Archive for May, 2008


For the Love of Podcasting [Mashable Conversations]

May 11, 2008 Author: Mark 'Rizzn' Hopkins | Filed under: Mashable!

Earlier this week, TalkShoe CEO Dave Nelson did a pretty decent (and refreshing) post on reasons to still love audio podcasts. Of course Mashable Conversations listeners (and most Mashable readers) are pretty familiar with our love for the audio format, but there’s still a fair amount of naysayers out there who Internet video is killing the radio star.

It isn’t that we think one form is superior to the other - in fact, we’re pretty in love with both forms of Internet media entertainment. That’s why we’ve been working on a plan for putting together a number of consistent video podcast series here at Mashable. We’re not yet on a consistent release cycle, but we wanted to put a new feed in front of you so that you knew where to tune your podcast clients and DVRs over to once we flip the switch on it.

feed-icon-14×14.png Get the Mashable Conversations podcast here.

If you tune into the feed now, you’ll presently be directed to Pete’s interview with Chamillionaire (embedded below). Keep it indexed in your readers, though, because more video interviews are in the pipe from Pete, Kristen, myself and Adam Ostrow. For those of you still in love with audio, don’t worry, that version of the show won’t be going anywhere, and will still contain a lot of unique content not found on the video feed.

Why are you in love with audio, though? Maybe you share some of Dave Nelson’s thoughts on the topic:

1) Voice is a much richer form of communication. Text does a poor job of conveying emotions, even with smiley faces. I want to actually hear that you’re enthusiastic, or sad, or sarcastic, or whatever. Hey, our DNA has been wired to TALK across 100,000 years, whereas text is a newfangled tool we haven’t yet fully mastered.

2) Voice is immediate and CAUSES new ideas. How many times have you been talking with a group of people and had totally new ideas emerge — ideas that were not from any ONE person? It’s the wisdom of crowds, to cite a great book.

3) It’s easier to talk than type. No explanation necessary, or at least I don’t have the time to write one out here.

4) (This is the most IMPORTANT one) There’s a big difference between our eyes and ears. When we read text or watch video, we can’t do much else, at least not competently. But when we listen, we can still do almost anything else.

For all my various criticisms of what goes on in podcasting, these are just a few of the reasons I keep at it. A couple more reasons? When I get great interviews like I did earlier this week.

Keith Richman, the CEO of Break.com, last week and speak frankly about the state of the business and where things are headed. This is a very valuable chat to listen to, no matter which side of the online video production business you aim to be on. While the business of online video remains very lucrative for a lucky few producers and a wonderfully successful place to put your advertising dollars, for the vast majority of producers and advertisers, it remains a very difficult minefield to navigate.

Keith and I talked not only about the goals and aim of the ROI council, but the state of the indie producers, and when we’ll start to see that boom for them that bloggers see today. For some, that boom is now, with some of the top paid producers on Break earning several thousand a month.

The embed is available below, or you can download the MP3 file directly here.

In one of the more popular podcasts in recent memory, I had a chance to speak to founder and CEO of New Relic, Lew Cirne, a bit about his organization and exactly where these rumors of unscalability for the Ruby on Rails platform come from.

Rails is known for it’s succinct programming style, where one line of code can be very powerful, and perform very complex tasks. It’s this simplicity that can also be a trap for developers who accidentally can trigger enormous processing tasks with what look like very efficient lines of code.

New Relic’s software as a service offering can analyze these code bits and give exact and graphed out details about what sort of computing time-sinks may exist within the code, and offer suggestions of more efficient ways of executing that same statement.

All in all, it’s a very interesting proposition - if you’re a developer in the Rails environment (or anyone curious about how Rails applications work behind the scenes), you definitely want to catch this episode, as Lew drops some very interesting knowlege on the topic.

The embed is available below, or you can download the MP3 file directly here.

Another great conversation was one that I had with Canaan Ventures partner Izhar Shay. I was contacted excitedly by the PR folks over there about a company they’d just invested in, something called Prime Sense. This precocious company seems intent on bringing into existence that technology seen most prevalently in Minority Report - that gesture based stuff.

The way it was described to me was that their intention was to make interfacing with entertainment consoles and personal computers as seamless and natural as interfacing with other human beings (think Minority Report, without the goofy Nintendo Power Glove).

I’ve seen a number of attempts at gesture based interaction, though, and most of them fall flat. The problem, generally, is in the object recognition. To fix this, Prime Sense has done a lot of work in what is essentially compositing and green screen technology. During the development process, they’ve as a side-effect of their work created what Shay described as professional level green-screen technology that will be made available for consumer level prices.

This has the net effect of putting in the hands of independent video producers the technology that has generally been only available to folks with the budget for a $10,000 lighting set-up and a $5,000 Tri-Caster. This is definitely one company to keep an eye on, and definitely one you want to hear more about.

The embed is available below, or you can download the MP3 file directly here.

Twing is a relatively new forum search tool that launched back in mid-March. Kristen recently reviewed them, and came to a lot of the same conclusions I did this week, as I sat down with Scott Germaise on an episode of Mashable Conversations this week and gave it a good once over:

As I said at the beginning of our conversation, too, I’m not typically excited or enthralled with vertical search offerings in general, but just sitting down and playing with some ego searches and some brand searches for Mashable, I was able to find a wealth of conversation that previously had been undiscovered by any of my present brand-management feeds I have set up.

Interestingly enough, through their category selection process and the natural self-policing nature of forums, they’ve also a remarkably spam free set of results.

Scott explained a bit of why that is, and gave me an in-depth tour of the features and history of the website, which you can hear in the embed is available below, or you can download the MP3 file directly here.

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Google Earth Outreach Collects Layers Of Cyclone Nargis Effects

May 11, 2008 Author: Paul Glazowski | Filed under: Mashable!

The cyclone which hit Myanmar (Burma) last weekend caused an indescribable amount of damage to the nation’s people; the ill effects of the storm have been vast extended by the ruling military junta’s resistance to both substantive and logistical aid from outside sources.


View Larger Map

And while Google has spend the past few days offering its users quick access to two financial drop-boxes established for a duo of international relief organizations, UNICEF and Direct Relief International (to which Mountain View has pledges a $1m donation, presumably to be made through it’s philanthropic arm, Google.org), the company has gathered a collection of Google Earth layers through its Outreach program to help any and all interested to observe visual data of the region in the aftermath of the disaster.

The information comes by way of organizations that Google purports to work with, including ReliefWeb. They’ve chosen to publish their materials in the Google Earth-friendly KML format, to be easily distributed to as many people as may choose to run the software program. While Google has made available any data it has garnered through affiliate sources, it has already collected a number of revealing layers, which include:

- Myanmar Ministry of Health Facilities
- Satellite imagery from a selection of providers
- Satellite flood analysis from MODIS
- Satellite flood maps from ZKI/DLR
- An animated storm track with category designation and wind speed
- Animated storm clouds

While some may understandably feel that observing the results of Cyclone Nargis dealt upon the people of Myanmar from afar is disturbingly voyeuristic, the fact of the matter is this: the more knowledgeable and aware the world is of what has happened and will happen henceforth, the better. No option in this case is good, but one can certainly make out the differences between bad and worse.

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Related Articles at Mashable! - The Social Networking Blog:

Google Earth Updates Layers
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Sumitomo set to produce 40-inch OLED panels in 2009

May 11, 2008 Author: Ryan Block | Filed under: Engadget

Filed under:


Not that there was any doubt that OLED is on its way to larger sizes (hasn't it been since like 2005?), but Japanese firm Sumitomo Chemical announced its plans to produce 40-inch OLED panels for HDTVs some time in 2009, meaning Sumitomo-based TVs could hit the market in 2009 or 2010. Samsung's old-skool 40-inch OLED HDTV prototype shown above for scale.

[Via OLED-Info]
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Top 10 Social Networking Sites for Women

May 11, 2008 Author: Palin Ningthoujam | Filed under: Mashable!

Honoring mother’s day, we thought it would be nice to do another round up. This time, we have some of the most popular social networking sites for women. This is not a definitive list, but rather our choice of what’s good out there; feel free to add your favorites in the comments.

Also don’t forget 20+ tools for the best Mother’s Day ever.

(...)
Read the rest of Top 10 Social Networking Sites for Women (778 words)


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Related Articles at Mashable! - The Social Networking Blog:

Report: Online Video Traffic Doubled in 2007
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Off Topic: Now This Is Good Stuff

May 11, 2008 Author: Om Malik | Filed under: GigaOMNET

Apple: No cash for iPhones at the Apple store

May 11, 2008 Author: Matt Hickey | Filed under: CrunchGear

NOCASH

There aren’t many iPhones left, as many note, but if you do find one and you want to purchase it, you’re going to need a credit card.

It’s not for the activation or anything of that sort, but Apple requires you to use a marked form of payment for the transaction to help eliminate scalpers, a problem it’s had between itself and AT&T.

According to Apple it does this to make sure that whoever is purchasing the iPhone is the person who’s activating it, so that they can be informed of the policies, notably that not signing up for an AT&T iPhone plan voids the warranty.

A guy in upstate New York found this out the hard way when he went to buy an iPhone with cash and was told that’s not how it works. He was embarrassed, as he doesn’t have a credit card. Sure it’s odd, but many people don’t have a credit card for fear of identity theft and other privacy issues.

And Now a Blackberry Fund

May 11, 2008 Author: Om Malik | Filed under: GigaOMNET

What used to be the purview of corporate and business development departments is now being replaced by venture capital. A fund to foster Facebook apps, the iFund to jump start the iPhone app revolution or the rumored $150 million fund to give Blackberry apps a boost - the increasing number of platform funds doesn’t ensure success. Remember the Java Fund, or the RSS Fund.

The news of the Blackberry Fund was first reported by Venturebeat, but that post has been taken down, so I am not sure if this is even happening or not. If it is indeed true, then it is clear that iPhone has delivered a swift kick in the pants to the Canadian company, and getting it to innovate faster. I don’t think an investment vehicle is the answer. Many developers I have talked to often complain about the challenges of working with Research In Motion (RIM.)

If Team Blackberry is looking to encourage development for their platform, then they should make it easier for folks to develop for their platform. One hair ball that comes with this so called Blackberry Fund: can a company that takes an investment from Research In Motion develop apps for iPhone or Google’s Android?

Simon Brocklehurst does a great job of deconstructing the Blackberry & iFunds, and I encourage you to read his analysis. “All the opportunities, though, probably need Apple and RIM to deliver significant growth in device sales, from where they are now,” he writes, in what is clearly an understatement. Brocklehurst points out that there is a whole lot of other platforms, and the developer are going to gravitate towards the largest market opportunities.

In comparison to the Blackberry Fund and the iFund, I like the approach taken by Google to foster an apps ecosystem for its Android platform. Instead of taking an equity in exchange of funding, Google is basically giving prize monies to winners of a developer contest. Fifty round one winners get $25,000 and go on to the next level. According to a Google Android blog post, the name of the winners are going to be announced shortly. Of course, I have been talking to other Android developers and will write about them some time soon.

Apple store out of iPhones…

May 11, 2008 Author: John Biggs | Filed under: CrunchGear

Guys: this TOTALLY means there’s going to be a new iPhone next week. I don’t care what you say: they wouldn’t pull the hottest device since the ventricle stent and not have something lined up for release… unless Apple is going out of business, Crazy Eddie style. What think ye?

n

What is Apple up to?
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Pogue on the Pulse Smartpen: He so funny!

May 11, 2008 Author: John Biggs | Filed under: CrunchGear


This smartpen lets you take notes and record those notes for later perusal. You tap the ink and it plays back the audio recorded at that moment.
David Pogue shows this quite handily and even harshes on the bugs he found in the pen. Good stuff and a great way to spend Mother’s Day weekend avoiding the phone.

Apple settles on iPod batteries, power adapters

May 11, 2008 Author: Ryan Block | Filed under: Engadget

Filed under: ,

Owners of yesteryear Apple products (and consumer advocates) had a pretty solid week. Friday it came to light that more than two million 2001-era PowerBook owners could be eligible for refunds between $25 and $75 in a class-action settlement (which is set for final approval on September 8th) over faulty, sometimes even sparking power adapters. But that's not all: Apple is also offering up $45 credits to any Canadian iPod owner that bought before June 24th, 2004 as part of a class-action suit claiming Apple misrepresented the advertised battery life of the players.

Read - Power adapters
Read - Canadian iPods [sub req'd]
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