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: widgets (Page 1 of 2)

Defrag 2010: A Chat About Yolink

On the first day of Defrag, I stopped by to chat with Brian Cheek, Director of Business Development for TigerLogic, about his firm's product Yolink, which is a next-generation technology that enhances search by extracting information from behind links and inside of documents.  Yolink-graphic I was amazed I hadn't heard about Yolink until a few days prior to Defrag, and found it pretty amazing as I started to play with it.  See the following coverage for more about this technology: Yolink Helps Web Researchers Search Behind Links (Mashable) … Yolink's Next Step Search Pulls Info from Behind Links and Inside Docs (ReadWriteWeb) … and Yolink – A Search Accelerator for Deep Internet Research (MakeUseOf.com).

It's available as a plugin for all the major browsers. It's also available as a desktop app for Windows PC users. You can even get a Yolink widget for your site or blog (again, all the major platforms). Also be sure to look at some cool lab experiments created by Yolink engineers that showcase the use of the Yolink API. The API allows integrating Yolink into any web service. It can be used to enhance existing search engine results, or to provide site or app search functionality outright. The API is simple to implement and completely customizable.

Download or listen to my interview with Brian Cheek of TigerLogic about Yolink… (MP3)

GSP+ETech=A Damn Good Week in San Diego

Despite the fact that I lost my voice halfway through my three days in San Diego (some weird cold thing I picked up), the two O’Reilly events this week were definitely worth attending. I say that even though I wasn’t able to participate as much as I would have liked. Certainly, the networking suffered. I haven’t figured out how to do that without talking yet… 🙂 Gspwest08banner

I did live-Twitter the sessions I sat in on, capturing all the nuggets you can likely handle. If you’d like to see those, just go to my Twitter page. For Graphing Social Patterns, scroll back to March 3 and 4. For ETech, scroll to the March 5 tweets.  I must have written 150 or more total for both events. And there were some darn good speakers and panels, which I captured as best I could (in the requisite sound-bite form).

GSP was Monday and Tuesday, while ETech was Tuesday, Wednesday, and
Thursday. But I only covered ETech on Wednesday, which I had previously
determined was the most interesting day from my perspective.  I definitely wanted to
be at GSP on Tuesday, and I skipped ETech on Thursday for a couple of reasons: to go back home to San Clemente so my voice could recover, and to avoid another expensive hotel night. Etechlobby

I also posted some 118 photos to Flickr in two sets: GSP pix here and ETech pix here. Note that I mostly shot what I thought would be interesting to you: speaker slides, as well as shots of the speakers and panelists themselves, plus other general scenes — as opposed to posed/cutsie shots of my friends, etc… 🙂

Anyway, I found the programming at both events to be very good, and I learned a lot. Plus, I made a bunch of great contacts. (Look for that list in my next post.)  I hope you found my live-Twittering and Flickr pix interesting, at least, and (even better) useful.

Widget Summit, Day 2: Geeky But Oh-So-Widgety Good

At 7:30 am on Tuesday, I was back at the squeaky-clean-new UCSF Mission Bay campus, chompin’ at the bit for more of that good widget scoop. Along with Monday’s program, this would surely be more widget smarts than a person could get anywhere else on the planet — at least this week. Tuesday’s session was to have a different purpose:  producer Niall Kennedy had planned it that way [and hats off to him for a great job putting this event together!]. Monday was about the business of widgets and large trends affecting the industry, while he told us Tuesday was for getting into the nitty-gritty, helping attendees plan their widget implementations. And there was no question in my mind that most of the 200+ attendees at Widget Summit 2007 were in fact developers — or, as Niall described them in the conference materials, the people "directly involved in this hyper-growth industry, providing the tools and content that connect people and their ideas across the web."

On this day, I would take deep dives for you, oh valued readers, in Javascript widget basics, advanced Javascript. Microsoft’s Popfly and Silverlight, Facebook development, iPhone widget development, and — last but certainly not least — Google Gadgets.

Dori Smith, a well known programmer and author of Javascript books (published by O’Reilly and others), led the first session. She told us how the term "widget" isn’t really well defined — it means different things to different people. Dorismith
In the Apple world, for example, there’s the "widget object," while in the Vista world, there’s the "system.gadget" object — but they’re different things.  She also called the industry on the "write once, run anywhere" claim — calling it a myth. "Unless it’s something really, really basic," she said, "you’re going to have to tweak the widget for different platforms."

So, what should your considerations be when creating your first widget? Dori set out a great list:
• what do you want to do?
• is it community-oriented and viral? or maybe just something simple, like a countdown to an event?
• is is static or dynamic?
• will it require frequent updates?
• is it for a web page or not?
• what platform will you use?
• what does your audience want?

Dori said cross-platform woes can be best dealt with by separating content from style and behavior: HTML for content, CSS for style.  She recommended you start by making your widget work without Javascript, then add JS functionality without touching the HTML. She said DOM (Document Object Model) lets you manipulate with Javascript without affecting the HTML.

The biggest complaint about widgets is that they’re slow, Dori said. The solution?  "Better written widgets!" Let the page finish loading, she said, adding that there’s a simple workaround to this problem. (Presumably, you have to read one of her books.)

What’s Dori’s crystal ball?  First, she’s really looking forward to Leopard coming out on October 26.  She’s seen a lot of the new stuff coming in this OS upgrade, but can’t talk about it.  One thing she could mention: "Dashcode" — a development environment for widgets. "I love this product!"  Audience question:  "But is it only for Mac OS dashboard widgets?"  Dori’s answer: "Yes, but you can create graphics you can use on other platforms."  She also really likes the new "WebClips feature of the new Leopard OS.  "It allows people with no interest in code to make their own widgets."

Programmers are increasingly understanding the impact of widgets, Dori said. "And users are more willing to install widgets."  She warned, however: "Platform incompatibilities will get worse before they get better…The standardization process will help," she said, "but it will take a long time."

Since this was a session on Javascript, what about that other kind of widget?  "Could you comment on Flash?" asked an audience member. "There are lots of people out there with iPhones," she said, "which don’t support Flash!"  The questioner countered: "But Javascript doesn’t work on MySpace."  Dori countered back: "Yes, but you can use DHTML. It really depends on what you want to do."  Flash is much more visual, she allowed, but it’s also an expensive product to buy.  And the final good insight from Dori: "Anything you can do in Flash you can do in Javascript — on one platform.  The problem comes with multiple platforms."

But, as if this session wasn’t enough on JS, there was more coming. Joe Smarr, the young, animated chief architect at Plaxo, jumped right up on the stage to continue the fun.  [Joe is the son of famed computer scientist Larry Smarr.]  Plaxo, Joe reminded us, was doing Ajax iframes in 2004. It now has 20 million users. "Why is JS special?" Joe asked. Joesmarr
"Because you’re downloading real source code and running it in the browser," he said. And downloading and running JS blocks the browser, and the UI thread. "Code from different domains is executing together," Smarr said. "You can do a lot of good with Javascript, but you can do a lot of harm, too."

The biggest piece of advice from Joe: "Make your widget NOT slow the page down — or open any security holes. Make it fast."  He also put in a plug for Firebug (a Firefox plug-in for coders): "It’s the web hacker’s best friend. Makes it really hard to keep developing in IE."  Joe gave us his secrets for high-performace widgets:

• write less code

• draw HTML efficiently

• yield early and often

• profile like crazy

He had this opinion as well: "innerHTML is way faster than DOM manipulation." On the subject of best practices in Javascript, Joe stressed, "Give your functions unique names! You’re in a shared namespace. Otherwise, you can clash with others." For security, he said, "use JSON and callbacks for third-party API calls." For more info, Joe said to check out his blog — two specific posts to look for there have "OScon" in the title. He’s also pointed to a video of him presenting on this same topic at OScon. An audience question: "What about multiple widgets on the same page?" Joe’s answer: "You have to worry about those widgets fighting each other. Each one should have its own ID….And don’t assume too much about the host environment."

More to come later from me — one more post, wrapping up the rest of Tuesday’s program.

DEMOfall 07: Day 2 – MuseStorm…Dead-Simple Widgetizing for Publishers

Are you an online publisher dying to widgetize your content so you can hustle more audience, or just better  engage who you already have, wherever they may hang out on the Web — but have no idea where to start?  Well, bucko, does MuseStorm have a deal for you!  Musestormlogo_2
How about a service that lets anyone — even large, traditional publishers  🙂 — create widgets in minutes. And, to show they mean business, MuseStorm has already signed up CBS, Simon & Schuster, and the Washington Post.

MuseStorm is in the business of empowering publishers and marketers to engage their target audiences
through syndication of highly interactive rich media content. It says it removes the complexity from widget authoring, "enabling companies to
nimbly and inexpensively develop and control intelligent multimedia
widgets with integrated advanced functionality, including user
interactivity."

MuseStorm’s platform lets publishers and
marketers access an unprecedented level of detailed distribution
and interaction metrics to capitalize on their content and dynamically
respond to audience preferences.  The web widgets you create with MuseStorm can also be cloned as desktop widgets.

Musestormdiagram

You can embed your web widgets easily and quickly in a variety of
places. MuseStorm even showed in its demo that you can actually do it with one click….deploying them an any and all of the following:

• most
social networks (FaceBook, MySpace, etc)

• blogging platforms (Blogger,
TypePad, etc)

• start pages (PageFlakes, Netvibes, iGoogle, etc)

• and any
web site

After the company pitched on stage, I spoke with CEO Ori Soen at the company’s station in the Pavilion to see and hear more of the details. "If you’re a publisher, you’re hearing so much about widgets," he said. I guess I understand — who doesn’t want a viral little app out there driving people to your site? "But we buffer you from all the noise. With us, you just build your widget once, then clone it into whatever you want." The benefits, of course, are that the customer doesn’t need to have people learning all the various widget platforms and keeping track of multiple deployments.

But MuseStorm doesn’t just help you with the authoring of your content syndication widgets. It also has an
enterprise-grade syndication service that provides a secure,
high-capacity solution to deliver them,
too. It uses clusters of several types of application servers to
deliver the actual widgets and applications. And it gives you access to
your account via a
management console for authoring and updating, delivery, and metrics.

For analytics, MuseStorm claims previously
unattainable "precise distribution and audience interaction metrics,
including impressions, video playback, rollovers, and clickthroughs."
It says this intelligence lets  customers optimize their content and
delivery in real time to maximize the engagement of their audience.

The company offers (1) Distribution Metrics
detailed information on the distribution and reach of your content and
message, ranging from impressions to unique users to domains and
geo-location data, and (2) Interaction Metrics — to give you
insight into how users actually interact with your content, "monitoring
every user action to create anonymous user profiles that can be used to
optimize your distribution."

MuseStorm is based in Israel, is privately held,
and was founded in 2005. Investors include famed Israeli entrepreneur
Yossi Vardi. It received a Series A of $1 million earlier in 2007.

UPDATE 10/2: To add this article about MuseStorm teaming up with Universal Music Group to promote the upcoming release of a Jimi Hendrix 1967 Monterey Pop Festival DVD — via a widget, of course.

Online Ad Crowd In High Summer Style at ad:tech Chicago

Brand marketers are getting harder to tell apart from techies lately, in these heady days of the ascendancy of online advertising. This most targetable and measurable ad medium the world has ever known seems to be a breeding ground for a new class of ad professional — not so much right-brainers or left-brainers now as center-brainers. I guess it’s a fusion of the softer side of branding with the harder side of numbers, mixed in with algorithms and Javascript and Flash and Ajax and widgets and a whole lot of other things geek. Navypierskyline

A good cross-section of the rapidly growing ranks of these savvy new online marketers gathered this week to listen to leading voices, talk shop, learn new techniques, mingle, and party at a midsummer’s conference in the heart of middle America. It was ad:tech Chicago — one of ten such events globally this year, four of them in the U.S. — and it was held for the first time at the popular Navy Pier tourist haven that stretches out over Lake Michigan from downtown Chicago. The venue was spectacular, the lake was blue, the spirits were high, the buzz was flowing, and the topics were as hot inside the conference center as the summer temps were out. Adtechcrowdriver

Sky’s the Limit
With online advertising at $20B a year and going nowhere but up, it’s safe to conclude this profession is a good place to be. The conference was strong, the promoters told me, and this is actually one of their smallest U.S events. More than 3000 showed up for a packed, two-day agenda. The showfloor’s 70-some exhibitors provided a lesson for anyone in how to hawk their wares — after all, these are marketing companies, folks! Big technology players like Google, DoubleClick, WebTrends, Omniture, and Advertising.com all were present, along with many email marketing firms, large online agencies, and whole raft of smaller players bringing new tools to bear in areas such as RSS, mobile, and video advertising. Adtechshowfloor It was hard for even an experienced ad guy and marketer like me to take it all in over two days — but I tried anyway.

No More Pre-Rolls?
The coolest new tech company I found, as I mentioned in a previous post, was from the Netherlands: Adjustables. They were showing, for the first time in the U.S., a patent-pending technology for placing non-intrusive ads within video streams. Very cool stuff. You have to see it, which you can here do in this online demo.

The company’s Windows-based “AdDesigner” is a tool that lets you create these Adjustables™ for your online video streams, in any of four different types. AdDesigner automatically saves your Adjustables to the AdServer. You also need the company’s “AdScheduler,” which places the Adjustables™ you created within your videos. Software for both products can be downloaded from the company’s site for free. Adjustableslogo_2 Standards are needed here badly, and soon — and this technology could very well jolt the industry into some action. Adustables is a recently VC-funded startup, and had actually just announced their technology at the ad:tech conference in Hamburg not long ago. But I was glad to find them at their U.S. debut event and be the first to blog about them.

I spoke with Menno Biesiot, cofounder and VP marketing of Adjustables, about the still untapped field of in-stream video advertising. Mennobiesiot An article just appeared yesterday on this very topic and said this: “The core issue that keeps advertisers from sponsoring video content is simply the lack of technology, creative and industry standards, with integration standards being the greatest barrier to adoption. It’s important to note that this is not integrating banners or search listings on a page. This is about delivering real-time video ads into a video player.” The reaction of Adjustables’ Biesiot: “I totally agree that core issue is a lack of technology. It’s really amazing that, in this time of the booming online video market, that ad models are still so limited. Right now, only pre-rolls (and post- and mid-rolls) offer a solution to monetize online video content. But that model is far from ideal — it’s just a copy of the television model, with commercial breaks, applied to the new world.” I asked how he felt after two days in Chicago talking about the Adjustables solution: “The conference was good for us, though the real evaluation can be made two months from now, I think … People involved in online video were amazed about the solution, very enthusiastic, and willing to start ASAP with Adjustables. Their reaction was that our solution could be the new standard. Let’s see.” Indeed….

Chock Full o’ Content
While the overriding theme of the this year’s event was on “driving performance,” with an obvious emphasis on ROI and metrics, hot topics also included social networking, behavioral targeting, viral marketing, user-generated content, mobile marketing, ad networks and exchanges, and…well, lots more! To get the full-on firehose, available speaker presentations are being posted here. And, within about two weeks, I’m told that podcasts of all the conference sessions will be be available here.

Near the close of the event, I spoke with Warren Pickett, content director for the ad:tech conferences, to get his take: “We’re quite happy with both the new venue and the attendance. One analyst I know told me this event was the best ad:tech he’s attended out of seven or eight so far.” What does the future hold? “We’re looking forward to continued growth. The online ad industry is just explosive. And we continue to listen to the analysts, to get the best of them here to our events, and help people keep up on the latest.”

My Favorite Session
The opening keynote panel on the second day was one I was really looking forward to, and I was right down in front to take it in. The slide here tells it all, including the speakers, so I won’t repeat. I was particlularly intrigued to hear from the head of the Wall Street Journal’s new TV and online video network after the News Corp deal had just been announced, and to get some of the latest scoop from YouTube. Adtechday2panelslide The two agency execs on the panel had some great insights as well.

Boyd Peterson from Yankee was a stand-out moderator, noting in his kickoff that “this is a fantastic time to be in the business.” But, he said, the key is really how do brands use all this new technology? That was the topic of the hour. Adtechday2keynotepanel

Robert Leverone joined Dow Jones in 2005 with the MarketWatch acquisition. He described his new “WSJ Digital Network” as bringing together the video assets of WSJ.com, MarketWatch, Barron’s, and their new AllThingsD.com site, which I’ve written about previously. He told me later that Walt and Kara are loving their new, added roles as video reporters/producers. “We gave a bunch of reporters HD video cams, and they’re having a ball.” Glad to hear that, since it was no secret many on the editiorial side weren’t so excited about the pending News Corp acquisition. But Robert said he certainly doesn’t see any wholesale departures of reporters and editors under the new regime. Life will go on, and I think it’s fair to say that video has a big future at the Journal. I also couldn’t help but ask about News Corp’s coming launch of its Fox Business Network, which will directly compete with CNBC, with whom the Journal has a partnership. “Yes, we have to look at that contract,” he said. Robert noted his firm is a big fan of Brightcove, skinning that video player for their various uses. (See my previous coverage of Brightcove by typing the word into my Lijit search box.) We also talked about our mutual friends here in Minneapolis, where Dow Jones Online is based (going back to its days as BigCharts, which was acquired by MarketWatch).

So, what’s up with YouTube? Well, Suzie Reider, head of ad sales there, told us that, after only 18 months of existence, it’s now the eighth largest web site, with hundreds of millions of videos streamed monthly. “We’re even humanizing politics,” she said, referring to the recent “Snowman” video (produced in Minneapolis, I might add). “We’re giving consumers the tools for the conversation to begin.”

A great question the moderator threw out later was this: “At what point does the agency lose control, with brands just starting to do videos themselves, like consumers?” And that brought a couple of good reactions. “Oh, they’ve long lost control!” said Marc Landsberg of Arc, referring to the consumer. “But take Apple, for example — they love the fun videos people are producing about them and their products. Consumers are gonna do it — just give ’em the tools! You’re not going to be able to control the world of user-generated content.” Suzie Reider of YouTube provided another insight when she said General Mills, to name one, is now looking at all the quirky videos consumers are producing about their products and thinking about how to use them in producing its own. “How do we expand or play off of those?”

Buy, Sell, or Hold?
Boyd Peterson of Yankee threw out an interesting exercise for the panelists, asking them to rate a few key forces in today’s online scene.

– Second Life: buy, sell or hold? All said sell, with only Dow Jones saying hold. Leo Burnett’s Myhren: “Pontiac got in early, and we caught a huge media wave. But they did hit a peak.”
– Facebook: buy, sell or hold? This one was no surprise — all would buy. “Especially since they opened up their platform,” said YouTube’s Reider.
– Advertising on individual blogs: is it acsendant? All said yes.

Here are some more good quips and comments I captured from this panel:

“The Wall Street Journal Digital (TV) Network will be a crown jewel in the new News Corp empire.”
– Robert Leverone, VP Television, Dow Jones

“Do consumers really want to have conversations with brands?”
– Boyd Peterson, SVP Consumer Research, Yankee Group

“If you asked 100 consumers if they wanted to have a conversation with their brands, 100 of them would say no. They just want to be entertained.”
– Tor Myhren, Executive Creative Director, Leo Burnett Detroit

“Some consumers are active participants on the web, some are passive. Lots just look, but they’re still beneficiaries. They may only be observing, but they’re still having their lives enriched.”
– Marc Landsberg, President, Arc Worldwide

“There’s lot more involved in getting people to like a brand than clicks.”
– Tor Myhren, Executive Creative Director, Leo Burnett Detroit

A great audience question: “User-generated video scares a lot of brand managers and CMOs. What should they do?” Suzie Reider of YouTube: “They should hire people for this — watch the comments, react quickly, be proactive.” Another reaction, from Arc’s Landsberg: “Get on social media! Write a blog! You have to understand what ‘it’ is. You have to participate from the inside.”

So, What Did I Hear About “Widgets” at ad:tech?”
Not much. Other than some buzz in the hallways, there were no sessions, per se, that were focused on the topic of widgets. I think it’s too soon. The convergence of widgets with advertising — how they’ll be used within ads, how they will impact ad technology, or metrics, or whatever — is really just beginnning to be talked about. I did see a good article pop up yesterday on ad:tech’s sister site, iMediaConnection.com, entitled The widget: a small tool with a big future. Check it out — good advice for marketers. I’m gonna have to make iMedia a regular stop in my morning reading.

Other ad:tech Quotes of Note
When I recap conferences, I always like to pore over my notes the day after and pick out some of my favorite speaker quotes. Little gems or words of wisdom that sometimes are blurted out so quickly you can easily miss ’em. But I’ve learned to keep my ears peeled for such special insights, and I grabbed a higher than normal quantity of them at this one. Here’s a selection:

“Your brand isn’t what you say it is. It’s what Google says it is.”
– Chris Anderson, Wired Magazine, and author, “The Long Tail”
(Anderson gave the opening keynote, which was recapped nicely on the conference’s own blog here.)

“We don’t want to happen to viral marketing what happened with email marketing (spam).”
– Gary Spangler, Dupont

“Make meaning, not buzz….ask new questions…is your topic ‘talk worthy’? … Word-of-mouth marketing is making your customers feel heard.”
– Lois Kelly, Foghound, and author, “Beyond Buzz”

“Amplification of user voice leads to greater brand transparency.”
– Amy Shenkan. McKinsey & Company

“A form of ‘wiki branding’ is going on, where consumers are in control of not just the media but the brand itself, and they’re taking their version of what that brand means into their own circle of influence.”
– David Murphy, Co-President, Barrie, D’Rozario and Murphy

Wiki branding…hmmm, interesting. Never heard it put that way. Not meaning actual wikis being formed around all the brands out there, of course (although that does happen) — but the notion of the collective consumer conversation around a brand being what the brand really is. That, I think, is the exclamation point on this whole event. The one big takeaway.

See you at the next conference!

[Note: I also did a brief guest post about my ad:tech Chicago experience for Read/Write Web.
And all my photos are now up on Flickr, tagged “ad:tech Chicago 2007.”]

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