Archive for the 'Internet' Category

11
Jun
08

GBrowser … a myth!

Rumor: A WebKit-based GBrowser?

In the post The Google Browser from earlier this year, someone going
by the name “the Lizard” says that Google is developing its own,
WebKit-based browser. Lizard argues that it is strategically dangerous
to bet too much on just Firefox, which sends a lot of paid search
traffic to Google, and that this made Google start an internal project
in mid-2006 titled “GBrowser.”

According to the Lizard, GBrowser is built on top of the open source
WebKit browser framework, which was also used by Apple to create
Safari, and is also used for the browser of Google-initiated mobile
platform Android. “More than that,” the Lizard writes, GBrowser “will
offer integration with many Google services, such as Gmail, Google
Calendar, Blogger, and likely Google Talk.” Lizard continues:

“Rumblings of a Google browser have been carpeting the web for years,
but it wasn’t until 2006 that an entire team was actually committed to
working on what will become GBrowser.

Google, always known for iterating slowly on most of its projects, has
taken its time on GBrowser for a very good reason: it only has one
chance to get it right. Failing to succeed in its browser move means
rocky negotiations with a core partner, Mozilla, and could negatively
impact its financials in a significant manner. A move into the browser
market requires perfection, and GBrowser has undergone at least one
substantial rewrite and many major user-interface iterations.”

Lizard adds, “Mozilla knows GBrowser is coming and discusses it at
length internally.” And then, I heard another rumor that Google will
be creating a standard which allows the toolbar of GBrowser to change
when visiting certain sites – say, when you visit Google Docs you get
a special Docs toolbar. Now, I don’t know if there’s indeed such a
browser in the works, and have to file all of this under rumor until
further details are known… but thought it’s an interesting rumor
nevertheless. Once in May 2006, when Google CEO Eric Schmidt was asked
in a Q&A whether Google would consider building their own browser, he
replied “We would only do so…if we thought there was a real user
benefit.”

The original article can be found here: http://blogoscoped.com/archive/2008-06-10-n87.html

10
Jun
08

Google and Salesforce integrating more services

Google and Salesforce can’t seem to get enough of each other: over a series of announcements the companies have aligned their product strategies more and more closely over time. Now the companies are planning something new together, to be announced by Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff and Google VP Engineering Vic Gundotra at Salesforce’s upcoming Tour de Force developer event on June 23 in Santa Clara.

A year ago Salesforce integrated adwords tracking into their platform. Then two months ago we heard rumors that the companies were planning on deeper product integration – it turned out to be the complete integration of Google Apps (Docs, Calendar, Gmail, and Gtalk) and Salesforce?s online enterprise apps.

With the most recent announcement Google in effect became Salesforce’s productivity suite. Google documents, spreadsheets, and presentation can be created from within Salesforce?s CRM application. GTalk works as the de facto instant messenger within Salesforce. With one click, sales people who use Gmail can send any email correspondence with potential or existing customers to Salesforce, where it becomes recorded as part of the sales cycle. Sales events and marketing campaigns can be overlayed onto a Google Calendar, as well as colleague?s schedules for figuring out convenient meeting times.

So what will the two companies announce later this month? Gundotra, who keynoted the recent Google I/O conference, is responsible for developer evangelism and open source programs at Google. That includes things like Android, Gears and Open Social. Connecting the dots isn’t too hard. 

 

09
Jun
08

Woopra – Site Statistics Software

Want to talk to the people visiting your blog in real time via a chat request? That’s just one of the features of new stats/analytics startup WoopraThink Google Analytics or Nuconomy, but in real time.

The product includes real time statistics (“tiny details on every single visit and/or visitor, where they came from, what pages they visited what keywords they used etc.”), chatting with users on the site at any time (and tagging them for future identification). Cali Lewis interviewed the founder at Wordcamp Dallas today. The video demo is below (and is significantly better than the officially-worst-demo-video-ever produced by the company).

 

Woopra is currently in private beta and will only take blogs with less than 10,000 page views/day. Like Google analytics and most other hosted analytics services, integration occurs via a javascript addition to the sites you want to track. The evolution of analytics condinues (I still remember the days of MeasureMap, which was awesome when it actually worked).
http://www.woopra.com/press/layered-technologies-and-3tera-to-provide-100-grid-servers-to-woopra/

Layered Technologies and 3Tera to Provide 100 Grid-Servers to Woopra

Layered Technologies, Inc., a leading worldwide provider of “on demand” IT infrastructure, and 3Tera, Inc., the leading innovator of grid computing technology and utility computing services for Web applications, today announce support for Woopra, the real-time Web analytics platform. The companies will provide 100 grid-based servers in order to assist Woopra as it experiences a huge market demand prior to official launch.

“We are extremely pleased that Layered Technologies has stepped up to pledge the infrastructure necessary for us to meet the growing demand for Woopra,” said Elie Khoury, CIO of Woopra. “We are also grateful for all of the public feedback and support we have been given in the past 48 hours. We vow to work as quickly as possible to make Woopra available to as many as 100,000 Web sites within the next few weeks.”

Woopra provides real-time stats delivered via a revolutionary client-server application, and includes unique features such as the ability to identify and chat real time with visitors to the monitored site. The beta version of Woopra was quietly unveiled to a select audience of 200 at WordCamp Dallas, but news rapidly spread to over 2 million as buzz began to grow.

“We are excited about the launch of Woopra and the fact that we will be hosting it on The Grid,” said Todd Abrams, COO and President of Layered Technologies. “With such high demand, we are working closely with Woopra to ensure that all of Layered Technologies’ clients can gain access to the application as quickly as possible.”

With more than 12,000 servers and nearly a decade of experience, Layered Technologies has developed an expertise in data center operations. Using 3Tera’s award-winning AppLogic OS, Layered Technologies is able to provide grid computing solutions by harnessing the power of their data centers and making it available on-demand – processing power, bandwidth, and storage capacity. 3Tera’s AppLogic Grid OS allows a customer to package their entire application into a single self-contained logical entity. The packaged system can be scaled from a fraction of a CPU to hundreds of machines without any code modification.

“The instant growth of Woopra is a perfect example of how grid solutions provide new capabilities for growth,” said Peter Nickolov, President and CTO of 3Tera. “Scaling an online application, such as Woopra, can be enormously challenging. Being able to quickly deploy and operate on a highly available and scalable utility computing platform offers a unique business solution. Partnering with Layered Technologies has allowed us to deliver true utility computing solutions and help hundreds of companies scale their application with the growing demand.”

3Tera’s AppLogic grid operating system is the first commercial platform designed specifically to enable true utility computing. The system converts commodity servers into scalable grids on which users can visually deploy, operate and scale transactional Web applications without any modification of code. With the ability to run on any grid anywhere in the world, the disposable infrastructure technology found in the heart of the AppLogic system packages applications with the definition of the infrastructure required to run them into self-contained and portable entities. As a result, applications become completely separated from the hardware infrastructure traditionally needed to run them, allowing users to remotely manage their applications through a Web browser and provision resources as needed.

For additional information on Layered Technologies, please visit http://www.layeredtech.com. For additional information on 3Tera, please visit www.3tera.com. For additional information on Woopra, visit http://www.woopra.com.

About Layered Technologies

Layered Technologies, Inc. is a leading global provider of on-demand hosting, utility computing solutions and Web services. By providing high quality technology, infrastructure and support we enable customers to forego capital expenses and save on operating costs while focusing on core business issues. Layered Technologies’ scalable infrastructure powers millions of sites and Internet enabled applications including e-Commerce, Software as a Service (“SaaS”), content distribution and more. Our clients range from leading-edge Web 2.0 startups, successful mid-sized enterprises and some the world’s largest consultancy and integration firms. For more information about Layered Technologies, please visit: http://www.LayeredTech.com or call 1-866-584-6784.

About 3Tera, Inc.

3Tera, Inc. is an innovator of grid and utility computing, simplifying the deployment and scaling of Web applications. Named one of the “Top 20 Companies to Watch in 2008″ by Linux Magazine, 3Tera offers AppLogic grid operating system that enables the first true utility computing services to completely remove the cost and complexity associated with infrastructure. The operating system converts commodity servers into scalable grids on which users can visually operate, deploy and scale transactional Web applications without any modification of code. Software-as-a-Service providers, Web 2.0 companies, enterprises and open source developers can now get new online services quickly to market by utilizing resources from commodity hosting providers on a pay-as-you-go basis, while maintaining complete control of applications including visual operation, scaling and on-demand resource provisioning. For more information, visit www.3tera.com.

This article is a few months old and gallons of water has flown beneath the bridge. Feel free to click on the site and check it out for yourself.

09
Jun
08

Facebook Eyes Enterprise Market

By David Needle
June 6, 2008

Instead of worrying about employees spending company time on Facebook, some enterprises may soon have reason to encourage the idea.At a conference on consumer services and applications in the enterprise here on Thursday, a Facebook executive confirmed the social networking giant has big plans to make its service more accessible to corporate users.

“One area we’ve seen a lot of value for the social graph is in the enterprise because it’s a completely different way to envision an HR system or CRM,” said Chamath Palihapitiya, vice president of marketing and operations at Facebook. “A handful of large companies have expressed interest in seeing how it would work because organically at least 50 percent of their employees are already on Facebook.”

Facebook’s interest comes at a time when companies like Socialtext already offer “enterprise-ready” social networking tools that include corporate-friendly enhancements, such as extra security and audit features.

But even if Facebook is late to the enterprise party, Palihapitiya said the company remains well aware of the opportunity.

“We see it as one of the single long-term areas of value creation,” he said during his presentation.

In an interview with InternetNews.com, Palihapitiya added that Facebook doesn’t plan to be building enterprise applications. Instead, it wants to make sure developers can leverage its platform to bring Facebook in through the front door as a company-sanctioned application.

“We’re interested in working with enterprises and making sure we understand their needs,” Palihapitiya said. “We want to enable other developers to use our platform to develop for the enterprise.”

He also said the company is working with enterprises to develop some reference examples of Facebook services for the workplace.

Already, Salesforce.com has helped marry a bit of Facebook to the enterprise with the Faceforce application available through the SaaS giant’s AppExchange, an online catalog of Salesforce-ready applications.

Faceforce pulls Facebook profile information into Salesforce CRM. For example, this allows a salesperson to see a prospect’s birthday, favorite movies, books, sports team and contacts they might have who are already customers.

How much information is pulled in through Faceforce depends on how much the user includes in his or her public profile. Clara Shih, director of AppExchange product line management, developed the application.

Will ad-supported apps fly?

Palihapitiya specifically mentioned Faceforce as an example of forthcoming applications that leverage the social network platform. But he also said Facebook is exploring ways to extend its ad-supported model into the enterprise — or at least, to give developers the option.

“We want to be agnostic, based on what we can enable,” he said.

Those comments led to a spirited debate with other panelists dubious about whether ad-supported model will work. “Ads in the enterprise are extremely unfeasible,” said David Thompson, CEO of Genius.com, a provider of online tools designed to help salespeople track prospects.

Thompson said the issue of ad-supported software for business had been debated for years at WebEx, the online conferencing company where he previously served as chief marketing officer.

“No one wants it, certainly not corporate IT,” he said. “I say it’s doomed.”

Palihapitiya replied that writing off the idea was “rigid” thinking, adding that instead of becoming an impediment to productivity, the latest ad-targeting technology can deliver ads that are highly relevant to the user, based on where and who they are.

“When the right company weaves all this together for the enterprise, that will be the proof point,” Palihapitiya said.

He conceded that a strict focus on relevancy won’t lead to “trillions of impressions, but will reach lots of qualified users.”

Thompson also questioned how a Facebook developer might go about matching users to appropriate ads: “So, you just need to rifle through everyone’s data?” he deadpanned.

But Palihapitiya replied that such applications already exist, and don’t involve scouring users’ data.

Shih, the Faceforce creator, said in a later interview with InternetNews.com that she’s likewise skeptical about the appeal of ad-supported applications in the enterprise.

“Customers have told me they’d be willing to pay for a premium edition of Faceforce that included support and help with configurations,” she told InternetNews.com. “Businesses have a budget for these things and it doesn’t add much to operating costs. If I can pay X amount of dollars per year to not have ads, I think that’s a no-brainer.”

Ross Mayfield, chairman and co-founder of Socialtext, told InternetNews.com that enterprise customers want a higher level of customization and vendor support than a free or ad-supported application company typically provides.

“Some companies come to us and say, ‘We love Facebook, but we want it behind the firewall’,” said Mayfield, whose firm provides a number of social networking features within the corporate network like Wikis and tagging of profiles.

“And they say, ‘If we don’t deliver it, the employees will use it anyway and that’s a security hole for us,’” he added. “They’re looking for alternatives.”

As a result, it’s not surprising that consumer-originated incumbents like Facebook are scrambling to avoid losing out to those alternatives — particularly with a vast sum of money on the line.

“Enterprise applications are a $10 billion opportunity,” said Kevin Efrusy, a venture partner at Accel, a co-sponsor of the half-day, Consumerization of Software conference, along with SD Forum.

08
Jun
08

Rummaging through the internet

Computing: New techniques to navigate and gather information online promise to revolutionise web browsing 

Illustration by Belle Mellor
Illustration by Belle Mellor

THE web has changed in many ways since it first emerged in the mid-1990s. The first web pages contained only text, and there was a big debate about whether pictures should be allowed. Today, by contrast, it is quite normal for pages to be bursting with photos, animated graphics, video clips, music and chunks of software, as well as text. In one respect, however, the web is unaltered: the clickable hyperlinks between pages are still the way users get from one page to another.

But now a Norwegian computer scientist named Frode Hegland has cooked up a new sort of navigation. His free software, a browser add-on called Hyperwords, makes every single word or phrase on a page into a hyperlink—not just those chosen by a website’s authors. Click on any word, number or phrase, and menus and sub-menus pop up. With a second click, it is possible to translate text into many languages, obtain currency or measurement conversions, and retrieve related photos, videos, academic papers, maps, Wikipedia entries and web pages fetched by Google, among other things.

All that information, of course, can already be accessed by web users willing to root around, opening a series of new browser windows or tabs. The goal of Hyperwords, Mr Hegland says, is “reducing the threshold” of satisfying curiosity, by making the quest faster and easier. Later this year he will release a new version that extends this trick beyond the web browser, turning any word in any window into a clickable “hyperword”.

Hyperwords is a relatively new idea, and so far it has fewer than 200,000 users. But it is one of a number of new initiatives designed to transform internet browsing, by providing more connections between data, presenting information in new ways and making it easier to navigate. Another example is Cooliris, a start-up based in Silicon Valley, which has invented a browser add-on called Previews. Hovering the mouse pointer over a link causes a small preview of the linked page to pop up in a tiny window, making it easier to decide whether to click through to the page or not. More than 2m people have downloaded the free software since January.

Another Cooliris application, PicLens, takes images fetched from Google, Flickr, Facebook, eBay and other websites and displays them, free of the clutter on each image’s webpage, on a spectacular full-screen, 3-D wall. Viewers can zip left and right, zooming in or pulling back, to scan hundreds of images in seconds. Images can be clicked for full-screen display, or shown in context on their original webpage. The free software has been downloaded over 5m times. A new version, released in April, turns YouTube searches into a clutter-free wall of videos in a similar fashion. Austin Shoemaker, technology chief at Cooliris, says internet users are “subconsciously frustrated” with clicking “next, next, next” to view content.

PicLens provides a glimpse of a possible future for the web: as a three-dimensional environment, in which users move through clusters of pages that appear to float in space, pushing unwanted ones away and arranging others in logical groupings. This approach takes advantage of people’s natural spatial memory. John Maeda, the president of the Rhode Island School of Design, says people find it hard to navigate the flood of online information in two dimensions, and rarely open more than a few windows at a time. With a 3-D browser over 100 windows can be visible at once, even on a laptop screen.

Mr Maeda, until recently a senior researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, worked on a forthcoming 3-D browser called E15 which uses a special mouse to allow viewers to move around in a 3-D space. Researchers have been kicking around 3-D browsers in labs for years, but they never came to much. Only in the past year or so have ultra-fast internet connections and powerful computers become commonplace enough to make mass-market 3-D browsing feasible.

SpaceTime, a start-up based in New York, has developed a 3-D browser which has been downloaded over 2m times since its launch in January. SpaceTime’s boss, Edward Bakhash, says the inspiration came from video games, and the sleek animated graphics of Apple’s iPhone. Software developers compete, of course, but Mr Bakhash says there is a feeling that the whole community is working hard to “help usher in the next paradigm”.

The movement will get a boost in late July, when Second Life, a popular 3-D virtual world, incorporates a feature that will allow inhabitants to post web pages on walls. Joe Miller, vice-president of technology at Linden Labs, the company in San Francisco, California, that runs Second Life, says 2-D web browsing is usually solitary. Browsing in Second Life, however, will be a social activity, because users strolling virtually through the world can gather and chat next to web pages.

A browser called 3B, developed by a firm of the same name in London, also makes browsing social. Users search for a product, and pictures of the results are arranged into the aisles of a virtual shop. Shoppers can mill about to get a better look, and chat via instant messaging with other people searching for similar things. Over 200 retailers, including Barnes & Noble, Wal-Mart and Gap, display their wares in 3B. A few employ shop-assistants to answer shoppers’ questions. 3B takes a cut of sales initiated in its browser. Nicky Morris, the firm’s boss, says business is “absolutely phenomenal” because women in particular stay in shops longer when they are not alone.

Microsoft is also developing a 3-D browser, called Deepfish, for mobile devices. Many other 3-D browsers are in the pipeline. It is seductive technology that can look gorgeous. But Dave Farber, a computer scientist at Carnegie Mellon who is one of the internet’s founding fathers, says the enthusiasm for cool visuals will be replaced by a realisation that 3-D navigation is a much-needed tool. He points to Hyperwords, which he thinks will become widely used (and imitated). It allows people to make more connections of the kind that interest them. A user can add an option, say, to search for any clicked-on word or phrase in her favourite Bolivian and Peruvian newspapers. Hyperwords users can also effortlessly place clicked-on text into a blog, e-mail, instant message or Facebook profile. These new connections add “depth” to words and ideas, Mr Farber says, but create incredibly complex networks. Without 3-D maps, he says, we may lose our bearings. 

-Jun 5th 2008 

From The Economist print edition

03
Jun
08

Internet Exporer 8.0 Beta 1

The new IE browser is here folks. Still in the beta stage, it is drawing considerable attention towards itself. This browser is said to be an improvement over IE 7.0 with more stable downloads and with a slightly spruced up interface. This beta is aimed at web developers and designers to help them take advantage of new features in Internet Explorer 8 that will enhance their websites. This beta is aimed at web developers and designers to help them take advantage of new features in Internet Explorer 8 that will enhance their websites.

Requirements:

Processor: Computer with a 233MHz processor or higher (Pentium processor recommended)

OS:

  • Windows Vista x64 and x86
  • Windows Vista Service Pack 1 (SP1) x64 and x86
  • Windows XP Service Pack 2 (SP2)
  • Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3)
  • Windows XP Professional x64 Edition
  • Windows Server 2008 x64 and x86
  • Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2 (SP2) x64 and x86

Memory Requirements:

  • Windows Vista – 512MB
  • Windows Vista Service Pack (SP1) – 512MB
  • Windows XP Service Pack 2 (SP2) – 64 MB
  • Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3) – 64 MB
  • Windows XP Professional x64 Edition – 128 MB
  • Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2 (SP2) – 64 MB
  • Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 2 ia64 – 128 MB
  • Windows Server 2008 – 512MB
Display: Super VGA (800 x 600) or higher-resolution monitor with 256 colors.
Compatibility Issues: I wont go in to the details. The list is way to long. I suggest that you read the articles on this page: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/949787



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