Wednesday, November 30, 2011

The new Google Bar

Google is just chugging along with all of their new design elements. The next one was much needed, in my book. Google has taken the old navigation bar, where links would change based on the product you were using, and made it a lot more robust and usable. Now the top of every Google product will look the same with easy access to search and all of Google's products. Check it out in the video below.




Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Google maps your mall. Find Cinnabon faster!

Well, this is pretty neat. Anyone who has been to an airport more than a couple times has surely found themselves lost, hungry or needing a bathroom. Or worse, like heading to the wrong terminal to get to a connecting flight that leaves in 10 minutes from the other side of the airport.

Google aims to give your human brain yet another break by mapping the interiors of popular public places. No longer will you have to find the, ever elusive, map obelisk. Forget having to try to step into the map just to figure out if it is true that "You are here." Google has you covered.

I'm just wondering if they are going to add turn-by-turn navigation for these interior spaces. Seems ridiculous, but think of the assistance it could provide to the blind and elderly.

Read More: Google maps the indoors. Finding nearest bathroom has never been easier:


Thursday, November 10, 2011

Prediction: Drumo will crush city-data.com forums

Okay, its not like the place is hugely popular (though very active in its own right), but www.city-data.com is a great place to go to get a wealth of information on many cities in the world. If the mountains of analytical data are not quite what you are looking for, city-data also has a robust forum where you can post questions on individual city forums and locals, hopefully, respond. It is a great set up and I've used it to get information on places I was moving to or visiting. I'm also an occasional contributor on the Kansas City, St. Louis and Chicago forums.

Drumo is the forum part of city-data but much better. A pretty UI and game mechanics keeps users engaged and entertained. Additionally, local businesses can reward users for their advice and support with deals and special promotions. Unfortunately, it is limited to a few cities that are nowhere near the United States. Though, if it is successful, and I think it will be, I'd expect to see this spread fairly quickly.

Check it out:


Drumo from Drumo on Vimeo.

Read/See More: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/10/drumo-is-quora-for-cities/

Another "Google+ is Dead" article. Really?


It seems to me when things seem not so great on the surface, someone (and I mean a lot of people) like to throw around headlines saying this or that is dead. Authors do this, like this one on Slate, to get attention and clicks. Fine by me! However, you better have enough arrows in your quiver to actually kill it.

The Slate article I linked to above brings up a lot of good points on why Google is not doing as well as it should. Brand pages were a pretty decent slip up from the get go. Google should have been clear about what the limitations were for a closed beta. Though, being in beta, confusion should be expected. To expect it to be a finalized product ready to head to the races, is not a good litmus for the service's success. Also, the whole real name vs. pseudonym mix up has been had by each of the major networks and continues to be a debate today.

Okay, so let me break this down:

The first charge volleyed at Google in that article is in regards to user activity. This has been brought up time and time again, yet has little bearing on real activity. Public posts do not equal all activity on Plus. Until Google releases the information, we don't know how much activity is going on within people's more private circles. Additionally, who cares if Page, Brin or Schmidt are actively posting on Google+. Look at Zuckerberg on Facebook: With more than 9 million subscribers he has exactly zero posts. Also, it helps to have active users in your circles. I've circled a few bloggers and, for some of them, I will see over 100 comments on their posts in less than an hour.

Next, Circles is not for friends only. In fact, as I've watched Plus grow, it has become clear to me that the way people use Circles is to curate a stream on a specific topic or to get information from a specific group of people. For example, I have all of my friends in the friends circle. There is not much need for me to break it down further than that. I also have a family circle and a work circle. All good, though activity from these circles is not high. My most-used circles are my Tech News, Usability, Photography and Humor circles. I've populated them with the most active and influential people in each category. Now I have rich, topic driven streams of information. I can quickly find things I'm interested in reading/seeing, and then I can reshare them so my friends and followers who have circled me can see the things I'm into. Google+ is not Facebook and is not about friends; get over it.

The main thing people seem to overlook with Google+ is its pervasiveness. Think of all the Google products you use. Android, Search, Maps, Blogger, Docs, YouTube, Calendar, Gmail and the rest are all going to be tied into Google+. Google has got the slow boil down to an art form. You will see Plus show up more and more in the various Google products that millions of people use every day. It will become unavoidable as it becomes more useful in tying all of your digital productivity together.

Maybe the whole saying "[this or that] is dead" is dead.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Twitter finally gets an update


With the likes of Google+ and Facebook rolling out exciting, sometimes controversial, updates on a regular basis. Many of us have been left wondering if Twitter was ever going to evolve too. Years have gone by with users complaining that conversations are broken. It has gotten to the point where people just don't think of Twitter as a place for conversation. It is a broadcast medium that will leave you woefully disappointed if you ever wanted to see how your Tweets evolved across the network.

Twitter's new @USERNAME stream and Activity stream are set to tackle this issue. The @USERNAME stream will combine the @Mentions and Retweet streams into one. Additionally, activity on your account and tweets is included. This will allow you to see things like information on new followers and who is favoriting your tweets. The Activity stream displays similar information but is focused on the activity of those you follow.

This should help to make following conversations and identifying your biggest fans easier for most users. Popular Twitterers might not care for these enhancements as their @USERNAME stream will be flooded with retweets. However, it is good to see Twitter taking a step towards innovation instead just letting the service bleed active users.

What I like about these changes is that they don't mess with what Twitter has become as a broadcasting service. In fact, it looks to me that these changes are about keeping track of your broadcasting reach. These are just the type of enhancements Twitter needs to keep from becoming irrelevant in the eyes of Facebook and Google+ users.

Read More: http://techcrunch.com/2011/08/10/twitter-activity-streams/

Monday, November 7, 2011

Welcome to Kitty City - Uhh what? So weird.

This is one of the oddest things I've seen in a while...Oddly hilarious, to me, anyway.

Welcome to Kitty City - new video from Cyriak:


Googlecast: Google getting into the Cable TV biz?

This is interesting. Google getting in to cable TV? Seems odd, though they are about to deliver 1Gbs internet services to Kansas City (Kansas & Missouri). It appears to me that shoving down a full cable service through that fiber is an easy next step.

Google reportedly looking to get into the cable TV business:




Google "is considering a plan to offer paid cable-TV services to consumers," the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday. Google recently hired former cable TV executive Jeremy Stern, who is reportedly leading talks with media companies. But a Google cable TV service is still only a possibility.
"Google has discussed distributing major TV channels from companies like Walt Disney Co., Time Warner Inc., and Discovery Communications Inc. as part of the video service, though the discussions were exploratory and no final decisions have been made," the Journal wrote.


A cable service would be separate from the Google TV, which is comprised of software and hardware to stream YouTube and other Internet content to the television screen. Google has been known to bring numerous speculative projects to market, too, only to kill them off when they fail. We're still waiting to hear what Google's plans are for SageTV, which Google purchased for its DVR and Slingbox-like capabilities. But given Google's reliance on advertising money, television could be an important market for the company after all. Still, competition will be robust; Apple, which already has its own Apple TV media streaming device, is rumored to be expanding its own push into the television market as well.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Socialbots disguised as real people steal 250GB of Facebook data

I don't know how many times I have said this but, I feel it still hasn't been enough. DO NOT accept friend requests from random people you've never met or conversed with. They might look really hot or super in to you. Maybe their profile looks professional and polished. It doesn't matter. Don't trust your judgement. If you haven't seen them, spoken to them or otherwise know they are a real person then just hit "Ignore."

'Socialbots' steal 250GB of user data in Facebook invasion | Security - CNET News:

'via Blog this'

Just confirmed why I am using Google+

I did a simple search today about some random statistics I wanted on browsers and I saw this in my results. While not exactly what I was looking for, it provided an excellent opportunity to learn about and participate in a discussion about a related topic right from my search results. This is where Google truly shows how powerful social networking can be when tied to search. I must say, I am very impressed.

IE users, sorry, can't control what results get returned.


Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Kinect for Windows SDK going commercial in early 2012

I'm really looking forward to some polished and user-friendly implementation of Kinect into Windows Media Center. Flicking through the guide and pausing shows with hand motions would just be a barrel of fun for me.

Kinect for Windows SDK going commercial in early 2012:


The Kinect for Windows SDK, a beta version of which is already available to developers, is being prepared for a commercial rollout in early 2012.



Gripping photos of Bangkok's flood

Thailand flood reaches Bangkok:
Flood waters inundating Thailand north of Bangkok since July have made the journey south and reached the capital. The disaster is responsible for 400 deaths in Thailand and neighboring Cambodia and Vietnam. Thailand is the world's biggest rice exporter, but the floods have wiped out over a quarter of the country's crop. The government has declared a five-day holiday for the capital to allow residents time to evacuate. Damages could top six billion dollars in Thailand's worst flooding in 50 years. Collected here are images of the water as it moves south to Bangkok, and how residents there are dealing with the disaster. -- Lane Turner (43 photos total)

A woman holds a toddler as she walks through floodwaters in an area near the Chao Praya river in Bangkok on October 29, 2011. (Nicolas Asfouri/AFP/Getty Images)

Google Reader Rolls Out a New, Clean, Google Plus-Integrated Interface [Updates]



Google Reader Rolls Out a New, Clean, Google Plus-Integrated Interface [Updates]:

Google Reader is following in the footsteps of Gmail, Docs, and Voice with a clean new interface, that's easier to use and contains integration with the Google+ social network. More »