Entries Tagged 'The Industry' ↓

CES 2010

jaces2Well a week later and I have finally recovered from the whirlwind trip to CES 2010. This was a great experience and one that exposed me to the insane energy in the consumer electronics space. The clear winner was 3d tvs but still a gimmick in my opinion. The glasses that you need to ware to get the real experience make this a non-starter for many people. Not to mention the masses don’t want to upgrade their tv yet again. The magicjack GSM femtocell was a quite winner but they are going to run into all kinds of FCC issues I suspect with this device. CES 2010 had a record 120,000 attendees this year which you noticed trying to make your way through the amazing LG booth. CES is something every geek has to do at least once but I am not sure I would do this more than every few years at the most.

Let’s play foursquare

It’s the next big, cool, hip thing. Simply put foursquare is a location based tool/game that let’s you see where your friends are and earn badges for all sorts of challenges.
foursquare
So why the fascination? I can do this via txt, email, twitter, facebook, right!? Not really. It’s the location piece that makes foursquare unique. I know exactly what business my friend is in and not just some confusing GPS coordinates or a dot on a google map. Bars are beginning to use this as a tool to bring in crowds with notes like “the mayor drinks free.” What is the mayor? This is the fun part. The person that visits the location the most is automatically awarded the mayorship. Don’t worry that isn’t the only award there are tons of badges you earn for all kinds of things like the gym rat and school night when you are out past 3am on a week night.

Grab the iPhone app and see what all the cool kids are talking about.

The Rundown: Web 2.0 Summit 2009

I was fortunate to attend the Web 2.0 Summit last week in San Francisco. This was an amazing event that allowed me to get to know some of the most senior folks in the technology industry.

The big trends discussed over and over again at the Summit were mobile, social, and open standards. The highlight of the event was hearing Tim Berners-Lee talk about his creation, the world wide web, and that he sees a huge opportunity for someone to do for data what he did for documents.

Barnes&Noble: nook & Android

nookBarnes & Noble announced, this past week, their new e-book reader to compete with the Amazon Kindle. A couple under-reported key things about the nook.

1. The nook runs on Google’s new Android operating system. This doesn’t sound like a big deal at first but when you realize this is the first non-cellular consumer device to officially run the android operating system it IS a big deal. Just another example of Google taking over the world. Android is open and the idea that at some point, this device could be extended by open source developers is very cool.

2. Sharing! When I asked the wife if she wanted a kindle the first thing she said was “I can’t share books with my friends, forget it.” Sharing is the killer feature of the nook. I remember when I first got a ReplayTV and sites were spinning up around sharing shows via the features built into that device, it was huge. We will see the same with the nook and the LendME feature.

Bottom line competition is good for any business and this new war between Amazon and B&N will only help drive both products to a better price point and push features faster and further.

Google: Real-time

Marissa Mayer GoogleI got to witness Marissa Mayer’s announcement first hand at the web 2.0 Summit this past week that Google will begin integrating Twitter posts into search results via a new deal with Twitter. This is the beginning of Social Search having some weight and I am sure an extremely lucrative deal for Twitter. In addition she demoed a new Social Search function that will be released in Google Labs in the next few weeks which will be opt in to start. This will allow you to see social results from your friend network in a one-box style format when you preform a Google search.

The real news is that “Real-Time” is now the focus of the industry. Some would argue this has been the focus for years but only a few of us would actually go to twitter to figure out what is happening in real-time. With the also announced news, at the Web 2.0 Summit, that Microsoft’s Bing is integrating Facebook and Twitter feeds the social search arena has been opened to everyone. Think about all your friends and family that depend solely on search. They will now begin seeing results on what is happening right now instead of waiting for something to get popular enough over hours or days for it to begin showing in any of the search engines. This also has the potential to dramatically decrease the focus on major news outlets on the web.

More to come on real-time as we see it unfold…

The New CNN.com

CNN Launched their redesign today, an all around improvement for sure.

CNN.com - Breaking News, U.S., World, Weather, Entertainment & Video News
Uploaded with plasq’s Skitch!

One of the most interesting things is the newly centered CNN logo. This indicates a renewed focus on their brand and design wise looks great. This site still looks extremely clean even with the addition of the red header instead of all white like the previous version. The content is in a three column layout, framed in light gray boxes that give it some structure but doesn’t detract from the core of the site, content. The new site doesn’t appear to give a huge focus on specific vertical screen real-estate either which naturally forces the user to scroll without thinking twice. This is a simple but great achievement giving more flexibility for the content programming of the page.

Technically they have made some improvements as well. The page is fast coming down in around three seconds. It’s also leveraging assets from a CDN but that is nothing new. They can still make some improvements here with long live TTLs on images to improve browser cache-ability as well as minifying css and js assets.

All-in-all great work by the Turner team, congrats.

Amazon flood gates open.

AWS LogoTwo huge new features were announced today for EC2. The first being Elastic IPs which is basically the static IP solution everyone has been waiting for, but better! Elastic IP is a 1:1 NAT solution. What is so cool about this is you can dynamically remap your static IP to different running instances creating a poor mans HA solution. The second feature is Availability Zones. This allows you to launch instances in isolated zones that amazon describes as “distinct locations engineered to be insulated from failures in other zones.” The next step to this is allowing for region specific selection as well, currently you are limited to selecting a zone within your defined region based on your account. This provides for a huge increase in availability and will certainly make organizations take another hard look at what amazon has to offer to extend or augment their existing facilities.