Archives for 2006

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Morbid Ad



Click the pic to read the small print at the bottom…

Here’s another gem from Seth Godin:

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Somebody Please Acquire Technorati. NOW!!!

 Somebody please buy Technorati, right NOW!   I really don’t care if it’s Microsoft or Yahoo (see below), I’m just sick of seeing this all the time:

Techorati

Like I’ve said before, kudos to Technorati for being the pioneers, for being a great  “idea company” – they truly are Innovators of the Blogosphere, just can’t scale.  Time for someone to take over.  And, on second thought, I do care: Yahoo would be a much better fit 

References:

 

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Kratia = Google + Digg?

Logo-kratia2  The First Democratic Search Engine

Search results are determined by user votes.  Kinda like a DigGoogle .. .except for now it uses MSN search.

Give it a try!  (via eHub)

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President & Groundhog

This year, both Groundhog Day and the State of the Union Address fall on the same day.
It is an ironic juxtaposition:

  • One involves a meaningless ritual in which we look to a creature of little intelligence for prognostication.
  • The other involves a:  CLICK TO FIND OUT

(hat tip: BL Ochman)

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Mobile Penetration topped 92.4%

… in Hungary, that is, according to TeleGeography:   (via Om Malik)

The number of active users rose by 583,000, boosting the country total to 9.32 million. The NHH said mobile penetration reached 92.4% by the end of December 2005, up from 86.4% a year earlier and 90.7% in November. The largest single monthly rise took place in the pre-Christmas period and 178,000 new SIM cards were registered in December alone.

It’s a classic case of a formerly under-developed country skipping a generation in technology.  When I grew up (in Hungary), getting a landline phone took 10–15 years, sometimes a lifetime.   As surreal as it sounds, it was everyday reality in the “Shortage Economy”.   Just like buying a car, where you’d prepay for a Russian-made Lada, and be able to pick it up in 5–6 years.  Considering the quality/ life expectancy of these cars, well-off people typically prepaid for a second car before the first one was delivered…

In the late 80’s / early 90’s Hungary saw an influx of foreign capital and it was quite common for  international corporations to have to build out the local communication infrastructure to be able to operate their new plant.

As is often the case, it’s easier to leapfrog to the next generation in technology, then fixing up the old one; nowadays landline use is on the decline (who needs a phone anyway?), just like in the US, and as the numbers show, mobile phone penetration far exceeds the US level.

  

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Viral Monkeys ( No, this is not an Outbreak, it’s about Music)

(Updated)
Give the product away, gain traction, the money will follow….  

This could be the summary of many 1999 Internet business models.. in fact we’re seeing it back in Bubble 2.0  Boom 2.0  Boomble 2.0.   Except in this case it’s not Software, it’s Music.

Monkeys203British indie band Arctic Monkeys handed out demo CD’s at their gigs in 2003, which fans happily uploaded to the Internet.  Now their  second album (the first one sold)  has become the fastest-selling debut album in UK chart history.

A spokesman for music retailer HMV said: “In terms of sheer impact… we haven’t seen anything quite like this since The Beatles.” He added: “In the space of just a few weeks the Arctic Monkeys have gone from being relative newcomers to becoming a household name.”

Viral Marketing at its best.  And a wake-up call to the music industry Establishment.

full story on BBC News  

Update (2/24):  The CD is now available in the US, already #4 on Amazon. (hat tip: Fred Wilson, the only VC who writes about music as much as business  He also has a video on his site. )

Update (3/19): Seth Godin on the power of giving your best stuff away.

Update (3/31): Again from Seth, how much longer it took the Fab4 to become “THE BEATLES”.

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Free Virtual Printer Creates PDF, JPG, DOC, XLS and other Formats

Paperless Printer can convert almost any application data to PDF, HTML, DOC, Excel, JPEG or BMP including those created with drawing, page-layout, or image-editing programs. Using the application’s Print command, you can create files directly from Microsoft Office applications, database applications, word processing applications or common authoring applications. It truly is a Rare Find – and, incidentally (?) that is the name of the company.   (via the freeware review)

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Good or Evil? Get Measured.

I’m only 64% good, according to the Gematriculator.  (hat tip: Jeff Nolan)

Good1

Apparently I should stay on focus, I’m doing better when I talk only about software:

Good3

Oh, well, at least I’ve made no promises to do no evil… look at the guys that did:

Googlegood

But somebody else fares a lot worse:

Gw

 

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Gmail Can Boost Your Non-Gmail Productivity

Gmail can greatly enhance your email experience, even for your non-Google accounts if you learn a few tricks.

(Update (4/3/07):  A year has passed and a lot has changed. Check out my new post here. )

Reading Paul Kedrosky’s and Michael Parekh’s  recent posts on the limits of Gmail storage prompted me to list the bag of tricks that made my life easier.  Note: I’m still not entirely online, have a lot of stuff on my desktop and am enslaved in Outlook-prison.

Multiple Gmail Accounts and aliases. We probably all do this: have a separate account for personal, blogging, subscriptions …etc use.  POP-download all, or use forwarding between the accounts.  Here’s a trick: the name+alias@gmail.com format.  Your core gmail account is name@gmail.com, but anything addressed in the “+alias” format will end up in your inbox. That way you can separate your subscriptions, different banks, brokers, airlines ..etc by setting up matching labels and corresponding auto-filters to assign the labels in gmail.

  • Having said that, my most important Gmail account is the one that I don’t use at all.  It’s my archive account.

All-In-One Searchable Archive.

  • Transferring historical data

    Like Paul, I also made Gmail my overall email archive. However, forwarding current email is of little value to me unless I can get ALL my historical email (those ugly Outlook archive.pst files dating back to the mid-90’s) dumped into ONE gmail account.  There are several “gmail-loader” tools on the Net, none of which are up to the task, IMHO.  Some  simply don’t work, others change the original sender information to the email account they use – pretty bad.   The simple solution is using Thunderbird with a redirect extension.  Steps to achieve this:

    • Open old archive.pst files in Outlook
    • Import all Outlook email into Outlook Express
    • Import from Outlook Express into Thunderbird.  (Yes, I know, Outlook > Thunderbird directly looks like a simpler process, but for some reason the direct import takes forever – we’re talking about a day for 1G of stuff … the extra steps saves a lot of time, don’t ask me why)
    • Download the Mail Redirect extension for Thunderbird.
    • Select all your email and redirect them to your gmail account.  The whole process will likely take hours, but it’s worth it.
    • Optional step:  set up gmail labels that match your Outlook folders / categories / archive files, and do the transfer in batches matching those groups.  On the gmail end set an autofilter that assigns the relevant label to ALL incoming email.  Obviously change the label for all new batch.

  •  Forwarding all current email
    • Setting up auto-forwarding for your incoming email is a no-brainer.  The ideal choice is to do it server-side, before it hits your Outlook (or whatever email client).  Unfortunately the choice with most ISP’s and email hosts is either POP or forwarding.  The service I use (1and1) allows 3 simultaneous destinations for inbound email:  inbox (for POP access) and two forwarding targets. When forwarding several (ALL) email accounts, you can use the alias-trick, i.e. forward to name+sourceaccount@gmail.com and autolabel accordingly.
    • You’ll need to forward all your outgoing email, and while using the BCC option is a more discreet approach, unbelievably Outlook does not have a rule for auto-BCC.  Hidden BCC is a great little tool to help with this, and at about $3 it’s as inexpensive as it gets …  Remember to use the alias-trick for your forwarding address, i.e. name+outgoingarchive@gmail.com.

  • Managing your account
    • Don’t ever use this email address / account directly; this is exclusively your personal archive.
    • With the above + using the alias trick, no email should ever directly be sent to this address, you can safely set an autofilter that moves everything that still arrives to name@gmail.com into the trash.
    • If you ever run short of space (see Paul’s concern), just create another gmail account.  No need to notify anyone, this is passive searchable storage, remember?  This is unlikely though, considering that Google continuously increases the available capacity, and if it still happens, you can separate the two archives by calendar year.

SPAM-filter for non-gmail accounts 

 “Spam detection and filtering in Gmail is as good as Yahoo’s SpamGuard” says Jeremy Zawodny.  He probably meant it as a compliment, but my impression is that Gmail is far better;  I left yahoo email specifically because of the insurmountable amount of spam.  Gmail meets the two fundamental criteria:  it catches all spam, and does not generate false positives.

  • Using gmail directly. 

    Of course a very simplistic approach is to forward all your email to a gmail address, have it spam-checked and pick it up from there, while making sure your outgoing email setup  always shows the non-gmail address.  If you’re like me and have reasons to directly use your non-gmail servers, the following will do the trick.

  • Indirectly

    We’ll set up all inbound email to make a round-trip to gmail and get spam-filtered there.

    • Set up a gmail account to forward ALL inbound email to your primary, non-gmail address. (name@otherdomain.com)
    • Set up a server-side filter on your your primary (non-gmail) account to examine the message header and look for this string: “X-Forwarded-For: name@gmail.com  name@otherdomain.com “ .  Any email not containing this string should be forwarded to gmail.  In other words,  only email on it’s way back from the gmail spam-check will get into your inbox, everything else will be forwarded.

The target gmail account for the Spam filtering and Archiving could be the same, you just have to make sure to set the gmail forwarding rule to also keep an archived copy of all email locally.

Get even more productive

By using less email … but that’s the subject of another post (hint: Think Wiki)

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Censorship Visualized

TiananMen-photoTiananmenAs they say, a picture is worth a thousand words…the left and right photos are the results of an identical image search on Tiananmen using the free Google and the censored Google China version.

They are worth clicking, there’s more where these came from… quite shocking.

(hat tip: Paul Kedrosky

 Update (1/28):  this one via Jeff Nolan is a total hit:

Update (1/29): this one from Randy Thomas is quite telling, too:

Oops, this last one originally came from Michelle Malkin – there’s more on here site, worth clicking.

This isn’t bad, either:

Update (1/31):  People still post this as new …

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