Updated: 4/4/2004; 9:53:41 PM.
Editor's Radio Weblog
        

Tuesday, February 17, 2004

New Mozilla browser out.

Matthew Mastracci tells us all to switch to the new Mozilla Firefox.

[The Scobleizer -- Celebrating the Geek lifestyle]
9:05:15 PM    comment []

Will Google get steamrolled? Maybe, by Technorati or Feedster.

The Washington Post asks "Will Google get steamrolled like Netscape?"

No.

Next question?

Seriously, I'm a Microsoft employee. I haven't yet stopped using Google. Why? Cause I keep trying MSN search and I don't like it as much.

I've only been a Microsoft employee for, what, nine months? Back in the Netscape days I switched to Internet Explorer 2.0 (I was an early switcher), not because it was integrated with the OS, but because it had a better object model than Netscape did. By the time IE 4 rolled around there wasn't any real choice.

The thing to watch is the quality of the results.

Speaking of which, I'm using Technorati and Feedster for more and more of my searching. Now THAT is a trend worth watching!

While you all are watching for MSN to steamroll Google, maybe the steamrolling will come from left field? Feedster is on stage at Demo today. Last week at ETCon Technorati and Dave Sifry were the stars of the show. It'll be interesting to see what happens.

[The Scobleizer -- Celebrating the Geek lifestyle]
9:05:06 PM    comment []

At John Battelle's search-focused weblog, rumblings of a new search engine called Dipsie, and a search engine transplant at Yahoo. Could there be choice in search soon? That would be welcome. [Scripting News]
9:04:40 PM    comment []

WaveBlog.

I'm here with my company WaveMarket at DEMO and this morning - after a few days of last minute rush - we launched our suite of Location Based Services, including my baby WaveBlog. Yay! What a push. And whew! Now I can talk about what I'm doing!

This is what I've been working on for the past several months. It's a combination of a custom J2ME based mapping client, weblog service and location alerting system. It's being sold to carriers, not to the general public, but you can play with the public weblog site above. This is the piece I developed. It still needs a lot of hardening and ever more features need to be added to keep up with the TypePads of the world, but in general it's your standard weblog service, but with the integration of location information and maps.

The location information is the hard part, and the piece of the puzzle my company fills in. First, you can use the J2ME app (called WaveSpotter) to locate a position on a map with crosshairs for a one-click post to your weblog, or in the coming months we're going to be announcing deals with American and international carriers who will provide the location information on the back end which will geo-tag email and web posts automagically. I've also added a geo-encoding form to the site as well, so at the worst case you can just enter the address information and it'll look up the location info for you.

In addition to the maps on the weblog, the RSS feed also incorporates per-post geolocation using the W3C geo proposed namespace and tags. The idea is to provide that data for others to use and to start aggregating other geotagged feeds so that using a handset - via J2ME or WAP2 - you can see which weblogs have been updated in real time near you or in another specific location ("location-based mobile aggregation"). Our pitch has to do with club-goers and other trendy what-if scenarios that carriers love, but in general it's just the next step in mobile weblogging. Going from "photo blogs" to *real* moblogging, by enabling producing and consuming of information organized not only by time, but also by location. When you combine this with the rich media that modern handsets can produce, people become "personal broadcasters" where every mobile user (everyone?) becomes a roving reporter on the scene around them.

Now this is just the weblogging piece. WaveMarket existed long before I got there - they've got this really intense Alert system (the third product in the suite) which is not just a product, but a platform. Carriers buy our server and can then enable any of their third party developers to add location based alerts to their products (we'll be using the Alert system ourselves in the WaveBlog). For example, Buddy Alert allows you and your friends to sign up for alerts if you come within a certain distance of each other: "Alert: Ana is within 1 kilometer of you. Call her?" or things like Child Tracker: "Alert: Alex just decided to leave town with your car. Call him?" (This example will obviously not be for a few years, but the tech exists today.)

And that's the launch. Whew! We're pretty exhausted already and it's only day one. Luckily we got to present (not me, my CEO) early on Day One, so now we can just hang out in the Pavillion and answer questions. I got a great visit from Dave Sifry and Doc Searls this morning (who brought along an AP reporter with them. THANKS GUYS!). Doc is going to come back and pick my brain on the Linux systems we're using. I haven't mentioned that yet, but I'm the only developer who uses Windows. Everyone else uses Linux on their desktops, which is very cool, and WaveBlog (of course) runs on Linux (Debian, actually). Wonder why I like my job so much?

Okay, back to the conference...

-Russ By russ@russellbeattie.com. [Russell Beattie]


9:04:23 PM    comment []

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