Archive for October 24th, 2006

Idio For All

Idio: A Personalized Flash Mag on Music and Design

Idio is a Flash magazine launching tomorrow that will deliver personalized content and rich media advertising regarding design and music.

Here’s how it will work. Users are asked to identify themselves demographically and use sliders to express their varying interests in subjects like music genres. Idio will then select from professionally licenced and user generated content to create a personalized Flash magazine for each user.

While reading Idio, users will be asked to rate particular articles in a simple up down fashion. That data will further contribute to determining what articles are displayed for different readers.

Bloggers and other writers whose contributions are selected will be paid by revenue sharing from ads. Contributions can come through direct submission or a resyndicated RSS feed. The company says that advertisers are willing to pay a premium for microsites and rich media ads embedded in the magazine and so the revenue shared will be substantial. It will be very interesting to see who the first advertisers are.

YouTube made clear that a particular kind of Flash content, beyond Flash ads, can mean big money. Of course advertising is already flush with Flash. There’s also something about Flash that tends to feel relatively constrictive as a user. None the less, a personalized web magazine with Flash ads embedded inside seems a solid strategy.

It’s one thing to build a beautiful vessel, as it appears that Idio has, but it’s another to come up with quality content on a regular basis. Even with the initial focus of design and music, Idio will face a serious challenge in satisfying niche users that have no shortage of other options available to them. If revenues are significant enough to compensate contributors well and pay for high quality licenced content then the challenge could be met. How many thriving examples of revenue sharing with individual content producers exist online now? Not very many at all. It’s something that many people are trying, but for some reason most efforts fail to gain critical mass.

Will Idio appeal to readers? James Yu has a long article on Idio at BuzzShout where he says that the company describes its product as a “glossy RSS feed” and says that his personalization needs are filled by his own RSS reader.

Good visual design in a fluid medium can be very compelling. If Idio can land the sponsorships and content they need to create a meaningfully personalized experience I think the company could be a big success.

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Ms Dewey It, Don’t Google It

This is a hilarious viral (atleast that is what I think it is). Ms Dewey is the latest entrant into the serach space (that is if she is for real). The only screw-ups are she is bloody slow, repeats her actions with feverish regularity and keeps throwing a lasso or a fishing line for some vague reason. Take a look for yourself, not when you want a result in a jiffy though.

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Vista Worth It?

A First Look at Windows Vista

Microsoft plans to introduce its new operating system to consumers in January. Is it worth upgrading?

From Technology Review

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Save That Space

PPTShare: Compress PowerPoint Files Up To 95%

PPTShare is a Windows desktop client that compresses large PowerPoint files by as much as 95%. Huge PowerPoint files have long been a problem, and if the medium is going to see extensive use in the future it’s going to need some way to be usable on platforms like the web and mobile applications.

Starting at $45 for an individual license through $17 per user for between 250 and 500 users, this is largely intended to be enterprise software. There is a free trial download available, but it expires after less than 10 compressions.

Five compression levels are available: normal, extra, high quality, mobile and custom. In most cases the compression rate is between 65 and 85% but on very large files it can reach the advertised 95% mark. 

PPTShare is a product of Ontra Presentations, an enterprise PowerPoint competitor from New York. In addition to the compressor, the PPTShare site also offers a slide organizing program.

If you’re someone who wants to email slide decks around a lot this could work well for you. It’s very easy to use, with easy installation, a drag and drop file loader and drop down menus to compress the files.

PowerPoint files are notoriously large; Microsoft’s own page of advice on the issue recommends watching out for 9 different factors that could be contributing to file bloat. Microsoft says there are limits to PowerPoint’s magical powers and that their 9 tips can help “squeeeeezzzze” more information into a lean and mean file. It looks like Ontra has come up with another layer of magic.

From Techcrunch

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Meet Up And Party

No plans? Meet New People via Activities

No plans this week? Or, ever found yourself with an extra ticket to a concert or sporting event, but didn’t have anyone to go with? In the past, your solution was wading through Craigslist postings or calling all your friends. Well now there are two web-based services that allow you to find others to do things with — Who’s Going and MatchActivity.

Who’s Going is simple and very well thought out. The business model works like this: Posting activities are free and then people that “want to go” to an activity, pay an amount if they are chosen — if you aren’t chosen, you get your money back. Note: Your friends can apply/attend for free.

The site has social networking features — allowing you to browse profiles, add friends, message people, add people as favorites (to learn of any activities they post), post photos to your profile (people can comment on them if they are a friend), and post photos/comments to actual activities. They also provide widgets that you can embed in your blog or MySpace profile to promote a specific event or all your events.

MatchActivity has a dating spin to it — focused on finding activity partners for singles (but anyone can respond to any activity, whether they’re seeking a male or female). By becoming a premium member ($7.99/month), you achieve 3 things:
1) You are able to post Private Activities that only go out to buddy’s in the system that you select.
2) You can send specific 1-on-1 invites to other members; and
3) You get 3 points added to your Reliability Rating

It’s tough to say whether either of these sites will make it — they need participation. The widget offerings by Who’s Going could virally spread the word a bit faster.

From Techcrunch

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Google Goes Co-operative

Google Co-op Launches

Google just launched a customized search service called Google Co-op (screen shots below). Co-op allows a user to create and launch a search engine with just a few specific websites included. Searches will return results from only that website.

Users have a number of options to customize the search engine: choosing which pages they want to include in their index, how the content should be prioritized, whether others can contribute to the index, and what the search results page will look like.

This isn’t new - Rollyo, Eurekster and Yahoo already have similar products. But Google is also offering to bundle the service with Google Adsense ads and share revenue with websites that embed the custom search engine into their site. Only Eurekster currently shares revenue with users. Yahoo’s product, which got a lot of press at launch, has barely been mentioned in the nearly three months since then.

For bloggers, using Google Co-op may be a better choice than the built in search feature. Google search is generally better than search features included with blog software, and with the addition of Adsense this will generate a separate income stream as well.

From Techcrunch

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Disclaimer

Most of the posts on this blog are sourced entirely from sites such as Techcrunch/Slashdot/Engadget etc. The ownership of the articles lie entirely with these websites and the originators (creators/writers). I have absolutely no copyright or left over them articles. In case any original creator feels that a particular piece must be taken off because of ownership issues please let me know, I will gladly comply with the demand. The only endevour this version of Ray-Deo is to spread the technology word as far and to as many as possible. Mithun Kidambi

Here Is How You Get In Touch

mithunk(at)gmail(dot)com mithunkidambi(at)hotmail(dot)com

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