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Posts Tagged ‘yahoo’

Napster won’t rule out a sale

Friday, August 29th, 2008

Beleaguered online-music pioneer Napster announced to shareholders in a letter Friday that it’s still employing investment bank UBS and may be positioning itself for “strategic alternatives” to keeping the company public–i.e. a sale.

The letter was sent on behalf of Napster’s board in order to urge shareholders to not vote for three activist candidates for the board. “The press release recently filed by the dissident group appears to imply that your board is not willing to consider a sale of the company,” the letter read. “This is not true.”

The board additionally recommended that in place of the dissident candidates, shareholders re-elect existing board members Richard Royko, Philip Holthouse, and Robert Rodin.

Napster was the original name in digital music, and a notorious one at that. The free peer-to-peer service was silenced after a high-profile court battle. Its attempts to resurface as a legitimate subscription-based music service just haven’t gotten it back on top, and the addition of 6 million DRM-free MP3s would’ve been more impressive, if Amazon MP3 weren’t doing the same.

Napster’s letter to shareholders insisted that the proposed new board members would lead the company in a wrong direction. “The dissident group’s nominees have no relevant experience in the digital-music industry, have no public-company board experience, and the dissident group has not put forth any substantive plan for how their nominees will enhance value for our stockholders, if elected to the board,” the letter read.

Napster won’t rule out a sale

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Yahoo Mash gets smashed, bashed, quashed

Friday, August 29th, 2008

My Yahoo Mash profile, soon to get euthanized.

(Credit: Yahoo)

File this one under the “ouch” category. Yahoo is shutting down its social-networking experiment, Yahoo Mash, after only a year in business.

An e-mail to Mash members from Yahoo community manager Matt Warburton read, “Thank you for trying out our Mash Beta service. We hope you had fun with it. Please note that we will shut down Mash on September 29, 2008. As a result, your current profile on Mash will no longer be available.”

Mash didn’t really offer anything new, other than the fact that instead of inviting friends you created profiles for them and then invited them to customize and change them. You could also add “modules,” a sort of rudimentary version of social-network apps. It was designed as a quirky, cute step up from Yahoo 360, the social network that Yahoo had based off its millions of pre-existing user accounts; if Yahoo 360 was analogous to AOL profiles, Mash was more like Facebook.

But Mash never caught on, and its parent company has now deemed it worth closing.

This is not the first time that Yahoo has launched an experimental social network only to yank it. Last year, Yahoo shut down a Dodgeball- or Brightkite-like mobile social site called “Mixd” that had only been in operation for a few months.

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Mozilla Ubiquity, Microsoft IE8, and the fracturing of Web pages

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Mozilla on Tuesday released a public prototype of Ubiquity, a curious command-based interface to locating information on the Web and creating compilations of information from various sources. See: Mozilla offers do-it-yourself mashups for all.

At the moment, it’s most capable as a command-line browser. You press the hot key, ctrl-space, and you can just start typing lookup commands, like “imdb Blade Runner.” Or, if text is already selected in the browser, your command will act on them. Mouse over a restaurant page in Yahoo Mail, press the hotkey, and type “yelp” for a review, for example.

Ubiquity can find and insert map images into e-mails.

But the most interesting application is Ubiquity’s capability to extract items from Web pages and insert them in whatever you’re creating, like an e-mail message or a blog post. At the moment I believe the only site you can extract data from is Google Maps, but clearly Mozilla’s direction is to build a platform that takes bits of data from Web resources and pastes it together on the user’s behalf.

Microsoft, too, is putting resources into a new feature that parcels out Web pages. In the upcoming Internet Explorer 8, the browser supports a feature Microsoft calls, “Web Slices,” which is the platform’s capability to take a portion of a Web page–like a stock chart on a financial page–and display it as a pop-up widget that’s called from the bookmark bar in the browser.

Slices on Internet Explorer are part RSS feed, part widget.

Slices are built using a combination of protocols, including Microformats, RSS, and new HTML tags that IE uses to demark Slices.

Together, Ubiquity and Web Slices lead me to believe we’re entering an era of fracturing Web content. Already we have seen content separated from presentation with RSS, and we’ve given developers access to online data for their mashups via Web APIs. But the growth of Microformat-coded Web pages will make it possible for users to more easily create their own mashups–personal profile pages that have just the pieces of Web content they want, or e-mail messages made up of live maps, automatically updating weather forecasts, up-to-the-minute travel information, and so on.

It means that developers will have to learn how to code pages for modularity. Conceptually that’s not that big a deal, although if coding for Ubiquity and coding for Slices is different, it’s going to be a technical mess. What I am waiting to see is how managers wrestle with the branding and revenue implications of letting their sites be mashed up and refactored into tiny pieces all over the Web, by anyone. I predict that the sites that give away the most data will reap the biggest benefits, but that will be a difficult leap of faith for many publishers.

See also: ActiveWords.

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Mozilla Ubiquity, Microsoft IE8, and the fracturing of Web pages

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Technorati acquires ‘online magazine’ Blogcritics

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Technorati Media, parent company of blog search site Technorati, has acquired Blogcritics.org. The newly-purchased site is a user-fueled “online magazine” for bloggers that was already a member of the newish Technorati Media ad network.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed, but Technorati has said that it plans to keep Blogcritics an intact, separate property.

With the acquisition, Technorati says it hopes to help Blogcritics contributors make some money, as well as scale the property to give it more reach. “As part of Technorati Media, we’ll be able to grow the community and further improve our platform to attract new audiences,” Blogcritics founder Eric Olsen said in a release. “Technorati’s mission to help bloggers and people who read blogs is the ideal complement for us.”

Acquiring content properties, however, likely won’t change the fact that Technorati has been losing ground to Mountain View-powered Google Blog Search and (to an extent) the search feature that Twitter built into its technology when it bought Summize. Technorati founder David Sifry has long since left the company, and he’s now at the helm of a new start-up called Offbeat Guides.

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Technorati acquires ‘online magazine’ Blogcritics

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Yahoo OneSearch finds a home on your Nokia

Thursday, August 21st, 2008
(Credit: Yahoo Inc.)

Starting Thursday, searching the Web with a Nokia series 60 phone will be a little faster.

Yahoo’s mobile team has released a free shortcut for OneSearch, Yahoo’s search engine, that will live on your phone’s home screen. The OneSearch widget promises to cut your labor two ways; first, by giving you a place to begin a Web search as soon as you turn on the phone and second, by suggesting search terms as soon as you start typing.

The home screen search widget has already been in effect on other mobile platforms, but this add-on software gives it greater prominence than it might otherwise receive.

The convenience of the home screen search bar could also make this OneSearch widget the most effective of Yahoo’s latest experiments in pushing its search platform, including last April’s launch of OneSearch 2.0, a version that accepts voice search.

Yahoo has its stalwart supporters, but this application’s degree of success will depend on just how many Google search-loyalists end up suspending that preference in order to save time with Yahoo’s search bar.

Yahoo’s OneSearch shortcut will work immediately on Nokia N70, N95, N73, 6120, and E65 models, with support for other models and platforms reportedly coming soon.

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