how to:
(credit goes to warlock1711 of club.cdfreaks.com for discovering this loophole)

0. Download and install Napster, sign up for 14 day free trial.

1. Download and install Winamp

2. Download and install the Winamp Plug-in Output Stacker

3. Open Winamp Options->Plug-ins->Output->Dietmar's Output Stacker->Configure
a. Add out_ds.dll from Winamp/Plug-ins folder
b. Add out_disk.dll from Winamp/Plug-ins folder
c. Select out_disk.dll in the Output Stacker->Configure
d. Set the output directory and output file mode to Force WAV file
e. Exit preferences

4. Load downloaded Napster protected WMAs into your Winamp playlist

5. Press play and each file will be converted to WAV as it plays

6. Burn WAVs to CD with your favorite burning program

You There, at the Computer: Pay Attention

Thursday, February 10, 2005
You There, at the Computer: Pay Attention
By KATIE HAFNER

FIRST, a confession. Since starting to write this article two hours ago, I have left my chair only once. But I have not been entirely present, either.

Each time I have encountered a thorny sentence construction or a tough transition, I have heard the siren call of distraction.

Shouldn't I fiddle with my Netflix queue, perhaps, or click on the weekend weather forecast? And there must be a friend having a birthday who would love to receive an e-card right now.

I have checked two e-mail accounts at least a dozen times each, and read eight messages. Only two were relevant to my task, but I responded right away to all of them. My sole act of self-discipline: both instant messaging accounts are turned off. For now.

This sorry litany is made only slightly less depressing when I remind myself that I have plenty of company.

Humans specialize in distraction, especially when the task at hand requires intellectual heavy lifting. All the usual "Is it lunchtime yet?" inner voices, and external interruptions like incoming phone calls, are alive and well.

But in the era of e-mail, instant messaging, Googling, e-commerce and iTunes, potential distractions while seated at a computer are not only ever-present but very enticing. Distracting oneself used to consist of sharpening a half-dozen pencils or lighting a cigarette. Today, there is a universe of diversions to buy, hear, watch and forward, which makes focusing on a task all the more challenging.

"It's so hard, because of the incredible possibilities we have that we've never had before, such as the Internet," said John Ratey, an associate professor at Harvard Medical School who specializes in attention problems. Dr. Ratey said that in deference to those who live with clinically diagnosed attention deficit disorder, he calls this phenomenon pseudo-A.D.D.

A growing number of computer scientists and psychologists are studying the problem of diminished attention. And some are beginning to work on solutions.

Ben Bederson, who builds computer interfaces at the University of Maryland, said his design goal is to generate a minimum of distraction for the user. "We're trying to come up with simple ideas of how computer interfaces get in the way of being able to concentrate," said Dr. Bederson, director of the Human-Computer Interaction Lab at the university.

When scrolling up and down a document on a computer screen, for instance, he said, some software causes the page to jump. It's an invitation to distraction, in that it requires the eye to reacquaint itself with the document in order to continue reading. To help people understand the importance of avoiding these kinds of jumpy interactions, Dr. Bederson showed that smooth scrolling was not only easier on the eye, but reduced the number of mistakes people make when, say, reading a document aloud.

But some distractions don't need much of an invitation. Take e-mail, for instance.

"It's in human nature to wonder whether you've got new mail," said Alon Halevy, a professor of computer science at the University of Washington who specializes in data management systems and artificial intelligence. "I don't think anything else is as compelling to divert attention."

Dr. Halevy and others talk about making e-mail intelligent so that it knows when to interrupt the user.

"Suppose you trusted your e-mail system enough that you're alerted to an e-mail only if it's really pertinent right now," Dr. Halevy said. "If I knew the right thing was happening with my e-mail, it wouldn't be such a distraction."

Dr. Halevy said this is a very difficult problem because it requires sophisticated natural language comprehension on the part of the software. "Completely solving the natural language problem is still decades away," he said, but "extracting useful information out of e-mail is a simpler instance that could make much faster progress."

Dr. Halevy is working on what he calls semantic e-mail, which provides some structure to the originating e-mail to make it easier for the software on the recipient's side to understand it and assign a priority.

Many people, even the experts, have devised their own stopgap solutions to the attention-span problem.

Dr. Bederson tries to read e-mail for only 15 minutes every hour. Dr. Halevy sets milestones for himself and breaks down a large task into small ones. "I say, O.K., I'll finish writing this paragraph, after which I let myself check e-mail, go browse the Web a little bit or make a cappuccino," he said. "If I insert enough resting points between the work, I'm much more motivated to go back to it."

Others might say, however, that Dr. Halevy's self-induced interruptions remove him from essential cognitive flow.

Dr. Bederson, Dr. Ratey and others often refer to the notion of flow, a concept coined by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, (pronounced CHICK-sent-me-hi-ee), professor of psychology at the Claremont Graduate University and the author of "Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience" (Perennial, 1991). Flow, in essence, is a state of deep cognitive engagement people achieve when performing an activity that demands a certain level of focus, like writing.

Mary Czerwinski, a cognitive psychologist who is a senior researcher at Microsoft, is studying the effect of interruptions on such deep cognitive immersion, with Dr. Bederson. "We're thinking that if you're deeply immersed in a flow state you'll be less amenable to a distraction from an incoming notification, much less likely to even know the notification came through," she said.

In related work, other Microsoft researchers are developing software that can learn to gauge where and how a computer user is directing attention, part of what they call the Attentional User Interface project.

One piece of software in development learns to assign a level of urgency to incoming e-mail messages while shielding people from messages they can see later - based on an assessment of how busy they are.

"We can detect when users are available for communication, or when the user is in a state of flow," said Eric Horvitz, a senior Microsoft researcher who directs the project.

For Edward Serotta, as for many other people, the problem is reaching that state of flow to begin with. Mr. Serotta is the director of Centropa (centropa.org), a group based in Vienna that has created a searchable online library of Jewish family photos, linked to oral histories. Part of his job consists of writing lengthy grant proposals, an unwelcome task at best.

For the past eight years, Mr. Serotta has used a laptop computer. "That means I can take my ability to dodge serious work everywhere," he said. "I really depend on small technical distractions to keep me away from the things I dread doing."

He is currently faced with creating a five-year master plan for his institute at the request of two potential funding sources. The continual checking of his e-mail is rivaled by the micromanagement of his iTunes. "I will certainly do what they ask, but that doesn't necessarily take precedence over figuring out whether I should list Stevie Winwood or Steve Winwood in my iTunes library," he said.

Mr. Serotta has four local weather services on his computer's desktop, all of which he watches like a hawk, even on days when he has no intention of leaving his office, which is down the hall from his apartment. "This is vitally important because one of them might be off by half a degree," he said.

When Mr. Serotta does manage to find himself in the flow of writing, the stretches of time in which he is focused are what Dr. Czerwinski calls "key cognitive flow moments." Dr. Czerwinski's research group is working to identify the signals that such a moment has ended. "It could be hitting save," she said. "Or it could be the end of a Web search."

And this, Dr. Czerwinski said, would be a good time to allow a distraction in, like an e-mail notification. "Most software doesn't take your current cognitive state into account when it lets dialogue through," Dr. Czerwinski said.

But such predictive interfaces, as they are called, do not necessarily promise a cure for distraction, even for those more disciplined than Mr. Serotta, as they can be distractions unto themselves that throw the user off intellectual course.

"It is the very nature of predictive and adaptive interfaces that the user has to look at whatever the system is proposing and make a decision about whether they want to act on it," Dr. Bederson said. As an example, Dr. Bederson cited word-completion software, like the kind often found on cellphones. "It's a trade-off because you have to look at and evaluate each suggestion from the predictive interface," he said.

Dr. Bederson is also skeptical of a predictive interface's ability to know when the best time to interrupt might be. "That's very, very hard for a computer system to guess," he said. Hitting save, for instance, might be the start of a more reflective moment. "And that's the most important time to not interrupt," he said.

Dr. Csikszentmihalyi, the flow expert, believes interruptions have their place. "I shouldn't knock distraction completely, because it can be useful," he said. "It can clear the mind and give you a needed break from a very linear kind of thinking."

He continued, "E-mail could be a kind of intermittent relief from having to think about things that are not really that enjoyable, but when it becomes a habit so you can't do without it, then it becomes the tail that wags the dog, and it's a problem."

Peter S. Hecker, a corporate lawyer in San Francisco, said that when he hears the chiming alert of new e-mail, he forces himself to continue working for 30 seconds before looking at it. Thirty seconds, mind you, not 30 minutes.

"Deep thought for a half-hour? Boy, that's hard," Mr. Hecker said. "Does anyone ever really have deep thoughts for half an hour anymore?"

Google loses trademark case in France

A major impact on advetising ... and PPC sidebars ...

Google loses trademark case in France
By Stefanie Olsen, CNET News.com
7/2/2005
URL: http://asia.cnet.com/news/industry/0,39037106,39216545,00.htm

A French court on Friday ruled against Google in a trademark infringement case brought by Louis Vuitton Malletier, in the latest legal setback to the search giant overseas.

The Paris District Court has sanctioned Google and its French subsidiary from selling search-related advertisements against trademarks owned by the luxury fashion designer, which sued the search giant in early 2004. The court charged Google with trademark counterfeiting, unfair competition and misleading advertising. Google was ordered to pay US$257,430 (200,000 euros).

The ruling comes on the heels of another French court order against Google, in a case brought by European chain Le Meridien Hotels and Resorts. In that lawsuit, the court said Google infringed on Le Meridien's trademarks by allowing the hotel chain's rivals to bid on keywords of its name and then appear prominently in those related search results.

Both lawsuits have hinged on Google's signature keyword-advertising system, Adwords, which pairs text ads with related search results. For example, a Nike ad appears after a search for running shoes. Through the system, Google allows marketers to bid for such search-related keywords, including common branded and trademarked terms.

The negative rulings could hamper the company's advertising practices--at least in Western Europe, where the courts have been favorable to trademark owners. Google derives the lion's share of its revenue from online advertising.

Louis Vuitton applauded the ruling, highlighting the danger that some sponsored search results tied to its name can promote counterfeits. "It was absolutely unthinkable that a company like Google be authorized, in the scope of its advertising business, to sell the Louis Vuitton trademark to third parties, specifically to Web sites selling counterfeits," a company representative said in a statement via e-mail.

"This milestone ruling grants protection for the first time to both consumers and brand owners by finding that Google's Adwords and Premium Sponsorship services as misleading advertising services," the representative added.

Google spokesman Steve Langdon said the company has not yet received a copy of the ruling. When it does, he said, the search giant will consider its options, including appealing the decision. Google is appealing the ruling regarding Le Meridien.

In the United States, the company recently won a favorable ruling in a similar case brought by Geico, the car insurance company. In December, a judge in Virginia ruled that as a matter of law, Google's use of Geico trademarks to trigger ads did not constitute trademark infringement and that Geico had not sufficiently proven its case.

Google still faces other copyright disputes, including one brought by American Blind and Wallpaper Factory.

MP3Tunes

Wednesday, February 09, 2005
Die iTunes / Microsoft DRM Die !!!

MP#Tunes - Music Store

* Don't rent your music, own it!
* All songs at MP3tunes are in the popular MP3 format and will work on ANY MP3 player, including Apple's iPods, Dell DJ, Creative Labs Nomad, Rio, and many more.
* All songs will work with any computer or music library software, including Apple's iTunes and Microsoft's Windows Media Player.
* No cumbersome DRM schemes that will lock up the music you buy or restrict your personal use.
* Unlimited CD burning for personal use.
* Free "music locker" allows you to enjoy unlimited download access from your personal MP3tunes music library at anytime. No need to repurchase songs again if your hard drive, player or computer is lost, stolen or crashes.

Real Alternative

Monday, February 07, 2005
Final Builds Site: "Real Alternative will allow you to play RealMedia files without having to install RealPlayer or RealOne Player from Real Networks. Supported are: RealAudio (.ra .rpm), RealMedia (.rm .ram .rmvb .rpx .smi .smil), RealText (.rt) and ReadPix (.rp). It also supports RealMedia content that is embedded in webpages. The very user-friendly installation is fully customizable, which means that you can install only those components that you want.
It is highly recommended to uninstall all existing Real related software, like RealPlayer or RealOne Player, before installing. This way your system stays clean and potential problems will be avoided."

Economist.com

Economist.com

The economics of sharing

Technology increases the ability of people to share, but will they share more than just technology?

BY NOW, most people who use computers have heard of the “open source” movement, even if they are not sure what it is. It is a way of making software (and increasingly, other things as well), which relies on the individual contributions of thousands of programmers. The resulting programs are owned by no one and are free for all to use. The software is copyrighted only to ensure it remains free to use and enhance. In essence, therefore, open source involves two things: putting spare capacity (geeks' surplus time and skill) into economic production; and sharing.

Economists have not always found it easy to explain why self-interested people would freely share scarce, privately owned resources. Their understanding, though, is much clearer than it was 20 or 30 years ago: co-operation, especially when repeated, can breed reciprocity and trust, to the benefit of all. In the context of open source, much has been written about why people would share technical talent, giving away something that they also sell by holding a job in the information-technology industry. The reason often seems to be that writing open-source software increases the authors' prestige among their peers or gains them experience that might help them in the job market, not to mention that they also find it fun.

The characteristics of information—be it software, text or even biotech research—make it an economically obvious thing to share. It is a “non-rival” good: ie, your use of it does not interfere with my use. Better still, there are network effects: ie, the more people who use it, the more useful it is to any individual user. Best of all, the existence of the internet means that the costs of sharing are remarkably low. The cost of distribution is negligible, and co-ordination is easy because people can easily find others with similar goals and can contribute when convenient.

The question is, can sharing be used to supply more than just information? One of the most articulate proponents of the open-source approach, Yochai Benkler of Yale Law School, argues in a recent paper* that sharing is emerging for certain physical, rivalrous goods and will probably increase due to advances in technology. Where open source was about sharing information by way of the internet, what is happening now, Mr Benkler notes, is the sharing of the tangible tools of technology themselves, like computing power and bandwidth. This is because they are widely distributed among individuals, and sold in such a way that there is inherent (and abundant) unused capacity.

Consider computing power. By some measures, the world's most powerful supercomputer is not owned by NEC or IBM, but is a volunteer project called SETI@home that aggregates the spare processing power of around 4m computers. When an individual's PC is idle, a screen-saver application that users have downloaded kicks in and harnesses the computer's processor to decode radio signals in search of extra-terrestrial life. A basic PC chip is a rivalrous good, but it provides far more power than most computer owners ever use. So putting this spare capacity to use through sharing makes more sense, if this is as easy to do as it is with SETI@home, than letting it go to waste. Why do people not sell the capacity instead? Probably, this would raise the transaction costs to the point where it would not be worthwhile.

Moreover, via “peer-to-peer” systems, people exchange digital copies of music over the internet, sharing not only songs but, more important, the physical memory of their PCs. Tens of millions of people have used peer-to-peer systems, which account for more than half of all internet traffic. One reason why sharing is so commonplace is that there is enormous overcapacity in both computer memory and internet bandwidth (and because the songs themselves are “non-rivalrous”). Both memory and bandwidth are rivalrous, yet people have no choice but to buy more than they can usually consume themselves. And as with open source, sharing is made easy because the internet has made transaction costs so low.

Tune in and share

The phenomenon of sharing physical goods has important implications for a number of public policy debates today, most notably for regulation of the use of radio spectrum. Around the world, regulators have granted licences, giving mobile-phone companies the rights to use a specific band of the airwaves, often in exchange for billions of dollars. Spectrum is parcelled out in this way under the assumption that more than one signal on the same frequency results in interference. This has been true until recently, but today radios with cheap microprocessors can pick out competing signals intelligently, just as the human ear can make sense of a conversation in a noisy bar.

The result is that new technology has made the sharing of spectrum possible—radio waves could be a non-rivalrous good—if only this were legally permitted and engineered into the software that runs the wireless devices. Regulators have changed their approaches slightly by allowing secondary markets in spectrum, but this anachronistically still presumes exclusive, not shared, use.

Mr Benkler does not limit his analysis to computing and bandwidth, but tries to make a broader point in favour of sharing goods far beyond information technology. “Social sharing”, he asserts, represents “a third mode of organising economic production, alongside markets and the state.” However, with the exception of carpooling, he acknowledges he is hard-pressed to find instances where sustained sharing of valuable things is prevalent in the world outside information technology. For most goods and services, sharing will remain the exception not the rule. But Mr Benkler has identified an intriguing alternative.

Wright This Way: iPod Shuffle RAID

A little costly 4 Gig RAID for $600 ... but fascinating ...

Wright This Way: iPod Shuffle RAID: "iPod Shuffle RAID"

Mac News: News: Rivals Hope To Sink iPod with Rented Music

Friday, February 04, 2005
The music subscription service ... rent-your-music ... stop paying the monthly fees and all the music stops playing.

Mac News: News: Rivals Hope To Sink iPod with Rented Music

Napster has announced the release of Napster To Go, a Windows-compatible portable digital music subscription service that lets users pick songs from its entire catalogue and load it onto compatible MP3 players for a $14.95 monthly fee.

As of now, the music players compatible with the service are the Zen Micro and Portable Media Centre, the iRiver H10 and Portable Media Centre and the Samsung YH999 Portable Media Centre.


Napster's advertisement says, "Users can fill and refill compatible MP3 players without paying 99 cents per track." The "99 cents" is a poke at Apple iTunes, which requires customers to pay 99 cents for each track downloaded.

The catch to the Napser service is that users are required to plug, or dock, the device into their PC at least once every 30 days in order for the company to verify if they are still paying the monthly fee. If users decide to stop paying the monthly subscription to their provider, they cannot access any of the songs in their library or on their music player.

Apple has always drummed up the fact that iTunes allows them to own their music like they do when they buy a CD. Napster though is trying to convince users to "Do The Math". For the price of one CD per month, they'll have access to as much music as they want, and with a catalog of over 1 million songs.

Apple iTunes claims to hold an estimated 70 percent market share for legal music downloads. It operates in 15 countries and has sold more than 250 million songs since launching the service. Napster operates in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom.

Tools You Might Have Missed

Wednesday, February 02, 2005
a good list of Search Tools ...

Tools You Might Have Missed

"Tools You Might Have Missed"

Here is a collection of research tools I made, as you might have missed them the first time around. Many of them access the Google API.

* Actors: What roles does an actor play?
* Link cosmos: See backlinks to your blog from Technorati and Bloglines.
* AnyRank: Find the CurseRank, GeekRank, NaughtyRank, or IntellectRank for your URL.
* Neighborsearch: Searches within pages linked from a site.
* Moviebot: See automated movie ratings, like for "Terminator."
* Google Mini: A small version of Google (IE-only).
* Google Rotated: A rotated version of Google (IE-only).
* The Google Family Tree: See relatives of any famous person.
* Ageshare: In which age group do keywords like "ice cream" appear most often?
* Categorizer: Automatically find a category for your keywords.
* FindForward: Collects many different search tools from this blog.
* Citybrowser: Find out everything about a city.
* The Google Encyclopedia: Data-mining through search engines.
* Domain Generator: Get a random domain name.
* Google Years: Show the PageCount for the years 1000-2100.
* Illusionizer: Replaces the images on any page by matching Google Images results.
* Memomarker: Get the "Googlonym" for any URL or text.
* PageBoost: Get only positive reviews for your URL.
* Permutator: Find variations for any URL.
* PersonMap: Which character traits most closely describe you or another person? The nearer an attribute is to the center, the more fitting it is.
* Image Quiz: My stats tell me this is the most popular page here ever.
* Quote Finder: Check if a source is original or taken from somewhere else.
* Random page: Takes random words, googles them, and redirects you to the first page found.
* Random Book: Grabs a random book, CD, DVD, or VHS from Amazon.
* Random Ego-Googler: Find a random person on the web.
* Memecodes: Darwinistic random page genes in a battle for search engine attention.
* Search Grid: Truly two-dimensional search results.
* Stereoscopic ASCII vision: Create one of those images you need to gaze on for a minute to see them in 3D.
* Google Suggests: Find out what options Google Suggest offers.
* Word Popularity Colorizer: Visualize how frequent keywords are relative to the context they appear in.
* Theorybot: Random theories on the click of a button.
* Egobot: Talk to the web through Egobot.
* The Google Couch Potato: Infinitely stream Google Videos.
* Keyword Variations: Finds site with variants of your keyword.

Rainy's Calendar

Rainy's

"Rainlendar is a customizable calendar that displays the current month. It is a very lightweight application that doesn't use much system resources or take much space on your desktop."

Indeed.com | one search. all jobs.

New Job Search Engine
Indeed.com | one search. all jobs.
"Searching 2,260,766 jobs from the last 30 days"

the electric sheep screen-saver

Fascinating use of parallel processing ...

the electric sheep screen-saver

"electric sheep"

This software owes its name to Philip K. Dick's novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep. It realizes the collective dream of sleeping computers from all over the internet.

When the screen-saver is activated, the screen goes black and an animated 'sheep' appears. Behind the scenes, the screen-saver contacts a server and joins the parallel computation of new sheep. Every fifteen minutes 24/7 a new sheep is born and distributed to all clients for display. Each sheep is an animated fractal flame.

The Interpretation of Dreams contains an artistic, conceptual, and technical explanation, or you can watch the streaming video documentary. Also available is a ten page academic paper to appear in EvoMusArt05.

Or, see super high-quality sheep dancing to music on the SPOTWORKS DVD. Includes the documenary at full resolution.

Design your own sheep movies with Shoop, the Sheep Loop tool.
Use the Apophysis genetic designer to create your own sheep and post them to the server.

Wired News: Folksonomies Tap People Power

The correct tagging and grouping of data is one of the key to good data/information management ...

Wired News: Folksonomies Tap People Power

"Folksonomies Tap People Power"

If the photo-sharing site Flickr is any indication, the world of digital photographers is dominated by cat people.

Dog owners would probably object. But because of Flickr's tagging system, which allows the photographers or other users to assign identifying tags to most photos on the service, we know that Flickr hosts 23,081 images tagged with "cat" or "cats" and only 17,463 with "dog" or "dogs."

Clearly, Flickr's system was not set up to motivate a feline-canine supremacy contest. But it does illustrate the way thousands of the service's members use tags to give some contextual meaning to more than 3.5 million pictures that might otherwise get lost in the shuffle. But it goes beyond cats and dogs: Users also tagged 21,660 photos "wedding," 12,681 "sanfrancisco" and 12,409 "halloween."

"The job of tags isn't to organize all the world's information into tidy categories," said Stewart Butterfield, one of Flickr's co-founders. "It's to add value to the giant piles of data that are already out there."

These days, a growing number of sites whose content is user-created rely on tagging systems, also known as folksonomies, for the added value Butterfield is talking about. Flickr and the social-bookmarking site Delicious, along with Furl, are generally considered folksonomy trailblazers, but now sites like MetaFilter and the blog index Technorati have jumped on board, and more are expected to follow.

"It's very much people tagging information so that they can come back to it themselves or so that others with the same vocabulary can find it," said Thomas Vander Wal, the information architect credited with coining the term "folksonomy."

"To me, they're a great new organization tool for applications and large content sites," said Matt Haughey, the founder of MetaFilter. "Tags are great because you throw caution to the wind, forget about whittling down everything into a distinct set of categories and instead let folks loose categorizing their own stuff on their own terms."

It hasn't always been easy to get users to take on such responsibility. But as more people understand what tags are, how they work and why they're important, the number of participants in folksonomies has grown.

"Tags are great, but the thing that is hard is getting people to use them," said Caterina Fake, who co-founded Flickr with husband Butterfield. "But the thing that has happened recently is they've become part of a social arena in which they are valuable not only to the individual but to the group."

Naturally, for such informal systems, no two folksonomies work exactly the same. Actually, argued Vander Wal, there are broad folksonomies and narrow folksonomies, and they are entirely distinct.

"Delicious is a broad folksonomy, where a lot of people are describing one object," Vander Wal said. "You might have 200 people giving a set of tags to one object, which really gives a lot of depth.... No matter what you call something, you probably will be able to get back to that object."

In a broad folksonomy, Vander Wal continued, there is the benefit of the network effect and the power curve because so many people are involved. An example is the website of contemporary design magazine Moco Loco, to which 166 Delicious users had applied the tag "design."

But 44 users had also assigned the URL the tag "architecture," 28 "art," 15 "furniture" and so on. That means that because so many people applied so many different tags to Moco Loco's site, it could be located in a number of different ways.

Conversely, Vander Wal explained, Flickr's system is a narrow folksonomy, because rather than many people tagging the same communal items, as with Delicious, small numbers of users tag individual items. Thus many users tag items, but of those, only a small number will tag a particular item.

"You don't have quite that capability of the power curve," said Vander Wal, "but you do have that ability of adding metadata to an object."

Haughey said MetaFilter's tagging system has been useful because by allowing people to tag their posts, including the tens of thousands of entries the site has accumulated since its birth in 1999, it brought some order to the site.

"I wanted the authors of a post to help organize them, so the archives could be more useful," he said.

Technorati's folksonomy is organized by categories defined by bloggers, who add tags to their blog posts. The result is that clicking on tags, such as "Current Affairs," brings users to the latest blog posts aggregated by Technorati with that tag.

Technorati's tag results also display results for the same tags on Delicious and Flickr.

Vander Wal said that because Technorati's system works by having blog posts with embedded tags that point to Technorati, which in turn point back to the posts, it "becomes a huge magnet for spam."

But Cory Doctorow, an editor of popular blog Boing Boing, disagrees.

"Technorati tags blend three different internet services and three services' worth of tags to tease meaning out of the ether," Doctorow wrote. "Brilliant."

To Steve Rubel, author of the blog Micro Persuasion, folksonomies are a boon for marketers, who, he said, can get real-time views of what user sites like Flickr or Delicious are interested in.

"Where the eyeballs go," Rubel said, "there's an opportunity to experiment with marketing."

Rubel also said he'd like to see services like Google add tags as a way to bring more user-specific context to search results. As it is, he explained, search-engine results differ from tag searches in that they are not based on user-created content.

"One of the things that's nice to see is that people are actually spending time tagging and doing it in a social environment, and following the power curve and the net effect," said Vander Wal. "The more people getting involved with it, the greater the value."

Wired News: Hide Your IPod, Here Comes Bill

The iPod revolution/fad continues ...

Wired News: Hide Your IPod, Here Comes Bill

"Hide Your IPod, Here Comes Bill"

Microsoft's leafy corporate campus in Redmond, Washington, is beginning to look like the streets of New York, London and just about everywhere else: Wherever you go, white headphones dangle from peoples' ears.

To the growing frustration and annoyance of Microsoft's management, Apple Computer's iPod is wildly popular among Microsoft's workers.

"About 80 percent of Microsoft employees who have a portable music player have an iPod," said one source, a high-level manager who asked to remain anonymous. "It's pretty staggering."

The source estimated 80 percent of Microsoft employees have a music player -- that translates to 16,000 iPod users among the 25,000 who work at or near Microsoft's corporate campus. "This irks the management team no end," said the source.

So popular is the iPod, executives are increasingly sending out memos frowning on its use.

Of course, Microsoft's software is used by dozens of competing music players from manufacturers like Creative Technology, Rio and Sony. Its Windows Media Audio, or WMA, format is supported by several online music stores, including Napster, Musicmatch and Wal-Mart. Microsoft's PlaysForSure program markets this choice as a boon for consumers.

Nonetheless, Apple's iPod commands 65 percent of the portable player market, and its online iTunes Music Store 70 percent of online music sales, according to Apple.

"These guys are really quite scared," said the source of Microsoft's management. "It shows how their backs are against the wall.... Even though it's Microsoft, no one is interested in what we have to offer, even our own employees."

So concerned is management, owning an iPod at Microsoft is beginning to become impolitic, the manager said. Employees are hiding their iPods by swapping the telltale white headphones for a less conspicuous pair.

"Some people are a bit concerned about being traitors, not supporting the company," he said. "They're a bit stealth about it."

How "stealth" varies from division to division. At the company's Macintosh Business Unit, which publishes a wide range of software for the Mac, owning an iPod is almost de rigueur.

But at the Windows Digital Media Group, which is charged with software for portable players and the WMA format, using an iPod is not a good career move.

"In the media group they all smoke the company dope on that one," the manager said.

Mary Jo Foley, editor of Microsoft Watch, said she had no knowledge of the iPod's popularity on Microsoft's campus, but has noticed a lot of iPod chatter among Microsoft's legions of bloggers.

"I have seen lots of Softies blog about it," she wrote in an e-mail.

Microsoftie Chris Anderson, for example, just blogged about buying himself an iPod, three days after buying his wife one.

"I couldn't resist anymore," he wrote. "The industrial design on the iPod is absolutely amazing. The usability of the device is light-years beyond anything else I've seen."

Robert Scoble, who calls himself the "Microsoft Geek Blogger" and is one of the company's most widely read and vocal mouthpieces, sometimes appears obsessed with the iPod.

He recently penned an open letter to Bill Gates about how to build an iPod-killer (first thing: start a blog). "Even I want an iPod," he confessed.

The Microsoft manager said he's heard from several executives who dutifully bought Microsoft-powered players, tried them, failed to get them working, and returned them in favor of an iPod. He went through the same experience, he said.

He had no idea if Bill Gates or Steve Ballmer, Microsoft's CEO, own iPods -- he's never seen what gadgets they use. "I've never seen either of them with any device, but I only see them in meetings," he said.

"There are frequent communications within the company about why it's a bad choice," the manager said. "So many people have chosen the iPod, executives feel they should send out memos about it."

For example, an internal e-mail circular sent to several senior managers in mid-December talked about iPod shipments to Apple's nearby store in Bellingham.

The e-mail said: "FWIW, the gal at the Bellevue Square Apple Store said that they are getting in two shipments of 200 iPods every day to keep up with this week's demand, and are nearly constantly selling out."

The note prompted a curt reply from Dave Fester, general manager of the Windows Digital Media division, who wrote the group: "I sure hope Microsoft employees are not buying iPods. We have great alternatives. Check out http://experiencemore."

Fifteen minutes later, the manager responded: "I don't know what I was thinking. I'm sure that Microsoft employees are not buying iPods, or Macs or PlayStations."

In 2003, Fester stirred up considerable controversy claiming Apple is locking in consumers with proprietary file formats, despite Microsoft's long history of using the same tactic.

As for hiding his own iPod use, the manager said he flaunts his iPod, despite the constant comments -- and occasional arguments -- it prompts.

"I don't really care if it pisses them off," he said. "I'll argue why they're doing it wrong. If you want me to stop using it, give me a product that works and is as easy to use."

Neither Apple nor Microsoft responded to requests for comment.

NPR : Personal Radio Via Podcasting Grows More Popular

Tuesday, February 01, 2005
NPR : Personal Radio Via Podcasting Grows More Popular: "Personal Radio Via Podcasting Grows More Popular"

TheStar.com - Is today 23/01/2005 or 2005/01/23?

ISO standard coming up ... 2005-02-01

TheStar.com - Is today 23/01/2005 or 2005/01/23?: "Is today 23/01/2005 or 2005/01/23?"

We can put a man on the moon but we can't agree on what the date is

KENNETH KIDD
FEATURE WRITER

The Canadian Payments Association, central clearing house for the country's financial institutions, says it wants to start processing cheques electronically. No more shuttling five million cheques between various banks every weekday; they'll just scan the little chits into a computer and, voila, consider it cleared.

This will, alas, also mean changes to your everyday life. In the not-too-distant future, you won't be writing out the date in the big round hand Miss Olsen taught you in grade school, as in "January 23, 2005." For cheques to be scanned, the dates will have to be rendered in numbers alone, not a mix of both.

This sounds simple, but the realm of numeric dating — using just numbers to signify dates — is a tossed salad of idiosyncrasies. Consider 01/02/03. That could mean February 1, 2003; or January 2, 2003; or perhaps March 2, 2001. Or something completely different.

So the payments people, after much confabbing and canvassing, have come up with two options. You can use numbers to represent the day, month and year, in that order, or you can do it month, day and year. The cheque will be printed with a legend, such as DD/MM/YY, letting everyone know which style you picked when you ordered your cheques.

"Some of our member financial institutions indicated that their research showed consumers would be more readily accepting of the two numeric formats that we adopted, so we went that route," says Genevieve Arpin, a spokesperson for the payments association.

Since the popularity of the options is mostly tied to geography, the group decided to call one of them "English" and the other "French."

As it happens, when the group says "English," it's actually referencing the "American" format, and "French" really means "European," used by the rest of the world with a few exceptions, including Japan, which marches to its own Kodo beat.

In the United States and, increasingly Canada (see above), today's date — January 23, 2005 — would be 01/23/2005, or 1/23/05 for short. In Europe, it would be 23/01/2005, a numerical version of 23 January 2005 or le 23 janvier 2005. Like a broken clock that shows the correct time twice a day, the two sides agree with one another 12 times a year — January 1, February 2, March 3, and so on.

MSN Search

Trying to catch up with Google ...

MSN Search