Stoppt die Online-Überwachung! Jetzt klicken & handeln! Willst du auch an der Aktion teilnehmen? Hier findest du alle relevanten Infos und Materialien:

uStream.tv - YouTube, only live

Tuesday, April 17th, 2007

in the wake of lifecasting phenomenon Justin.tv launches uStream.tv, an amazingly simple, free broadcasting solution. think YouTube, only uStream is broadcasting live-footage. a flash widget is used to record audio & video from any webcam or firewire/USB camcorder. the stream can be watched either directly on uStream’s portal, or embedded into any other website (very much like an embedded YouTube-clip). furthermore, live-shows are recorded & archived for replay.

uStream virtually removes the barriere for live-casting audio- & video-content, a tedious task usually involving streaming-servers, encoding-formats and bandwidth-cost. not any more, it seems…

uStream

Jaiku: competition for Twitter

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

Jaiku = Twitter + a little bit of geo-information + iconography + mobile client (currently S60, Nokia only).

cool: after signing up, Jaiku checks several IM-services (GTalk/Gmail, Hotmail, Jabber) for other existing Jaiku-users you’re already connected to. Jaiku also allows easy integration of existing blog-feeds. on the downside, I wasn’t able to find a feature for directly messaging a single user. other than that, it’s really very similar to Twitter. according to this post by Robert Scoble, they’re even dealing with the same load-problems (I experienced quite some delay when posting via my mobile, which btw. involves an SMS-gateway in finland, where Jaiku was created).

update: 606Tech features an interview with Jaiku-founder Jyri Engeström.

Jaiku

10 reasons virb sucks big time

Saturday, March 31st, 2007

supposed Myspace-killer virb.com had its public launch a week or so ago. for those who haven’t checked it out: virb claims to be “Myspace done right” (that’s not the official tagline of course, rather the meme that’s been spreading). “done right” in a techno-elitist way the majority of Myspace-users would never care about. somehow hardcore Myspacers don’t seem to be bothered that their profile is rendered in 90ies-HTML and screaming of awful colours & crappy widgets…meanwhile a loud minority (which I admittedly have been a part of for most time) is whining about these exact same issues (while happily tuning their own Myspace pages). however, while virb has received a warm welcome from this crowd, I’m quite disappointed after toying around with it for a few hours. so without further ado, here’s my top 10 reasons why virb in its current incarnation sucks big time:

  • virb is not open - in fact it’s way more sealed up than Myspace ever was. virb currently supports external flash-content from YouTube, Google and a few other approved popular service only. compare that to the widget-ecosystem which has emerged around Myspace for the past 2 years. bidirectional content syndication from and to social networks might turn out crucial. it will be exciting to see Myspace’ anticipated/dreaded policy shifts in 2007.
  • virb is hard to syndicate - I haven’t found a single RSS-feed yet. not even on my personal blog (c’Mon, even myspace offers RSS-feeds, though without full content)
  • virb ain’t valid - agreed, virb’s code is lightyears ahead of Myspace’s, but does it validate against current web-standards? not really.
  • virb is poorly communicating itself - I was suprised that virb isn’t using the merits of blogging to communicate with its userbase.
  • virb is a silo - there is currently no way (i.e. API) to get data out of a virb-account (except of course by content-scraping). since social networking is almost commoditized (check People Aggregator or Ning) by now, and most users have realized they want to be part of numerous networks instead of one monolithic, this is probably a bad move.
  • but most of all: virb is a lonely place (currently only 35 users based in Austria). sure, it’s kinda unfair to compare a service just started with Myspace’ community of +100mio users. but in the end, size-of-community is exactly the key-feature of any closed down, centralized social network as is virb or Myspace.

(ok, that was only 7 issues, sorry for cheating on the headline ;) )

of course, all of this won’t matter in the end. virb is better than Myspace in many aspects (technically), but come on, that wasn’t sooo hard to achieve, right? I’m pretty sure some of above issues will be fixed soon (RSS), and I hope virb will change its policy regarding others (openness). still, my biggest problem with virb is that it doesn’t add anything to social networking as such, featurewise. yasn - yet another social network.

currently virb is artifically keeping accounts scarce by limiting the no. of signups per day, but according to the countdown, demand is not very high. if you need an invite anyhow, drop me a comment! if you disagree and think virb rocks, drop me a comment as well!

update: there are a few responses, some positive, and some negative. of course it’s unfair to compare the community-size of Myspace to virb, but I think I pointed that out in the first place.

launch: Scrapblog

Saturday, March 31st, 2007

Scrapblog, the photo-layout & -blogging tool profiled in beta last year is about to go live after securing VC-funding earlier this month. the flash-based layout-editor is probably still the best & visually appealing I’ve seen to date, plus they’ve added a nice embeddable slideshow-widget which will help spreading the service.

finally, Twitter

Tuesday, March 13th, 2007

so, after all the buzz during past weeks, I finally signed-up for a Twitter-account (in case you’re of the hype-resistant type, Twitter is basically free, public group-SMS + Web 2.0-features, a mixture between blog & IM). turns out it is one of few SMS-based services from the United States that actually works on European (or at least Austrian) networks/contracts. plus its really fun to use… subscribe to (or “follow”) some of the heavy-users and your phone won’t be quiet anymore :) but seriously, this is a great tool for marketing your blog/event/party/product/website/ego to hardcore-followers, with a biiig potential for annoyance ;)

interested? follow me on Twitter! :)

update: posting to your Twitter-account from Austria requires SMSing to a german phone-number, which - depending on your contract - might be (slightly) more expensive than national SMS.

btw, don’t follow Twitter’s in other timezones and forget to turn off your mobile at night! ;)

Comeeko: ajax-cartoon editor

Thursday, February 15th, 2007

Comeeko is a fun online cartoon editor similar to popular Mac-app Comic Life (though the latter is significantly more versatile). the ajax-interface allows easy arrangement & annotation of images, however text-formatting is quite limited due to the nature of html/css.

comeeko

(via Ajaxian)

MP3tunes.com: free & unlimited mp3-storage

Tuesday, February 13th, 2007

as of today, MP3tunes.com has extended their free mp3-storage & -streaming product from 1gbyte to unlimited storage capacity & bandwidth. a locally installed application (available for windows, mac & linux) syncs the remote mp3-locker to the local media-library in both directions (this may take a very long time depending on your internet-connection, which typically is way weaker on the upload-side). since the application currently lacks the ability to do automated sync-ups, it’s up to the user to remember syncing once every while. stored tracks can be played back anywhere on the web using Mp3tunes’ embedded flash-player. however, before you start uploading tons of audio to the locker, consider that MP3tunes free offer will be financed by advertising, which at some point might also include audio-ads injected into your playlists.

MP3tunes

(via P2P Blog)

update: after experimenting a bit, I noticed that the free mp3-locker is limited to a maxium file-size of 10mbytes :( another restriction, albeight an obvious one, is that files including DRM (Apple FairPlay etc.) won’t sync with the locker.

web-apps going offline in 2007?

Monday, February 12th, 2007

according to Read/WriteWeb, Firefox 3 will offer support for running web-applications offline. though it’s not yet clear on which level this might happen, this is major news for providers of service-based web-software. the biggest advantage of online-apps - using them on any device with net-access with no need to sync data - is at the same time their worst caveat - when connectivity goes down, so do online-apps and all data stored within them (that’s why it is a good idea even for fulltime Gmail-users to backup their mail via POP3).

of course, Firefox isn’t alone in trying to move web-apps offline - Adobe’s Apollo framework promotes offline-services on top of their successful Flash-platform. Flash has bee used to store data in a local cache for quite a time, as it has been the only cross-browser solution besides storing (mini-chunks of) data within cookies (Niall Kennedy gives a good overview on various methods of storing data locally). applications like Scrybe (private beta) let us anticipate the way future online/offline-apps might look&feel.

besides Adobe, several open source projects are working on solutions for the offline-dilemma: the Dojo Offline Project and POW (Plain Old Webserver) both implement a proxy http-server for running local copies of web-applications. while Dojo Offline isn’t available yet, POW - a firefox plugin (which means basically a web-server implemented in Javascript!) - is ready for download.

naturally, existing web-apps require heavy modification to work with any of the mentioned offline-approaches, meaning we still have to wait for real-life apps leveraging the benefits of going offline.

Yahoo! Pipes unveiled

Thursday, February 8th, 2007

wow, the whole web is singing the praises of Yahoo! Tubes Pipes, a new mashup-service announced earlier today. unfortunately, the Pipes-servers haven’t been responding for most of the evening, Yahoo’s engineers have either underestimated the impact of this announcement or the ressources a service which could be described best as universal RSS-mashup-engine might suck up. however, from what I’ve seen in the short period of availability, Pipes offers a drag&drop interface which allows users to query, combine, filter, merge etc various source-feeds into one output-feed. besides pre-defined RSS-sources (including Google Base, surprisingly), users may of course add any given RSS-feed (OPML-support seems to miss). very promising so far, lets hope the plombers fix the Pipes soon…

Pipes

(screenshot courtesy of TechCrunch)

bubbl.us

Monday, January 29th, 2007

bubbl.us is a lightweight, flash-based brainstorming tool which has been getting some attention lately. while bubbl.us looks nice and implements some innovative models of user-interaction (f.e. the delete-timer, counting down from 3 before finally removing an item, accompanied by a cheesy combustion-animation :) ), it’s restricted to very simple diagrams and lacks collaborative features. give us real mindmaps with multi-user live-editing and I’ll check back, as I really like the interface!

Bubbl.us