August 28, 2009

Could FriendFeed Have Crossed the Chasm?

Filed under: Misc — jeetu @ 12:25 pm

Posted at www.cloudave.com

FriendFeed is now part of Facebook. For many of us FriendFeed users, this was quite a shock. We didn’t know exactly what FriendFeed’s future was, or how it was going to make money. But Twitter has set the current mental model of not worrying about such things. And in some ways, Amazon.com did the same in the 1990s with its grow-don’t-make-money strategy. In both cases, the companies persevered and are now enjoying mainstream success.

Rather than follow this model, FriendFeed sold itself to Facebook. Perhaps this is a case where the founders saw something we didn’t. After all, for every Twitter and Amazon, there are thousands of startups that don’t make it.

But given the heavy attention and usage of FriendFeed by the technology Early Adopter crowd, it’s worth examining this:

Could FriendFeed have crossed the chasm?

I’m referring, of course, to Geoffrey Moore’s classic and still-relevant book where he examines the challenges of moving from the Early Adopters to the Early Majority segments in the technology adoption cycle:

Crossing the Chasm

The biggest issue is that what appeals to Early Adopters doesn’t work for the Early Majority. If you’ve tracked public reaction to FriendFeed, doesn’t that sound familiar?

In Moore’s book, he counsels that companies need to establish a toehold in the Early Majority segment by focusing on a vertical niche. Let’s use that approach in examining FriendFeed’s options.

FriendFeed’s Early Majority Options

In the table below, I’ve come up with six possible use cases that might have been bases for breaking into the Early Majority. Each use case has a potential Early Majority niche noted. And each use case has one or more existing competitors listed:

FriendFeed Early Majority Options

Let’s analyze things by use case…

Company public groups: In this use case, companies set up shop on FriendFeed, with their own groups filled with content. PepsiCo set up one, called Pepsi Cooler. The idea is a stream of content produced by a team from Pepsi. If you look at the stream, it’s primarily tweets.

If FriendFeed had decided to pursue this option, it needed to create points of permanence on the page. Having just a stream of content makes it hard to establish objects that focus on your brand and let’s you run events. Creating an experience like this was something that would have given FriendFeed groups more value.

Alternatives? Companies run their websites, upgraded with social media streams of content. And Facebook has really pushed this with its pages effort. Facebook’s 200+ million members gives it a big leg up here.

This would have been a tough one to break into the Early Majority, as Facebook really owns this niche. The easy ability to stream content would have been FriendFeed’s advantage.

Collaboration spaces: Let employees work together on projects in their own private groups. Content can be streamed in certainly, but more important, people can post things directly into a collaboration space. Teams can comment on posted items to advance projects. Documents can be included in posts, letting the same version be accessed by everyone. Direct messages can be sent to one another.

In June of 2008, I wrote Using FriendFeed Rooms for Work: What’s Needed? In it, I argued that FriendFeed could be used for getting work done in teams. I saw some things I’d want there: better “stickiness” for current projects and documents. Can’t have everything fly by in a stream. Also, accept RSS feeds of document changes from Google Docs, Zoho and other cloud office productivity apps. Chris Brogan saw the potential too in a post from August 2008,  How to Use Friendfeed as a Collaborative Business Tool.

Collaborative business apps are an area of overall growth, but one that is filled with competition. Atlassian  has been delivering this for a while with its Confluence wiki, and Basecamp is a favorite small business collaboration tool. More recent entrants like SocialCast have added activity streams as part of their core functionality.

FriendFeed could have been a strong player here, but it needed a lot of focused feature development.

Social web monitoring: This is my use case. FriendFeed has a marvelous way of handling RSS feeds into separate groups, and managing people and groups into separate lists. I found these to be quite helpful for staying on top conversations and content that is getting attention. I actively monitor three groups formed specifically to be my “news tickers” on the social web. I don’t use them as communities for conversations, but as information management tools.

The real-time feature is great for this purpose. As soon as something is made available via RSS, or in Twitter’s case it’s posted, you’d see it show up in your groups. I find this to be highly valuable for jumping into conversations on Twitter, and to understand what’s buzzing now.

FriendFeed doesn’t have the powerful analytics and structure of the new premium Social CRM apps. I’d argue that for SMBs, that’s not needed. What’s needed is an ability to stay on top of topics and conversations relevant to your industry. ReadWriteWeb’s Marshall Kirkpatrick was seeing the same thing in How FriendFeed Could Become the Ultimate Social Media Tracking Service.

To my mind, this is the use case that was most promising relative to unmet need and dearth of competition. And FriendFeed had great technological advantages here in terms of its SUP work and real-time updating. Feels like an opportunity missed.

Real-time conversations: When FriendFeed made the switch to real-time updating by default, one thing users gained was the ability to see new comments on threads without constantly refreshing the page. Thaty meant you could engage others easily on the page as people posted back-and-forth.

For live events, this is pretty fun. It’s great to share a common moment this way. Be it sports, political events or technology conferences. And that’s what makes me think the real-time conversation platform would be great for online media sites. Imagine CNN.com outfitted with real-time conversations by FriendFeed. News events are constantly, and always will be, unfolding. Giving site visitors a way to converse quickly with one another would be great. Admittedly, this real-time conversation flow is something that is already present for webcasts.

The limitation for the value of real-time conversations is (i) the existence of alternatives; (ii) limited utility for most people. Twitter isn’t real-time, but it doesn’t have to be. It’s a good-enough conversation platform with a large subscriber base. Forums will do the threading work for multiple participants. And the people that got the most use out of real-time were social media A-Listers who get a lot of comments on their threads. Most people don’t get that level of interaction. So the value of real-time conversations was lost on them.

Following friends’ activities: This was the original purpose of FriendFeed: “FriendFeed is a service that makes it easy to share with friends online. It offers a fun and interactive way to discover and discuss information among friends.” Makes sense…”friend”…”feed”.

The challenge is that it is quite RSS dependent on friends’ streams. Which means people need to have content available via RSS. That’s still a slowly growing dynamic. The other issue is similar to that described above for company public groups and collaboration spaces: lack of ability to create more permanent objects on your profile. If Friends don’t RSS, they need a good way to manage content they directly post.

This really is Facebook’s game. Once they added the ability to follow RSS feeds of friends, much of the rationale for FriendFeed was lost, at least in terms of following friends. There’s still a great use case in following people that may not qualify for the traditional definition of “friends”. But you can stay on top of the likes of Craig Newmark, Robert Scoble, and others.

Personal information management: If you participate in several different social sites, you can create a diverse amount of content: tweets, Flickr photos, blog posts, YouTube videos, SlideShare presentations, etc. As you create it, you want to be able to reference it. The most obvious way to do that is to go to each site individually and search for some part of your content.

FriendFeed is marvelous for managing all the different content in one place. This is something I talked about recently in Three Reasons You Need to Be on FriendFeed *Now*. One place for all your content, with amazing search capabilities. Much better than what Twitter offers. With FriendFeed, you can actually access old tweets via search.

This use case is great, but it’s ability to penetrate the Early Majority is questionable, at least for now. It takes people who have these diverse social sites where they’re posting content. As we know from the 1-9-90 rule of participation, the number of people actively posting new content is still relatively low. But as social sites proliferate, I believe you’ll see increased numbers of people posting original content. 1-9-90 may apply to any one site, but viewed from a portfolio perspective, the ratio will be higher for the general population.

Am I missing something?

Those are the use cases that come to my mind. What do you think? Did I miss some important ones? And how about the assessments I made for each of the use cases? On target?

My own thought is that FriendFeed had a great opportunity for social web monitoring. It’s an area of growing interest, and FriendFeed had the technology and raw feeds to be a big player there. More and more, the mainstream is interested in the workings of and information available on social media.

Let’s see if Facebook sees a similar opportunity.

 

IIT Bombay working on a new search engine to provide relevant answers to queries

Filed under: Misc — jeetu @ 11:10 am

Posted at www.alootechie.com

IIT Bombay working on a new search engine to provide relevant answers to queries

28 August, 2009

Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay is working on a new search engine that would trawl the web and provide relevant answers to queries like ‘how old is Feng Shui’, ‘how many people are infected with AIDS worldwide’, ‘length of the Nile River’, ‘maximum speed of a Mercedes-Benz SLR McLaren’, or ‘driving time between Delhi and Jaipur’.

The idea is that unlike the existing search engines that expect 2-3 word queries and return URLs to browse, the new engine should be able to understand structures in the query and respond with information nuggets and tables, and not just the links of the pages from which this knowledge is distilled. The IIT-B team has already created billions of annotation links between a 500-million web page corpus and millions of entities known to Wikipedia.

The project is being headed by Professor Soumen Chakrabarti of IIT-B’s Computer Science Department, which has received a research grant from Hewlett-Packard (HP) Labs. Microsoft Research has provided additional research funding, while Yahoo has donated a number of high-end servers. Chakrabarti and his team plan to release their new search API to key research partners, including several universities, by the end of this year. [Source: Business Standard]

Shared Items – August 28, 2009

Filed under: shared — jeetu @ 8:03 am

Another Exploding iPhone Case Surfaces In Belgium

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , , — jeetu @ 3:54 am

Posted at TechCrunch

by Robin Wauters

A 15-year old Belgian by the name of Salvatore is the latest victim in a series of mysterious iPhone explosions that have captured the attention of France’s and the European Commissions’ consumer affair watchdogs. Details are scarce for the moment, but according to local news reports the teenager was holding his iPhone in his hand, about to make a call, when the device suddenly ‘imploded’. The incident didn’t cause any serious injuries but reportedly gave Salvatore a headache for a couple of days. He has been promised a free replacement unit by Apple but hasn’t yet received a new phone.

There have earlier been numerous reports of exploding iPhone devices in the United States, United Kingdom and France, with most recently about ten cases having emerged in France where the official competition, consumer affairs and fraud watchdog DGCCRF has now launched an investigation to find out whether the popular Apple smartphone could pose a threat to consumers. Apple, which has sold 26 million iPhones and 200 million iPods to date, said it had been informed of the French cases, but would not comment until it had closely examined the damaged phones.

TechCrunch50 Conference 2009: September 14-15, 2009, San Francisco




August 27, 2009

Habitual Multitaskers Do It Badly (Paradox?)

Filed under: Misc — jeetu @ 12:40 pm

Now thats a paradox. If multitaskers are bad at it, non-multitaskers dont multitask at all. So no body is doing it right.

Jeetu

Posted at Slashdot

iandoh writes “According to a group of Stanford researchers, people who frequently multitask don’t pay attention, control their memory or switch from one job to another as well as those who prefer to complete one task at a time. In other words, multitaskers are bad at multitasking. The research team is also studying how to design computer voices for cars that result in safer driving.” Reader AliasMarlowe adds “The comparison involved multitasking with a number of attention or context related tests. For the study, multitasking was defined as consuming multiple media sources at once — gaming, TV, IM, email, etc. Interestingly, the habitual multitaskers were much worse at multitasking than the single taskers in these relatively straightforward tests. In self-assessment the multitaskers considered themselves good at it and the single taskers considered themselves bad at it. An extreme case of the Dunning-Kruger effect, perhaps, with consequences for business and society.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Shared Items – August 27, 2009

Filed under: shared — jeetu @ 9:49 am

Google Now Offers Over a Million Free Ebooks in EPUB Format

Filed under: Misc — jeetu @ 9:24 am

Posted at mashable.com

Have you noticed that Sony launched its best ebook reader a couple of days ago, with an AT&T 3G modem for fast wireless connection? Not by accident, Google (Google) has now announced they’re offering over a million public domain books in EPUB format – the exact format compatible with Sony’s Daily Edition reader.

To download a book, search for a title over at Google Books. Public domain titles will have a download link in the upper right corner. Which brings us to the first major difference between the Kindle and this Google-Sony open book strategy: while Amazon only offers 300,000 titles, Google’s million books aren’t, for the most part, the most attractive ones, and Sony’s own ebook library doesn’t offer a choice as good as Amazon – at least when it comes to modern titles.

Sure, if you’re interested in an oldie, such as the Memoirs of Granville Sharp, Google’s library is a good choice, but if you’re looking to buy a digital copy of the latest bestseller, you’re more likely to find it on the Kindle than in Google’s library and Sony’s ebook store combined. You can sometimes buy an ebook online and then transfer it to your Sony ebook reader, but on the Kindle it’s simpler and easier to do.

Google and Sony’s format of choice, EPUB, is also important. It’s an XML-based, free, open ebook standard which can be optimized for different devices, but Kindle does not (natively) support it. So, any titles you have in EPUB format, you can transfer to another device (it’s a bit more complicated than that, since EPUB also supports DRM, but Google’s selection of public domain titles will be free of any restrictions); on the Kindle, it’s forbidden. In geek terms, when it comes to ebooks, Sony and Google are to Amazon Kindle like Linux (linux) is to Windows: free and open vs. closed but perhaps easier to use. We’ll see which one wins in the end.

August 26, 2009

Shared Items – August 26, 2009

Filed under: shared — jeetu @ 12:28 am
August 25, 2009

Seamlessly Extending the Data Center – Introducing Amazon Virtual Private Cloud

Filed under: Misc — jeetu @ 11:53 pm

Seamlessly Extending the Data Center – Introducing Amazon Virtual Private Cloud

By Werner Vogels on August 25, 2009 11:00 PM Permalink Comments (0) TrackBacks (0)

At this 3rd anniversary of the launch of AmazonElastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2), it is amazing to see the impact thisservice has had on the industry. It is truly disruptive technology and itsimpact has reached far beyond a pure technology offering as the benefits of thecloud have changed the way we view IT Infrastructure. As one of the CIOs at theACM Cloud Computing Roundtable summarized it: “IT used to be the blocker inanything we did, but with our shift to the cloud IT is now the enabler.” Fromyoung businesses and established enterprises to hospitals and governmentsagencies, all are equally enthusiastic cloud customers for whom ITinfrastructure has changed forever.

Even though we keep rolling out new services and features,and several existing AWS services are already very successful, this is stillDay One. We are only at the brink of what is possible to deliver in the cloud andat Amazon we continue to innovate to make this future a reality.

We continuously listen to our customers to make sureour roadmap matches their needs. One important piece of feedback that mainly camefrom our enterprise customers was that the transition to the cloud of more complexenterprise environments was challenging. We made it a priority to address thisand have worked hard in the past year to find new ways to help our customers transitionapplications and services to the cloud, while protecting their investments intheir existing IT infrastructure.

Protecting investments during the transition

Most enterprises with a datacenter practice haveinvested significantly over the past decade into the management of theirsystems and applications. CIOs of Fortune 500 companies are responsible forhundreds if not thousands of applications running in a variety of locations.Keeping track of those resources and managing access to them is a daunting taskthat continues to require significant investment.

The CIO of a large financial services company in theNortheast explained to me that his teams manage close to 3000 applications and servicesin 27 different locations.  Consolidation of applications, resources andlocations is a process that never stops in a world where mergers andacquisitions happen frequently.  For him the cloud is attractive as a target forhis consolidated services: it allows him to significantly reduce both hiscapital and operational costs, while gaining significant flexibility andreliability with resources that are globally distributed, without the headacheof owning and maintaining them.

He has set the guideline that their current data centerinfrastructure should not expand any further and that all new development willtarget the cloud. He expects that the process of moving his existingapplications and services to the cloud will take time to complete, as his roadmap is driven by many internal and external factors.  And there are certainly somelegacy applications that may never move. He has set the goal of moving 20% ofhis applications into the cloud by the end of 2010, but to meet this goal heneeded to find a solution for a significant obstacle: how to integrate applicationsrunning in the cloud into his existing management frameworks. In his world,this especially applies to those management practices that manage policy-drivenaccess controls and required, cross-application regulatory auditing.

This story is typical of many of the conversations Ihave had with CIOs around the globe. They have bought into the cloud as atarget for a significant portion of their services, as the benefits are tooobvious to ignore, and most expect that their transition will be a continuousprocess.  They would accelerate the adoption of cloud services if they couldaccess a form of cloud that would give them the best of both worlds: theflexibility and cost-effectiveness of accessing a virtually infinite pool of resourceswithout owning it, while being able to integrate those resources into theirexisting datacenter environments such that they could continue to leverageexisting investments in their management and control infrastructure.

Private Cloud is not the Cloud

These CIOs know that what is sometimes dubbed “privatecloud” does not meet their goal as it does not give them the benefits of thecloud: true elasticity and capex elimination. Virtualization and increasedautomation may give them some improvements in utilization, but they would stillbe holding the capital, and the operational cost would still be significantlyhigher.

I often get asked to define “The Cloud,” especiallybecause of the many permutations that different vendors use in trying to maketheir existing businesses look like a cloud offering. I define the cloud by itbenefits, as those are very clear. What are called private clouds have little ofthese benefits and as such, I don’t think of them as true clouds.

The cloud:

  • Eliminates Cost. The cloud changes capital expense to variable expense and lowers operating costs. The utility-based pricing model of the cloud combined with its on-demand access to resources eliminates the needs for capital investments in IT Infrastructure. And because resources can be released when no longer needed, effective utilization rises dramatically and our customers see a significant reduction in operational costs.
  • Is Elastic. The ready access to vast cloud resources eliminates the need for complex procurement cycles, improving the time-to-market for its users. Many organizations have deployment cycles that are counted in weeks or months, while cloud resources such as Amazon EC2 only take minutes to deploy. The scalability of the cloud no longer forces designers and architects to think in resource-constrained ways and they can now pursue opportunities without having to worry how to grow their infrastructure if their product becomes successful.
  • Removes Undifferentiated “Heavy Lifting.”The cloud let its users focus on delivering differentiating business value instead of wasting valuable resources on the undifferentiated heavy lifting that makes up most of IT infrastructure. Over time Amazon has invested over $2B in developing technologies that could deliver security, reliability and performance at tremendous scale and at low cost. Our teams have created a culture of operational excellence that power some of the world’s largest distributed systems. All of this expertise is instantly available to customers through the AWS services.

Elasticity is one of the fundamental properties of thecloud that drives many of its benefits. While virtualization has tremendousbenefits to the enterprise, certainly as an important tool in serverconsolidation, it by itself is not sufficient to give the benefits of thecloud. To achieve true cloud-like elasticity in a private cloud, such that youcan rapidly scale up and down in your own datacenter, will require you to allocatesignificant hardware capacity. While to your internal customers it may appearthat they have increased efficiency, at the company level you still own all thecapital expense of the IT infrastructure. Without the diversity andheterogeneity of the large number of AWS cloud customers to drive a high utilizationlevel, it can never be a cost-effective solution.

We have been listening very closely to the real requirementsthat our customers have and have worked closely with many of these CIOs andtheir teams to understand what solution would allow them to treat the cloud asa seamless extension of their datacenter, where their standard managementpractices can be applied with limited or no modifications. This needs to be asolution where they get all the benefits of cloud as mentioned above whiletreating it as a part of their datacenter.

data center in the cloud

Introducing Amazon Virtual Private Cloud

We have developed Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC)to allow our customers to seamlessly extend their IT infrastructure into thecloud while maintaining the levels of isolation required for their enterprisemanagement tools to do their work.

With Amazon VPC you can:

  • Create a Virtual Private Cloud and assign an IP address block to the VPC. The address block needs to be CIDR block such that it will be easy for your internal networking to route traffic to and from the VPC instance. These are addresses you own and control, most likely as part of your current datacenter addressing practice.
  • Divide the VPC addressing up into subnets in a manner that is convenient for managing the applications and services you want run in the VPC.
  • Create a VPN connection between the VPN Gateway that is part of the VPC instance and an IPSec-based VPN router on your own premises. Configure your internal routers such that traffic for the VPC address block will flow over the VPN.
  • Start adding AWS cloud resources to your VPC. These resources are fully isolated and can only communicate to other resources in the same VPC and with those resources accessible via the VPN router. Accessibility of other resources, including those on the public internet, is subject to the standard enterprise routing and firewall policies.

Amazon VPC offers customers the best of both the cloudand the enterprise managed data center:

  • Full flexibility in creating a network layout in the cloud that complies with the manner in which IT resources are managed in your own infrastructure.
  • Isolating resources allocated in the cloud by only making them accessible through industry standard IPSec VPNs.
  • Familiar cloud paradigm to acquire and release resources on demand within your VPC, making sure that you only use those resources you really need.
  • Only pay for what you use. The resources that you place within a VPC are metered and billed using the familiar pay-as-you-go approach at the standard pricing levels published for all cloud customers. The creation of VPCs, subnets and VPN gateways is free of charge. VPN usage and VPN traffic are also priced at the familiar usage based structure
  • All the benefits from the cloud with respect to scalability and reliability, freeing up your engineers to work on things that really matter to your business.

For more details on Amazon Virtual Private Cloud, visitthe Amazon VPC detail page and the posting on the AWS developer weblog.

And happy birthday to Amazon EC2!

August 24, 2009

Shared Items – August 24, 2009

Filed under: shared — jeetu @ 4:13 pm
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