Archive for the ‘Startups’ Category

The Web is Made of People: On FriendFeed and RSS

Sunday, March 30th, 2008

I posted a comment over on TechCrunch that sums up a lot of what I’ve saying to people in person or on Twitter the past few weeks about FriendFeed. Several applications have, of late, risen to prominence that have taken the promise given to us by RSS and improved upon it. A few of those focus simply on taking the concept of content and flipping it around to being person-focused; instead of subscribing to a blog, I subscribe to a person. Examples include Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr.

Other applications have gone one step further. They don’t (intially) offer you the ability to create content, but rather to collect (aggregate) your own content and make it discoverable via your identity (rather than a blog/brand). FriendFeed is the best example. This is RSS subscription, but you subscribe to a person, not a feed.

We have, right now, embraced the social applications idea. Blogs became just another form of media, not the personal avatar on the web, as Richard MacManus called them many years ago. The future is systems like Facebook and FriendFeed (Twitter, despite its obscene limitations on content, is building a powerful social network that could destroy FriendFeed in an instant if they chose to move in that direction).

It’s a final recognition that the web is made of people, not content.

Appreciating Fine Wine (TV)

Tuesday, May 15th, 2007

In checking out the other sponsors for Thursday’s TECH Cocktail DC, I was introduced to Wine Library TV. I’m not a huge wine drinker (I’m more of a scotch guy), but I find myself very intrigued by the show, which is done extremely well; the host, Gary Vaynerchuck, shows great enthusiasm and really makes a topic I wouldn’t normally be interested in compelling. There’s even a whole episode devoted to kosher wines!

And today I noticed that Cork’d, a niche social network for wine-lovers, was acquired by Wine Library TV. The combination of original content, user-generated content, social networking and, most importantly, high-end products that cater to high-income demographics, seems like a good combination. I’d bet that something like this would work for scotch, cigars, maybe even beer (putting aside the issues with selling this stuff online, which can be tricky). It’s nice to see a business model that doesn’t rely on advertising.

More Insight into Odeo Sale

Thursday, May 10th, 2007

A few weeks back I was meandering around the Baltimore Craigslist gigs board and came across a posting for a Ruby on Rails position for “a newly funded startup in the Audio/Video Podcasting Arena,” which piqued my interest. The ad states that the startup “will be acquiring a very large presence in the Audio Podcasting space,” and many of the details seemed to point to Odeo, so I was suspicious that Odeo had found a new home. After reading today’s announcement of Odeo’s sale to SonicMountain, it was confirmed.

As for the future plans for Odeo, the ad mentions:

We are going to be enhancing the site with video podcasting and podcast hosting features as well as a patent-pending search system for audio, video and podcast content. The search development is being performed by a company under a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) and we have used offshore development for the video conversion engine (.mp3, .mp4, .mov, etc) into Flash (.flv), a custom flash player and the CC billing module for hosting and the podcast hosting / management engine.

Sounds interesting; I think there’s definitely room for a more complete solution for podcast hosting and metrics; I currently use a combination of Ourmedia.org, FeedBurner, Podtrac and Performancing Metrics; if there were a way to tie some or all of that together, it would be very interesting.

And very interesting to me is that the contact listed on the ad is based in Baltimore; the question is: Is Odeo coming to Maryland?

Meanwhile, Odeo itself has been stagnating for a while; I use their podcast player widget for a podcast I do with my wife, and despite my best efforts (pinging, etc.), Odeo hasn’t updated in about two months. Hopefully the new owners can revive the site.

PC World’s Search Engine Shoot-Out

Wednesday, May 9th, 2007

PC World has a really great article entitled Search Engine Shoot-Out. The article asks the question, “Does Google deserve all that traffic, or is it living off its reputation? Are people using it because they’re not aware of other, potentially better search engines?” What follows is some fairly comprehensive test of search engines across several verticals: web, videos, images, news, blogs, and local info.

I’m very happy and proud to report that Blogdigger finished third in the blog search category; of couse, I’d love to do better, but the fact that we finished where we did, to me, says a lot about what Mike and I have been working towards. I’ve written more of my thoughts on the Blogdigger blog, so hop on over and check it out.

The main take-away from the article is, of course: Google is king of search. Their web search results are probably the most frequently viewed single page on the web, and they have strong entries in all the other major categories as well. It would appear to be almost a fools-errand to even consider taking them on. On the other hand, as the article points out, only a few years ago Google didn’t exist and Alta Vista was the king of web search. And as YouTube has shown, it’s entirely possible to enter a market and create a community that can rival even Google’s offerings, and Wikipedia has, for many, replaced Google as the go-to resource for factual information. And remember, Google wouldn’t have a blog search if it weren’t for the fact that many of us showed how useful it could be.

Social Networking is about Social Interactions

Monday, April 23rd, 2007

Alex Krupp: Is Social Networking Dead? Nope. Read his post, it’s right on the money.

I’ve often used, as an example of this, a site that was a social network before everyone was talking about social networks. The site is called OnlySimchas.com, it’s the king of the Jewish web world, 2.0 or otherwise. It’s a site that lets people share an announcement of a happy occasion, such as an engagement, wedding, bar mitzvah, new baby, by posting photos and leaving comments. It’s become an obsession and a part of life of the Jewish world, to the point where many people now hear about engagements of close friends and even family via the site.Â

Why does it work? It works, not because it’s focused on a niche, which it is, but because it pays attention to a very specific social interaction common to that niche (namely, the age-old Jewish tradition to shep nachas, or, in other words, to share the joy of a happy occasion), and augments with the capabilities of the medium of the web. Just creating “Facebook for Jews” (which others have tried) hasn’t and won’t yield the same results. If all you’re doing is recreating an existing social network with an added feature, or doing a niche-clone, there’s plenty of open source or commercial projects you can use, and you shouldn’t need to raise venture capital for something like that.

Tonight: NextDC. Tomorrow: Social Media Club.

Wednesday, March 28th, 2007

Anyone going to the NextDC event tonight? I’m going to do my best to get there. And Social Media Club is tomorrow night, I’m going to shoot for that one as well.

The Blog Search Wars

Friday, December 29th, 2006

LeeAnn Prescott at Hitwise posts: Google Blog Search surpasses Technorati.

While Michael Arrington casts some doubt on the numbers (and we know this stuff is murky waters to begin with), I don’t think Hitwise’s claim really has any significance. All it really says is that Google can dramatically increase a site’s visibility by more directly incorporating it into their existing ecosystem, which should be a no-brainer. Keep in mind, the Hitwise blog exists to showcase their services, so the more sensational they can make their examples, the better for them.

As I commented over on Data Mining, the real issue to look at here is users. Of course more people are going to use Google Blog Search once it’s hooked up to Google’s search results page (the single most popular page on the Internet, I would guess) and Google News. But this really says nothing about how the two sites are competing. It’s most likely that the increased usership of Google Blog Search did not visit directly, rather they got there via a link from elsewhere on Google. But are users of Technorati switching to GBS? Are other blog search services losing users? How many folks who visited GBS also visited Technorati or other services? Are folks who discover blog search via Google/GBS looking for more information, and discover alternative services that provide richer functionality? None of these questions are addressed, and they would seem to be extremely relevant.

I’m also confused as to why Hitwise chose to use just Sphere as an example of an also-ran. I can think of at least four other blog search engines that probably get as much, if not more, traffic/visitors/users. Nothing against the Sphere folks, I just can’t abide the general myopia to anything outside of a few blocks in San Francisco. If I get some time, I’m going to post about the various services, strengths/weaknesses (in my opinion); I’ve kept away from this kind of stuff in the past, but I think it’s important.

Taking you Alexa with a Grain of Salt

Wednesday, November 22nd, 2006

Om Malik writes about the pitfalls of putting too much stake in Alexa. I’ve been meaning to write a post about Alexa for some time, as I’ve been collecting tidbits of data that point to the relative inaccuracies in Alexa rankings. I don’t have so much of an issue with their uptime, other than not being able to get my Alexa-fix (despite my skepticism in the accuracy of their rankings, I’m still an Alexaholic); it’s entirely possible that although the website is down, there are seperate servers to collect the toolbar data. My issue is with the lack of a correlation between rankings and site traffic and the ease of gaming your ranking.

Evidence and Data Points

A data point: Blogdigger, a site which I own and operate, currently has a three-month Alexa ranking of 16,801. If you check our graphs, you’ll see that this number fluctuates on daily basis, sometimes by up to 10K places (in both directions). I can tell you that we get around 100K page views a day. From what I have seen, there is ZERO correlation between a good day in terms of our traffic and a good day according to Alexa. Further proof of this comes from Otis Gospodnetic’s post comparing the Alexa stats to the Sitemeter stats for Lifehacker and Techcrunch, showing that there is little correlation between actual site traffic and Alexa rankings.

Otis’ post brought to my attention another astounding data point. Blogdigger gets more page views per day than TechCrunch. I’m not going to claim that we’re more popular or influential, but the fact of the matter is, in terms of raw numbers, we have more traffic, or, at least, similar levels of traffic. Yet the difference in Alexa stats is astounding: TechCrunch’s three-month average stands at 605. Now, I realize that Alexa traffic is more than just raw page views, it includes data about number of users and number of page views (although TechCrunch’s average page views per user is consistently lower than ours as well). What this points to is a severe skew in terms of the distribution of the Alexa toolbar, or possible signs of gaming (I don’t mean to suggest that the TechCrunch folks are gaming Alexa, I’m sure they have better things to do, but it is possible that there are automated nets of Alexa gaming bots that end up at TechCrunch more often than not because they are a highly linked-to site). This also shows that the relative difference between 16,000 and 600 is not that much, whereas the difference between position 600 and position 6 is logaritmically greater.

There’s many examples of this, too many to go into here, but, suffice it to say, one needs to consider other information beyond the Alexa rankings.

Alternatives

So what are our alternatives? There’s a new site called Compete.com, which takes a similar toolbar approach. While their stats seem to make sense in a lot of places, in many others they just don’t, and ultimately, if Compete.com becomes popular, it will suffer from the same pitfalls as Alexa does. There are other companies, like Hitwise and comScore, which take a Nielson-like approach (which is better than letting the userbase that you cull data from self-select itself by installing a toolbar), but, just as the Nielsen ratings need to be taken with a grain of salt (when Nielsen tells you 14 million people watched Heroes last Monday, they are extrapolating this number from, as far as I know, less than 5000 individual households, and sometimes even less than that), so do these approaches. They are also not publicly available, and cost quite a bit of money for a subscription.

Om suggests the big toolbar players, such as Yahoo and Google, begin to collect this information. Combined with other information these companies have (such as search results page click-thrus, stats-tracking applications and advertising information), they would have a better, more complete picture of web traffic (since the user base is broader). Even better, and I realize the tremendous privacy concerns here, so keep in mind that this is a theoretical proposition, would be to have the browsers themselves cull this information on an anonymous, aggregate basis. It’s unrealistic to ask the site operators to contribute this information, and would create the potential for fraud.

One last note, there’s a few hack you can use to estimate a site’s traffic when no information other than Alexa is available. Obviously you should look for a stats tracking link, such as Sitemeter; if it’s publicly accessible, it can provide good information. Another way is to visit the site, and see what kinds of third-party advertising they are using. If they use something like AdSense or AdBrite, finding the pages to signup for advertising on their sites may provide details on their traffic. This information can provide additional information for estimating a sites overall traffic.

YouTube/Comedy Central: You’ve Got to be kidding me

Monday, October 30th, 2006

Comedy Central, wake up. You owe a large chunk of the success of The Daily Show and The Colbert Report to the Internets. Why are you punishing the people who love your content? Why can’t you come up with some revenue sharing agreement with YouTube to make this kind of thing work? I’m all for copyright protection, but look at the reality here. If NBC, CBS or ABC came to you and said, “We’re going to put The Daily Show up at nights…and we’ll share some revenue with you…” you would do it, right? I mean, that’s where all the people are!

Maybe I’m pointing the finger in the wrong direction; maybe YouTube doesn’t want to get into these kinds of deals. Why not? Wouldn’t it be nice if I could just throw out my TV and TiVO, and just watch everything the next day on YouTube? Isn’t that why you named it YouTube?

Either way, there’s huge potential here for one of the other video sharing sites to make some headway. As soon as all the copyrighted material is gone from YouTube, people will start to look elsewhere. And wherever they find episodes of The Daily Show or The Office, you can bet they will flock in droves. Of course, there really isn’t a great business model in the old YouTube-style of doing things, but if you can get to the point where you’ve aggregated a large audience looking for quality (i.e. copyrighted/professionally produced) content, and you can strike some deals with major content owners, then you won’t need to get bought out by Google or Yahoo or anyone because you will be making real money.

No, no they didnt…

Monday, October 16th, 2006

Ooga Labs: “Has no one taken you aside and said, “Wait! You’re about to waste 10 years of your life figuring out the path you chose out of college is crap!” [via evhead]