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Tag Archive | "Buzz"

Tags: Buzz, Discover, Dogpile, Ebay, Facebook, Good Chance, Google, Google Yahoo, Microsoft, Nbsp, New Feature, Similar Pages, Software Engineer, Ubid, Yahoo

Google: Facebook Similar to Gmail, Bing Similar to Dogpile

Posted on 29 April 2010


Google has launched a new feature in its search results, which displays results that are deemed "similar" to the query. If you search for eBay, for example, you may get results for Craigslist, uBid, Buy.com, and ebayanuncios.es.

Basically, if someone searches for a brand, there is a good chance Google will inject links to the competition on that results page by default (though at the bottom).

It’s actually not a new feature entirely. "We’ve offered a ‘Similar’ feature on results for a while now as a way to discover new, useful sites, but it hasn’t been too visible," says Google software engineer Doantam Phan. "Since we’ve been continuously improving this feature and we think it’s really useful, we’re now going to start showing these alternative sites more prominently."

I thought it would be interesting to see what pages Google thinks are similar to Google itself and some of its competitors. When I searched "google" I didn’t get any similar pages. When I searched "bing", I got the following:
Pages similar to Bing according to Google
For "facebook" I got the following:
Pages similar to Facebook according to Google
For Yahoo, I got the following:
Pages similar to Yahoo according to Google

I find it interesting that Google deems Bing to be more like Dogpile than Google or even Yahoo. It’s also worth noting that Gmail is in the mix for Facebook, with Buzz presumably being the connecting factor, which is interesting in itself since Buzz is more like FriendFeed than Facebook, and Facebook actually owns FriendFeed, but that’s not listed (while Microsoft.com is listed as similar to Bing).

Posted in SE NewsComments Off

Tags: Buzz, Discover, Dogpile, Ebay, Facebook, Good Chance, Google, Google Yahoo, Microsoft, Nbsp, New Feature, Similar Pages, Software Engineer, Ubid, Yahoo

Google: Facebook Similar to Gmail, Bing Similar to Dogpile

Posted on 28 April 2010


Google has launched a new feature in its search results, which displays results that are deemed "similar" to the query. If you search for eBay, for example, you may get results for Craigslist, uBid, Buy.com, and ebayanuncios.es.

Basically, if someone searches for a brand, there is a good chance Google will inject links to the competition on that results page by default (though at the bottom).

It’s actually not a new feature entirely. "We’ve offered a ‘Similar’ feature on results for a while now as a way to discover new, useful sites, but it hasn’t been too visible," says Google software engineer Doantam Phan. "Since we’ve been continuously improving this feature and we think it’s really useful, we’re now going to start showing these alternative sites more prominently."

I thought it would be interesting to see what pages Google thinks are similar to Google itself and some of its competitors. When I searched "google" I didn’t get any similar pages. When I searched "bing", I got the following:
Pages similar to Bing according to Google
For "facebook" I got the following:
Pages similar to Facebook according to Google
For Yahoo, I got the following:
Pages similar to Yahoo according to Google

I find it interesting that Google deems Bing to be more like Dogpile than Google or even Yahoo. It’s also worth noting that Gmail is in the mix for Facebook, with Buzz presumably being the connecting factor, which is interesting in itself since Buzz is more like FriendFeed than Facebook, and Facebook actually owns FriendFeed, but that’s not listed (while Microsoft.com is listed as similar to Bing).

Posted in SE NewsComments Off

Tags: Bots, Buzz, Conversations, Facebook, Friends, Geeks, Gmail Inbox, Google, Hardcore, Hearts And Minds, Principle, Robots, Social Media, Social Web, Success, Tweets, twitter

90% of Content on Google Buzz is Bots, Report Finds

Posted on 20 April 2010


Less than 10 weeks after launching, Google Buzz seems so far to have fallen short of capturing the hearts and minds of the social web. A new report from social media analytics service PostRank has found that 90% of the content published into Buzz is automated: 63% is piped in from Twitter and 27% is from automated RSS feeds.

So does that mean that nobody participates in Buzz? It’s hard to imagine more premium placement for a service than inside every Gmail inbox, so why hasn’t Buzz caught on? To be fair, it’s hard for any service to compete with the volume of imported Tweets and easily added RSS feeds. The fact that 10% of content published is added manually might even be seen as an early success… maybe.

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twitter on buzz

Of course the best part of Buzz is the conversations in comments. In my stream at least, I see some amount of conversation but it’s dominated by a few uber-geeks: people who loved FriendFeed before it was acquired by Facebook.

The whole Buzz model looks a lot like Facebook does these days, in fact. It doesn’t do much else for users, and there are fewer people being social there. Why use Buzz when your friends are on Facebook? Perhaps that’s the question and why Buzz hasn’t caught on.

We’re excited in principle about Buzz because of its potentially disruptive support for open data standards. Apparently it’s mostly robots who get excited about such things, though, as they are mostly the ones coming to the party so far.

There are some hardcore Buzz users discussing this…over on Buzz, too. If you do use Buzz, you can be our friend here. We never post automated content there.

Discuss


Posted in Internet NewsComments Off

Tags: Audiences, Authorities, Buzz, Canada France, Eric Schmidt, France Germany, Future Products, Google, Information Public, Intention, International Scrutiny, Israel, Launch, Netherlands, New Zealand, Privacy Practices, Privacy Problems, Protest, Rush, Sanctions

International Data Protection Authorities Protest Buzz

Posted on 20 April 2010


It looks like Google isn’t going to be able to put Buzz’s initial privacy problems behind it anytime soon.  Late yesterday, representatives from Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Spain, and the UK all signed a letter expressing concerns about the service and Google’s privacy practices in general.

GoogleThe data protection authorities weren’t too hard on Eric Schmidt (to whom the open letter was addressed); they recognized that Google’s participated in many discussions regarding privacy, and that the company’s just one of many operating in a similar fashion.  Also, they applauded the manner in which Google responded to complaints about Buzz.

Still, what follows is definitely the takeaway point: "It is unacceptable to roll out a product that unilaterally renders personal information public, with the intention of repairing problems later as they arise.  Privacy cannot be sidelined in the rush to introduce new technologies to online audiences around the world."

Then the data protection authorities later stated that they’d "like to receive a response indicating how Google will ensure that privacy and data protection requirements are met before the launch of future products."

So it looks like Google will face a lot more international scrutiny due to its mishandling of Buzz’s launch, even if the company isn’t hit with any immediate sanctions or fines.

Posted in SE NewsComments Off

Tags: Apps, Blogger, Buzz, Gmail, Google, Mainstream Audience, Navigation Bar, Nbsp, Niche, People, Popularity Thanks, Stranger, twitter

Google Connects Blogger, Buzz Services

Posted on 15 April 2010


Google Buzz, which still seems to be struggling to catch on with any sort of mainstream audience (or even a sizable niche one), has been given another opportunity to connect with people.  Blogger users will now be able to promote their posts with the new-ish product.

Chang Kim, a Blogger product manager, explained on Blogger Buzz late yesterday, "[W]e’re excited to announce that Blogger has made it easy to share to Google Buzz via the Share button in the Blogger navigation bar.  Just click ‘Share’, choose Google Buzz, and you’ll be able to customize your message before posting to Buzz."

Then one more interesting comment followed.  Kim wrote, "We are committed to make the sharing experience better on Blogger: more updates are on their way, so please stay tuned."

Anyway, it should be interesting to see if Buzz gets a boost in popularity thanks to this development.  To be fair, the move isn’t an illogical one.  As the above picture shows, Blogger users could already promote their posts through Facebook, Twitter, and Google Reader; it would almost be stranger if Google didn’t add its latest "social" product to the list.

This step follows a pattern that involves pairing Buzz with Google Apps and Gmail for mobile, too.

Posted in SE NewsComments Off

Tags: Associate Product Manager, Biz Stone, Buzz, Co Founder, Frameworks, Functionality, Google, New Labs, People Names, Quot, Real Time, Replay, Rsquo, Sake, Suggestion, Time Search, Timeline, Tool, twitter

Google Wants to Help You Expand Your Twitter Network

Posted on 14 April 2010


Google has launched a new Labs project called Google Follow Finder. It’s designed to help you expand your Twitter network.

To use Google Follow Finder, you can enter your Twitter account name and see a list of people Google thinks you might be interested in following (our own Twellow has a helpful suggestion feature too). Google’s tool will also let you enter other people’s Twitter names and get suggestions based on that.

Google Follow Finder launched to suggest twitterers

"If you see someone you want to follow, just click ‘Follow on Twitter,’ log in, and they’ll be added to your following list in Twitter," explains Associate Product Manager Aaron Wise. "This integration is based on Twitter’s new @anywhere frameworks, which make it easy for any site to add Twitter functionality. We’re using the frameworks to provide dynamic information about Twitter accounts and one-click following."

It’s quite interesting that Google is this into getting you to expand your Twitter network, when you might think they would be more interested in getting you to use Buzz. But since your Twitter network can be integrated into your Buzz account, it’s probably just as well, for the sake of Buzz use.

This is the second Twitter-related announcement to come from Google today – the first being the replay feature in Google’s real-time search, which archives tweets and lets you browse them on a timeline.

On a related note, the @anywhere platform from Twitter is now available for anyone to use. Twitter co-founder Biz Stone talks about this on the company blog.

Posted in SE NewsComments Off

Tags: Amp, Api, Apis, Bookmarking, Buzz, Developers, Dozens, Facebook, Favorites, Firehose, Query Language, Real Time Data, Sql, Status Updates, Time Feed, Uploads, Web Services, Yahoo, Yahoo Query, Yahoo Updates

Yahoo Releases Firehose of Comments, Ratings & Social Network Activities

Posted on 12 April 2010


Yahoo announced this afternoon a “Yahoo! Updates Firehose service” that will provide a stream of activity gathered from various Web services, from Flickr uploads to YouTube favorites to blog comments and more.

The firehose will provide a stream of real-time data from Yahoo’s index, which will also include Twitter data, as part of a deal the two companies made last February.

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According to Yahoo, the firehose will include “a real-time feed of every public action taken on our network and elsewhere around the Web that users have authorized Yahoo! to make available.” This data will consist of “status updates, ratings and reviews, comments on stories, Buzz votes, Flickr uploads, Delicious bookmarking, tweets, Open App activity, YouTube favoriting, and Last.fm listening, among many others.”

Developers will be able to access the data using Yahoo Query Language, a “SQL-like query language”, and parse this information by a number of criteria, from language to location to all updates associated with a specific URL.

While companies like Twitter have already offered a firehose of its data, and Facebook is expected to release its in the very near future (likely at the F8 conference), there are few, if any, firehoses of large swaths of data such as this. The closest we came up with at the moment was Gnip, which provides a single API to connect with dozens of other Web services and their APIs.

According to the company, the firehose will provide access to more than 150,000 ratings, 8,000 reviews and 750,000 comments a day.

Discuss


Posted in Internet NewsComments Off

Tags: Activity Streams, Analytics, Atom, Business Owners, Buzz, Coffee Shops, Competitor, Developers, Google, Hub Page, Ins, Neighborhood, New Feature, New Features, Party Apps, Possibilities, Private User, Real Time, Relative Value, Venue

Gowalla Adds Real-time Feeds and Activity Streams For Maximum Mashup Action

Posted on 07 April 2010


Location based social network Gowalla quietly released a big new feature today: real-time PubSubHubbub feeds for check-ins by people and at locations. Hello, mashups and 3rd party apps of the future!

In addition to being real-time and easy to access, Gowalla’s new feeds are also marked-up with the beginnings of the widely used Activity Streams format. Put all of this together and Gowalla to Google Buzz is one obvious connection, but the possibilities are endless.

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For comparison, much larger competitor FourSquare offers private user-specific RSS feeds, which are slower and much more limited. It also offers powerful analytics for business owners about who checks in at their venue. The relative value of both systems for developers is debatable, but Gowalla’s new feature is clearly very nice.

These new Atom feeds from Gowalla can be remixed by anyone, though – not just developers. For example, I plan to run the feeds from a few coffee shops down the street from my house through an alert service so I can know who’s hanging out in the neighborhood.

I expect we’ll find out even more about what could be done with these feeds once they are officially announced. The Hub page says the feature is delivered by Superfeedr, so presumably the feeds will grow more sophisticated as Superfeedr continues to add new features as well.


Discuss


Posted in Internet NewsComments Off

Tags: Blackberry, Business Listing, Buzz, English Accents, Enthusiasts, Experimental Features, Google, Google Maps, Hometown Pizza, Mandarin Chinese, Mobile Devices, Mobile Team, Nearby Businesses, New Features, Pizza Place, Pizza Restaurants, Place Punch, Search Suggestions, Software Engineer, Washington Avenue

Google Maps Gets More Useful on BlackBerry

Posted on 07 April 2010


Google introduced a new version of Google Maps for BlackBerry devices today. There are quite a few significant features that come along with it.

Search by Voice, one of the most convenient features of searching from mobile devices in general, is included with this version. "Simply press and hold the green ‘call’ button, speak your search, and see your results quickly appear without typing a single letter," explains Ole CaveLie, Software Engineer on the Google Mobile Team. "Try it now for any search, like the name of my favorite hometown pizza place, ‘Punch Pizza in Minneapolis.’ You can also search by voice for addresses like ’802 Washington Avenue Southeast’ or search for other another pizza place to try by speaking, ‘pizza restaurants.’ Currently supported languages include multiple English accents and Mandarin Chinese."

Google has added Buzz for mobile, which lets users use the Google Buzz layer to see what’s going on around them, or to post tot he layer themselves. You can use this to share pictures, news, etc.

Google Maps for BlackBerry - Version 4.0

Google also syncs your personalized search suggestions and starred places with the new Blackberry version of Google Maps.

Other new features include:

- Use Labs to try experimental features like the Scale Bar or Terrain layer (great for hiking enthusiasts!).

- See nearby businesses at an address or location by selecting a point from the map.
 
- Report a problem with the map data or a business listing.

Users can install this version of Google Maps for BlackBerry by going to m.google.com/maps.

Posted in SE NewsComments Off

Tags: Advertisements, Alex, Android, Apps, Buzz, Combination Work, Current Users, Desktop Version, Device Users, Gmail Inbox, Google, Government Users, Iphone, Light Users, Nbsp, Popularity, Quot, Sake, Software Engineer, Transition

Google Buzz Makes It To Gmail For Mobile

Posted on 06 April 2010


Earlier today, we reported that Google Buzz is, in a sense, getting serious – it’s supposed to be integrated with Google Apps in the near-ish future for the sake of enterprise and government users.  But it’s getting sort of casual, too, landing in Gmail for mobile this afternoon.

No app downloading or menu digging is required in order to make this combination work.  iPhone and Android device users can take advantage of the development just by visiting Gmail.com.

Then, as software engineer Alex Kennberg explained on the Official Google Mobile Blog, "[Y]ou’ll see buzz in your inbox on your phone just like you do in the desktop version of Gmail, complete with the little Google Buzz icon."

Also, "When you open a buzz post from your inbox, you can perform all the standard functions, such as liking the post or commenting, just as you can from the desktop Gmail inbox."

Making Buzz more accessible might help solve its popularity problem, insofar as current users are liable to act as advertisements for the service while playing around with it in public.  There’s a chance people will transition from being light users to heavy users as they get the option to interact with it more, too.

Posted in SE NewsComments Off

Tags: Buzz, Conversations, Counterintuitive, Enterprise Environment, Enterprise Versions, Environments, Gmail, Google, Government Agencies, Government Secrets, Kim Hart, Launch, Nbsp, Odds, Participant, Professional Reputations, Rollout, Social Enterprise, Social Networking, Sums Of Money

Google Buzz/Apps Integration Approaching

Posted on 06 April 2010


Google Buzz should get another shot at life in a few months’ time.  A new report’s indicated that the service, which has so far been a flop with normal users, will finally be integrated with Google Apps and given a chance to operate in more formal environments.

Kim Hart wrote earlier this morning, "Government agencies that have adopted Google’s Gmail service may start to notice their employees sharing more personal information. . . .  In a few months, Google wants to incorporate its social networking Buzz feature into enterprise versions of Gmail, The Hill has confirmed."

This may seem a little counterintuitive; since Buzz has upset regular people, tossing it at individuals who know government secrets, deal with large sums of money, and/or have an increased need to manage professional reputations is potentially unwise.

Google’s learned some lessons about privacy and tweaked Buzz since its initial launch, though, increasing the odds that this rollout will go well.  Also, the enterprise environment represents another opportunity for Buzz to shine, given that the tool is suited to simplifying long, multi-participant email conversations.

It should be interesting to see how Google Apps users respond to this move as the integration plans become more definite.

Posted in SE NewsComments Off

Tags: Advertisements, Alex, Android, Apps, Buzz, Combination Work, Current Users, Desktop Version, Device Users, Gmail Inbox, Google, Government Users, Iphone, Light Users, Nbsp, Popularity, Quot, Sake, Software Engineer, Transition

Google Buzz Makes It To Gmail For Mobile

Posted on 06 April 2010


Earlier today, we reported that Google Buzz is, in a sense, getting serious – it’s supposed to be integrated with Google Apps in the near-ish future for the sake of enterprise and government users.  But it’s getting sort of casual, too, landing in Gmail for mobile this afternoon.

No app downloading or menu digging is required in order to make this combination work.  iPhone and Android device users can take advantage of the development just by visiting Gmail.com.

Then, as software engineer Alex Kennberg explained on the Official Google Mobile Blog, "[Y]ou’ll see buzz in your inbox on your phone just like you do in the desktop version of Gmail, complete with the little Google Buzz icon."

Also, "When you open a buzz post from your inbox, you can perform all the standard functions, such as liking the post or commenting, just as you can from the desktop Gmail inbox."

Making Buzz more accessible might help solve its popularity problem, insofar as current users are liable to act as advertisements for the service while playing around with it in public.  There’s a chance people will transition from being light users to heavy users as they get the option to interact with it more, too.

Posted in SE NewsComments Off

Tags: Buzz, Conversations, Counterintuitive, Enterprise Environment, Enterprise Versions, Environments, Gmail, Google, Government Agencies, Government Secrets, Kim Hart, Launch, Nbsp, Odds, Participant, Professional Reputations, Rollout, Social Enterprise, Social Networking, Sums Of Money

Google Buzz/Apps Integration Approaching

Posted on 06 April 2010


Google Buzz should get another shot at life in a few months’ time.  A new report’s indicated that the service, which has so far been a flop with normal users, will finally be integrated with Google Apps and given a chance to operate in more formal environments.

Kim Hart wrote earlier this morning, "Government agencies that have adopted Google’s Gmail service may start to notice their employees sharing more personal information. . . .  In a few months, Google wants to incorporate its social networking Buzz feature into enterprise versions of Gmail, The Hill has confirmed."

This may seem a little counterintuitive; since Buzz has upset regular people, tossing it at individuals who know government secrets, deal with large sums of money, and/or have an increased need to manage professional reputations is potentially unwise.

Google’s learned some lessons about privacy and tweaked Buzz since its initial launch, though, increasing the odds that this rollout will go well.  Also, the enterprise environment represents another opportunity for Buzz to shine, given that the tool is suited to simplifying long, multi-participant email conversations.

It should be interesting to see how Google Apps users respond to this move as the integration plans become more definite.

Posted in SE NewsComments Off

Tags: Advocate, Building Technology, Buzz, Chris Messina, Google, Mdash, Milestone, Network Space, Network Users, Open Web, Personal, Protocol, Public Web, Salmon, Social Networking, Social Web, Trackbacks, Tweet, twitter, Web Entities

Social Media May Get Much More Convenient for Businesses

Posted on 05 April 2010


As we reported last week, some significant news was announced regarding the open web, and the direction social networking is headed in. Cliqset and Status.net announced that for the first time ever, the users of two independent, public web entities are able to communicate with each other, without being on the same service as the person they are communicating with. These two services accomplished this using the Salmon protocol, a technology that’s already on Google’s list to implement with Buzz.

Would you find value in communicating with a user of a social network you didn’t belong to? Tell us what you think.

I reached out to Google’s own open web advocate, Chris Messina, to get his thoughts on this milestone and its significance for social networking, and for businesses.

What’s it Mean for Social Networking?

"I do think that Salmon is a very important building block technology for the open, social web," Messina tells WebProNews. "It basically provides a mechanism for what I would call ‘personal trackbacks’ or ‘social pingbacks’ — to borrow the blogging term."

Cliqset and Status.net claim first live salmon implementation Imagine: If Facebook, Twitter, Google Buzz, and MySpace all implemented Salmon in the way that Cliqset and Status.net have. Users of any one of these services could communicate with users on any of the others without having to be part of those other communities. For example, if I’m a Facebook user, but not a Twitter user, I could respond to a tweet from somebody from my Facebook account, which they would see on Twitter. All the while, I do not have a Twitter account. They could then in turn respond to me, and I would see that in my Facebook account.

Right now, social network users can’t do this, unless they’re using Cliqset and Status.net, but depending on how widely this gets adopted, it could become more of a standard in the future, which would make for increased competition in the social network space. People wouldn’t necessarily have to join Facebook just to stay in touch with all of their friends and family who use it. If they liked MySpace better, for example, they could continue using that as their preferred social network, and still communicate with anybody else. As Marshall Kirkpatrick recently suggested, this would mean social networks would have to strive to innovate more, to keep users from simply moving elsewhere.

"This is a great demonstration of Cliqset’s larger vision of social networks being siteless, and we think it’s going to be the future of how all services interact and, more importantly, how users of these services interact," Cliqset told us earlier.

Chris Messina - Google's Open Web Advocate - Talks Significance of Salmon "With the ability to mention someone on one service and then send a verified ping to the recipient’s service, we get one step closer to decentralizing social networks in the same way that email was decentralized a decade or longer ago," Messina says. "For today, this means that if you prefer to use Cliqset, and I use Status.net — but I want to talk to you without signing up for Cliqset  — Salmon will make that possible!" (emphasis added)

"Put another way, let’s say that I post a photo to both Flickr and my blog, and let’s presume that I would like to have one unified set of comments for that object — rather than two distinct streams of comments," Messina adds. "Salmon provides the mechanism to sync those two channels so that, once again, Flickr users can use Flickr, and my blog readers can read my blog."

What Impact Could This Have for Businesses?

Social networking has become a significant part of marketing, customer service, branding, and engaging with customers. It only makes sense that if social networking were to become more open in the way that widespread Salmon adoption would allow, business communication channels could open up along with them. Communication would improve.

"The benefits for business become clear then: produce quality content, syndicate to any number of services or aggregators, and then use Salmon as a way to host distributed conversations across the web — rather than in several disconnected contexts," says Messina. "This means more engagement and higher convenience for publishers — and a more familiar experience for content consumers."

What are the odds?

A lot still has to happen for social networking in general to reach this point. Right now, we’re really only at the beginning. Cliqset and Status.net are hardly representative of social media as a whole. However, Google Buzz, while certainly not as dominant as say, Facebook, will be implementing Salmon sooner or later, and you can bet others will follow. Kirkpatrick made the point that because Salmon is open source, any service can implement it without formal business relationships.

"If a substantial portion of the technical community implements Salmon, Facebook could be under a lot of pressure to do so as well. (As it was with OpenID, for example)," he says.

Facebook’s best interest, however, is to keep users using Facebook itself. Considering Facebook already has such a significant share of the population, you have to wonder how much it would really lose if it adopted this. It may also be in Facebook’s best interest to keep users happy, and that could potentially include tearing down a wall for users who don’t want to be closed off from the rest of the world.

Time will tell if this all comes to fruition, but Cliqset and status.net have shown that it can be done, and that’s an important first step.

Would you like to see social networks open up to cross-communication? Share your thoughts here.

Posted in SE NewsComments Off

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