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MSN Virtual Earth – US only, Google flying to the Moon :-)

The Novelty of Google Earth hasn’t worn off yet,  and now we have a contender: MSN Virtual Earth... well, sort of … as long as the Earth is limited to the US – while Google’s world includes the Moon 🙂

If you clicked on the Virtual Earth link above, and got to nowhere, that’s quite understandable, according to Steve Rubel and confirmed by “The” Scoble, MS made the site available pre-launch, for testing purposes.

Apparently the few hours it was up were enough for Rick to test-ride and compare it to Google Earth.  What really blew me away though was Patrick’s visual comparison of four products, including one from the NASA.

 Map Comparison

Update (7/31) Rick’s new review here.

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Innovation and Customer Service

Ever started to comment on someone else’s blog only to get so carried away that you felt you had t make it a full-blown post?   Well, it just happened to me.
 
Vinnie Mirchandani writes about how Hertz is using innovation to provide superior Customer Service.  This prompted me to comment on the contrast of great Hertz service vs. a very poor experience I had with Avis: 
 
On of Hertz’s early innovations Vinnie mentions, the Map-printing Kiosk proved to be a lifesaver when as a Consultant new to the US I flew around a lot every week – it gave me the security of arriving to unknown places in the middle of the night and finding my hotel without ever getting lost. This was in the early 90’s.

In fact we often take such conveniences for granted, assuming they are “industry standard” … not quite.

Fast forward to last year, when I flew to Boston for an interview – the company’s standard agency was Avis, so they booked me there … fine .. or so I thought.

After a horribly delayed flight I arrived at the Avis lot around 4am, trying to get directions to my hotel in Suburbia, a good 30 miles away. Wow, no Kiosk!!! (???). Well, you’d think the clerk can help you (like they do at Hertz). Apparently they are not supposed to, for liability reasons (???) – or so they say.

Oh, well, GPS will help – except the system I reserved was not in the car; the crew at the station had trouble first finding the key to the locker where they keep the GPS units ( a lousy Motorola phone), then they had no clue how to operate it. We ended up reading the user manual together, and I was faster in deciphering it than they were.

After this it should have come as no surprise when I was caught at the gate – apparently the paperwork and the car did not match, they parked the wrong car in the assigned lot.  (Need I say this was the car the station manager and I spent 30 minutes in, trying to get the GPS installed?) Well, back to the office, station manager trying to call the gate, they don’t answer… he ended up running to the gate and order the guard to let me (finally) leave,  saying he’ll fix the paperwork afterwards…

All in all, I spent 50 minutes at the Avis lot, despite being the only customer there.

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Has Blogging Peaked?

The Always-On Innovation Summit just devoted it’s last session to the Blogosphere, but some “brand name” bloggers, like Jeremy Zawodny are already predicting blogging would peak soon … others are wondering if it already has.

I don’t believe either. Blogging may soon not be the “hot, new thing” ( in fact I am sure it no longer is, by the time I jump in on something, how could it be new …)

Those of us that find Blogging a good way of self-expression will likely not abandon it.

Others blog as a from of ongoing  career-management – get your name known, “become a brand”  (thanks, tompeters!).
If you want to be “in” some Entrepreneurial circles, better be a blogger… just look at what Joe Kraus says about his hiring criteria

That leaves the commercial crowd – blogging for $$$.  Blogging networks grow like mushrooms, their content is often not  determined by the author’s desire to communicate but by what areas help maximize ad revenue.    Don’t get me wrong: many of these networks actually provide high-quality information… but with some others, content is secondary, just an excuse to display ads.

I expect to see a spectacular  hypergrowth- peak-crash-burn cycle in this segment.   The  barrier of entry is  low, and I suspect this will be just like the day-trading phenomenon:  with news like  Jason Calacanis hitting $1M  or “ProBlogger” Darren’s record Adsense check  sooner or later many  in corporate America  will see blogging as a way to get out of the cubicle and  make easy money, then …  well, we know what happened to daytraders.
Few will make a decent profit, most will burn,  the real beneficieries will be, just like with daytrading, the platform/infractsructure/tool providers.  I wrote about one extreme example here.

When the $$ crowd is gone, blogging will be back to what it’s meant to be: a way of self-expression, communication, professional/social networking, exchange of ideas.  Which is perfectly right with me.

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Always-On 2005 at Stanford

Watching some of the sessions online.  For a conference about Innovation, there is nothing innovative about the feed; tiny screen, cannot be enlarged, the only way to zoom in is to give up the online chat.

The backchannel is about the best feature, it is displayed on the wall at the Conference, thus we, cheapos who did not plunk down $1,800, or just live too far get to participate.  “PeoplePower” really worked when during the Opening Keynote the panelists finally listened to the backchannel demand and changed subject, back from Politics.  (Isn’t this an Innovation Conference, after all?)

Today I really liked Joe Kraus‘s closing remarks, essentially saying we should stop talking about copyright..etc, leave it to the Hollywood types, and focus on what the Valley’s real value is: innovation, creating new businesses and jobs.  Too bad it was a closing remark 🙂

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BlogPulse Upgrades

BlogPulse introduced a number of upgrades,

indluding Profiles yesterday.  It’s not a user maintainable

profile, BlogPulse finds the data itself – for the top 10,000 blogs

that is. 

Considering Technorati’s performance issues and glitches the Blog Herald predicts the upgraded BlogPulse could become a Technorati slayer

Yesterday evening as news spread around the Blogosphere, the new

service became sloooooooow … than crashed – it is back up now …

well, that is if you pull up  dusty old IE, since  it does

not seem to display correctly with FireFox.   Just compare the two images below.

Firefox:

IE:

Update at 9:35am:  it is fixed now.

Update: 9:20am 7/25; the fix lasted a day, it’s now just as crappy as it was before in Firefox:-(


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Connected Commute

The Mercury News reports that an East Bay transit agency is looking to install free wireless Internet service on its transbay buses as early as this fall, a move that could make it one of the first mass transit agencies to provide the service to commuters.

Wow … I am envious… I need the same in my car!  … and maybe a driver so I can focus solely on the Online experience … but wait… this exists already … it’s called a Limo

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Google Earth is here

First there was Keyhole, downloadable for $ .. then  we got most features (albeit in lower res) for free on Google Maps.. now here’s the super-program:  Google Earth.

Fly in Space, zoom in to any location, get local info, 3D sightseeing ..etc.   Wow!

And what a surprise, this is not a web-app, it has to be downloaded/installed on a local PC.

Bill Gates beware!

test.

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Picasa labels on multiple computers

picasa.gif

Update: this is an old post, I suggest you read How to Use Picasa on Multiple Computers – The Updated Definitive Guide instead.

Has anyone spent ours of labeling, captioning, editing your favorite photos in Picasa only to discover that all this information is buried so deeply within Picasa, that there is no (easy) way to copy it over to another computer?

Picasa is great, but I can’t believe I am the only one who likes to have a backup set of my photo albums on another computer … all the “value added” information in Picasa is lost.

Can’t wait for Release 3.0!!!

Update:
All Picasa database, label .. etc info is stored in the C:\Documents and Settings\\Local Settings\Application Data\Google\Picasa2 directory. As long as both PC’s have the same directory / windows user structure and both are XP, copying the directory will save all the Picasa metada to the new PC.

Update 2 (12/01):
See my other post on how to keep your Picasa albums in sync on multiple PC’s.

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