Posts Tagged ‘ Twitter ’

The Hype is Dead. Long live the Hype.

Posted in FreeTime, General on July 2nd, 2009 by asjs
So, you hear a lot less about cloud computing these days and a lot more about “the Real Time Internet.” In a move that should surprise exactly no one, hype factory TechCrunch is going to be hosting an event about the implications of Real Time. I expect to see more of these events, seminars, and camps from the usual suspects over the coming months.
Find out more about the TechCrunch event  here!
Rest assured that Graphient will not be changing its business model or the specs of FreeTime to meet this new challenge head on. Like the Cloud, Real Time is an important concept to keep in mind as technology evolves in front of us. Filtered streams of data are exciting and in many ways important to the work we are doing at Graphient. But true Real Time is still a long way off and the oncoming hype spasm  will likely muddy the waters in many ways. Much like it did for Cloud Computing.
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#Tehran

Posted in Off Topic on June 17th, 2009 by asjs

I’m going to get a little off topic here.

Here at Graphient our thoughts are with those engaged in a higher stakes game than any startup ever could be. This morning I set Tweetdeck to search for “Tehran” for about an hour and watched the messages of hope and revolution stream by. It is amazing to see a technology derided by so many as useless and narcissistic have such a profound effect on world affairs.

Good luck to the Iranian people. And to Twitter: congratulations, your shipment of relevance has arrived.

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Visualizing Randomness

Posted in things we liked on May 22nd, 2009 by asjs

Apparently, it’s free-for-all Friday here at Graphient. I just started using live search in TweetDeck for the word “visualization” and I feel like I jacked my head straight into the internerd. Also I drank a lot of green tea just now.

Ok, randomness is a really hard thing. Deriving actual randomness is hard work. A lot of mathematical models have been created over the years to describe randomness. Conveniently for you dear reader, this guy Daniel A. Becker has visualized a bunch of them for you. Enjoy this tasty and nutritious treat here.

Poisson Distribution. Look out Roger Mexico.

Poisson Distribution. Look out Roger Mexico.

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Everything New is Old Again

Posted in Off Topic on May 19th, 2009 by asjs

This is going to be a little off topic for us, but bear with me. When did facebook start feeling old and sort of lame? Well, if you’re me, it always seemed a little lame. But now it feels outdated too. And not just because Twitter is getting all the glory. It feels outdated to me because ad supported business models feel outdated to me.

I’ve lived through a couple of iterations of the Internet now. When excitement over content was rekindled at the beginning of web 2.0 it seemed like advertising was going to pay for everything, and thus what would otherwise be expensive services would be delivered to users for free. Everything became (just like in the 90s!) about leveraging content. This time around the content was user generated, so it didn’t represent a cost center for the companies serving ads against it. Or at least not an obvious cost center. Turns out hosting all those photos isn’t cheap. It also turns out that the advertisers aren’t quite as full of money as they may have seemed initially. Particularly when the economy is coming down around everyone’s ears.

The whole ad-supported model is starting to feel a little stale. And with it, ad-supported businesses like facebook are starting to feel a little stale if not outright spammy. Mapping the social graph in order to better serve audiences to advertisers seems like pre-crash thinking. The so called attention economy is giving way to the real economy.

It’s no longer going to be about eyeballs, it’s going to be about providing real services and charging for them. The fact that the world’s hottest startup, Twitter isn’t thinking about advertising but about tools in its search for revenue seems to confirm that. The web is growing up, and as it does it is going to start providing more relevant and compelling services than ever before. The next web isn’t the social web, it’s the useful web.

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