Flow-based search architecture promises flawless
February 24, 2008
Bill Burnham, an early beta-tester of a, what he calls, flow-based search engine, predicts bright future for SkyGrid and even its ability to predict it; the future, that is.
Mr. Burnham writes on alwayson.goingon.com that when the flow, filter, analyze search architecture correlates to the “observed movements in things like … stock markets, company sales […] it should ultimately be able to theoretically predict, with reasonable accuracy, many of those changes. Yes, I said it: SkyGrid and its new search architecture may ultimately predict the future,” the author writes.
Mr. Burnham contrasts the “flow/filter/analyze” SkyGrid architecture to the “traditional” “crawl, index, query,” and the verdict to the latter sounds pessimistic. He calls SkyGrid “a radical new architecture” which ‘holds the potential to actually predict the pattern and influence of idea/meme propagation throughout the internet and from there into the financial markets and beyond.” To support his claims, the author breaks the flow-based architecture description in a series of logical steps that he had, as an early beta-tester, identified.
As to the danger of having the new, “revolutionary” search architecture getting beaten by the sharks of the business, Google, for instance, Mr. Burnham has the answer to that. “Moving from a traditional crawl/index/query architecture to a flow/filter/analyze one is a decidedly non-trivial undertaking, one that would require an entire re-architecture of their core services and thus one highly unlikely to be made.”
Picture: Flickr
Russian blogs on uprise on the eve of presidential elections
February 20, 2008
The Russian blogs are seemingly trying to outplay mainstream media, by harshly criticizing the main Presidential candidate, Medvedev, AP reports, quoted by editorandpublisher.com.
“The postings by Web commentators, professionals and amateurs alike,” the website reads, “are sometimes barbed, frequently satirical and always unfiltered — a marked contrast to most of Russia’s major media, where many reporters, editors and producers are wary of angering the Kremlin.”
Yet there are alleged and real limitations to Russia’s blogosphere watchdog effort. “There are also allegations the Kremlin has organized teams of its own bloggers to attack or rebut critics of the government through Web postings.” The natural limitation is access to Internet, which is scarce and slow, oftentimes.
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Nuclear power flashes light at tunnel end
February 20, 2008
It seems that nuclear power is gaining ground on the energy market, or so the report of a “London-based World Energy Council” maintains. James Kanter, writes on a Business of Green blog, how Europe seems to be investing its hopes into the fission reactors.
“Nuclear energy technology, its proponents say, already works and can supply a huge base load of power to keep national grids supplied,” Mr. Kanter writes. “By contrast, renewable sources of power like wind and solar are intermittent and less able — at least for the moment — to deliver the quantity of electricity needed to drive modern, industrial nations.”
Yet, the author writes, “[t]he question of how developed economies will keep the lights on without burning more fossil fuels seems unlikely to go away anytime soon.”
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Replacing paper in direct mail by stuff
February 20, 2008
Getting a weird hookadoo in your mailbox may not be such a remote thing, if Matter project works well, Community Mobilization blog implies.
“Matter is taking an unconventional approach to direct marketing by sending out boxes of ‘interesting stuff’ instead of paper,” following the historically successful model of Direct Mail.
“[The project] is a collaboration between Artomatic and Royal Mail, and it targets consumers in the UK only. If US based companies and philanthropies adopt this method who knows what kind of interesting stuff we may get in the mail, or how much junk we will be contributing to our landfills.”
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Full-fetched mobile networking might stand out as commodity
February 20, 2008
Christian Kreutz comes up with the natural question, “When is the collaborative mobile web coming?” on his crisscrossed.net blog.
“It is clear that the mobile will sooner or later bypass the personal computer by Internet usage,” he writes. But, “will it work? By this I mean that I can interact with all sorts of tools via my mobile phone — edit a wiki, build a mashup, writing a blog post, and finally network more effectively.”
Of course, Mr. Kreutz also sees other shortcomings of the mobile networking. “There are still many limitation to the phone: the screen, keyboard, connection. However this is just a matter of time, and recent devices already make a difference. I wonder why so little has been developed in order to interact and collaborate via the mobile phone in the social web.”
Place all the eggs in one basket: SDSN
February 20, 2008
It appears that the abundance of social networks gives headaches to busy guys. Several IT blokes from South Africa came up with a unified account, Simple Distributed Social Network (SDSN). “Their concept is simple,” whiteafrican.com reports, “create a standardized way for people to own their own profiles, so they’re not tied into (and recreated) on every social website (like Facebook, Flickr, YouTube, Twitter, MySpace, etc…).”
The rationale behind the services is also simple. “If you think about it, the way we’re handling profiles online is a little crazy. Having my profile duplicated multiple locations, for each site, is neither efficient or a good long-term solution,” Whiteafrican reads.
Although the idea is not new, it has some important innovative features, the website writes. “To be honest, a couple other services are trying to tackle some of these same issues (OpenID, Microformats, Google’s OpenSocial, etc…). SDSN compliments these services, from what I can tell, and simplifies it for anyone who has their own website.”
Picture: whiteafrican.com
Social annotation comes handy in online research
February 20, 2008
The “proverbial” quest for “needle in the haystack” finds application in social bookmarking, Rebecca seems to imply on wildapricot.com.
Without leaving out the benefits of social bookmarking, Rebecca wonders whether “the usual social bookmarking services really are the best possible tool for organizing that flood of online information, [when it] comes to online research and collaboration?”
“Diigo.com takes social bookmarking to a new level of usefulness,” Rebecca writes. “It’s all about social annotation. Highlight text or leave a note, right on the web page itself.”
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BusinessWeek might grab digital activism by the throat
February 20, 2008
Mary wonders on zapcoom.com about what implication for digital activists can have a story published in the “conservative BusinessWeek” magazine. “We go beyond signing up on an online petition,” says Mark Hanis, executive director of the Genocide Intervention Network, quoted by BusinessWeek. “The Web is very much the gateway into taking substantive action,” he says referring to a Facebook group initiative to help Darfur.
“What does it mean when a conservative magazine like BusinessWeek writes a story about college kids using Facebook to organize against the carnage in Darfur?” Mary writes. “It means that they see the practice of digital activism (or ‘activism 2.0,’ as they call it) to be widespread and influential enough to be worthy of notice.”
Careful to take into account BusinessWeek’s profit-seeking intentions, Mary comments that the site sees “some commercial implications from this new user group.”
“If activism is another motivation for using an ad-driven online service like Facebook or YouTube, the owners of these services are right to pay attention to their demands. I would love it if the market tailored services to meet the needs of digital activists.”
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Online learning may be flat but also deep, if demand is high
February 20, 2008
Increasing demand for higher education is becoming difficult for traditional campuses to meet. Fortunately, there is Internet and Web 2.0, which will eventually lead to Learning 2.0, write John Seely Brown and Richard P. Adler in their paper “Minds on Fire: Open Education, the Long Tail, and Learning 2.0.”
“The latest evolution of the Internet, the so-called Web 2.0,” the paper reads “has blurred the line between producers and consumers of content and has shifted attention from access to information toward access to other people.”
Web 2.0 facilitates the social learning, peer to peer, and scientist to scientist as well as combinations of these. “Understanding is socially constructive,” the authors write. At the same time, online education has a “long tail.” “Whereas traditional schools offer a finite number of courses of study, the “catalog” of subjects that can be learned online is almost unlimited.”
In their lengthy paper the authors present thoroughly how the demand-driven education involves more passion and, thus, better quality knowledge. “This new form of learning begins with the knowledge and practices acquired in school but is equally suited for continuous, lifelong learning that extends beyond formal schooling.”
Picture: Connect.educause.edu
TV ads might lose the cash cow status in a move to online
February 20, 2008
Webisodes and advertorials seem to be winning ground from traditional channels of advertising distribution – TV, VOD, and set-top box menu. Or so shows the study released by The Association of National Advertisers and Forrester Research, comments Jackson West on Newteevee.com.
“For producers looking for sponsors,” Mr. West writes “87 percent of advertisers believe branded entertainment — from sponsor shout-outs to product placement — will play a stronger role.”
The poll also shows a decrease in budgets for TV ads. “[T]he stat that really jumped out at me claims that over half of the marketers polled said that they’d cut television advertising budgets by 12 percent once DVR penetration had reached half of American homes.
“Where’s that money going to go?” the author wonders.
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