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  • Data mining and trust

    • 18 Oct 2011
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    For Siri to be really effective, it has to learn a great deal about the user. If it knows where you work, where you live and what kind of places you like to go, it can really start to tailor itself as it becomes an expert on you individually. This requires a great deal of trust in the institution collecting this data. Siri didn’t have this, but Apple has earned their street cred.

    Developers are realizing that they can deliver amazing experiences when they understand more about the user. However, users today are careful to not give away too much of that information. With Apple’s strong reputation behind it, there’s a massive potential for success here.

    via labs.vectorform.com

    The lead developer of the original Siri app on the importance of background information to making the app work.

    Curious how Facebook, Google and Apple are taking such different approaches toward building trust of their users.

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  • Amazon Joins the Data Mining Party

    • 29 Sep 2011
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    Amazon will capture and control every Web transaction performed by Fire users. Every page they see, every link they follow, every click they make, every ad they see is going to be intermediated by one of the largest server farms on the planet. People who cringe at the data-mining implications of the Facebook Timeline ought to be just floored by the magnitude of Amazon’s opportunity here. Amazon now has what every storefront lusts for: the knowledge of what other stores your customers are shopping in and what prices they’re being offered there. What’s more, Amazon is getting this not by expensive, proactive scraping the Web, like Google has to do; they’re getting it passively by offering a simple caching service, and letting Fire users do the hard work of crawling the Web. In essence the Fire user base is Amazon’s Mechanical Turk, scraping the Web for free and providing Amazon with the most valuable cache of user behavior in existence.
    via cdespinosa.posterous.com

    Consider me floored.

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  • Dancing with the Elephants

    • 26 Sep 2011
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    What do the week’s Facebook and Google+ changes mean for your web presence?

    • More opportunities to connect with your users and their friends than ever before.

    • Larger and larger stores of data for the giants' benefit.

    • Data crumbs for the rest of us.

    • But if your site uses Facebook, users won’t have to remember yet another login. Is it worth it?

    Photo “Shadow of the Giant” by Grufnik

    Google+ opened to everyone this week, perhaps in an attempt to divert us from their rival’s main event, Facebook’s F8 developer conference. Google announced some good, but incremental, improvements to Google+: improved messaging and better mobile apps. Midweek, Eric Schmidt had testified before a congressional committee, defending against allegations that Google cooks its search results in favor of its own offerings.

    Meanwhile at F8, Facebook took over the World Wide Web.

    Things started innocently enough. The social networking giant announced the Timeline, a redesigned user profile. Timeline allows a longer-term view, with Facebook’s algorithms bringing the important stuff to the surface. More realtime activity gets moved to the Ticker in a sidebar.

    Then, while we were all groaning about the interface changes, Facebook announced updates to its Open Graph API. These updates are huge, changing both the data that apps can collect — and the way Facebook apps interact with the service, with their users, and with the entirety of the web itself.

    Apps now may request permissions to report user activity not just on a per-use basis, but in perpetuity. With one little “show in ticker” permission, an app can record your interactions inside the app forever — or until a user revokes that permission.

    And Facebook’s Like button, now installed on sites across the web, gains new powers. Publishers can name their own verbs, so “read,” “watched” or “bought” are all now possible. Facebook collects all the data: where the buttons appear, who clicked and the object of their click.

    The ambition here is astounding, the technical chops astonishing. What audacity! — just days after Eric Schmidt answered questions about Google’s fudging of search results.

    Those senators should have been asking — of both Facebook and Google — about proper the role of companies collecting private data on the web. Both Google with links and Facebook with likes have mapped tremendous swaths of human activity. Where’s the oversight? What limits appropriate?

    Then there’s you and I and our organizations' websites.

    Facebook, with the interface and API changes, has made it palatable to collect huge amounts of user data — data about our actions and, potentially, about our intentions.

    Chris Saad, posting about the announcements, asks the critical question:

    Will independent websites think to collect their OWN Attention data BEFORE sending it to FB so they can leverage it for their own purposes. The value of this data is incalculable.

    Think of the simplest data collection: email newsletter signup. With your own platform, you can collect that, and whatever data is relevent to your business — email addresses, content popularity, comment or other interaction. (We like Drupal for this, because of its flexibility and open source code, but there are many others, from many vendors.)

    With Facebook, you may be able to do this by plugging your app into Facebook’s Open Graph APIs (though terms of use limit what you can do with email addresses). But with a simple Facebook page, forget about it. Pages get Likes, but no email addresses. Sparing your users that login also keeps you from collecting data.

    So it comes down to this: are you big enough to own your own show?

    Coda

    If you don’t know, further reading may help —

    • John Hayden gives the nuts and bolts of how the Facebook changes affect Pages

    • Florian Bersier wonders about ownership of our online DNA and control of the giants

    • Facebook’s Open Graph docs are a great introduction to the API changes, if you’re building

    • Chris Saad posted a spreadsheet comparing Facebook to owning your own platform

    • Dave Winer posted his concerns about automatic recording of reads, etc. Hacker News' discussion of the post is a great measure of the power of Facebook and how it’s unavoidable for certain demographics.

    Read the rest of this post »

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  • HTML5 vs Native Phone Apps - One Example

    • 11 Aug 2011
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    At this point, do developers have to choose one mobile platform over another?

    Dan Pilone: Unfortunately, yes. Either that or they're choosing both iOS and Android and basically writing their applications twice. There are some mobile applications that are great as HTML5/CSS3/JavaScript and those are cross-platform, but I still think nothing beats a true, native application. As a great example, try ordering pizza from Papa Johns through their web application — it's well-done, pretty straightforward, and it looks a lot like an iOS application. Then use Chipotle's native iOS app. It's phenomenal. It doesn't do a whole lot more than Papa John's mobile web app, but the Chipotle app's user experience is dramatically better.

    Papa Johns web app and Chipotle native app

    via radar.oreilly.com

    Great example from the authors of Head First iPhone and iPad Development.

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  • An iPad success story

    • 10 Aug 2011
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    I’ve had laptops and cellular internet connectivity for 7 years, but I never would have done something like this before. Why?

    • I wouldn’t have been able to easily find a good app to do this without being bombarded with spam in my Google search. (And many of them would be Windows-only.)
    • When I did finally find an app that looked reasonable, I wouldn’t have been able to find any trustworthy reviews, being bombarded instead by more search spam.
    • When I went to buy it, it probably would have cost more.
    • I wouldn’t have trusted it comfortably enough to install it on my computer.
    • It might not even work.
    • If it did work, I’d probably need longer to figure out its learning curve, and navigating wouldn’t be as easy or fast with a keyboard and trackpad.
    • Taking out the laptop in the car, and passing around a laptop to show the final product, would feel much clunkier than using the iPad.

    The computing revolution brought on by iOS, the hardware, and the App Store ecosystem is a bigger deal than we realize.

    via marco.org

    Marco Arment on using an iPad 3-D drawing app to design his mother's kitchen. From his car. On a 1-hour drive.

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  • The network at work

    • 1 Jul 2011
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    Media_httpdistillerys_jzuhi

    Hard to believe that these little wires bring so much data/information/entertainment into our lives.

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  • Crystal Beasley on the Moral Hazard of Game Play or Why Foursquare is Broken

    • 25 Jun 2011
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    The danger of adding game dynamics to sites is that it changes the motivators for doing an action. By it’s very nature, the incentives make you more likely to do the behavior the designers are targeting. The designers think… This is great! More people are interacting with our thing we built. Fantastic! We won teh internets!

    Down this road lies the problem. Foursquare incentivizes you to check into places. The big sell for Foursquare is the social interaction layer. The BIG PROMISE of Foursquare is that you’ll have serendipitous interactions because you’ll see that your buddy is at the coffee shop just down the street from you. I’ve never seen this promise delivered on in Portland simply because we don’t have enough density. It does work in one place for a few days each year, Austin, TX at SXSWi.

    The game layer is added to keep Foursquare interesting for the other 360 days a year for those of use who don’t live in NYC or SF.

    via skinnywhitegirl.com

    The problem, as Beasley sees it -- and her post has a great anecdote about this -- is that checking in for points can break Foursquare's big promise.

    She ends with a great caution: be careful not to spend dev time on game mechanics until you know your product's value -- and can be sure the game won't work against that.

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  • Elements

    • 1 Apr 2011
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  • Drupal is Legos for Websites

    • 29 Mar 2011
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    Maybe we've recommended building your website with Drupal, the content management system (CMS). Perhaps you've heard how the White House and Congress and Sony Music (and many, many others) use Drupal for their public websites.

    Quite right for you to hesitate a bit about using Drupal the platform, and about working with small firms like ours to implement and support your site. 

    These are both good decisions, I think. Of course I'm biased about el-studio.com, so I'd like to talk a bit about your decision to go with Drupal. Let's be clear about a couple of definitions first, shall we? 

    Read the rest of this post »

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  • Orbit in action at #drupalchi

    • 11 Mar 2011
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