Reflections & analysis about innovation, technology, startups, investing, healthcare, and more .... with a focus on Minnesota, Land of 10,000 Lakes. Blogging continuously since 2005.

Tag: AdaptiveBlue

Firefox Users, You’ll Love the Cool, New “BlueOrganizer Denim” Plug-In

AdaptiveBlue, a company we covered here and here last September when they debuted at DEMOfall, today launched the latest version of its BlueOrganizer plug-in for the Firefox browser, which it calls Denim. Alex Iskold, the founder and CEO, is a friend of mine, and a fellow writer at Read/Write Web. (Okay, I’ve written two posts there and he’s done what seems like 50 or more, and they’re all amazingly good.) How he finds time to do all this writing and run a startup, I don’t know. I’m threatening to start calling him Superman. Alex’s firm is based in New Jersey and was funded in a Series A round last fall by Union Square Ventures of New York City.

Anyway, I downloaded and installed the plug-in in about 30 seconds on my Mac. It’s an elegant solution — and the web site is very clean, well functioning, and informative, with good demos, graphics, and explanations. The plug-in worked flawlessly for me right from the start, and I’m now thinking it could turn me into more a Firefox user… 🙂

Blueorganizer
Duncan Riley reported on the launch today on Tech Crunch, noting that “Adaptive Blue also enters the widget market. The new ‘sharing links’ feature allows users to embed semantic links into any web page, include bookmark style lists in a sidebar, or just embed a traditional widget. Affiliate programs are fully supported with no revenue sharing; if a user includes their affiliate code for programs such as eBay and Amazon they keep 100% of any associated revenue.”

Richard MacManus also published a post today on BlueOrganizer on Read/Write Web, under the title “Semantic Web In Action?” He explained that BlueOrganizer “aims to provide extra contextual information to you while browsing the Web. Basically, after you install BlueOrganizer in Firefox, it enables you to discover all kinds of relevant content while you’re browsing – such as books, music, links, related information, etc. Essentially then, it adds personalization and semantics into the browser.”

How’s the new version of the plug-in different? “First,” says Alex, “it’s just much more fun! Its lighter, more clickable, and takes less space both in the toolbar and in the sidebar. There’s also a new BlueMenu right in the toolbar. This makes the menu much easier to use for people who are not into right-clicking.” He also says that the latest context detection algorithm “is a huge improvement over the previous versions. Try it on blog posts about books, music, wine or another topic and see for yourself.”

Probably the most important new feature is SmartLinks, according to Alex. “These are web links that feature contextual shortcuts. They carry all the smarts about the objects right into blog posts, web pages, and social network profiles.” With SmartLinks, he noted, you can share the power of context and semantics with your friends, family, or readers.

“This is fundamental and big,” Alex proudly points out. “We’re bringing semantics into the most basic element of the web – the link. Imagine the web where links no longer point to pages, but point to things….users can get to information faster; information that’s contextual and relevant.” While some people might call this the Semantic Web, “we would not be so presumptuous,” Alex says. “But we think BlueOrganizer and SmartLinks are powering a smarter web and that, in turn, paves the road to the real Semantic Web.”

Web 2.0 Expo: My Coverage on Read/Write Web

My first guest post went up on Read/Write Web a couple of days ago. It’s called Widgetsphere: New Playground For Marketers, and it’s about a session I attended at the Web 2.0 Expo this week in SF. Readwriteweblogo The CEOs of two widget syndication networks, Widgetbox and Clearspring, spoke about how widgets are becoming a must in the Internet marketer’s toolbox. (I covered Widgetbox a bit back in September 2006 when they debuted at DemoFall.) Widgetboxlogo

Anyway, it was fun getting to Web 2.0 Expo and meeting Richard MacManus, editor and publisher of Read/Write Web. What a hard-working guy! And now a media mogul in his own right… 🙂 He’s based in Wellington, New Zealand, but flew to California for a few weeks to attend the Expo and do some other business. Clearspringlogo Watch for another link to Read/Write Web soon, a recap of the whole Web 2.0 Expo experience. And I hope to be writing for this great blog again in the future. It was also fun hanging out again with Alex Iskold, a regular writer at Read/Write Web, who’s also founder of AdaptiveBlue. Alex is not only a smart guy and a great writer, but a fun guy, too! We had some laughs at the party Tuesday night snatching appetizers from the carts as they wheeled by on the way to the buffet lines, which were waay too long to stand in… 🙂

More DEMOfall: Down the Home Stretch

The second afternoon of the two-day event was a real marathon session of non-stop demonstrations — 21 pitches in two and a half hours! (With no break!) It was focused on these themes:

• Talk Is Cheap, and Easy – new cost-saving technologies from VOIP, to smart conferencing, to new hardware
• Express Yourself – tools for consumer-generated content, the king of the online world, whether for business, learning, or personal expression
• It’s Nice to Share…Social Content – social networks meet consumer content to bring rich contexts to both relationships and information
• Tag, You’re It! – collecting, managing, organizing, referencing, and sharing the information you find online
• Finding and Delivering All That Rich Media – a presenter that taps the power of peer-to-peer networks to efficiently deliver rich media
• The Connected Desktop – online information is feeding desktop apps, and they in turn are extending to the Internet and beyond

I won’t even think of trying to describe them all — my brain still aches — but let me pick out a few that impressed me. There were some very visually stunning apps and UIs shown this afternoon. Call it the “image” session — as in how it matters on the web. Let’s start, however, with a couple of apps that are more about talk.

Jajah is pretty cool, and a real disrupter. It lets you make free global calls with regular phones — “no software downloads, no headsets, no hassles.” The company was founded in 2005 by a pair of Austrians, and now has its U.S. headquarters in Mountain View, with a European office in Luxembourg. Jajahlogo_1 They’ve raised $8 million for far from Sequoia and Globespan. Today, they announced JajahMobile, which lets you make free international calls from your cell phone — no new phone needed, no new number, and no contracts. I love the way the Demo folks describe their competition: “the global telephony industry.” Yes, indeed, and it should be plenty worried.

Another VOIP play is Grand Central, a unified communications service that integrates all your phones, your numbers, and your voicemail boxes. You get one number for life and, as CEO Craig Walker said, “It’s the last number you’ll ever need.” Grandcentrallogo_1 The system, which has a very clean, attractive interface, always tells you who’s calling, and it gives you four options on how to deal with any call: accept it, send it to voicemail, listen to the voicemail, or accept and record the call. The latter is especially useful if someone’s giving you information but you can’t write it down because you’re driving, for example. Grand Central has been funded to date with $4 million from Halsey Minor’s venture firm, Minor Ventures, also in San Francisco, and it inherited the name and domain from a previous company of Minor’s that was in an unrelated business.

How could a web site creation and hosting service be at Demo, and how could it be something I’d expect you to be interested in? Well, SiteKreator is different! It brings really attractive, professional design to small business owners, many of whom are not yet on the web — or just can’t afford to hire a designer to custom-build their own site. Sitekreatorlogo And the prices for using the site builder tool and hosting services are very reasonable, starting at just $15 per month. If you ever get called on to help friends or relatives set up a web site (don’t we all?), this is where you should send ’em! As described today, SiteKreator offers the elegance and sophistication of a design studio at the price of a common site builder.

Perhaps the biggest newsmaker of all at the DEMOfall event was Wallop, the social networking site spun out of Microsoft. In fact, if you haven’t yet heard of it, you must be living under a rock. It was all over the TV news on Tuesday morning, and in the major print media as well. Walloplogo My first real look at it was in their demo today, and I must say it’s an elegant interface. Changes the game. But it should be for what they paid Frog Design to do it! (Nothing like all that Microsoft money, and Bay Partners, too.) It was completely developed in Flash. Check it out. The business model of this MySpace and Facebook competitor is interesting — no advertising! Its revenues will come strictly from taking a 30% cut of all e-commerce on the site — but that should be a very, very nice number.

Not only do I not have time to frequent social networking sites, but I’m also not a target for scrapbooking — though I do know it’s a huge market in this country (approaching $3 billion annually). Another Demo presenter, Scrapblog, is combining the storytelling qualities of scrapbooks with the sharing qualities of blogs. Scrapbloglogo Each of the “scrapblogs” you create with this free service –and it’s aimed at parents, newlyweds, vacationers, etc — is a rich-media blog that’s formatted very nicely for either sharing online or printing into a high-quality photo book. The design, attractiveness, and ease-of-use of Scrapblog was very impressive.

Okay, so that’s a cool way to be creative with consumer-generated content, photos in this case. But how does the social-networking generation create “personalized multimedia entertainment experiences.” That’s what iBloks wants to bring to the party — and it was one impressive presentation. Ibloks_logo The service lets you use your photos, videos, games, music, and sound effects to create an “immersive” mix, and then share it via email or IM, and/or publish it anywhere, to any web page or blog. The company calls its “mods” creation a totally new way for people to express themselves. And they seem to be convincing, already having raised $3 million in VC from Maveron. iBloks sees a ready market, too, citing a Forrester study that says 31% of consumers now spend an hour or more a day on social networking sites. [Now I’m wondering if anyone’s measuring how much work (or homework) isn’t getting done as a result?]

Another presenting firm I just have to mention is HeyLetsGo — only because I thought they were cute, and had the cutest company name in the whole pack. What do they do? Well, they claim to be the “first social network that connects people face to face.” Unique concept huh!? Heyletsgo_logo_1 What it specifically does is connect them with local events where they can meet their friends — old and new — by the hundreds, it seems. They’re only active in their home base of Boston right now, but they had a rush of 80,000 twenty-somethings sign up on their site in a short period of time recently, still in their pre-launch phase. [And, yes, they already have Series A funding from Highland Capital and General Catalyst.] Naturally, they have plans to go national. You heard it first at Demo, folks…

Another content-sharing site, which appeals to a more mainstream or mature online consumer, is eSnips. CEO Yael Elish told me her site allows “everyday people to share content in one place, without having to manage so many accounts.” Esnipslogo It’s about sharing, publishing, and even selling your creative work — and it’s all free. eSnips puts content at the center of things, and lets it lead the way to creating new relationships. Think artists, photographers, karioki enthusiasts, anyone who wants to share his or her passion or creative pursuits. Users each get 1 gigabyte of storage for free. You just upload to folders, each of which becomes a web site — designated private, group, or public. There’s no limit, and files can be of any type. “It’s a social network focused on finding people,” the CEO said. It must be catching on, because she said eSnips already has one million registered users, and the site is now logging 3 million unique visitors per month. Geographic distribution includes about 30% U.S., and a fairly equal spread between Canada, Europe, and Asia. The Israeli based company received a seed round of funding from Gemini Israel Funds.

Alex Iskold, CEO of Adaptiveblue (and quite a blogger, too, for the Read/Write Web blog), did a great job pitching his “Blueorganizer” smart Firefox extension toward the end of the afternoon. It creates a context-sensitive, personalized web experience, and is “a step closer to the smart browser of tomorrow,” Iskold said. Adaptivebluelogo The firm claims that browser personalization is the next step in personal productivity online, but notes that the market is not clearly defined — overlapping with targeted advertising, for one thing. The Demo producers call Adapativeblue’s Blueorganizer “a sight for sore eyes, going beyond social bookmarking by turning your browser into a productivity tool….It’s a browser with a brain, and it’s about time.”

The final company I’ll mention was in fact the last presenter of the day, Srivats Sampath, CEO of Mercora (and a serial entrepreneur who was on the Demo stage for the fourth time). His firm was added at the last minute by Chris Shipley after one of the others had to drop out. Mercoramlogo250w He was debuting MercoraM, a new service that “transforms your smartphone into a wireless, socially connected music player.” This was very cool, and we got to hear quite an array of great music to wrap up the day’s sessions, including Vanessa-Mae’s rendition of “Classical Gas,” plus some very funky West African music that had the guys on stage dancing, and some audience members joining them. There’s only one question I have for Srivats: when can I get this for my phone, and when will you support the Mac??

That’s it from the DEMOfall showfloor, folks, right here from press row. I’ll try to do a wrapup post soon with some of my final thoughts….

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Semantic Web Goes Blue at DEMOfall

Adaptiveblue is launching its blueorganizer Firefox extension at DEMOfall next week. Chris Shipley, executive producer of the conference, said it will give us a “glimpse of powerful semantic Web technologies to come.”

Adaptiveblue is a personalization and smart browsing company founded by Alex Iskold in early 2006. Adaptiveblue500w The vision of adaptiveblue, says the company, is to invent new browser technologies that deliver a personalized Web experience, enhance productivity, and save time.

Among other things, Alex writes frequently for Web 2.0 journal, Ajax World magazine, and the Read/Write blog. There’s more about him here. And here’s what some people are saying about the product. Amazon’s Web Services Blog recently said this.

Blueorganizer uses Amazon S3 (Simple Storage Service), which it calls “storage for the Internet” … “designed to make web-scale computing easier for developers.”

Tag: