Here it is again (I walked into it again uh here)
create your own Southpark character online.
Absolutely brilliant, addictive and ofcourse… haven’t you placed yours already on your weblog?
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Here it is again (I walked into it again uh here)
create your own Southpark character online.
Absolutely brilliant, addictive and ofcourse… haven’t you placed yours already on your weblog?
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Open Source Social Networking Applications Written in Java
Quite an interesting list of open source social networking applications
Can anyone explain me why, for about the past week, my mailbox is overflowing with Plaxo invites?
I mentioned Plaxo somewhere in 2004 for the first time. It is uh was uhm still is but now much more … an online address book. If everyone would be in there then there would be no need to update your address book yourself since all your friends, family and business contacts would update their profile by themselves. Quite handy.
Of course, I liked this idea, so I tried to convince some people to use it back then, but unfortunately noone liked the idea of entering their private address data in such online system. Of all the invitations I send pretty much noone signed up. Even worse: PC-Active (the Dutch IT magazine) published an article around that time that it is against the Dutch law to keep such a database
Until Recently I used it to synchronize with my (PocketPC) Outlook back and forth, quite handy, but not so handy that still noone I know irl is in there.
And now… somehow either Plaxo’s new Pulse service or their "first kid around the block using Open Social" is really kicking off (media writing about it, bloggers blogging, readers reading, readers signing up). I can honestly say that I’ve never experienced such a mega bulkload of invites to join a social network in one week. I think I just added 50 new connections, who knows what is coming in next week.
And uh… yes… after claiming "internet" on http://www.linkedin.com/in/internet, http://www.flickr.com/internet, etc… of course I can be found on http://internet.myplaxo.com
Feel free to send me an invite!
The wonderful horrible life of Facebook users and their data (or, "data hogs get slaughtered")
The betrayal of facebook to their users
Spock organizes Humanity
The application Spock mines the Internet for information on people and allows users to claim and customize their profile. It has become the dominant people search application on the Internet. The coming years it might become the de facto standard for finding and specifying information on individuals within the (web) applications marketplace.
Within the IT Enterprise landscape we can differentiate markets and within each market, e.g. software applications we can define areas, e.g. CRM, ERP, Supply chain management and business intelligence. Within each of these areas we have a clear view on the leaders of these segments and the followers, e.g. by using Gartner’s reports (or any of the dozens of other IT Research and Consultancy companies).
“The Internet” however is still too young and pretty much too alive to pinpoint the exact markets. It is as if each day new applications arise which somehow define a complete new area which noone noticed before but which actually fulfils a need for people or companies. When we give it a try we find “search”, “market places” and a lot more. Many of the leading web sites are transforming to provide a multitude of services and applications for users which somehow makes them comparable to an application that provides more features with each new release.
Applications that manage to become the leader in their segments should not be underestimated. When they maintain their position they will become essential building blocks for the coming decade. Furthermore these web applications could take over the leadership in accompanying markets or provide additional essential functionality in traditional markets.
When we look at the “traditional” applications who deal with “humans” we find among others (we can extend this list to dozens of areas):
All of these applications focus on the needs for companies and organizations. The Internet however is a wide open space where “humanity” resides and which different needs and brought applications for humans from a different more open angle. During the past years different groups of web applications arose who tackle parts of these needs.
Especially during this era of web2.0 social web software the list of common web applications is near endless. One of the most interesting arising new areas is the one of people search in the wide open Internet domain.
On the Internet we can find information on humans, both alive and dead, both famous and not famous. Challenges here are:
Spock.com is a collaborative web application, founded on advanced academic algorithms, which is currently becoming the leader in this market. There is a reason why this is happening:
For illustration purposes we will give some examples of the current ways you can use Spock.com to help you (I had to refrain myself to stop at these examples):
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Investigate companies or organizations e.g. IBM.In the example you can see that the the CEO, Sam Palmisano, is the first in the list. Which may sound obvious, but remember that it is not easy to find this ordered human list anywhere else (although it could be discussed if Thomas Watson should be #1). When you follow the list you get an amazing alternate human view on the company. Clicking through on persons or tags gives more and more insight on persons and human relations e.g. which politicians do they support.
It can be seen as Google who started by providing simple “most clicked” rankings on the dmoz directory and slowly providing more functionality around it. tip: where do you rank in your company? |
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Find human information on topics e.g. badmintonSurprisingly we don’t find the world champions at the top but… the chief architect of Spock The interesting thing here is that I can immediately add interesting webpages on Zhang Ning myself and so help the community with adding useful information on these persons. It also allows the community to influence the order of appearance of persons in this list. tip: try your own favorite sport or hobby. |
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Find out who is behind an e-mail address.Uhm… I know this guy from somewhere. But seriously: in time you could well imagine this becoming a global directory system or even being coupled with internal directory and identity systems. In terms of imaginable integrations with both classic IT systems and other web applications the possibilities are endless.
tip: try your known e-mail addresses |
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Use advanced search algorithms to find a specific group of people. In this example: blond hair, between 18 and 25, with photograph, female and location worldwide Groups, organizations and companies could add tag strategies to escape the strict hierarchical system of a normal directory based internal address book. It allows you to search for all developers in your company who specialize in C#.NET and like to drink red wine for example. And yes, private tags are coming and the API to interface with Spock is already available. tip: try the advanced search to search for people with your interests in a certain age group. |
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Investigate Persons e.g. Ivanka Trump.You can find out relations (hey, look who she is married to), read up on the bio or the latest news or click through on tags or related people.
Just like concepts as startpagina allow to have 1 webmaster collect information on 1 topic, I can imagine certain dedicated persons will take ownership of persons. E.g. just collect all information on certain politicians, reporters or movie stars and add the latest images and news on this person. It will become the main hub around certain persons and “specialists” who keep dossiers on persons. tip: try finding politicians, movie stars, sport stars, business icons, inventors, famous historic persons, musicians and even add your tags and information you know about them. |
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Claim your own profile.It allows you to take control over the information people will find when they look for your name. It also provides a convenient way to list all your social network profiles, relations and tags that are relevant for you in one place.
Spock offers both Flash and Javascript widgets to place on your website / sidebar so you can use it as a one-stop solution for an “about you” page linked from your web site: |
Apart from these examples it is already possible to use the API to query Spock for persons and integrate this in your (web) applications. E.g you could write a WordPress plugin which automatically lists the most important persons on a certain tag, integrate person’s information and news and so on (so your blog content will continuously stay up-to-date) or for corporate use to integrate it with existing person applications as mentioned above (CRM, directory services, who-is-who, etc…). Magazines and newspapers could integrate it with dossiers on persons.
As a conclusion: Spock has opened up it’s service to the public for about 3 months now but has already gained a leadership in a market that may well have to defined much broader than just “people search”. Both end-users as well as organizations and companies can benefit greatly from it already at this stage. The collaborative aspect and the wide range of possible applicable use cases including usage of the API makes it a playground of opportunities for third parties.
As a personal side-note: there were so many possible interesting ideas/items on my list to add to this blog article that it will be welcome topic for the coming years that I will give it a tag of it’s own.
Use DNA to find family
The well known genealogy portal Ancestry.com as of now offers DNA based genealogy searches and DNA analysis for this purpose. Via DNA analysis it is possible to find family relations without any documents.
Edward de Leau
Amersfoort
***
I picked up the news that Ancestry.com now also offers DNA analysis and DNA based genealogy services to find relatives. A while ago I’ve already made a swab sample for analyzing my DNA for the Genographic project and luckily Ancestry lets me import these findings.
However Ancestry’s DNA analysis packages also offer much more complete analysis showing both paternal and maternal information, these packages start at $149 for the basic paternal information, $199 for 13 additional markers and $179 for the maternal lineage test. I have to think about these offerings. Basically the paternal information I currently have is enough for basic genealogical studies but the maternal test is of course a nice addition to find relatives in the female forefathers line.
After submitting your DNA (or in my case manually entering the results from earlier DNA tests) it shows you the results in a similar way as the Genographic project. It shows you your Haplogroup (in my case R1b) and the journey your direct ancestors have made across the world for the past 40.000 years. We have seen this before.
However, the most interesting part of Ancestry.com providing this service is the fact that the vast amount of contributors and members of this genealogy site makes it a source of many other humans on this earth who could end up being your relatives. It’s simply a game of numbers. The service is just starting up but after trying to button “Find Paternal Matches” it showed me already a list of humans enlisted in Ancestry.com who have some kind of relation with me. By using the slider ´close´ to ´distant´ it allows you to filter on relatives close to you based on your submitted DNA.
´Distant´ means that the persons mentioned here match with you within 70 generations. I already found 57 persons who are ´family´ 70 generation ago, does that boggle your mind? It does here in mine. When I moved the slider closer to ´close´ I could only go to 40 generation back which gave me 1 female person, About 34 generations ago (850 years) her branch split off from my main family branch. She lives in WA in North America. Without a doubt I will be able to move my slider more to ´close´ the coming months as the users of this service grow in number.
The amazing thing about this is that my own family tree dates back about 500 years ago (Nicolet le Pinson). I can’t go any further up because there are simply no documents left. I often wondered what we did let’s say 1000 years ago. This new method and fortunately the growing amount of genealogy sites, like Ancestry.com, who use DNA based search may give me and you the answer.♦
Donald Knuth must Pay / the 7 missing checks
Donald Knuth, known for creating the text compiler TeX and writing the programming bibles `The Art of Computer Programming` is also legendary for writing reward checks to readers who found errors in his books. Seven of them are still untraceable although he has checks ready for them. Weblogger Jelle starts a web 2.0 initiative to find them.
Edward de Leau
Amersfoort
***
I received an e-mail from weblogger Jelle, who was a former class-mate during my university years. He had an interesting idea. We all know Donald Knuth as one of the living legends in the IT world. He not only created the text language and compiler that is required at many universities and publishers to deliver books and papers but he also wrote “The Art of Computer Programming“, a series of books which pretty much summarizes all essential information for programmers to know.
One of the legends surrounding these books is the reward Donald Knuth offers for finding each and every mistake in one of this books. He has send out many checks but unfortunately 7 checks could not be delivered because all snail mail information was lost. The seven persons who “are lost” are the following, according to this website:
Jelle makes an interesting observation: now that the web 2.0 era has started and many many people are online in all kinds of social networks it must be much easier to actually tracks these people down and forward Donald Knuth their addresses (note that he does not read e-mail!). I thought this was a superb idea and I also thought this can only work if it is somehow viral.
So Jelle (and me) would like to call upon anyone reading this to make your own blogpostings about the 7 missing checks and/or forward this message in your own social networks so we can track these 7 persons down. For all I know this should be a simple thing to achieve in this social web era. Let me know if you find someone and you will become a web 2.0 hero!
update: one person found !!!! 1 down 6 to go!!!
update 2: midori found (see comments), 5 to go!
update 3: I noticed Knuth removed Mustafa and Ralf Roth so I assume that they have been found since posting this, I hope because of this viral Internet effort, 3 to go!
update 4: Janet was crossed off the list
update 5: Schlomo comments that he has contacted Knuth, he is still on the website of Knuth so I will wait until he is crossed from that spot but as far as I can see…….. only 1 to go!!!!
I just had the following idea:
Everyone who participates in a new history based community registers a certain date in history e.g. “16-06-1171.com” and then devotes the complete web site to this topic. He or she then also links back to the previous date and to the next date. Slowly a time line will arise which covers the complete history.
There are many widgets you could place on it: “today Einstein turned 13″ or “the top 5 favorite dates”.
I can see it before me: “claim your favorite date now!” (obviously sub-communities around the same date could also be possible) and advertisers lining up because a certain date is essential to them.
Hmm…
The contest for the new Mister Wong logo has started. Starting now, you can vote for your 12 favorite out of over 1800 submitted designs.
The German based company Mister Wong removed their old logo, of a Chinese man, after being criticized and accused of racism.
Picking a new logo through the community is of course also a great publicity stunt.
The thousands of possible logo’s are categorized in the categories Abstract, Animals, Cartoon, Fantasy, Nature, Symbols and Typography.
It’s also a great study guide to get some ideas for your own logo (like the not-yet-existing-logo for this weblog).
There have been major lengthy discussions about the addition of avatar photographs the past year. 50% is against and 50% is before but I noticed that the “aye” camp apparently won since it is now possible to add your avatar picture to your profile.
Kwero is the dutch Yahoo Answers, which recently started.
It has several categories like the english questions variants and somehow brings along the same addictiveness of both answering questions and responding to questions.
On a Question on Sonja Bakker, I quoted this fabulous quote (only understandable for Dutch persons): “Sonja Bakker is een gewichtconsulent, ze heeft een cursus bij de LOI gedaan. Diëtisten zijn vier jaar in opleiding.”
If you have knowledge on some area, visit it and help some people out, you can win some neat money prices by answering questions.
I’m sort of a social network gypsy This could be the title of a song but it’s the best way to describe my behaviour on the social net. I travel from social environment to social environment and every week my focus lies in another area.
I wonder if more end-users fall into this category?
I tend to stay a week or two very active on a forum / social network / mailinglist / blog / community, create my profile, chat a bit, do something useful for the community and then tend to move on to shift my eye of sauron to another place. Usually I am triggered to visit a place because I read about it somewhere, found some old bookmarks or just googled on related questions in my mind and find some really useful communities.
The bad thing about this behaviour is that my e-mail box grows with reminders and invites and updates, my passwords list become infinite and my time slowly grows to minus 24 hours availability. The good thing is that I meet quite some interesting people, read a lot and keep up2date with the latest buzz.
In my mind is now to set up a social network gypsy community. A sort of AA for all those web2.0 travellers who can share their stories with one another. It’s like the tavern where the party settles for a moment after a long quest and finds new quests to accept solely or with some heroes found in the tavern.
Numpa, de Nederlandse Twitter, was de afgelopen maanden nog ‘in beta-versie’ online, maar is nu volwassen! Sinds begin deze week is Numpa 1.0 live, en fors vernieuwd ten opzichte van de beta-versie.
Zo kent Numpa nu channels, waarbinnen mensen met een gemeenschappelijke interesse (koken, film, politiek, design, etc.) elkaar treffen. Ook kunnen gebruikers zelf channels aanmaken; open toegankelijk voor alle ge