Sunday, October 28, 2007

Spin-my-Blog Post Fails!

Hey Rizzn-ites,

I'm testing out SpinVox today for an article I'm working on at Mashable. Here's what I actually said (as best as I can decipher from the text it spit out) to the SpinVox system:
Hey folks. This is Mark. Testing out SpinVox again because I'm about to write an article about them on Mashable. Don't know what updates or change to the system they've done since the last time I used them.

Last time I was on here, the record time was quite low and it was probably close to 60% recognition of what I was saying. Maybe they have improved a little bit, we will see.

It's staying on and letting me talk and so I'm just gonna talk into this thing kicks me off.

Ok, well, see what am I talking about? Oh! Actually I put a new article up on Mashable.com today. I talk about, well, it's about the reality of user generated content. I saw a couple of other articles up on the net I came across in my feeds. They were something about how that there is ... basically we're talking about the 1% rule and that there is no real new user generated content coming out of like YouTube and stuff and it is really just talented folks that found their way through the system. But will rise to the surface anyway.

It's that youtube or whatever may have helped them get there quicker, citing the new Apple UGC ad that came out as an example. I begged to differ, I explained a lot of my positions there, using Twitter and Facebook and other seamless integration tools that I've talked about before on Mashable, as example as to what works and what doesn't work. And really, truly taking the value of what you plan early and moving a step forward in terms of user generated content. [ed: this sentence is so garbled I'm not sure what I was saying there] I it let me go on for what looks to be at least a minute or two. So I guess I'm going to close this out, to see what comes out of the other end. Talk to you later. Bye.
This is what SpinVox thinks I said:
Hey Folk, this is Mark. Testing out SpinVox again because I'm about to write an article about them on nash(?). Don't know what is your update to change of the system they've done since the last time I used them. Last time I was on here, the record time was quite slow and it was probably close to 60% recognition of what I was saying. Maybe they had improved a little bit. We will see. It's sticking on let me talk and so I'm just gonna talk into this thing puts me off. Ok well, see what I'm talking about oh actually put a new article of nashville.com(?) today. I told you well, it's about the reality of user generated contents. I saw a couple of other articles up on the net, across I came across my feeds so there were something about how that there is no, they, that they basically we're talking about the 1% rule and that there is no real new user generated content coming out of why I think like youtube and stuff is really just talented folks that well found their way to the system. But will left to the surface anyway. It's that youtube or whatever may have helped them get their quick or setting the new apple UGC ad, they came out as an example, I begged to differ, I explained a lot of my positions there using footer and face book and other seamless integration tools that I talked about before nashville(?) as example just to what works and what doesn't work in really, truly taking the value of what you plan early and moving a step forward in terms of user generated content. I'll see, let me go on, look for at least a min or 2. So I guess I'm got a closer shout, to see what comes out of the other end. Talk to you later. Bye.
The more I use SpinVox, the less I am pleased with it. It's a great idea, with really crappy execution.

By the way, the editorial I'm talking about in the SpinVox segment can be found here.

/rizzn

Sunday, October 21, 2007

BlogRush: Get an Axe! It's a Trick!

Hey, Rizzn-ites,

Tamar Weinberg at technipedia was axed from the BlogRush network, along with around 10,000 other bloggers this weekend, according to an email I recieved from CEO John Reese:
We've just completed a massive SWEEP of our entire network. We've removed over *10,000* blogs (Yes, ten thousand) that did not meet our new Quality Guidelines.

We have done a huge "quality control audit" of our network and have reviewed all the blogs one-at-a-time. We will continue to review each NEW blog that is ever submitted to our network.

You will notice the HUGE DIFFERENCE in the quality of blogs that now appear in your widget. This major *sweep* of our network will also increase the click-rates across the entire network and you will start to receive more traffic.
The email I received from him also promised MOAR HITZ and BETTAR TRAFFIK, presumably because all these spam blogs are no longer on the network. It boggles my mind, and is almost a waste of time for me to attempt to construct what possible scenarios must be at play over at BlogRush HQ that causes them to delay any type of meaningful stat reporting this long and removing "spam blogs" like Tamar's.

Essentially, all this to say what I've said before: ditch BlogRush. They're not a scam, but they certainly don't have their act together. As someone said down in the comments on Tamar's blog: "I think a ban from Blogrush may be a badge of quality as I note some the quality of some of the blogs that run it. In fact, when I see a blog with the blogrush widget my opinion of the blogger takes a tumble."

See ya on the show tomorrow. Deuce.

/rizzn



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How To: Effortlessly Maintain a Link Blog

Hey Rizzn-ites,

Apparently, I've made a couple converts with last night's quick commentary on tech blogging being bent on the concept of maintaining a link blog, judging from comments and emails. Jeffr0, for instance, asked for an easy way to create a linkblog, as I described. It's actually quite simple, barely warranting a blog post on it, so I'm going to take it a step further, and show you how to create a custom river (ala Techmeme) as well.

First, you need to be using Google Reader. I'm not sure why you're not using it to begin with, if you're not. It's just hands down the best reader utility for the power blogger.

Second, take note of two particular features - the shared items feature, and the tagging feature. The beauty of these features is the fact that you're able, with a couple of keypresses, very quickly add items to an RSS feed. Here's how mine are set up:

I use my shared items button to generate the stuff Rizzn Network Link Blog. I simply took the RSS feed that gReader generates (which can be found under the tag settings link, in your gReader Settings), and threw it into a FeedBurner setup. What you do with that feed, after that, is up to you. I personally ran it through my HTML display scripts to integrate it with my website, but you could also do what Robert and Todd do, and simply link it in your sidebar for others to subscribe to.

If you want to take it a step further, and provide a "River" of source material you use, you can make use of a Yahoo Pipe I set up today (or you can use any other number of feedmixers out there).

Unfamiliar with the concept of a "River?" Well, if an RSS "Stream" follows one blog, what do you call a bunch of "Streams" combined? A River, of course. One of the things that makes TechMeme useful to tech journalists is that as TechMeme discovers a new post in one of it's seed streams, it posts it shortly thereafter to the River. As far as I know, TechMeme doesn't have a monopoly on the concept of a River, though. I'm working on a River interface for the Rizzn Network, but using my pipe, you can chain together ad infinitum multiple RSS feeds, and display or use them how you like on your own website.

Just some starting points. I'm tired, little baby Jacob kept me up late last night, so I'm gonna go take a Sunday nap. This ought to keep you busy for a minute though. :)

/rizzn

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Saturday, October 20, 2007

No, Tech Blogging is only Bent

Hey Rizzn-ites,

Even though Todd Cochrane and I technically work together under the RawVoice and Tech Podcast umbrella, it's rare that I agree with his various positions on what is 'right' in the New Media world (as many listeners to the show will attest to). I do, however, agree with him somewhat on his stance with the TechMeme being somewhat broken. Somewhat.

And I don't mean the way Steven Hodson mentioned with sites like TechCrunch or Mashable or Read/WriteWeb being paid to profile certain companies. As much as TechCrunch and others have railed against PayPerPost, if they were found guilty of paid posting, it would be the end of the Arrington Empire.

I mean the evolution of "penetration coverage" of stories that takes place in tech blogging simply because of TechMeme (yes, penetration coverage, the sort of stuff that blogging was supposed to supplant because the world was tired of that type of coverage on CNN MSNBC and Fox).

I've been involved in A-List blogging (over at Mashable) for about a minute now, so I'm probably not the best expert to consult on this, but I know what I see. The top blogs all cover a lot of the same stories. For the high post rate blogs, they see a story show up in the River at TechMeme, they know they gotta cover it, or look like they're missing important news. The truth is that there's a lot of high tech being missed because a lot of the A-List is centered around Silicon Valley and the companies around the world that function within the Silicon Valley mindset.

Companies outside that mindset (i.e. those that don't work well within the blogging world, companies that don't have RSS feeds, companies that don't know to send their exclusives to TechCrunch or Mashable) arguably have only themselves to blame, but are also a real part of what is going on in developing tech, and deserve to be covered.

What is it I think about TechMeme that really bends the boundaries of what good news is? The algorithm. The human element is needed. As much as I hate to agree with Jason Calacanis (and his definition of Web 3.0), and barring a much better AI than I've seen implimented in anything yet, the human element applied to a much larger set of source material in terms of scanned RSS feeds than what TechMeme does would be able to provide the random element of news bubbling up organically in the web.

Robert Scoble's shared list is a great example of this. I'm beginning to be of the opinion that all bloggers who want to impact the blogosphere positively should maintain a link blog. I love that I get a good set of niche stuff, but also the random things off niche from Robert's list. Robert, for the massive feed munching machine that he is, is only one man. He deviates off niche occasionally, but it tends to stay around his niche. I'd like to see a Jeffr0 shared items list, an Arrington shared items list, one from my buddy Art, one from Todd... I want to see what stuff they think is cool but not quite cool enough to write a whole blog post about.

It's all about inspiration, but the A-List, because of TechMeme, is becoming a bit too monoculture for me. Spice it up a bit. I think this is the best way to make it happen, given the technologies at hand today.

/rizzn

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Thursday, October 18, 2007

New Addition to the RizWords Podcast.

Hey Rizzn-ites,

This is just a quick post to announce that we're welcoming Jeffr0 of Jeffro2pt0.com, well known Web 2.0 journalist and blogger, to the show starting Friday. From here on until Jeffr0 gets too big and popular to be seen consorting with the likes of us, he's going to bring us a special Web 2.0 segment of the show to play on Fridays, either reviewing a new Web 2.0 product/service/website or giving us a good week in review.

If you haven't checked him out, head on over to his site, and send him a message welcoming him to the show!

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New Directions For Mr. Rizzn!

Hey Rizzn-ites,

You may see a slightly decreased posting frequency here in the coming days. I've started writing this week at Mashable. I spoke with Adam Ostrow, the newly crowned editor of Mashable, Monday evening. I've always enjoyed Mashable's style and timeliness - as I talked about on the show (episode 151) Monday, they beat me on the Google + Jaiku story by about 15 seconds, and I really thought I was going to have a scoop on that one.

Why am I writing for another site? That's the question I've been asked a few times since I announced it on twitter Tuesday evening. Well, quite honestly, I've recently discovered that I do indeed love writing as much as I remember from the days of yore when I wrote around two or three five page diary posts a day (Super Fast Kel, you know what I'm talkin' about). I enjoy the pace and quality of what Mashable puts out, but I can't do that here on this blog. I have too diverse of a mix of readers to spam everyone three times an hour with a new tech story.

I'd rather keep Rizzn.com a place for really good scoops, a home for the podcast, and a place to really learn about and explore new media and politics.

In other words, writing for Mashable will allow me to do more of what I love without pissing all of you off with ten posts a day!

So definitely keep your RSS readers and podcast clients tuned to rizzn.com, but join me, if you will, in my foray deeper into the heart of social networking and Web 2.0!

(by the way, I've set up a feed of just my stories on Mashable, if you want to subscribe to that as well).

/rizzn

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Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Changes at Rizzn.com

Hey Rizzn-ites,

I've got several big things I'm working on here at the site and the podcast that I'll be announcing today and tomorrow, but for the mean time, you'll notice that I've got a diminished posting frequency ... do not fret, I've not disappeared. Just busy!

Stay tuned!

/rizzn

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Monday, October 15, 2007

Journalism and Marketing Tools: Focus on Twitter

Hey Rizzn-ites,

This is a broad topic, really. Someone brought it to my attention this evening that I do an awful lot of evangelizing for Twitter amongst my friends and associates, and I haven't really explained it very well to my inner circle.

Essentially, twitter is what is called "Status Micro-blogging." Don't worry. The term didn't make much sense to me either. I remember being in an airport or somewhere and reading a Wired review of the service, and then getting home, and every single feed on my list was talking about how great Twitter was, and how much of a huge hit it was at the SXSW conference, and it's the next big thing.

For someone who's such an avid user of technology, I must admit that whenever I hear that something is the 'next big thing', I get a little queasy in my tummy, and have an immediate desire to distance myself from said technology. Usually, I've learned, it's best to ignore this instinct. The same feeling I had about podcasting, I had about twitter. To me, it seemed destined to fail, especially since it revolved, at least in part, in sending tons of SMS messages to people's mobiles. In a world where text messages can add literally pounds to your phone bill, set aside dollars, I can only imagine how poorly the service is going to do.

As with podcasting, however, I was sorely mistaken in my initial reaction.

I'll describe Twitter from my perspective, which is that of an independent content producer, and how you can do the same as I.

Robert Scoble often describes his usage of Twitter as 'constant chat room.' This isn't far off the mark. What twitter does, is take your friends (who can almost effortlessly create an account), and make it so that any time they send a message to Twitter, it appears in your favorite chatting mechanism, be it IM or SMS on your phone.

Now you've got the overview, let's graduate you to power user.

At first, it's not going to seem like much, especially if you don't spend a lot of time on IM. My best suggestion to you, is if you're not there already, always keep a GMail window open. It's hands down (in my opinion) one of the best email utilities out there, and it allows you easy, unobtrusive access to GTalk. Add twitter functionality to GTalk through the twitter settings interface, and you're hooked up.

There's a couple things you'll want to do right off the bat. First of all, go to your favorite bloggers or new media producers in your niche. For me, it's obviously technology, so I'll use that as an example. I went to the bigger names in tech, like Robert Scoble, Guy Kawasaki, CC Chapman and Steve Rubel, and then added them to my twitter friends. Don't worry if some of them don't add you back (Scoble will, but he'll add just about anyone, so don't think you're all that special!).

Things will start moving a bit faster now. At this point, you'll want to turn off the DING every time there's a new message.

What are you looking for with this? This puts you a step closer to getting your finger on the pulse of your niche. Depending on what that is can mean either connecting with folks who are movers and shakers, or it can mean having that scoop ten minutes sooner than the next blog, which can make or break you on traffic.

You'll also start to notice conversations breaking out on twitter, signified by tweets with @username. If it interests you, you may want to follow that person (you can do this easily now, from within GTalk by typing "follow [username]". Chances are that for every two or three you do that with, you'll gain a follower yourself. Now you're building a platform from which to speak to larger and larger groups.

Before we move on to what you can do with your platform, let's get into the "track" feature. By simply typing "track [keyword]" into twitter, now you'll be alerted anytime anyone on twitter talks about a given keyword. It's a good idea to go ahead and track your all variations of your user name, company name, and given name. Chances are, at some point, someone will talk about you, and you always wanna know when that happens, right?

It's not just for ego-searches, though. I like to be up on all the gPhone news, so I track gPhone. I've found a few juicy rumors to track down that way using this feature. Marshall Kirkpatrick claimed last week that Twitter is responsible for 5 of the last 11 leads he used for ReadWriteWeb.com stories.

The other stuff you'll find is that it's a great platform for broadcasting your message, be it blog or podcast. RSS is your friend, as you know. That's why I suggest you stick your RSS feeds into RSS2Twitter. It reformats your links so that they fit into the character restrictions, and puts a short description of the items in your feed as they pop up.

You'll find, as you grow your Twitter network, that this will be one of the more valuable tools in your box.

It's late. I'm leaving things out, undoubtably, but this gives you a starting point. EMail me with questions (and I know you will!).

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Is Google Vulnerable in Advertising?

Steve Rubel just twittered an article from today's International Herald Tribune entitled "Google shows vulnerability in Advertising." It's almost a completely ridiculous article, but for the small weaknesses that Google does have in its ad platform. Of course, because the Time Magazine, Digg and Facebook havedecided to go with other ad partners other than Google, it isn't necessarily spelling the beginning of the end for the giant.

In June, Vivek Shah of Time magazine awarded a three-year, $100 million contract to Quigo Technologies, a venture capital-backed New York company that will handle ad space on more than 15 sites, including CNNMoney.com and People.com after spending six months assessing whether Google, Yahoo or Microsoft could most effectively attract advertisers to the publisher's Web sites.

The article in the IHT focuses on an alleged weakness that the Google AdSense system supposedly possesses - the inability to target your ad towards a single site. Granted, the system is set up on a bidding system, but there is the capability built in to not only put text advertisements on a preferred site (albeit at a CPD, elevated rate), but also video ads, one of the hot new areas of advertisement that is supposedly (at least according to IHT) being ignored by Google.

What is the big problem with Google then? Why are big sites like Digg and Facebook going with Microsoft right now? Essentially, it comes down to two things, in my analysis: targeting and subsidy.

I doubt that in any of their cases, Google is offering publishers big lucrative deals to switch the entire site's ad platform to Google. Microsoft clearly is, in a way that most likely doesn't make sense for Microsoft long term. This can be interpreted as a strength or a weakness for Google, depending on perspective and preferred business strategy.

The other thing: targeting. I know from my own personal experience that while Google's targeted ads on search are generally spot on, the targeted ads for content are usually so far off the mark (although in recent months they've gotten better), that I ended up removing Google AdSense from my site completely. My entire ad inventory for the site is now handled by the ad agency Project Wonderful. So far, they've pleased me far more than Google. When traffic spikes occur, of course, my income doesn't similarly spike, but they're good for a predictable and reliable income stream above what AdSense was able to provide for my level of traffic at the blog.

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Sunday, October 14, 2007

Ron Paul Wins Conservative Leadership Straw Poll



The Conservative Leadership Conference was this week - an event that came and past without me noticing. A lot of the political last week coverage seemed to revolve around the S-CHIP and Michelle Malkin, and that white noise drowned out a lot of what would be interesting news.

Like what kind of news? Ron Paul won a straw poll at a conservative conference that it appears Mitt Romney spoke at. The list of speakers at this event reads like a who's who of the Libertarian and conservative caucuses, so it's not surprising that according to PoliticalDerby Ron Paul won with a commanding 32.8% of those voting.

Speakers at the event included: Mitt Romney, Grover Norquist, Bill Redpath, Scott Cleland, Bob Barr, and Dick Armey.

See this spreadsheet for full breakdown.

/rizzn

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Keep an Eye on ScrollTalk

The longer I stay on Truemors, the more I like it. Sure, there's a bunch of uninteresting garbage that comes out of it. Well, garbage may be a bit of a harsh term, but because there's only one RSS feed, you get a bunch of stuff that you may not be interested in.

Regardless, there have been a couple interesting nuggets to come off there. One that really piques my interest, and I hope to hear more about is a new company/service called simply scrolltalk. From the Truemors posting:
scrolltalk was created in a weekend, starting Friday night and ending Sunday evening. The project went from concept to completion with the help of roughly 25 team members. scrolltalk is a chat room that contextually groups like-minded members, we call it Interest Messaging.
To me, just sounds like an interesting story. I love hearing about rapid development projects with no executive and PR BS around them. To me, it's what the internet and programming is all about, not the convoluted, over-managed, corporate process we see most of the time.

There's no contact info on the site, so if the scrolltalk folks want to, well, talk with us either on the show or via email, I'd invite them to do so.

/rizzn

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Attention All Non A-List Bloggers!

Hey Rizzn-ites,

Robert Scoble, Andy Beal, Michael Arrington, and very likely every other A-List blogger is gazing towards their navel as they all unzip their feed readers and compare the size of the feed-count. Maybe you can call my disinterest feed envy, but I've got to be real honest: I'm more or less sick of everyone in the so-called A-List talking about how great they all are, and how awesome it is that they are about to be a part of another exclusive club of folks with a thousand or more subscribers or ten-thousand readers to the blog or what have ya.

As to the rest of us - I got a proposition for ya. Remember that episode of Star Trek, the Next Generation, I think it was, where the Borg had the Enterprise in the cross-hairs, and then Geordi and Data came up with the plan of uploading the logic bomb that looked like a mobius strip, wound up making all the A-Listers Borg sit there and try to assimilate the information while the Enterprise beat a hasty retreat.

These top lists, Technorati, TechMeme 100, and what's sure to be the Google Feed Reader 100 that some jerk with an Ajax development kit is writing as we speak, are our logic bomb.

Here's an idea - let's write about some stuff that matters to more than about 100 people or so, and then steal all their subscribers and readers.

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Saturday, October 13, 2007

Just a Few Minor Odds and Ends

Hey Rizzn-ites,

No big ground-shaking posts from me this weekend. I've been taking most of the weekend thus far to do some SEO on the site, and to clean up some of the designs. Hopefully you like the front page a bit better than it was last week.

Here are a few random thoughts that I simply don't have the energy to develop into full blog posts:
  1. TechMeme isn't nearly as brilliant as what Calacanis says. Especially if you're not part of the TechMemeOrati. I heard it said that it's a People Magazine of the Tech Blogosphere. If you aren't one of the cool kids, you probably don't enjoy many benefits from it, other than as a digest of what others may be saying. I know I have been listed a couple times in my ten years of tech blogging.
  2. I fixed the stuff Rizzn Network Link Blog. All headlines and link fields should populate correctly. You should subscribe, especially if you're a voracious reader like we are.
  3. Heck, while you're at it, subscribe to the stuff RizWords Show Notes. Even more good stuff to put in your reader.
  4. I'm seriously pondering what it'll take for Robert Scoble to finally link me. I've tried subtlety. Do I just need to ask him outright?
  5. Why do folks who espouse Facebook for business not answer Facebook messages? (This isn't a blanket statement, just an observation).
  6. I want to do a series on the absolute best way to set up your suite of indy journalist web apps, but my suite keeps changing too quickly for me to finish the series. The short list of just app names: Facebook, GMail, GTalk, Twitter, Feedburner, Blogger, Podango, Stumbleupon, and Digg. Oh and Google Reader.
  7. Oh yes! Blogrush is a huge disappointment! I had what can best be described as a crap-ton of both credits and sign-ups. How much traffic came my way? Three visitors. I apologize to those of you who signed up under me. Write me and I'll try to think of a way to make it up to you.
  8. I have very exacting standards on my RSS feed list now. I don't generally allow in any MSM feeds, and if you don't have full content in your feed, I probably won't subscribe. If I subscribe, I probably won't read. Sorry, dem's da facts.

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Friday, October 12, 2007

Tag Please, I've Got Three Children...

...well, two, really. Three, if you count Art.

We want to go to two conferences (that we've identified so far!) on the slate for this year. Our coverage on RizWords, Art Lindsey's blog, and the blogs at here Rizzn.com will be highly read, as well will be our coverage strung to other new media outfits. Seriously! Highly viewed by hundreds of thousands of focused niche readers and listeners.

The two conferences are:
  • CPAC (Conservative Political Action Conference): This event takes place in March of 2008, and we'd like to get sponsorship closed by the end of October 2007. Every major name in conservative politics will be attending, including Tony Snow, Sen. Mitch McConnell, Vice President Richard B. Cheney, William Lauderback, Michelle Malkin, Phyllis Schlafly, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, and many more!
  • CES (Consumer Electronics Show): This event is in January of 2008, and we'd like to close sponsorship by the end of October, as well. This is the technology event of the year to attend. The connections and scoops that can be garnered by attending this conference can be simply boundless in terms of increasing your bottom line.

    This is, unfortunately, a more expensive conference to attend (because, mostly, it's held in Las Vegas), so despite the fact we've raised a fair amount of sponsorship for this event, we're still looking for a bit more. We're looking to take a team of at least six folks, and the hotel rooms are obnoxiously expensive there.
What will you get for your sponsorship? Depending on your sponsorship level, you'll get one or more of the following:
  • Mentions in the tops and/or tails of our reports on RizWords.
  • Us wearing your schwag on camera.
  • Us acting as representatives for your brand, and collecting names and numbers of movers and shakers that can use your product or service.
  • Us presenting you with advice and consultation services personalized for your organisation based upon the findings and analysis after our post event wrap-up, and how you can increase your bottom line.
We aren't going to charge our typical CPM style ads - it'd get way too expensive way too quick. You listen to this show, you know the type of people we speak to. Suffice it to say, we talk to a lot of folks like you both on the show and off the air. All for less than the price of taking your staff out to the conferences or buying a booth! Flat fee style!

Interested? Email us, and we'll talk turkey. Don't worry, if you don't think you can afford it, drop us a line, and we'll try to work something out.

/rizzn

PS: of course, if you're interested in buying a CPM ad for the regular show, we've got some new openings for that, too! Email us.

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Should We Trust the MSM's Science Reporting? Even a little?

Hey Rizzn-ites,

It's been a minute since I've done a political post. Heck, a lot of you subscribing now probably haven't even seen a political post from me unless you have gone through my archives. I've sort of been leaving the political commentary to Art, lately, but since still getting back into the habit of posting on the blog, I'm gonna pick up the slack today.

I spotted an item on Truemors today that pointed me to a CNN article on abortion rates:
Abortion rates do not change based on the procedure’s legality in different nations and rates remain virtually equal in rich and poor countries. Despite a dip in abortions, from 46 mil. in 1995 to 42 mil. in 2003, half of all procedures occur illegally under potentially dangerous circumstances. Officials say increased access to contraceptives is the best way to combat unsafe abortions, but frustration continues as countries like the US will not give funds to any health services associated with abortion.
To me, this sounded a bit off, as do a lot of the studies that come out of the mainstream press that have anything to do with morality. The problem with citing these stats in their article goes back to the big problem the MSM seems to have with checking facts, as well as checking the source of their facts. Setting aside the hundreds of ways that the MSM has screwed up my reporting on the gPhone, let's look a bit to history on how the MSM doesn't like to check facts when it comes to scientific stories intersecting with popular American morals.

I'm going to quote myself again. A couple years ago on a environmental story, I said the following:

Anyone who doesn’t have a habit of reading scholarly papers would tend to be alarmed by this seemingly expert opinion. I, on the other hand, have not only read quite a few ‘scholarly papers’ but have had close personal relationships with the scholarati. Let me say to you that the typical scholarly study writer in tertiary fields of study tend to be as full of bs, bias, and opinion as the next guy, and if you want to put stock in a scholarly ‘study,’ you had better read it for yourself.

I’m not in any way saying these studies are easy to do, but often what happens is they start out with a thesis, and then they cherry pick factoids, graphs, opinions and other nuggets to ‘prove’ their point, instead of investigating a phenomenon and reporting the results of their findings. As a result, these agenda studies (as I like to call them) often contain sources with shaky foundations at best. Many times the researchers haven’t even based their findings on primary sources. During a debate, one time, I was quoted a study citing the fallibility of abstinence based education. The outlandish claim was made that more people who are taught abstinence (as opposed to those who aren’t) catch STDs. I read the study, went through the sources, and as it turns out, the source quoted by the source quoted by the source quoted by the study was an opinion paper (and the number was based on pure speculation), not an actual fact. Since it was several generations deep in studies, it was being passed around as a complete fact.

The abstinence story I'm referring in that article comes from a popular MSM story that one of my writers at the time picked up on citing how abstinence only programs actually promoted promiscuity. While that may or may not be the case, the study my writer cited, the same study cited by the ever incorrect LA Times and the usually wrong UK Guardian was really what I've come to term an Agenda Study. The article cited was written in September of 2004. Here are some snippets of the results of about an hour's worth of research:

"Texas has the fourth highest AIDS rates and ranks second, behind Mississippi, in births among teens ages 15 to 17, according to a new study by the Annie E. Casey Foundation that draws on federal statistics. "

First of all, it turns out that Annie E. Casey Foundation did not do the research on this topic, and did not do the study, and did not get their source material from federal statistics. They pulled their information from a liberal watchdog group called "Advocates for Youth" (http://www.advocatesforyouth.org/). To be fair, Advocates for Youth did not do the research, study, or statistics themselves either. They got them from another liberal watchdog group called the "Alan Guttmacher Institute" (www.agi-usa.org).

The most recent statistics gathered by the AGI were in 1996, and these statistics are being quoted as much more recent in daughter reports. Secondly, data came from two primary sources: a) Abortion Providers and b) the Census Bureau. Census Bureau data is compiled every 10 years, so in 1996, the relevant Census Bureau data would have come from 1990, much before Bush's policies were implemented and far before they could take effect. Data from other government agencies are at least in part derived from Census Bureau statistics, and in 1992-1996, the likelihood that they were dealing in the most recent Census Bureau statistics decreases even further, so the age of our data in the present time begins to age anywhere from fourteen years (optimistically) to twenty-two years (pessimistically).

I don't even have to begin to acknowledge the inherent bias of trying to create a statistically accurate study based off findings of an industry who's interests are being represented by the outcome of the study.

So, in summation, one of the cornerstone "facts" of the narrative is in fact ... Well ... Not.

So, essentially, I've shown a bit of history of the MSM's propensity to err on the side of anti-Morality/pro-Science when reporting these things. Let's take a look at this CNN article:
Women are just as likely to get an abortion in countries where it is outlawed as they are in countries where it is legal, according to research published Friday.

In a study examining abortion trends from 1995 to 2003, experts also found that abortion rates are virtually equal in rich and poor countries, and that half of all abortions worldwide are unsafe.

The study was done by Gilda Sedgh of the Guttmacher Institute in the United States and colleagues from the World Health Organization. It was published in an edition of The Lancet medical journal devoted to maternal health.
Let's start with where it was published. The Lancet medical journal is not a peer-reviewed journal, but a reader-reviewed journal. From the description of the journal on their website:
We seek to publish high-quality clinical trials that will alter medical practice [...] critical appraisal of research and reviews is ensured by strong Comment and Correspondence sections.
This means that even the pro-Science bias can exit in peer-reviewed journals was not applied here - it was simply published because it was submitted, and looked credible and controversial enough to get the Lancet some attention. But who is the Guttmacher institute, anyways?
The Guttmacher Institute (formerly The Alan Guttmacher Institute) advances sexual and reproductive health in the United States and globally through an interrelated program of social science research, public education, and policy analysis. The Institute is named after an Ob/Gyn and former president of Planned Parenthood, Dr. Alan Guttmacher.
After looking through their publicly available yearly finance and shareholder reports, I was able to determine that partners of the Guttmacher Institute include: The Abortion Coalition, the ACLU, Catholics for Free Choice, Choice Communicators Network, Family Planning Coalition, Feminist Majority Foundation, International Planned Parenthood Federation, NARAL Pro-Choice America, National Network of Abortion Funds, Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Religious coalition for Reproductive Rights,

The same report, interestingly, showed that there was $15,000,000 unspent at the end of the year in 2005. Neither here nor there, but a bit odd.

Additionally, major funding for the Guttmacher Institute came from: the Ecotrust Foundation, Elaine P. Hapgood and the Educational Foundation of America (known for strong contributions to LGBT and abortion related causes), and the Planned Parenthood Federation.

All of this to say: follow the money and then come back and tell me whether or not you think that the 'scientific studies' of the Guttmacher Institute are valid and unbiased? Every group and individual I've listed is an organisation with a very strong political agenda. The entire institute is named after the founder of an organisation known for its wanton promotion of abortion.

Here's the kicker: I was able to find all this data out with about 45 minutes of research! Why is it up to me to do the job of a science editor over at CNN? Why do they publish information where the core data is suspect? Is it an agenda, a bias, or just plain ineptitude? Does no one in the MSM use a critical eye at all when a new scientific study comes out?

This is why I stay away from MSM articles on the whole. No exaggeration: about 90% of the MSM articles I've come across in the last two or three months have had glaring inaccuracies, fallacies, or questionable core data like this. This isn't a new thing, it's just much easier these days to do research and find out the truth.

I've almost quit MSM completely. You should do the same.

/rizzn

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Thursday, October 11, 2007

I know what animal you're thinking of.

Hey Rizzn-ites,

Have you ever played 20 Questions with a computer or small orb? If so, you know that computers and technology, are very capable of predicting what we'll say and what we're thinking.

How does it do it?

Greg Blonder, who we interviewed on the show about a month ago, posted on Internet Evolution today not asking how it does it, but noting how it doesn't, and posing a work-a-round for poor predictive technology. I've chatted with Greg a few times, and he's a great guy to talk to, but I don't know him well enough to know exactly how much of an AI fan he is.

I am a fan of AI. I'm an AI nut. One of my big fantasies (given enough cash and computing cycles, one that I think is realistic), is to create a truly sentient (at least by Alan Turing's standards) AI.

Greg gives a couple examples of how current predictive technology falls short:
  • Search engines, and their contextual ads: "Search engine companies believe that they can target ads more efficiently based on invading my privacy and analyzing my last hundred search queries and emails -- and thus charge a premium for each ad served. But last week, while I was seeking information on car recalls, I was flooded by ads to buy the very same lemon from the same company I was investigating."
  • Piracy: "The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) snoops around our computers to see what music files we're posting and trying to guess our intent. Do we own the track we posted, and are we just backing it up to the net?"
It's hard to argue with his examples (and there are others in his list), but I'll try. The bottom line that Greg is getting at is that invading privacy to learn more history is not going to assist a computer in accurately predicting the future. I think that frankly, the opposite is true.

Remember the 20 questions bot I mentioned in the opener? The trick to those AIs is for them first to narrow down the possible responses you could have to a narrow list of nouns, and then, narrow down the possibilities further with a refined tree of questions. Most modern 20 questions AIs can get the answer in less than 17 questions, but rarely more than 26.

What do you need to do when all you have is one question (a search query), and no retries? You need more context. You can either get that by coaching the user to be more specific, or you can use historical context.

Search engines, particularly Google, are going back not just a hundred queries, but years in their history, to determine context and intent. Google is also working to invade our privacy on a number of levels, and I'm not just talking about that silly street view thing they have on the maps system everyone seems to be up in arms about.

Look at Blogger, GMail, Search History, GTalk, Calendaring, and just about every tool that's graduated from Labs into common usage. What's a common thread? Not just organisation and assistance in utilisation of said data - archival! They default to archiving all text chats, give you nigh unlimited space to store email conversations, go back as far as they can in their history of your searches, and give you a free tool to record your thoughts on everything from the mundane to the profound in Blogger. Then they tie it to one nifty little Google Account that has your name and cookie attached to it.

They want to give you a gPhone and a Social Network too, not so that you can do better business with it (although that will be the selling point so that you'll use it) - it's to give better context and idea mapping so that when ads do get served up, it'll know from that bulletin you posted about how much you hate your Honda POS, when you search that term, you aren't necessarily looking to buy a new one.

Read some Kurzweil, if you don't believe me. Even if you do - read some Kurzweil. Age of Spiritual Machines changed the way I think about the future. Kurzweil talks about how for a time, AI's will be almost indistinguishable from unmodified humans in levels of performance and in some cases appearance. And then there will be a period where they excel in every way possible past the unmodified human, especially in matters relating to cognition.

All that having been said, the very things that are driving us toward that solution, that is the ability for Facebook and Google to sell us better, more targeted and predictive ads, are the very same factors that are driving us towards the solution to the problem that Greg proposes.

Greg thinks that we should have a 'transparent internet' - that is an internet where actions have consequences. We are slouching ever towards a social internet - where we log in to an internet based operating system that is focused around our task list and our workgroups. Social networks imply responsibility, as actions are increasingly coming with consequences. It's easier to dig up dirt on a person by looking through their photo albums, but it's also easier to see where information has been forwarded from, as more and more information is moved around by the grease of social tools like Facebook, MySpace and Twitter.

I don't think we'll ever quite have the transparent internet Greg asks for, with modified SMTP and DNS protocols and security aware browsers. There's just no margin in it for anyone. We will, though, see both more accurate predictions from computers as well as more accountability in our online actions due to social networking. Count on it.

/rizzn

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Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Preview: Current.TV gets a new look


Hey Rizzn-ites,

Yeah, you wouldn't think I'd actually be a member of the Current.TV website, what with my creeping disdain for almost all things Al Gore (which, incidentally, is one of the many things that makes me averse to Apple products - he's on their board of directors).

But believe it or not, I actually think (and have thought for quite a while) that Current.TV was a fairly decent business model, and one likely to succeed in this transition period between New Media and Old Media. So, like a good little video content producer, some time a couple years ago, I signed up for an account. Unfortunately (for Current.TV, any way), they require that all submitted content be exclusive to Current - I wanted to have distribution rights over my content. I never actually submitted anything past their first refusal (based on my distribution demands).

All that to say, I got an email from Mr. Gore's folks saying that they have created a "brand spankin' new private beta" for me to preview. Here's what Mr. Gore's email told me to expect:
  • Explore cool stuff from the Web submitted by people like you
  • Add things of your own and share them with your friends
  • Watch and influence the full line-up of programming from Current TV
  • Join the conversation ... with your keyboard or your webcam!
I remember last time I was there, most of the content was some good lookin' Google stuff, I think some Yahoo shorts, and a bunch of conspiracy nuts talkin' about how 9/11 was an inside job, and how we're all going to die from global warming.

At least the content has shifted a bit. No longer is Mr. Gore's baby a bastion of leftist thinking. The two second tier feature videos upon logging in are a couple of dudes railing against the "hoax of global warming." The number one feature is a video about how Charlize Theron is now "officially the number one sexy babe of the universe."

Hello, democratized video. You are here, and you are teh sex.

In all honesty, the quality and content of the site has radically changed. It's the design sense of Veoh applied to the political community of YouTube. You feel highbrow browsing around, until you actually click play. Then you realize you're playing in the kiddie pool in terms of intellectual content.

The question on your mind is likely the real question on my mind, when I got to the site: do they still pay for content? This is what the producer FAQ says:
We will still pay for full-length pods, V-CAMs and Current Promos:

Pod prices will be negotiated on a per-piece basis.

V-CAM submissions are paid a flat rate of $1000 per V-CAM chosen for Current TV. If your V-CAM does air on Current and the sponsor of your V-CAM wants to show it in other places beyond Current TV, you'll get anywhere between $5,000 and $50,000, depending on where they show it:

  • Internet (other web sites besides): $5,000
  • Cable or satellite television (other than Current TV or any cable or satellite television network owned or controlled by Current TV): $10,000
  • Network television: $15,000
  • Any other medium (theatrical trailer, public billboard, sporting event jumbotron, etc.: $20,000

Promos are purchased for a flat rate of $250 per promo.

If you're a serial content producer, and your stuff is a notch above your typical YouTube fare, I'd suggest creating some exclusive content for Current. Couldn't hurt. Let me know how successful you are in terms of getting played, though. Keep in mind this is a company run by Al Gore's people, so while they may allow content on the website from the right wingers, if you don't fit into the socialism-for-America camp on anything political you produce, don't expect to get put on TV.

/rizzn

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TechMeme LB: Devaluation of Traffic

According to Steve Rubel, we've all missed the mark (apparently, including me) on the topic of web traffic (stemming from the TechMeme, er, tech meme). As many people have noted yesterday right about the same time I said it, there really isn't a lot of traffic to be had by gaming the TechMeme, and thus, it's rather pointless to game it (or, perhaps it is better to say that the rewards of gaming it would likely be less valuable than the energy spent in the process of gaming it).

Essentially, Rubel's point is that because most traffic these days comes from dis-interested Google searchers, then "...debating which sites drive the most traffic is really meaningless. A more fruitful discussion should be around what metric succeeds the page view. A lot of people are measuring by traffic, but those days are coming to an end - slowly."

I'm not sure I may be grasping everything Rubel's saying her, but as I see it, traffic clearly still counts for media types like bloggers, podcasters, and vidcasters. Sure, responsiveness of the audience and how engaged the audience is plays a big part, but seriously - if you have three super engaged listeners to your podcast as opposed to 7000 marginally interested listeners to a podcast, for instance - well, which one do you think is better?

Traffic is, let's not forget, numbers of people. Long-tail is important, but let's not get all nutty now and say traffic is an antiquated concept that means nothing. Seriously.

Am I really off on this? Am I missing the point? I don't think so, but I'm open to suggestion.

/rizzn

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gPhone: 30 pre-Beta Tests Underway

Hey Rizzn-ites and gPhone Hounds,

Last week I picked up a stray bit from a LiveJournaler about there being 30 rumored pre-beta gPhones wandering around in Mountain View California. Blogger Michael Bazeley recounts an experience he had in an Emeryville Apple store several days ago:

So I’m standing in the Emeryville Apple store today trying to troubleshoot a problem with a sales rep when a young woman bolts up to us saying she wants an iPhone. Like, now. After some back-and-forthing about the particulars, she says she’s a Google employee and she was going to wait for a demo of the gPhone, but it turns out Google’s only letting 30 people test it internally and she’s not one of them. So she’s going with the iPhone instead.

At which point, the Apple rep and I exchange glances and he says “gPhone? So it’s real, huh?” And the Google gal realizes she’s probably said too much and changes the subject.

There you go.

By the way, if you're interested in carrier information, price, and design, check out this post.

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Tuesday, October 9, 2007

The Techmeme 100: No Reason to Game

Hey Rizzn-ites,

Better late than never, I s'pose. I'm finally chiming in on the TechMeme 100 conversation. What finally was my impetus was this article over at the UK Guardian. Bobbie Johnson over there seems to be of the opinion that the TechMeme 100 is a small sandbox being fought over by a few folks for a tiny bit of traffic. According to Bobbie, the Drudge Report, those cheeky beggars at Digg, Google News, Reddit, the Huffington Post, StumbleUpon, Slashdot, BoingBoing and a number of loony New World Order conspiracist sites all send more traffic than TechMeme.

But then again, Bobbie may not understand the concept of niche news. He is from the UK Guardian, after all. Most of those MSM types have a hard time understanding the intertubes and all that.

Winer, Scoble, Arrington and others all weighed in on the TechMeme 100, all with very interesting points (and all of them made the TechMeme front page, too). I'll be real honest, though, I'm pretty sure I've only been on TechMeme once or twice as a primary headline. One such time was back in July, on the 13th to be exact, in regards to my $10 DSL saga. It was very widely reported after being listed in Engadget. Here's the breakdown of the traffic spike on the 13th as my Google Analytics log displays (which, keep in mind, is a bit lower than most other stats engines in terms of what it records); all numbers in unique visitors:
  1. Engadget.com - 3,853
  2. DSL Reports - 949
  3. Direct or Entered "rizzn.com" in Google - 691
  4. Other Google traffic - 244
  5. news.google.com - 194
  6. stumbleupon - 96
  7. Houston Chronicle - 60
  8. TechMeme - 57
  9. Wifi Net News - 50
  10. Digg - 34
The numbers speak for themselves. Of course, actually being on the TechMeme 100 means you're getting significant attention already, but in terms of that incredible influx of traffic you think it might bring in, I wouldn't really look to gaming TechMeme 100 for that.

Just my two cents to the mid-level bloggers out there like me. In terms of us tech bloggers, look at TechMeme for what it is - a status symbol (and perhaps, if you make repeat appearances there, a brand recognition tool), but not really the place to get that Digg-like avalanche of traffic.

/rizzn

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gPhone: Belaboring the Point on the NYT Article

Hey Rizzn-ites,

I posted a bit yesterday about the NYT piece on the gPhone. The coverage of the NYT analysis has been spun as wrong as it can possibly be, with the grand take-a-way being that there is no gPhone coming. The original article was a bit off in the first place. I actually got an email from Miguel Helft this morning, responding to my analysis of what he said.
I'm puzzled that you call this a hit piece. Really? A story that lays out the facts, as I known them, and strategy behind Google's mobile ambitions and plans. In fact, most readers would probably come away with the notion that loosening carrier control and more competition for are good things. No?

As for quoting Google enemies, the one and only source I quoted who is in that camp is Scott Cleland, and I very clearly disclosed his point of view.

In fact, the one CEO of a carrier I quoted was Vodafone, by some metrics the largest mobile operator in the world, and a Google ally, since they provide easy access to Google services (unlike US carriers).
The problem is, Miguel, that very few facts were reported. The leading items were your unqualified (by any sourcing) analysis, and the quotes from those that would be decidedly out of the Google camp. Karsten Weide? Ex-Yahoo. Dan Olschwang? Potential Google mobile competitor. Arun Sarin? T-Mobile competitor (gPhone carrier).

Throughout the article, Miguel and all the quoted sources seemed mystified by the hype. As I stated yesterday, the gPhone promise is what the iPhone used to be, but without the threat of bricking.

I looked a bit further into Scott Cleland, since I was pretty sure I'd heard the name before, but couldn't place it. He writes Precursors Blog, and talked a bit about the gPhone yesterday. Like Miguel's piece, most of his analysis lacks cited sources, and completely downplays any credence to the hype surrounding it whatsoever. According to Scott, all the hype revolves around "their one-letter sub-branding conventions, their cultures of extreme secrecy about their plans, and their similar "Midas touch" public relations successes."

Again, though, what would you expect from shill for the anti-net neutrality crowd, and someone who argues that "...[t]rue competition best serves consumers, not government-managed competition where the Government pre-determines market outcomes with preemptive open access of net neutrality regulation" when speaking of the nation-wide megalopolies of AT&T and the cable companies. Competition indeed.

Update 9:48 AM CST (10/10/2007): Scoble linked Nicholas Carr's blog post this morning, who drew more or less the exact same conclusion I did.

/rizzn

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Google + Jaiku


I just found out via C.C. Chapman on Twitter, but it would appear that Jaiku has been purchased by Google!

This from the Jaiku FAQ today:

Jaiku is joining Google. While it's too soon to comment on specific plans, we look forward to working with our new friends at Google over the coming months to expand in ways we hope you'll find interesting and useful. Our engineers are excited to be working together and enthusiastic developers lead to great innovation. We look forward to accomplishing great things together. In order to focus on innovation instead of scaling, we have decided to close new user sign-ups for now.

But fear not, all our Jaiku services will stay running the way you are used to and you will be able to invite your friends to Jaiku. We have put together a quick Q&A about the acquisition.

Jyri Engeström and Petteri Koponen, Jaiku Founders

I guess Leo Laporte was right to bet on Jaiku back when he made the switch. I'll have to take a second look at the service, since it'll likely be pitched at me within the next couple months in the form of Google's new social networking initiative (yeah, bet on that!).

@sugree had an interesting observation: zingku+jaiku = google phone. It's a thought, and it is clearly related to the gPhone. Don't think it's the totality of it though, by a longshot.

Registration to Jaiku is currently closed, but you can request an invitation from the Jaiku site.

/rizzn

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Monday, October 8, 2007

Family Pictures



I'll be real honest, there's a lot of things I could be talking about on the blog tonight. Instead, after finishing a quick little project for Podango this evening, I'm going to head to bed an hour or two early, and leave you with some pictures of me, my boys, and my wife.

(My wife took most of these, btw).

Enjoy.
Posted by Picasa

gPhone: In Defense of Google

Hey Rizzn-ites,

Well, if you're like me, you woke up this morning with an inbox full of emails and a Google reader that pointed to mostly links to the New York Times article on the gPhone. Instead of tapping out thirty or forty replies to emails on my comment on the story, I'm simply going to post here, and refer all the bozos who wrote me back to this article.

You can hear me talk about this today on RizWords, daily politics and technology (subscribe for free to listen).

Everyone in the new media seems to be taking the New York Times article as if it were gospel, on not a poorly written re-hashing of everything else Crunchgear, Information Week, DigiTimes and I have written previously. Very little primary source research work was done for the article, and everything mentioned as a 'fact' about the gPhone, I've mentioned previously (to little fanfare) on my blog. The only difference is that the New York Times didn't attribute me as a source, nor did the even bother to contact me and ask me where I got my facts from.

That's right. I'm saying plagiarism. If not from me, then from the blogosphere in general. That they've not checked me out or asked me about anything (or that anyone but the Boston Globe has contacted me from the MSM) to try to get a couple of the rumors they're reporting as fact correct completely floors me.

Here are the first four paragraphs of the NYT article, translated and condensed down to a sentence a piece:
Everyone is saying there's a gPhone coming. The gPhone isn't going to be better than the iPhone. I've figured out all of Google's mobile strategy, magically, and without any help. Here it is: they want to advertise on mobile phones.
The problem here is it's all the way down to paragraph five when the author starts talking to someone who might have a clue as to what technology is, Karsten Weide. Unfortunately, even a cursory glance at his bio shows us that he has very little experience in what it is that Google actually does. He's an ex-Yahoo Germany project manager - the closest he ever came to knowing Google strategy was working at a branch of a competitor of Google.

The article then continues to cite: an anonymous (non-Google) executive, Dan Olschwang of JumpTap (a mobile phone version of Google), Arun Sarin of Vodafone, and Scott Cleland (telecommunications industry analyst who recently testified before the Senate against Google’s proposed acquisition of DoubleClick). All of these folks were either in direct competition with Google or were anti-Google.

Only in the last three sentences are any positive words used (by the article or by quoted sources) in reference to Google.

Essentially, the NYT piece is just a poorly veiled hit piece on Google, essentially stating that the gPhone is extraneous, and that you can already get to Google.com with a mobile phone, so why the hype about a gPhone?

I'll tell you why the hype. The Apple iPhone was this incredible piece of technology released to the largest launch in recent memory for a mobile device. What we had was a device we could develop for and look at as a platform for real forward, user-controlled advancement. And then Apple bricked it.

Now, with the gPhone, we're looking at the same thing, but without an Apple-ish propensity for monopoly, and closed systems. Google and the gPhone is the only device coming out on the horizon that looks like it both has the power to inspire the masses as well as the open and robust platform that developers can use and work on. That's the bottom line, and that's the big picture that the New York Times missed.

For an article that got it right, see TechCrunch today.

For a good chronology, see SearchEngineLand.

I've got more to say, but you'll have to tune into RizWords today to get it.

/rizzn

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Sunday, October 7, 2007

gPhone: Rumored to be in the Wild!

Hey Rizzn-ites and gPhone hounds,

Just a bit of gPhone news for the weekend, it has been reported by Alex Lewis over at Network World that Google may have released some 'pre-beta gPhones into the wild':
Google has reportedly released approximately 30 pre-beta gPhones to current employees for testing. There are a lot of rumors, but if you hang around Mountain View, CA much you may see one in the wild. I was talking to a Googler yesterday but as soon as I asked he quickly shoved the device into his pocket and changed the subject. IF this was one of the fabled Gphones, it appeared similiar in shape to the iPhone, maybe a little thicker, with a bright screen and video.
So there ya go, another tasty gPhone rumor snack for you. Carry on!

/rizzn

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Yahoo Pipes + Twitter = RSS TwitterTrack!

Hey Rizzn-ites,

This post goes out to the developers in my audience that are Twitter-heads. I really love the new Twitter "track" feature. In case you haven't checked it out yet, basically, you type "track [keyword] into Twitter, and it'll alert you whenever a new twitter containing that is mentioned by anyone on twitter.

I've been noticing my tracks have been wiped out a couple of times - not sure if that's a bug or a feature. At any rate, it's not a supported (in the API) feature just yet, and for an applet I'm working on, I need the data fed into another routine. I toyed around with all the search engines out there, and wasn't able to find exactly what I need out of it (that is, an RSS feed based off system-wide tweets by keyword).

So then I remembered Yahoo! Pipes. I made this little pipe that allows you to enter a search term, and then get search results based off of that. It also generates the content in just about every type of RSS feed you could ever dream of.

Want it? Go here for it: Twitter Tag Searcher.

Are you a developer? Want to be able, say, CURL an RSS to get what you want? Syntax below:

RSS:
http://pipes.yahoo.com/pipes/pipe.run?_id=ss4dzZt03BGTD2OwBx2yXQ&_render=rss&tag=

JSON:
http://pipes.yahoo.com/pipes/pipe.run?_id=ss4dzZt03BGTD2OwBx2yXQ&_render=json&tag=

That's the latest from here. I'm headed to bed.

(there'll probably be a PHP snippet on this from me soon. maybe. depends on how motivated i am tomorrow).

/rizzn

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Saturday, October 6, 2007

Microsoft Zune and Podcasting!


Hey Rizzn-ites,

A bit of news I've come across, and I haven't really seen anyone else report this yet, but I was alerted a couple days ago via the TechPodcast discussion list that the Zune and Microsoft are making an effort to be more podcast friendly. Rob Greenlee sent this to the list Thursday:
I wanted to let you all know that I am the new Podcast Programming Lead on the Zune team here at Microsoft and [...] I am determined to make podcasting or portable on-demand casts great on the Zune. [I] was not involved with building the core technology for the podcast engine on the Zune, as I just started here on Tuesday of this week.

Rob Greenlee
Mobilecaster News & Zune Podcast Programming Lead
(www.mobilecasternews.com) - (www.zune.net)
Rob is a long-time podcaster, and referencing some of Apple's early mistakes in podcasting, wanted those of the TechPodcast community (as well as, presumably, the podcasting community at large) that he was very open to suggestion and communication in his work.

I've got to say that one of my continuing frustrations with any of the big tech groups like Yahoo, Apple, Microsoft and Google is that they either have no clue to how the podcasting technology is supposed to work, isolate themselves in an ivory tower from the podcasting community at large, or both. Apple has been unresponsive to anyone but video podcasters and MSM for quite a while. Google, for some reason, has never gotten around to putting together a directory or anything podcast centric (although I vaguely remember seeing something a while back that encouraged you to individually upload and tag all your media files from your podcast individually.. don't seem to see it now, though). Yahoo, well, we all know how well their foray into podcasting went.

Microsoft, here's to you maybe getting it right! Hopefully we'll see good things from the new Zune community when it emerges.

/rizzn

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Friday, October 5, 2007

gPhone: Unsubstantiated Rumor

I haven't spoken with "Deep Throat" in a couple of days, so I'll have to ask him about this, but I just picked up an unsubstantiated rumor from a student at Rochester Institute of Technology:
So apparently Google's Phone really truly for all times for serious is coming, whether one likes it or not. It seems that there are displays at the Googleplex where people (that is, Google employees) can check it out. It also seems that the phone will be partially ad supported, in the sense that walking around town if you get close enough to some restaurant you will receive [...] I've heard of something similar in Korea where instead of getting coupons, you get texts whenever one of your friends is within x miles of you.
Interesting. I'll update you later. Gonna go record a show real quick now.

/rizzn

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HUAR Alert: The 16 Best Robot Stories (of the last two months)

Hey Rizzn-ites,

Over the last few months, I've noticed an uptick in the number of robots in the news. I'm fairly certain it's an uptick, and not just that I happen to be noticing it more now than before. Usually, I just send the robot stories off to Sean, because I know he's interested in that sort of stuff, but I've been sending the emails of to him so often, I felt it necessary to round it up here. I mean, who doesn't love robots?

My love affair with robots began back in the day when I was but a wee Rizzn watching the Christmas time commercials for Radio Shack, and they kept showing that awesome Tomy robot that grabbed the orange juice from the refridgerator and gave it to the dad. Apparently, I'm not the only one loving robots these days; just a cursory glance at the volume of robot searchers on Google News relative to news volume shows an uptick in interest (see image at left).

So what is the robot news? Let's scroll back over the past couple months and see the more interesting stories:

The First Armed Robots Rove Iraq: Robots have been roaming the streets of Iraq, since shortly after the war began. Now, for the first time -- the first time in any warzone -- the machines are carrying guns. The SWORDS -- modified versions of bomb-disposal robots used throughout Iraq -- were first declared ready for duty back in 2004. But concerns about safety kept the robots from being sent over the the battlefield. The machines had a tendency to spin out of control from time to time. That was an annoyance during ordnance-handling missions; no one wanted to contemplate the consequences during a firefight.

Top 3 Robots Coming Soon to the Battlefield: Live @ DARPATech: In theory, DARPATech 2007 is crawling with robots. Stanford University's Grand Challenge winner, Stanley, squats in the lobby of the Marriott Anaheim. The first thing you see upon walking into the exhibit hall is Big Dog, the four-legged robotic jogger from Boston Dynamics. There are videos of robotic surgeons and scale models of giant unmanned ground vehicles and a snake-like bot encased in glass. But for the most part, these robots are static props, the machine equivalent of stuffed Siberian tigers, frozen mid-leap, in a natural history museum.

Military tests rocket-powered bionic arm: A rocket-powered bionic arm has been successfully developed and tested by a team of mechanical engineers at Vanderbilt University as part of a $30 million military program to develop advanced prosthetic devices for next generation of super-soldiers. The mechanical arm mechanical arm with a miniature rocket motor can lift (curl) about 20 to 25 pounds, three to four times more than current commercial arms.

Probo: ‘The Intelligent, Autonomous Huggy Robot’: Picture this. A child is in a hospital room, away from home and scared by his or her surroundings. Everything smells different, everything looks different, all the people are different. Where are mom and dad? When is it time to go home? Suddenly, in marches a robotic monster with green fur asking for hugs. Such is the vision of Bill Gates, Fujitsu-Siemens, and the Belgium-based ANTY foundation. They’re building an “intelligent, autonomous huggy robot” to interact with hospitalized children in an attempt to make being away from home a little less scary.

Self-Introspecting Robot Learns to Walk: "There's something about these things that seems eerily alive! The Starfish Robot reminds me of the Grid Bugs from Tron. But it's very real, and apparently capable of self introspection. In fact, instead of being explicitly coded, it teaches itself how to walk, and it can even learn how to compensate for damage."

Robots set sail in Microtransat Challenge: Having already proven their worth on the land in various Grand Challenges, robots are now setting out to conquer the open seas, with the first Microtransat Challenge now getting underway in the Irish Sea off Aberystwyth. From the sound of it, however, this year's competition is just setting the stage for next year's race, when larger boats will set sail from France and hopefully find their way across the Atlantic to the finish line in the Caribbean, relying primarily on wind speed and GPS to stay on track.

Man telecommutes by sending in a robot replacement: Programmer Ivan Bowman works from home, but still maintains his presence in the office through the use of a bot he calls IvanAnywhere -- a clever play on his name and the name of his employer, iAnywhere. Basically a webcam-on-wheels, IvanAnywhere motors around the office, takes meetings, and even gives presentations, all while the real Ivan remains safely pantless in his home office. Actually, that sounds pretty smart -- anyone got a spare webcam?



The Robots of CEATAC: There are so many beautiful robots here, it'll make your head spin. They come in all sizes, from a twee bike-riding robot whose visage I cannot now find in my photo library to a set of guard robots that won’t do much guarding when you kick them over before they can alert the authorities.



How to build a RoboFlush: We were always a little wary of bringing our Legos into the bathroom, but if you've got no such baseless fears, BattleBricks has published a handy how to on building one of those fancy auto-flushers you see in some of the finest washrooms worldwide. Using only parts from a standard NXT Mindstorms kit, Will Gorman rigged up a contraption that employs the ultrasonic sensor module to detect the presence and then absence of a bathroom-goer, and also features a dedicated button to perform a Rube Goldberg-esque manual flush. Keep on reading for a thankfully-SFW demo vid of the so-called "RoboFlush"..

Virtual Robots Fooled By Visual Illusions: Roland Piquepaille alerts us to research out of University College London in which virtual robots, trained to "see" as we do, were duped by optical illusions the same way humans are. Here's one of the illusions the software system fell for.

Erector SpyKee:Nikko and Erector just launched the Spykee Spy Robot, a Johnny-5-esque little fellow that recharges itself and includes a webcam and MP3 player all in a clever little package.It costs about $299 and lets you watch your family remotely, ensuring that your domicile will be safe from robo-phobic burglers. It reacts to motion so when someone pops in for a visit the SpyKee can email their picture to you and then burn their face off with huge fiery lasers.

Robotic Scout To Survey Arctic Ice: "The Meridian unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) is a single-engine research aircraft with fixed landing gear designed by engineers at the University of Kansas. According to Technology Review, it will be used to see what happens beneath the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets. Two units are currently being built for a cost of about 3 million US dollars. The Meridian will fly for up to 13 hours over a distance of 1,750 kilometers. The first flight over Greenland is forecast for next summer, and a second flight will take place over the Antarctic later in 2008."

Undergrad-built Robots Play "Operation": "UBC Engineering Physics students pit prototype operation robots against each other for prizes and bragging rights in the 7th Annual Robot Competition. Offering solutions to handle delicate body parts on a 6-foot long version of the playing surface resembling the board game "Operation" (including the "shock" buzzer), the second-year students designed and built autonomous surgical robots to remove body organs reliably and quickly (well, most of the time). You can also see video footage."

Inventor shows off robot chef: While it may not boast quite the same capabilities of the AICookingrobot that came out of China last year, this robot chef designed by retired professor Liu Changfa looks like it should be more at home in your kitchen, if you're brave enough to let it into your house, that is. According to InventorSpot, the apparently unnamed "food robot" stands nearly five feet tall, and packs a pot and induction cooker inside its torso, along with a robotic arm to aid in the cooking process. Apparently, hungry humans simply need to pick a (presumably simple) recipe and wait while the robot works its magic. While there's no word on a commercialized version just yet, the bot has reportedly served dinner for some 200 taste testers already, and its inventor is now hoping it has what it takes to take home the top prize in China's upcoming national invention contest.

GeStream Technology's new robot challenges i-SOBOT's title: i-SOBOT, long the holder of the "world's smallest bipedal robot," finally has a proper rival, in the form of GeStream Technology's 15-centimeter-tall gold-colored bot. The latest tiny robotic overlord has 16 degrees of "freedom," which computes to something like 65,536 possible movements, and will be sold in unassembled so that owners can customize the look and functionality of the miniscule bot. With the price rumored at around $185 to $200, the company is laying claim to the "smallest, lightest, and cheapest in the world," though it wouldn't be surprising to see those titles usurped by some like-minded competitor. No word on availability, but as soon as we can get the Engadget offices crawling with a lethal army of these, we'll let you know.


Samsung Sentry Robot: The time is nigh, people. When the shiznit hits the fazan, these robots will be your only solace and protection. As hordes of ravenous, mutated Moray eels begin roaring out of your plumbing, the Samsung sentry bot, patented but not yet available at Best Buy, will hold them off long enough for you to slit your own throat with a broken bottle and listen as they slither and slope towards your dying body, hoping to feast on your sweet appendix. In your last dying breath say “Thank you, Samsung, for making this sentry robot just to hold these damn eels off long enough for me to die with my dignity — and nose — intact.” Then slip into the warm pool of oblivion and know that this sentry will watch over your masticated body for eternity, a testament to the madness and beauty of life’s monstrous play.

/rizzn

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