DomainKeys: finally being used for its intended purpose
Submitted by rernst on Tue, 07/15/2008 - 1:40pmGoogle and Yahoo are using domainkeys to verify paypal and ebay email. This is a good thing, but it's really late. Still, since paypal and ebay are amongst the most phished services, this has the potential to do a lot of good. Now, if only banks would start using it.
Microsoft's Biggest 'Threat'
Submitted by rernst on Fri, 05/30/2008 - 2:15pmMicrosoft periodically shuffles around what it thinks to be its biggest 'threat'. Right now, it's apparently open source. Yesterday, it was Google.
I disagree. Microsoft's biggest threat is itself. Particularly the higher-ups (here's looking at you, Steve...) for their refusal to embrace the open source community, rather than spouting FUD and lies.
Google Summer of Code 2008 Proposals (Drupal)
Submitted by rernst on Thu, 04/03/2008 - 12:22pmCrap Creep
Submitted by rernst on Thu, 02/14/2008 - 5:30amThis was originally intended to be a rant about pointless Facebook notifications. After thinking about it a while, I realized that Facebook wasn't unique. Nor did only social networking sites exhibit the phenomenon of scope expansion, aka crap creep
What bothers me is not the encroaching ads, not the arbitrary banninations the process of transformation caused by trying to do everything and be everything to everyone. No wonder people get overwhelmed. In the late 90's it was banner and popup advertising, as people expecting something for nothing were expected to put up with a constant barrage of ads. Now? The new vogue is social networking features. Combine this natural tendency of trying to be all things to all people with the tendency of the social network to try to include *everything*, and you've got a nightmare on rocket roller skates.
The usability and value of Facebook has gone drastically downhill ever since they opened up an API. The many trivial applications have created a surge in useless invitations, and pollute the previously-informative status feed. Sure, you can customize where things go on your profile page, but you can't get rid of all the notifications you aren't interested in because their system doesn't learn from what items you click the 'X' on, and because there are more applications created daily.
The only web services vendor I can recall right now that *doesn't* do this to their services is -- go figure -- Google. Sure they've got a boatload of products but they don't try to shove everything on the same page.
Mark my words: the future of social networking applications is in sites which have a more tightly focused scope, or towards one particular interest. That is, unless social networking ends up being just another fad footnote in the rapidly-evolving Internet landscape.
The 'Groups' functionality of the big social networking sites might seem to do this, but it's not the same thing. On a social network devoted to a particular topic you can find only people who are interested in that topic. Not your coworkers, or creepy people from high school that you don't want to have to deal with -- just people with some sort of an interest in a certain topic. There's a sense of simplicity to that.
The presence of specific groups on larger social networking sites leads to a particularly annoying problem: too many Group Collectors. You've seen this type of person, Only slightly better than the Friend Collectors. They focused on joining as many groups as possible while never participating in any of them. I wouldn't be so annoyed with the type if they didn't insist upon sending 'join me in this group' notifications to everyone of their 'friends'.
I don't know how I would manage under the barrage of notifications if I were a friend collector. I think I'd go stark raving mad. As it is, they're irritating and useless ("Foo and Bar received a UselessSuperFancyWallPost -- click here to try to see it and be denied access")
The inevitable fragmentation of the social network is why platforms that allow distributed data management and distributed authentication are the wave of the future. An undercurrent to the current state of the 'net is that people already have too many user accounts and it's getting hard to remember who uses what. I've suffered from this problem ever since about 1999 or thereabouts. To this day I still can't login to most sites using the email I used to register as opposed to some username which I may or may not remember.
Techs like OpenSocial and OpenID. Drupal also has distributed authentication built-in if the admin enables it. I'm still exploring this feature but it looks very neat.
The greatest irony: I get group notifications from facebook groups whose purpose it is to protest against the pointless groups and group notifications! I want to choke and die at seeing those. It's not funny any more guys...
Somebody at Google Listens
Submitted by rernst on Wed, 11/14/2007 - 10:54amA while back, I made a remark about the insane steps necessary in order to embed a youtube video into a site.
That's changed now: as the embed code is freely available for videos that haven't disabled embedding.
Having to enter your username and password to an external site in order to embed their videos is insecure, inane, and just stupid.
So, now that I can, I'll be putting up the post I *wanted* to put up: later todaytomorrow.
Ambient Findability and the Future of Search
Submitted by rernst on Thu, 09/20/2007 - 10:21amWhile searching the list of Google Tech Talks I found one of Peter Morville's talks on findability. It's a long talk but worth the time spent.
Users are Lazy
Submitted by rernst on Sat, 09/15/2007 - 7:32pmIf you *want* users to re-use your content, don't make it insanely difficult to do so:
This was going to be a post entitled Which Car Would You Buy with two youtube videos: one of a Kia Rio (low-end, cheap car currently sold in North America, and the other of a chinese-made piece of crap: the 'Brilliance BS-6'.
But to post videos from youtube to your blog is an annoying, hassle-filled procedure. I'll outline the steps:
- signup at youtube.com (not so bad, but still: why couldn't I use my google account?)
- click on 'post to blog' once I'd logged in
Microsoft has lost it’s mind
Submitted by rernst on Tue, 03/20/2007 - 4:16amI think Google's success has caused several minds at MS to snap. Lately, Microsoft shills have been going out of their way to attack Google in particular: According to Steve Ballmer, doubling your employee count is 'insane', and Google has no sources of revenue outside of search and advertising. Thus, by extension, all their other efforts are doomed to fail.
Microsoft Ads on Pro-Linux Sites
Submitted by rernst on Mon, 03/05/2007 - 3:48pmA one-shot blog was linked to on digg today that expressed puzzlement and outrage over the presence of Microsoft's Get the FUD (here's the 'actual' page for those of you that will ask: Microsoft: Get the Facts).
Killam Trust Lectures @ Dal
Submitted by rernst on Thu, 10/05/2006 - 1:55pmLast night I went to one of the Killam Trusts lectures at the Rowe building on Dal campus. Daniel M. Russell of Google was presenting on the topic 'Divining user intent'.
While there was nothing revolutionary to me in the presentation, it did give me some interesting insights into the importance of 'meaning' when searching. The focus on comfort level seems almost obsessive, but I can't deny that it's important, and probably is crucial to Google's business model.