Filtering the Internet

Posted November 29th, 2009 in Geek by HN

This an article about the next billionaire: The guy who separates the wheat from the overwhelming chaff.

Think about the evolution of the net. First it was a problem of too less. It was just a project by the US Dept of Defense, never meant for wide-spread use. But the work kick-started development on the very first Internet protocols, and rapidly evolved into a set of well connected hubs and the first interweb. HTML happened, and Geocities (RIP) became big, and suddenly, everyone everywhere was making web-pages, Frontpage and Dreamweaver were mainstream softwares, (not to mention, NIIT, Aptech and SSI were making quick bushel-loads of money on coding lessons everywhere in India). Then Java, ASP, PHP, Flash, and things got a bit crazy. The net hit its first billion, then the next, and then we stopped counting (at least I did).

Now the problem is of too much. Of glut of information about everything. EVERYTHING. Think of any topic that might interest you and Google never delivers less than tens of thousands of results. (In fact there is a game that challenges users to come up with any two-word combination that delivers only one Google result). Add to that the blog explosion, zillions of user-generated pages being added on social networks (billions of pages, millions of photos, hundreds of thousands of videos, and trillions of messages). The scale is mind-blowing; so much so that the extent of data produced, consumed, shared and stored every single day surpasses years and years of data that was available to the entire world’s population a few years ago.

Google is the index page to this madness. It is a neat table of contents, ordered by its own algorithm into its own priority list. But it is still overwhelming, and the importance of a page is driven by links that flow in and out of that page (hence the old name Backrub. If you are more interested about how it works, I strongly recommend the original thesis. Very technical, but makes a nice read). Google is trying a social angle to its main search, but is still driven by algorithms and its database than by humans (quite understandably so, given the size of the frickin’ internet). Indexing, crawling, archiving, mining and ordering make the search results relevant, but not necessarily ideal in usability.

For example, say I am searching for the best magazine styled Wordpress themes (as I was, the other day); Google gives me a list of sites that rank high amongst people who visited it and linked to it. But a human would have told me sites that have similar themes, other plugins that I might find useful with the theme, pros and cons of the 10 top listings, links to forums that have troubleshooting help for these themes, cost comparisons for purchase etc. The opportunity for adding value is immense, and there seems to be no one doing the job.

The next billionaire will be the guy who makes search contextual and human. Like a Wikipedia for search. Where the net is broken down by topic, and each topic has the best resources, links, documents, videos, papers, facts, at one single place. And is constantly updated. By you and me. Squidoo is a start, but is still limited to having one author / editor per lens. Knol is an attempt by Google, but the current level of content and coverage, well, sucks. And my guess is lot of the giants want to get their hands into this, but none of them know exactly how. Time will soon tell.

Google made the index page to the internet. Someone has to write a good table of contents with all parts of the same chapter put together. That is when the user experience will deliver an incremental benefit to create the next billion $. Let’s wait and watch.

Why I won’t publish on Facebook

Posted April 20th, 2009 in Geek by HN

Let us all be scared a little. Here goes:

When you post User Content to the Site, you authorize and direct us to make such copies thereof as we deem necessary in order to facilitate the posting and storage of the User Content on the Site. By posting User Content to any part of the Site, you automatically grant, and you represent and warrant that you have the right to grant, to the Company an irrevocable, perpetual, non-exclusive, transferable, fully paid, worldwide license (with the right to sublicense) to use, copy, publicly perform, publicly display, reformat, translate, excerpt (in whole or in part) and distribute such User Content for any purpose, commercial, advertising, or otherwise, on or in connection with the Site or the promotion thereof, to prepare derivative works of, or incorporate into other works, such User Content, and to grant and authorize sublicenses of the foregoing. You may remove your User Content from the Site at any time. If you choose to remove your User Content, the license granted above will automatically expire, however you acknowledge that the Company may retain archived copies of your User Content. Facebook does not assert any ownership over your User Content; rather, as between us and you, subject to the rights granted to us in these Terms, you retain full ownership of all of your User Content and any intellectual property rights or other proprietary rights associated with your User Content.

(Emphasis and italics by me)

It is taken from the Facebook Terms of Use (as of today). Meaning they basically own whatever you ever published, and they can do whatever they want with it. I am no legal expert, so someone correct me if I am wrong. But this is what I gather from all the legalese.

Meaning I will host, publish, post, chat and generally hang around in my own personal nice little blog, and chose what I wish to share and what I don’t. Also meaning now I have to go read the TOU in Twitter, Flickr, Picasa et al. But better than freelancing for someone for free.

Read a fitting description of Media 2.0: “You create all the content, they make all the money.” Even though I am a marketer and am well versed with these business models, claiming rights of all content posted is pushing one’s luck a bit too far.

Update: Time to show Twitter some love :) I love the first sentence in their Copyright section: “What’s yours is yours.

Granted that there is a lot more ‘content’ in other social media compared to Twitter, it is still an important distinction in the approach to user-generated content.

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My Wordpress plugins used on HN.com

Posted August 24th, 2008 in Geek by HN

Wordpress rocks. In extendability (widgets, plugins, that too all free and open source); in design (beautiful free themes, wonderful CMS capabilities, magazine styles, et al); and in ease of use. Just for starters, the plugins I use on my website (which are listed by using another plugin!):

There are 76 plugins used: 35 active plugins and 41 inactive plugins.

Active Plugins

About Me widget 2.1  About Me widget 2.1
» Samuel Devol & John BouAntoun (url)
Adds an “About Me” widget to your sidebar.

Add to Any: Share/Bookmark/Email Button .9.9.4  Add to Any: Share/Bookmark/Email Button .9.9.4
» Add to Any (url)
Help readers share, bookmark, and email your posts and pages using any service. [Settings]

Advanced Category Excluder 1.4.3  Advanced Category Excluder 1.4.3
» DjZoNe (url)
This plugin helps you to manage your content, RSS feeds, sidebar widgets, and fine tune where you want to display your posts, pages, links, link categories, or hide.

Advanced Category Excluder Widgets 1.4.3  Advanced Category Excluder Widgets 1.4.3
» DjZoNe (url)
This plugin one basic widgetsm that support exclusion

Akismet 2.2.7  Akismet 2.2.7
» Matt Mullenweg (url)
Akismet checks your comments against the Akismet web service to see if they look like spam or not. You need a WordPress.com API key to use it. You can review the spam it catches under “Comments.” To show off your Akismet stats just put <?php akismet_counter(); ?> in your template. See also: WP Stats plugin.

All in One SEO Pack 1.4.6.13  All in One SEO Pack 1.4.6.13
» Michael Torbert (url)
Out-of-the-box SEO for your Wordpress blog.

Audio player 1.2.3  Audio player 1.2.3
» Martin Laine (url)
Highly configurable single track mp3 player.

Configurable Tag Cloud 4.5  Configurable Tag Cloud 4.5
» Keith Solomon (url)
A tag cloud plugin for Wordpress 2.3 to give you more flexibility with the styling of your tag cloud.

Configure SMTP 2.7  Configure SMTP 2.7
» Scott Reilly (url)
Configure SMTP mailing in WordPress, including support for sending e-mail via SSL/TLS (such as GMail).

Contact Form 7 2.3  Contact Form 7 2.3
» Takayuki Miyoshi (url)
Just another contact form plugin. Simple but flexible.

Exclude Pages from Navigation 1.9  Exclude Pages from Navigation 1.9
» Simon Wheatley (url)
Provides a checkbox on the editing page which you can check to exclude pages from the primary navigation. IMPORTANT NOTE: This will remove the pages from any “consumer” side page listings, which may not be limited to your page navigation listings.

Feed Statistics 1.3.1  Feed Statistics 1.3.1
» Christopher Finke (url)
Compiles statistics about who is reading your blog via an RSS feed and what they’re reading.

FireStats 1.3.6-stable  FireStats 1.3.6-stable
» Omry Yadan (url)
Statistics plugin for WordPress.

flickrRSS 4.0  flickrRSS 4.0
» Dave Kellam (url)
Allows you to integrate the photos from a flickr rss feed into your site.

Google Adsense widget 1.0  Google Adsense widget 1.0
» Otto (url)
Like the Text widget, but specifically for Google Adsense blocks. Up to 4 instances of this widget may exist (since Google only allows 3 ads and one link block on a page). Heavily derived from the Text widget code included with the widget plugin by Automattic, Inc.

Google Reader widget 1.8  Google Reader widget 1.8
» James Wilson (url)
Adds a sidebar widget to show your latest shared stories.

Google Reader widget 0.1  Google Reader widget 0.1
» Miguel Ibero (url)
Adds a widget with the links to the stories shared or starred or of a certain tag of a google reader

Gravatars 2.6  Gravatars 2.6
» Scott Merrill (url)
This plugin provides an administrative interface to control default gravatar options. Registered users can also (optionally) define local gravatar images that will override their gravatar.com default. Copyright 2005 Scott Merrill; Licensed under the terms of the GPL.

Page Links To 2.3  Page Links To 2.3
» Mark Jaquith (url)
Allows you to point WordPress pages or posts to a URL of your choosing. Good for setting up navigational links to non-WP sections of your site or to off-site resources.

Post-Plugin Library 2.6.2.1  Post-Plugin Library 2.6.2.1
» Rob Marsh, SJ (url)
Does nothing by itself but supplies common code for the Similar Posts, Recent Posts, Random Posts, and Recent Comments plugins. Make sure you have the latest version of this plugin.

Previous Posts widget 1.0  Previous Posts widget 1.0
» James Carppe (url)
A more customizable version of the built-in Recent Posts widget.

Random Redirect 1.1  Random Redirect 1.1
» Matt Mullenweg (url)
Allows you to create a link to yourblog.example.com/?random which will redirect someone to a random post on your blog, in a StumbleUpon-like fashion. You can also specific in the URL `random_post_type` or `random_cat_id`.

Recent Comments 2.1.1 beta  Recent Comments 2.1.1 beta
» Rob Marsh, SJ (url)
Displays a list of posts most recently commented. Instructions and help online.

Recent Posts 2.6.2.0  Recent Posts 2.6.2.0
» Rob Marsh, SJ (url)
Displays a highly configurable list of the most recent posts. Instructions and help online. Requires the latest version of the Post-Plugin Library to be installed.

Twitter for Wordpress 1.9.7  Twitter for Wordpress 1.9.7
» Ricardo González (url)
Displays your public Twitter messages for all to read. Based on Pownce for Wordpress by Cavemonkey50.

Twitter widget 1.5  Twitter widget 1.5
» Sarah Isaacson (url)
Sidebar widget to display your Twitter timeline. The widget allows you to choose to display your twitter username in front of your updates. You can also choose whether to display the time before or after the twitter post.

Wordpress Automatic Upgrade 1.2.5  Wordpress Automatic Upgrade 1.2.5
» Keith Dsouza (url)
Wordpress Automatic Upgrade allows a user to automatically upgrade the wordpress installation to the latest one provided by wordpress.org using the 5 steps provided in the wordpress upgrade instructions. Go to Wordpress Automatic Upgrade to upgrade your installation Thanks to Ronald Huereca for making the plugin run in automatic mode.

WordPress Database Backup 2.2  WordPress Database Backup 2.2
» Austin Matzko (url)
On-demand backup of your WordPress database. Navigate to Manage → Backup to get started.

WordPress XML Export 2.0  WordPress XML Export 2.0
» Aaron Brazell (url)
This will generate a WordPress XML export for import into other WordPress blogs. Based on code provided in 2.1+ versions of WordPress and originally written by Matt Mullenweg.

WP-PluginsUsed 1.00  WP-PluginsUsed 1.00
» Lester ‘GaMerZ’ Chan (url)
Display WordPress plugins that you currently have (both active and inactive) onto a post/page.

WP-PostRatings 1.11  WP-PostRatings 1.11
» Lester ‘GaMerZ’ Chan (url)
Adds an AJAX rating system for your WordPress blog’s post/page.

WP Subdomains 0.6.9  WP Subdomains 0.6.9
» Alex Stansfield (url)
Setup your main categories, pages, and authors as subdomains and give them custom themes. Originally based on Subster Rejunevation.

Yet Another Related Posts Plugin 2.0.4  Yet Another Related Posts Plugin 2.0.4
» mitcho (Michael Yoshitaka Erlewine) (url)
Returns a list of the related entries based on keyword matches, limited by a certain relatedness threshold. New and improved, version 2.0!

Youtube Favorites Plugin/Widget 1.0  Youtube Favorites Plugin/Widget 1.0
» Ozh (url)
Customizable display of your latest Youtube favorite videos. (quick readme & manual)

YouTube widget 1.1  YouTube widget 1.1
» James Wilson (url)
Adds a sidebar widget to show a YouTube video.

Most of these are wonderful in functionality and are easily customisable. Do check them out for using in your website. And if you are using anything other than Wordpress to run your blog, it’s time to change, I say. Download the Wordpress engine and host your own; or get a free blog at Wordpress.com.

Bligetty Blogetty

Posted December 2nd, 2005 in Geek by HN

Description of one of the blogs I visited “I am neither leftist nor rightist. I am a typist.”

So as the number of us bloggers typing away to glory scales new levels every day, methinks, what is it in this medium that the others lack, and why is the proliferation faster than a man rushing towards the loo on the verge of bladder-burst? (ah… a genuinely bad analogy… pat.. pat.. )

First of all, methinks it is the web. When I say web, it is not just the technology. It is the ease of use, ease of publishing and ease of feedback that makes the loop complete. Blogger for word; the carrot that makes even lazy-tashreefs like me to go blogetty once a many while. Halo-scan, shout boards, counters, profile viewers, template enhancers and a whole bevy of such niceties make life much easier and prettier.

But then me also realizes, it is not just the shift of a thought onto a byte and then onto a character and then onto the virtual… it is the need to shout out to be heard (and to shout out even if no one is hearing in particular) is the prime driver.

And then the veritable metamorphosis… Vlogs (video blogs), Mlogs (mobile blogs) and in a few months we will run out of alphabets to precede the ‘logs’. And then it will no longer be a log – or a record or listing of events and interesting happening. It will become a medium of information exchange and real time modification and updation. The precursor, I might conjecture, is already here. We call it Wiki.

An interesting observation: The internet, the web (i.e the hyperlinked spaced sitting above the net architechture), and now blogs are all indicative and have grown out of the single impressive factor of collaborative sharing of experiences. And the next generation of such collaboration is already nested deep in the ideas we don’t even realize are already a part of our lives. Linux, the quintessential case study on open source, is also one of the best examples of collaborative software. And then there is the big daddy of them all, Google. Their search improves as we visit a page more and more, Orkut grows as we add more friends, Blogger expands as you and me write more, and Google Answers is a site run by everyone who answers a question.

This incredible model made possible only due to the omnipresent connectivity and the hyperspace, and it has happened now. And I feel privileged to be a part of this silent revolution. I am not a baby-boomer loathing technology, nor am I a Gen-Z whiz kid who thinks Google is a given and doesn’t understand why the net is so unbelievable. I am mentally baked just right, with the understanding and the sense of awe in perfect balance. Bless the zeros and ones… and bless the future that drives our present making us goal-seek and fulfill our own Pygmalion prophecies.