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In the Technorati 10,000

I’m #9851 on Technorati  – I know,  this is nothing compared to Guy Kawasaki being #46, but hey, he was already a celebrity before starting his blog.   The funny thing is, I broke through the barrier on a week when I barely posted anything.

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AttenCrap

My (so far) favorite feed reader, Attensa had an auto-update today.  It turned out to be an auto-downgrade, or should I say auto-disable?  All I am getting now is post titles, article body blank, can’t even click to go to the source – have to pull up the config menu to figure out what the URL’s are.

I am not happy.

Update (5/2):  As it turns out, newly dowloaded post come through with the full content – albeit with less attractive formatting than in the previous release, and I have to enable image dowloads to Outlook domain by domain – this was working properly in the previous release.  The crappy (unreadable) posts were all downloaded between 10pm yesterday until just prior to the upgrade. What happened there is a  mystery.

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Gold Medal for Listening to Customers

(Updated)
And the Gold goes to: Vyew.  

Dennis and I both posted about this free “browser-based conferencing and always-on collaboration platform that provides instant visual communication without the need for client downloads or installations.”  I also had a follow-on post, this time about product names and branding.  Perhaps that’s the reason that the lively comment-conversation these posts triggered focused more on Marketing on my blog, and product features chez Dennis.

Commenters on Dennis’s blog quickly noted that Vyew does not allow full desktop sharing, so while it’s a handy collaboration tool, it cannot be used for software demos. Oops, it was a bit  premature of me calling Vyew a “Free Webex-killer” – well, it’s not quite that … just yet.  But not for long! 

While I was exchanging emails with a very responsive Fred on the Marketing team, Tim, a member of Vyew’s development team came to Dennis’s blog and announced: As a direct result of various conversations with some of you and on other blogs, I met with our team and we decided to push out a LIVE DESKTOP SHARING feature this week. This may not be as snappy as webex, we’ll be looking at about 3 seconds between each screen refresh. But keep in mind this is a quick fix until our real release in 2 months.”   Wow!  Talk about responsiveness!

I don’t know how well the new feature will work, but these guys are definitely market-driven, if anyone, they definitely know how to “turn customers into evangelists“. Customer goodwill can go a long way – some companies are good in earning it, others manage to lose it fast…  it’s good to be in the first camp.

Update (5/2)Vyew just got Naked: “Talk about listening to your customers. This has to set a new record

for responsiveness for user-requested refinements. My congratulations

to vyew. My advice for next steps: start your own blog, vyew, so that

you can have more direct exchanges with customers.” – says Shel Israel.

Update (5/2):  Dennis sums up the story under A Naked Conversation with a vyew.  His conclusions in the second half of the blog are really interesting, go way beyond the Vyew story.  (Btw., I don’t get this naked thing… just got back from swimming and everyone was in swimwear  )

Update (5/2):  Vyew got TechCrunched – well, almost, on the French edition.  Here’s the Google-translated English version of the originally French article.

Update (5/4):  The Vyew team really listens: following Shel’s advice, they’ve just started their own blog.  Congrat’s .

Update (5/7):  The story reverberates:  Shel Israel talked about Vyew at MeshForum 2006 – not the product features, but their  customer responsiveness.  (souce: Christopher  Carfi and Howard  Greenstein).  Being customer-focused has already paid off for Vyew: they’ve become a “showcase”, enjoying increased brand-awareness.

Update (5/13)Guy Kawasaki just profiled Vyew.

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ThinkFree, the Microsoft-free Web Office

Are you  losing track of the plethora of  WebOffice applications?  I certainly am, as a matter of fact, today I just said half-jokingly that soon we will need a directory of all Web 2.0 directories, let alone app’s. 

My favorite editor so far has been Writely, but that may very well be by pure chance, since I tried Writely first.  I recently checked out the Zoho writer, and liked it.  Zoho has been the first one (as far as I know) to come out with a cool Web Spreadsheet application, which btw. is not only function-rich, but also esthetically pleasing. Sooner or later I’ll spend some time checking out their Virtual Office.  There hasn’t been a lot in the area of presentations though, the only one I am aware of is Thumbstacks – a simplified presentation app, without the fancy animation ..etc effect, but more than enough for a typical presentation.  Obviously all these applications are web-based, and so are the data files that create (in sharp contrast to AjaxWrite, AjaxSketch ..etc which are not true Web 2.0 apps, since they can only save your work on a local harddisk). That actually presents a potential problem where one’s digital life is stored on several sites and not easily shared between applications: some of the online storage services like Box.net Omnidrive, Openomy ..etc (sorry guys, can’t list all, there’s too many of you )

The entire landscape changed today – at least for me it was today, when on the Qumana blog  I read about ThinkFree.  The South Korea-based company claims to have “The Best Online Office on Earth”  (affirmatively, not just probably ).

 ThinkFree handles documents, spreadsheets, presentations, and is compatible with MS Office file formats.  You can create / save / share new documents, or upload existing Microsoft ones.  Oh, have I mentioned the 1G free storage?  I haven’t had the time to test all features in detail, but I think the fact that the first complete WebOffice exists is significant, and the initial reviews are positive.

Update (4/30):  Of course while we’re all caught up in the WebOffice craze, it doesn’t hurt to remember that a lot of Net-users are still stuck in dial-up prison, like Vinnie is now, in India..

Update (5/1): It just occured to me that a combination of ThinkFree (MS

Office replacement) and Central Desktop

(Online Collaboration, “wiki without the wiki”) is likely to be a

perfect online combo for most small businesses. I’ll cover the latter

in another post.

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Vyew – Free WebEx Killer ?

Reading TechCrunch’s profile on  Wyaworks, a new startup that “aims to do for web development what blogging has done for publishing” reminded me of another product I placed in my Web 2.0 Bookmarks a while ago and forgot to check it out: Vyew.  (no relation to wyaworks other than being remote namesakes).


It’s interesting how some brands become verbs: back in my last “corporate” job even after we switched from WebEx to GotoMeeting, we kept on saying “we’ll webex it”.  But Vyew is a cute name, I wonder if the same will happen as users switch.  Because they will switch.  Nothing beats free.

Of course Vyew has more going for it than just being free. Nice features, easy-to-use UI (I’ve just tested it with Dennis)  , and it’s even PC, being green.  A key value for people on-the-go is that it doesn’t require any download, you just start collaborating from any browser.

Vyew is a product of the team that created Simulat – I am not sure if it is the same company or another venture of the same individuals. They launched 2 weeks ago.

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Why Spam Swicki?

Search activity on my swicki (see right sidebar) skyrocketed all of a sudden. Here’s a partial list of searches performed yesterday:

ags publishing 1
battle realms 1
book publishers directory… 1
bourbon street 1
bourbon street new orlean… 1
brick 1
british industrial revolu… 1
brownie guides 1
brownies uk 1
bunk beds 1
buy cds 1
buy concert tickets 1
c programming 1
california bar 1
california state bar 1
camelot park 1
car audio systems 1
careers 1
cascading style sheets… 1
cd now 1
cd stores 1
cfm 1
cgi 1
chat rooms 1
chat sites 1
cheap airline tickets… 1
cheap cds 1
cheap dvd 1
cheap ink cartridges 1
cheap tires 1
civil war battles 1
civil war information… 1
clock kits 1
cnn 1
cnn interactive 1
cnn world news 1
comp cams 1
computer deals 1
computer hardware 1
computer prices 1
computer sales 1
computers 1
concert tickets 1
concert tickets ticketmas… 1
consumer product reviews… 1
consumer reviews 1
corel draw

There are pages and pages of this crap, it’s clearly an automated “search attack”.  Once again I prove how clueless I am about the business of spamming, but I really don’t see who and how benefits from such automated searches …  Swicki team?  Anyone? 

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43 Best Blog Prank Still Goes On

Alexander Muse reminds us that his 43 Best Blog Experience is still live – 2 months later people are entering themselves and deleting others.  For all those interested may I suggest you also check out Ego-surf.

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Freemium Memeorandum

Tom Evslin at Fractals of Change discovered “clear evidence from technorati that tech.memeorandum predicts the future”.

Memeorandum

He’s dreaming for tech.memeorandum to be able to predict product announcements, earnings releases.   Tom, I have news for you: it’s all coming soon,  along with a lot more… just think of the effect of some predictions on political Memeorandum.   The predictive features will be wrapped into various subscription packages, as part of Gabe’s Freemium business strategy. 

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“Innocent” Trackback Spam Can Knock Your Page Views

I though I’d share this:  recently I’ve seen some seemingly pointless trackback spam that appeared to have come from the main sites of Yahoo, MSN, Google ..etc.  I could not figure who benefited from these, since there was not even a hidden link to any other site.  Still, I went ahead and clicked “delete and block” since, after all these were spam entries.

Today someone told me I came up third on a particular Google search, so of course I went ego-surfing, and voila! there I was – but I clicking through gave an error message. Now, why would Google be an illegal referrer?  Then it hit me: when I blocked those seemingly harmless trackbacks, I actually blocked just about all major search engines!   Checking my firewall entries, I found Yahoo, MSN, Microsoft, Google blocked.   So if you suspect you received such spam, this may be a good time to check your blocked domains.

The good news: despite my stupid act, site traffic in this period not only hasn’t dropped, it actually increased – I don’t even want to know how much more it would be without the bogus blocks…

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Wiki & Blog Events

The “Father of the Wiki”, Ward Cunningham is featured in conversation with John Gage at the Computer History Museum tonight at 6pm.   This should be an interesting talk, I’ll be there – the side-benefit of attending these events that I always get to meet a few of my readers  face to face for the first time …

Tomorrow Uber-Blogger Robert Scoble will be amongst the panelists discussing  Blogs & Podcasts: Competitive Weapons or Too Much Hype? at the Santa Clara Hilton.   Another “must attend” event. Zbutton

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