Friday, November 14, 2008

Google's "Mail Goggles" Aim to Deter Drunk E-mailing


Google has launched its new feature of "Mail Goggles" to prevent people from drunk e-mailing those regrettable messages to their boss telling them what they really think or begging their ex-boyfriend/girlfriend to take them back.

What originated as drunk dialing became drunk texting with the growing number of people using SMS text messaging. But now, more and more people are sitting in front of their computer screens at the wee hours of the morning to send the feared drunk e-mail.

But have no fear, (as usual) Google is here to save the day!

Google has introduced "Mail Goggles," a program that is designed to make sure you really want to send the e-mail message you typed with one-hand while your other hand was holding a beer.

Basically, the Mail Goggles act as a digital breathalyzer, requiring users (after clicking "Send") to answer a series of simple math problems in a certain amount of time to ensure they are in the proper state of mind to know they really want to send that late-night e-mail.

The Goggles can easily been enabled and disabled by the user or set to start working at a certain time of day and turn off at another time of day.

Sorry, Dr. Shamp, it looks like this feature won't work on your iPhone!

To watch a news clip about the launch of Mail Googles, click here.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Google Plans to e-publish Out-of-Print Books

As the world of books begins to increasingly go digital, American authors and publishers have finally reached an agreement with Google to settle lawsuits over Google's Book Search program. This controversial program is able to scan millions of books and make their contents available on the Internet. The result: Google can sell electronic versions of copyrighted works that have gone out of print.

Although this deal still awaits court approval and the bookshop would only operate in the United States to begin with, this agreement is considered by many to be one of many initiatives under which books are making what may be the biggest technological leap since Gutenberg invented moveable type.

While the ability to browse and purchase books  from online stores like Amazon has previously led to an increase in book sales, in the first nine months of this year, book sales in the United States have fallen 1.5 percent, according to the Association of American Publishers. However, sales of e-books, read on devices like Amazon's Kindle, on personal computers or on mobile phones. Wholesale sales of e-books were up 55 percent from a year ago.

In fact, 40 percent of book publishing professionals think digital sales would surpass sales of paper-and-ink books by 2018, according to a survey published in conjunction with the Frankfurt Book Fair last month.

In the proposed settlement, Google would share online sales revenue with publishers and authors. But publishers are still looking for other new ways to sell books in digital form like subscription plans, where readers would pay a monthly fee for online access to best sellers or making online versions of books free or reduced in price by supporting the version with advertising, similar to the approach adopted by newspapers on the Internet.

For more information on this new media topic, visit http:///www.nytimes.com/2008/11/10/business/worldbusiness/10kindle.html?_r=1&ref=technology&oref=slogin.

Monday, November 3, 2008

MySpace and MTV Turn Pirated Video Into Ad Dollars

MySpace will partner with MTV Networks (whose channels include Comedy Central, Nickelodeon, VH1 and MTV) and Auditude, a Palo Alto firm that works to identify whether the video clips that users upload to the Web are owned by a television network.

Previously, when footage was uploaded from television shows like the "Daily Show," MySpace might have automatically blocked the clip, or at least taken the clip down upon complaint by Comedy Central.

Now, the users are able to post such clips to the advantage of media companies that will get to monetize and get all the data from this--meaning media companies will be able to know what is being watched, who is watching it and have their programs reap the benefit of this viral promotion.

How does this work?

Auditude will compile all of the video owned by MTV Networks that it finds on MySpaceTV, the second-largest video site after YouTube. Then Auditude will overlay an identifying label specifying the program and offer either the producing channel or MySpace the opportunity to advertise against it. Auditude will also supply viewers with a link to buy and download the full episode.

Auditude requires no additional effort by content owners and can work with a variety of Web video sites, like MySpace TV, YouTube and Veoh.



Saturday, October 25, 2008

I Spy a Qwitter...


Qwitter.

What does it do?

It allows the followed on Twitter to see that their followers have "qwit" following them, even providing which tweet was the last one the follower followed before "qwitting" following.

Make sense? Let me break it down.

Qwitter debuted on Friday, Oct. 17, 2008, as a means of allowing users (aka "the followed" on Twitter) to find out when others (aka "the followers") stop following them, or receiving their 140-character status updates.

The followed lose followers everso often for any of an assortment of reasons, whether the followed said something that the follower didn't agree with or the followed's tweets are no longer seen as relevant or interesting in the eyes of the follower.

Until Qwitter was created, services like Facebook and Twitter intentionally did not inform users when someone "de-friended" or "un-followed" them because it could potentially be a sensitive issue.

Now all precautions have been thrown to the wind, as Qwitter is trying to tap into the "too curious for their own good" market. After signing up for the service, when someone stops following someone on Twitter, the Qwitter user will receive an e-mail informing them of their follower that "qwit" and after which tweet the qwitter qwit.

The following example is provided on Qwitter's Web site to serve as an example of the message a Qwitter user would receive in their e-mail upon someone "un-following" them:

John Gruber (gruber) stopped following you on Twitter after you posted this tweet:

What's the difference between Arial and Helvetica?

While Qwitter may answer some user's questions, followers now must be more conscious of their "un-following" habits since there is the possibility that the followed will now be informed of such actions.

For more information on this new media topic, visit http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10069135-2.html?tag=mncol;posts.


Sunday, October 19, 2008

The Social Browser: Flock 2.0

Do you enjoy seeing who has recently posted on your Facebook wall, viewing friends' recently uploaded Flickr photos and reading your friends' most recent tweets on Twitter? Then I have found the Web browser that was created just for you!

Flock 2.0: The Social Web Browser is for people who love features but hate plug-ins and
 extensions. The newest version of the product, Flock 2.0, comes with  a variety of features preconfigured and integrated into the browsing experience, without the user's additional work of setting up and layering extensions into your Firefox installation. These features include the current Mozilla engine (the same one in Firefox 3) and additional media and social net integration features.

Flock users have expressed that the first version of the product was more stable than Firefox 2, most likely because it was not overloaded with extensions, and that it did more than Internet Explorer 7. Now the speed and stability that Firefox 3 provides makes the decision to use Flock to be based on the features it offers.

Flock's capabilities include offering social media feeds from MySpace (which is new to version 2), Twitter, Facebook and other sites, which ultimately allows you to see everything that is happening with your friends and networks, all in your left sidebar. You are also able to view media (photos and videos) from media and social sites like Revver (new), YouTube, Flickr, Facebook, etc. The media bar across the top of the product can be set to view items your "friends" have posted or been tagged in.

Similar to current browsers, Flock also recognizes if a page you are on has an RSS feed and further suggests and allows you to subscribe to the feed. The second version also allows you to subscribe to media streams and displays the items in the media bar.

Upon closing or disabling the media and social sidebars, Flock is much like Firefox 3, including the "awesome bar" URL entry field, a feature that heightens success in your searches, as it allows you to search for a particular website www or a word/topic. Most other Firefox extensions can be added to Flock.

However, the product's comprehensiveness in social updates is what sets this browser above all the rest.

For more information on the new media topic, visit http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10066805-2.html?tag=TOCmoreStories.0.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

YouTube to offer TV Shows with Ads


YouTube will now give people the opportunity to watch full-length episodes of some television shows. 

The ability to view television shows that one may have missed is another way to promote use of YouTube, which has experienced staggering growth.

YouTube was designed for posting short, amateur videos that lasted only a few minutes. The idea for posting longer videos of television episodes has evolved from Internet users becoming more comfortable watching longer videos online and an increase in individuals' attention span from 2.6 minutes in July to 2.9 minutes a year ago.

"Dexter," "Beverly Hills, 90210" and "Star Trek" will be showing on YouTube through a deal with CBS. Of great importance to YouTube's owner, Google, the longer videos will air advertisements before, during, and after each episode, which will hopefully help the nearly four-year-old video sharing site.

Executives at YouTube had previously refrained from the use of advertisements so as not to deter viewers from using the site in an attempt to avoid a 15-second commercial for a 45-second video. The extended length of the videos makes including commercials in the clip acceptable in the eyes of the viewers, as well as the fact that other network television Web sites are allowing commercials to run during full-length videos.

As YouTube branches out to include TV content, the site faces competition, most notably from Hulu, which reports more than 100 million video streams a month in comparison to YouTube's five billion video views recorded in July 2008. YouTube does account for 44 percent of all online video consumption in the United States.

Another feature YouTube has devised to encourage viewership is the new "theater view," a larger video player for longer content.


P.S. I'm so glad that I read this article, because I cannot wait to go back and watch all of the Beverly Hills, 90210 reruns on YouTube instead of purchasing the seasons on DVD!

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Technology Gives College Recruiting a Boost

In this day and age college recruiters no longer have to read the scores of all the high school basketball games in teeny, tiny print in the local sports sections of printed newspapers across the country. Nor do recruiters have to travel hundreds of miles to catch their prospects in action. Instead, they can simply log online from the convenience of their own home and catch the highlights.

The Internet and various video sharing agents, most notably YouTube, allow recruits to show college coaches and recruiters what they are capable of doing out on the field or on the court. The Internet's ability to show recruiters prospective athletes' talent adds one more item to the list of things computers make easier to do--athletes getting noticed and thus earning an athletic scholarship to college. Such online postings not only save gas money for the college recruiters, but it saves the potential recruit the money for postage necessary to mail video tape footage of games to recruiters. Computers make editing these films much easier, thus adding to the benefits of online coverage of recruits.

April Carson, a 15-year-old basketball prodigy, is just one example of how online video sharing has already paid off. April's father posted footage of her breaking the Tequesta Trace Middle School record for 3-pointers in a game. April's outstanding performance would have perhaps gone unseen by everyone not in attendance (including recruiters) had it not been posted online.

A performance that had only been seen by Tequesta Trace's fans has now gone on to receive 11,858 views (at the time of this post), including views by notable basketball coaches across the country, following her father posting the highlights online. April and her family have already received mailings from Baylor, Clemson, Princeton and Yale, and she is only a sophomore in high school!

April is not the only high school athlete to benefit from the ease the Internet provides of recording, posting and watching stellar atheletic performances online. Some athletes, like Jashaun Agosto, even use similiar methods to record and show their daily workouts and athletic training. Jashaun's footage had received 260,400 views at the time of this post.

YouTube links to these recordings can be sent to scouts and recruiters quickly in an e-mail. Although online films are not the only indicator of talented players, many coaches think that viewing such films is a good jumping off place when scouting. Online links also lower the age at which recruiters begin to watch and track prospective athletes. Such internet communication makes it easy for players to talk with coaches and coaches to talk with coaches. If only students could post videos of them acing their tests for academic scholarships, and we would be set!