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Posts Tagged ‘california’

A Google Wave reality check

Friday, July 31st, 2009

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.–Lars Rasmussen sighed, half an hour into a demonstration of Google Wave, the company’s audacious attempt to reinvent Internet communication: we’d found another bug.

Rasmussen had patiently worked around other minor bugs during the demo Tuesday at Google’s headquarters, but when images dragged into a wave wouldn’t load properly, he asked his brother Jens, seated at the conference room table, to get an engineer on the issue right away. It’s about two months before Google opens up Wave access to a larger audience, and there is a ton of work to be done.

Google's Lars Rasmussen demonstrated Wave for the first time in May, and is now focused on stamping out the bugs.

(Credit: James Martin/CNET)

Google Wave was unveiled in May at the Google I/O Developer conference, and dazzled attendees with its goal: a combination of real-time communication with social-networking and search capabilities built into a familiar interface. Wave is more than just an in-box on steroids, however. It’s also a communications platform that developers can use to build their own applications, something that many were excited about in the early hours of Wave’s life on the public stage.

Behind the scenes, the reality is sobering for the Rasmussens and the 6,000 or so people actively using Wave. Job No. 1 for the brothers Rasmussen–who are managing the Google Wave project–is making sure Wave is stable enough to accommodate 100,000 new users that will start doing the Wave after September 30, when Google opens up the limited preview to a wider audience.

At the moment, around 25 percent of all Wave sessions end in a crash, Lars said. That’s obviously not acceptable and, in an ironic twist, the highest priority bug on Google Wave at the moment involves search.

“I would imagine in six months this will be fast, slick, stable and usable,” Lars said. “Right now, you have to be a super early adopter (to use Wave). By September 30, an early adopter.”

Wave has been in the works for about two and a half years. The original prototype–constructed in nine months to pitch the concept to CEO Eric Schmidt and co-founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page–was actually discarded in favor of a system that provided better scale, Lars said.

Much of that time has been spent simply designing the workflow of Wave: how to add people to a wave, reply to a wave, add pictures, and create rules. Wave shares some basic infrastructure with Gmail, but is essentially a completely separate undertaking and has been a bit of an “organizational experiment” for Google in terms of giving an important project a great deal of autonomy, Lars said.

Google Wave is designed to be a next-generation Internet communications application and platform. When it works.

(Credit: Screenshot by Rafe Needleman/CNET)

So why go public now, with so much yet to be accomplished? The brothers Rasmussen have heard the shouts of “vaporware,” and actually chose the opposite launch strategy for the product that launched their Google careers: Google Maps wasn’t unveiled until it was complete.

The difference with Wave is that Google believes developer feedback is crucial to its evolution as a product. “We wanted to get people thinking about how we’re going to use it and what people are going to use it for,” Lars said.

For now, however, Wave is carefully labeled as a “developer preview,” a status that doesn’t even rise to the level of one of Google’s ubiquitous beta projects. While Google still has no formal process for determining what projects are previews as opposed to betas as opposed to full-blown products, the goal for Wave is reduce the number of crashes to less than 1 percent of all session starts, at which point the “beta” tag can be more confidently applied.

When introducing Wave in May, Google said it hoped to open the service up to the general public some time in 2009. That seems unlikely when viewing Wave in late July, but launching a product that has been hyped as much as Wave with anything even close to the number of bugs currently present would be a disaster.

Lars knows this. “Google can be a cushy place to work; we’re not going to run out of payroll anytime soon. But we’re putting a lot of pressure on ourselves.”

Originally posted here:
A Google Wave reality check

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Newsgator goes all in with Google Reader

Friday, July 31st, 2009

The publisher of popular RSS readers FeedDemon and NetNewsWire is ditching its proprietary online RSS synchronization in favor of Google Reader. Newsgator’s eponymous online service will cease on August 31..

Soon, Google Reader will be the only online synchronization option for Newsgator users.

(Credit: Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)

When the beta version of FeedDemon updated earlier this year with the ability to synchronize to either Newsgator or Google Reader, fans of the program rejoiced. Google Reader synchronization, the company says, was one of the most requested features for the Newsgator desktop clients. They have instructions for users who need to move their feeds to Google.

Google Reader may frustrate some, but it has far more users than Newsgator. Newsgator says that this was the main impetus for ditching the Newsgator synchronization for Google, but it’s also using the opportunity to revamp its product line.

Along with Google Reader synchronization for FeedDemon, NetNewsWire, and the NetNewsWire iPhone app, Newsgator will discontinue Newsgator Online, Newsgator Go!, Newsgator Inbox, the Newsgator browser toolbar, and the desktop notifier. Several features in the desktop apps that depended on the proprietary syncing service will also cease to function at the end of August. If you use the blogroll, ratings or headlines features, Newsgator recommends removing them from any Web site they’re used on by August 31. The shared clipping feature will transition into Google Reader’s analogous feature.

Despite its popularity, one feature that Google Reader doesn’t support that Newsgator does is authenticated feeds. For people who used Newsgator solely for that feature, their opprobrium on message boards and in comment threads is palpable. Interestingly, the last answer in the Newsgator transitioning FAQ points to another reason for the switch: a growing emphasis from the company on their enterprise-based business.

Newsgator recommends that all FeedDemon and NetNewsWire readers upgrade to the beta builds before August 31, since only those latest versions contain the Google Reader option. It gave no word on when the beta builds would finish development, but readers who want the current stable builds can get them for Windows and Mac.

Originally posted at The Download Blog

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Newsgator goes all in with Google Reader

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No joke: ‘Funny or Die’ coming to iPhone

Thursday, July 30th, 2009
Funny or Die caption

Good news for humorists–a dedicated mobile app for comedic video site Funny or Die will be coming to your iPhone, eventually.

Web content platform Babelgum announced on Thursday an exclusive wireless deal with Funny or Die to bring videos from the latter to mobile applications like the iPhone. Look for a Funny or Die app to hit Apple’s iPhone App Store sometime in the near future, though Babelgum hasn’t yet revealed when it plans to submit the software to Apple.

The license agreement also allows Babelgum to integrate Funny or Die videos into the comedy channel of Babelgum apps. Babelgum, which streams videos in film, music, and other categories, says it will also feature a Funny or Die section on its online comedy channel.

The exclusive wireless partnership between the two companies will last for two years.

Note: Funny or Die features some video clips with mature themes.

Originally posted at iPhone Atlas

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No joke: ‘Funny or Die’ coming to iPhone

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MLB taps Twitter for live commentary

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Major League Baseball is now using Twitter in two of its online properties: MLB.tv, and MLB.com. Fans can chime in themselves, or view the 140-character insights of “insiders,” which are tweets from each team’s official Twitter account or fan blog.

Along with being able to post new messages directly from the box, users can get their tweets filtered into the stream using hash tags. These show up alongside the happenings of the game and serve as an alternate commentary to the streaming radio feeds. This is a really neat approach, since it does not require users to remain on MLB’s live game sites. Instead, it can tap the commentary of people who are watching or listening to it elsewhere.

For those who decide to stay in MLB’s Twitter box though, there are plenty of options to make it worth your while. The stream continuously updates, tapping into Twitter’s API to let you befriend any user whose comments you like, or retweet whatever they’ve said with quick button shortcuts.

One thing MLB really should do though is filter out any retweets sent from its site. If a message has already been posted by another user, you see it over and over again as others pick it up. This would cut down on some of the noise. It would also be really nice to get certain tweets color-coded by what team they were talking about, which would make the stream that much easier to parse.

(via Silicon Alley Insider)

The Twitter chat box lets you view commentary from other Twitter users, including official tweeters from each team.

(Credit: CNET)

Originally posted at Web Crawler

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Facebook and Google Android app getting closer

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Update: Article updated at 1:10pm PT with confirmation from Facebook.

Facebook logo

Thanks to close collaborations with Apple, Microsoft, RIM (BlackBerry) engineers, and so on, Facebook-sponsored applications are available for a wide spectrum of mobile phones. An official Android app is in the works, Facebook has confirmed, with Facebook and Google working together on the software.

Some have scoffed that they’d never see the day when the two Silicon Valley titans pause the rivalry long enough to cooperate on a project. The truth is that they need each other, at least this time. Google needs to fill its Android application storefront with popular titles to stay relevant, and Facebook needs to ensure that mobile users can continue accessing core functionality from any device. It would be overstating the issue to suggest that, in one sense, they both need each other to beat each other, but in the case of this small victory, the brand win is important to both.

Facebook for Android is expected to launch with fewer features than its iPhone counterpart, TechCrunch reports. If their tip is correct, users may have to make do without the message in-box. However, Facebook for Android will center on the familiar activity feed and status updates, and is said to be powered by Facebook’s Stream API.

We’ll see what transpires when the application materializes, so stay tuned for an update and hands-on review in the near future. Neither Facebook nor Google would share a release date, but a Facebook representative told CNET that the app is coming “soon.”

Android has the strong Fbook app from developer NextMobile Web (covered here), but with all due respect, it’s akin to serving margarine instead of butter; margarine salts and fattens just fine, but we all know it’s not the same thing.

Originally posted at The Download Blog

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