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CaffiNation 234: GardenCaffiNation 234: Garden
from The CaffiNation Podcast
May 19, 2008

This show sponsored by GoToMeeting, Try it Free for 30 days For this special offer, visit www.gotomeeting.com/techpodcasts On Today s Show: Wii, Exercise, Olympics, robots, decaf, ice cream Gardening refreshes the mind, and bring you this episode Real News Bytes Back to the Drawing Board with Form over Function Fridays Olympic issue, Cyborgs up next History of Exer-Gaming PC for Teens This [...]
Buzz Out Loud 725: CBS' podcast of indeterminate lengthBuzz Out Loud 725: CBS' podcast of indeterminate length
from Buzz Out Loud from CNET
May 15, 2008

In today's episode, Leo Laporte drops in (and out) to discuss the future of CNET, the future of Yahoo, and lack of future we'll all have if the Air Force doesn't stop trying to build a real-life Skynet. Also, Leo points out why we should probably all delete our Plaxo accounts, Nintendo gets patent trolled, and can we leave Twitter? At least for one day?
2008 05-15 MediaBytes: ICAHN - YAHOO - COMCAST - GOOGLE - VERIZON - LIMO - TURNER NETWORKS2008 05-15 MediaBytes: ICAHN - YAHOO - COMCAST - GOOGLE - VERIZON - LIMO - TURNER NETWORKS
from my videos
May 15, 2008

Author: Media30 Added: Thu, 15 May 2008 14:52:31 -0800 Duration: 118* ICAHN launching proxy contest. * COMCAST buys social networking site. * GOOGLE officially #1. * VERIZON snubs GOOGLE for LIMO. * TURNER to start contextual ad targeting. Read more at http://www.ShellyPalmer.com
2008 05-15 MediaBytes: ICAHN - YAHOO - COMCAST - GOOGLE - VERIZON - LIMO - TURNER NETWORKS2008 05-15 MediaBytes: ICAHN - YAHOO - COMCAST - GOOGLE - VERIZON - LIMO - TURNER NETWORKS
from my videos
May 15, 2008

Author: Media30 Added: Thu, 15 May 2008 12:22:33 -0800 Duration: 118* ICAHN launching proxy contest. * COMCAST buys social networking site. * GOOGLE officially #1. * VERIZON snubs GOOGLE for LIMO. * TURNER to start contextual ad targeting. Read more at http://www.ShellyPalmer.com
2008 05-15 MediaBytes: ICAHN - YAHOO - COMCAST - GOOGLE - VERIZON - LIMO - TURNER NETWORKS2008 05-15 MediaBytes: ICAHN - YAHOO - COMCAST - GOOGLE - VERIZON - LIMO - TURNER NETWORKS
from Most Recent
May 15, 2008

Author: Media30 Added: Thu, 15 May 2008 12:22:33 -0800 Duration: 118* ICAHN launching proxy contest. * COMCAST buys social networking site. * GOOGLE officially #1. * VERIZON snubs GOOGLE for LIMO. * TURNER to start contextual ad targeting. Read more at http://www.ShellyPalmer.com
2008 05-15 MediaBytes: ICAHN - YAHOO - COMCAST - GOOGLE - VERIZON - LIMO - TURNER NETWORKS2008 05-15 MediaBytes: ICAHN - YAHOO - COMCAST - GOOGLE - VERIZON - LIMO - TURNER NETWORKS
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
May 15, 2008

* ICAHN launching proxy contest. * COMCAST buys social networking site. * GOOGLE officially #1. * Verizon snubs Google for Limo. * TURNER to start contextual ad targeting. Read more at http://www.ShellyPalmer.com
EVo_uVme_launchEVo_uVme_launch
from Dailymotion - most recent videos
May 14, 2008

Author: kydecnisa Tags: EVo uVme launch VWD Business sex MLM free download travel Vista porno plaxo windows video music soft расписание общение сайт дизайн Nokia Telme МТС Wi-Fi YouTube Posted: 15 May 2008 Rating: 0.0 Votes: 0
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SearchEngineUpdate with Vanessa Zamora - 05-12-2008SearchEngineUpdate with Vanessa Zamora - 05-12-2008
from my videos
May 12, 2008

Author: sew Added: Mon, 12 May 2008 11:55:29 -0800 Duration: 1641. Semantic Search Engine Powerset Launches In Beta, 2. Facebook Connect & Google Friend Connect Announced
Silona Interviews Joseph Smarr and Bob BlakelySilona Interviews Joseph Smarr and Bob Blakely
from - blip.tv (beta)
April 08, 2008

Silona interviews Joseph Smarr (Plaxo) and Bob Blakely (Burton Group) during SXSW 2008. In a lively, bubble-tea-fueled conversation (courtesy of Momoko), they discuss issues of identity and reputation, with a focus on the advantages and perils of OpenID, user trust, transparency, licenses and rights, and the patenting of technology.
Curley family skiing in UtahCurley family skiing in Utah
from YouTube :: Tag // christmas
March 30, 2008

We went to Salt Lake for a few days of skiing after having Christmas in San Jose Author: curlep Keywords: skiing family curley petecurley plaxo Added: March 30, 2008
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SXSW Panel on Data Portability (clip 1)SXSW Panel on Data Portability (clip 1)
from YouTube :: Tag // SXSW
March 11, 2008

Jospeh Smarr on better approaches to finding who you know on other social sites. Author: therealmccrea Keywords: joseph smarr plaxo data portability Added: March 11, 2008
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Nielsen - Google - Comcast - Apple - Clear Channel - MediaBytes February 14, 2008Nielsen - Google - Comcast - Apple - Clear Channel - MediaBytes February 14, 2008
from my videos
February 14, 2008

Author: Media30 Added: Thu, 14 Feb 2008 12:16:20 -0800 Duration: 1409* NIELSEN conducts study of online viewing patterns. * GOOGLE sees large number of searches from iPhone users. * KEVIN MARTIN asks cable to carry low-power stations. * COMCAST acquires PLAXO. * APPLE unleashes HD rentals. * CLEAR CHANNEL sale for $19 billion approved. Get the full story at http://www.Media30.com.
Nielsen - Google - Comcast - Apple - Clear Channel - MediaBytes February 14, 2008Nielsen - Google - Comcast - Apple - Clear Channel - MediaBytes February 14, 2008
from - blip.tv (beta)
February 14, 2008

NIELSEN has released the results of a major study of online viewing habits. The study found that women are twice as likely as men to tune into network television on the web. Men 18-34 are twice as likely as women to watch user-generated content on YouTube and other video-sharing sites. The study found that 73% of regular Internet users have watched online video. GOOGLE said that iPhone users conduct 50 times more Internet searches than other mobile users - underscoring the major revenue potential for mobile advertising on well-designed Internet-capable phones. The company expects to see mobile searches surpass fixed Internet searches within a few years. However, this week Google lost a major contract with T-Mobile, who will now use Yahoo for its mobile searches. KEVIN MARTIN has issued a letter to the NCTA asking and strongly encouraging cable operators to voluntarily carry low power TV stations to help them survive the digital transition. LPTV stations are not required to switch to digital next year, and yet the FCC is hoping that most analog TV s will have digital-to-analog convertor boxes. If the transition is successful, this would leave LPTV stations broadcasting an analog signal that no one can receive. Martin s request comes in addition to his plan to grant full-power status to 500 Class A Stations, which would grant them cable carriage rights. The NCTA has asked for help from legislators in fighting off the new regulations. COMCAST has reportedly bought PLAXO for $175 million, according to Silicon Valley blog ValleyWag. Plaxo is a mixture of an online address book and social network that already provides services to Comcast customers. Rumors had circulated that Google made the acquisition, but ValleyWag claims to have spoken with sources close to the deal. Comcast has been making some major online moves of late, buying Fandango and launching video search tool Fancast.com. APPLE has released the AppleTV Take 2 a software update that brings HD movie rentals to the AppleTV box. HD rentals cost $3.99 for library titles and $4.99 for new releases. Users have 30 days to watch a rental and 24 hours after beginning a movie before it is automatically deleted. CLEAR CHANNEL s sale to two private equity firms for $19 billion has been approved by the Department of Justice. In related news, Clear Channel is backtracking on its experimental new advertising initiative. The Less is More program was designed to use incredibly short commercials that, in theory, would bring in higher rates and give listeners a more satisfying listening experience. Since launching the program overall revenue has shrunk and prices for the short ads have been lower than expected. The company has been emphasizing the program less while adding more commercial breaks, which runs counter to its original plan. Get the full story at http://www.Media30.com.
Companies Join to Change Future of WebCompanies Join to Change Future of Web
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
January 24, 2008

Wouldn t it be great to be able to transfer your data from your profile on one social network to your profile on another social network? The Data Portability Workgroup is aiming to do that very thing. WebProNews Reporter Abby Prince talked with Chris Saad, DataPorability.org s Co-Founder and Chairman, about the initiative. The Data Portability Workgroup contains many companies including Google, Plaxo, Facebook, and LinkedIn, just to name a few. Plaxo s John McCrea and Joseph Smarr talked to WebProNews about their role in the recent incident involving Robert Scoble and Facebook. Catch all the details, only on WebProNews.
OpenSocial Hackathon: Joseph Smarr of PlaxoOpenSocial Hackathon: Joseph Smarr of Plaxo
from YouTube :: Videos by GoogleDevelopers
January 24, 2008

Patrick chats with Joseph about their OpenSocial growth and the hackathon itself. Author: GoogleDevelopers Keywords: development web socialnetworks opensocial google plaxo Added: January 24, 2008
GNC-2008-01-15 #339GNC-2008-01-15 #339
from Geek News Central Podcast
January 15, 2008

Back from Vegas back in the Saddle and ready to bring you the latest hot topics plus a full run down of everything that has been going on including some inside information. Sponsors: Special Promotion code 20% off on 1 Year Shared Hosting Plans use Godaddy Code Todd20 [Save 10% off on any order at GoDaddy.com!] Use Code Todd [Try GoToMeeting free for 30 days at GoToMeeting.com/techpodcasts. No credit card needed.] Twitter Me http://www.twitter.com/geeknews My Facebook Profile Comments to 619-342-7365 e-mail to geeknews@gmail.com Listener Links: Ford Trademark www.sciencedebate2008.com Bill's Gallery Portable EVDO Router Network Solutions shady .com Practices Solar Charger No Love for ASUS Customer Reports on Companies Radio QRM Podcast RIAA Liners Updated Battery Rules Show Notes: Solar Masterpiece Ford Trademark Apple Ultra Portable? Google Maps and Weather Channel Macbook Air? RIAA opens Mouth Again Netflix Video on Demand Unlimited Views OLPC Dissected USB 2.0 Universal HDD Adapter Vista SP1 RC Refresh Droboshare FeedDemon and NetNewsWire FREE! FeedDemon Crack ;) Facebook to buy Plaxo? Why? iTransmogrify Journalist using Bloggers WiMax Enabled ASUS EE PC Google and iPhone Bad Review Request DMCA Takedown Hubble Repair Plans Shuttle Launch Feb 7th
Data Portability UpdateData Portability Update
from YouTube :: Tag // techcrunch
January 08, 2008

A brief update on today's developments: TechCrunch Post: http://tinyurl.com/2tvgc9 Data Portability.org: http://www.dataportability.org/ Author: tlg847 Keywords: Data Portability Google Facebook Plaxo tlg847 Added: January 8, 2008
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Scoble and PlaxoScoble and Plaxo
from popular posts - blip.tv (beta)
January 03, 2008

A fraud.
Scoble and PlaxoScoble and Plaxo
from Dailymotion - 1938media's most recent videos
January 03, 2008

A fraud.Author: 1938media Tags: 1938media scoble facebook plaxo Posted: 03 January 2008 Rating: 0.0 Votes: 0
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[ポ] Mobile Safari 向けサービス / Plaxo でカレンダーの同期[ポ] Mobile Safari 向けサービス / Plaxo でカレンダーの同期
from ...My cup of tea...
December 27, 2007

いつの間にやら今年もあと数日。28日が仕事納めで忘年会のため東京へ出張。あやうく、帰りの新幹線の切符が買えないところでした。なんとか、グリーン車がとれました。 12/24のクリスマスイブは、AirBonchiの生放送を聴きながらチャットに参加してました。チャットにも参加し、非常に楽しかったですね。大晦日も生放送をやるとのことですが、大晦日は参加は難しいかもです。 そして、iPod touch に載っている Safari のお話。 mail@mycupoftea.cc 1. Touch The Sky / The Sky Project 2. It's Not My Place / John Hoskinson  BGM : for a saintly night / kcsaito
Snowboarding, love, and cross dressing -- in 3D!Snowboarding, love, and cross dressing -- in 3D!
from YouTube :: Tag // superbowl
November 16, 2007

http://mergitaubplb.piczo.com Author: mergitaubplb Keywords: Superbowl supersunday football commercials startup meebo meez multiply plaxo rockyou technorati roscoe animation avatar Added: November 16, 2007
Plaxo & Open Social - Joseph SmarrPlaxo & Open Social - Joseph Smarr
from - blip.tv (beta)
November 03, 2007

Joseph Smarr demonstrates and discusses Plaxo's OpenSocial implementation, taking questions from Marc Canter and Adam Green. This was shot on FRI November 2, 2007 on location at Plaxo's HQ in Mountain View, CA
MediaBytes 10.31.2007MediaBytes 10.31.2007
from my videos
October 31, 2007

Author: Media30 Added: Wed, 31 Oct 2007 12:55:12 -0800 Duration: 113* MYSPACE CMO Shawn Gold resigns. * GOOGLE plans "universal" social network apps. * NBC U sells in-game ads for IGA WORLDWIDE. * AOL educates consumers about targeted advertising. * FOX sells out 90% of Super Bowl spots. Get the Story at Media30.com.
vSocial Video - MediaBytes 10.31.2007vSocial Video - MediaBytes 10.31.2007
from vSocial - Latest Video Uploads
October 31, 2007

* MYSPACE CMO Shawn Gold resigns. * GOOGLE plans universal social network apps. * NBC U sells in-game ads for IGA WORLDWIDE. * AOL educates consumers about targeted advertising. * FOX sells out 90% of Super Bowl spots. Get the Story at Media30.com.
MediaBytes 10.31.2007MediaBytes 10.31.2007
from MediaBytes
October 31, 2007

* MYSPACE CMO Shawn Gold resigns. * GOOGLE plans "universal" social network apps. * NBC U sells in-game ads for IGA WORLDWIDE. * AOL educates consumers about targeted advertising. * FOX sells out 90% of Super Bowl spots. Get the Story at Media30.com.
OpenFaced Panel: Opening up the Social GraphOpenFaced Panel: Opening up the Social Graph
from PodTech.net: Technology and Entertainment Video Network
October 24, 2007

Tom Foremski and Lee Cummings capture the business and technology of Facebook during their recent Graphing Social Patterns conference. Opening up the social web, user content, viral applications, user etiquette, privacy and profiles are discussed as Tantek Celik moderates David Recordon (SixApart), Chamath Palihapitiya (Facebook), Joseph Smarr (Plaxo) and Ted Grubb (Satisfaction Unlimited). Will controlling data compliment open standards? Are privacy and trust standards capable of keeping pace with the influx of application designs? Without secure information, is the social graph a reliable? Tags: Graphing Social Patterns, social web, user content, viral applications, user etiquette, Tantek Celik, David Recordon, SixApart, Chamath Palihapitiya, Facebook, Joseph Smarr, Plaxo, Ted Grubb, Satisfaction Unlimited
Snowboarding, love, and cross dressing -- in 3D!Snowboarding, love, and cross dressing -- in 3D!
from YouTube :: Tag // superbowl
October 17, 2007

Visit http://Mahi66275.blogspot.com for more videos :) Author: Mahi66275 Keywords: Superbowl supersunday football commercials startup meebo meez multiply plaxo rockyou technorati roscoe animation avatar Added: October 17, 2007
Sree Sreenivasan 001, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, New Media Professor: Mr. Media Interview, Pt. 1Sree Sreenivasan 001, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, New Media Professor: Mr. Media Interview, Pt. 1
from Mr. Media
October 19, 2007

I don’t know about you, but I could spend hours on end doing stuff on the Internet, some of it productive, some of it, well, not. And some days, it’s hard separating the two because one is generally just as distracting as the other. I’m hoping that today’s guest, Sree Sreenivasan, can help all of us sort out the time-wasters from the time-benefitters. And no, I don’t think that’s a real word. Sree is one of journalism’s last great multi-taskers. He’s a New Media professor and dean of students in the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. But he’s also a technology reporter for WNBC television in New York City and a regular columnist for Poynter Online. Oh, and he is, naturally, a blogger too at sreetips.com. DOWNLOAD THE MP3; LISTEN HERE. ALSO AVAILABLE AS A PODCAST ON iTUNES. Subscribe to Mr. Media's RSS Feed. ANDELMAN: Sree, Facebook was recently featured on the cover of Newsweek magazine, basically alerting the general public that there was a new cultural phenomenon upon us or there had been for a while for college kids, I guess. I know you use Facebook, and I wondered if you could start by talking a little bit about how you use it and what the pros and cons of the service might be. SREENIVASAN: Facebook is one of the sites that you think you don’t need it until you start using it and then you get so addicted very fast. I got a note the other day from a friend I’ve been trying to get on Facebook for a while, and he said, “I have no use for this, I have no use for this.” And then the other day, he wrote me a note saying, “Oh my God, I love this site.” The way I look at Facebook is, it’s an example of how you can use technology as a great way to reconnect with friends and family and make some new friends. But also it shows you how much of a time thing it can be if you let it get to be that way. And we’re seeing people, including me, who can go on and an hour later, you’re emerging from it, sometimes two hours later from it. What you do is you go on to Facebook, you create an account, and you start by finding your friends. And you say, “I already have email, why do I need this? I might even be using instant messaging and a cell phone and text messages. Isn’t it just one more thing?” And, in fact, it is one more thing, but it has its own kind of style and its own attractiveness about it that is sort of hard to explain. But it’s very easy to use, and I’ve been reconnecting with friends who I have an email relationship with, but now I see them and talk to them more often on my computer screen than when I just did with email itself. ANDELMAN: One of the things I find when I’m trying to explain it to people or how to use it is -- and the step that most people seem to miss, I think, is -- uploading your email contacts from whatever email program you use. That seems to be the best way to get people started and finding people. SREENIVASAN: I think that’s a great way to do it. And whenever you write to someone, make sure you put in a little note explaining why you’re writing and why you’re using this because there are also some other services, including Friendster and Plaxo and all these things, that are just sending out, using your email contacts and connecting you to people sometimes even when you didn’t mean to connect with them. So indicate in some fashion that this is something you are serious about as opposed to some of the other services that you accidentally tried once or just tested out. But, if you’re really into this, let them know, and then your friends will follow you there. ANDELMAN: Do you have any personal stories of people you’ve reconnected with through Facebook, in particular? SREENIVASAN: Yes. I reconnected with some of my younger cousins through Facebook. Sometimes -- and this is also an example of how you can be careful about it -- there’s one particular cousin who I connected with, and we’re now emailing a lot more than I did before or Facebooking a lot more than we did before. But I also noticed that, as everyone in her generation, she’s putting up photographs and putting up details of her life that no older cousin should know about, mainly so that I have a kind of plausible deniability from my uncle and aunt. If they ever ask me, “So how is so and so doing, what is she up to?” I can say I don’t know. So I have often gone into people’s photographs which they’ve put and then I suddenly back out and try to erase it from mind’s hard drive. That’s just one of the ways I’ve been using it, but I’ve also been using it as a great way to communicate with former classmates and also my current students. You can form what are called groups on Facebook, and then you can set up a group, and people will find you, and they’ll populate your pages. And it’s sort of connecting with friends of friends and sharing photographs, and you wonder what did people do before they had this. Well, the answer is they had something else and before that, something else, and before that, something else. And we’ll see if Facebook becomes something that lingers on for a long time or is just a momentary thing the way some other websites were. Another one I like is linkedin.com. I used to call it “Facebook for Adults,” but that sounds too weird so I call it “Facebook for Professionals.” But like Facebook, which itself has now opened itself out, it was only for college students, but in the last year, it has opened itself out. LinkedIn is very good for business contacts. ANDELMAN: I wanted to ask you about both, and even before I do that, I want to share with you a Facebook story, about the first time I heard from someone recently who wanted to be added or add me to their Facebook friend list. Usually when you do that, you indicate how you know someone, whether it’s through professional contact or college or you were roommates or, as they put it, “hooked up” or something. And this fella sent me an email saying, “We used to work together at CBS,” which I thought, “Wow, I don’t remember working at CBS,” and then it occurred to me he was thinking of David Andelman who’s a well-known journalist, has worked at CBS and the New York Times, and I think is at Fortune now. And so I wrote back to him, and I said, “I think you probably mean David.” And the funny thing is David and I have never actually spoken or met, but we get confused for each other so much that we now refer to each other, we’re LinkedIn with each other, and we’re on Facebook together, and we refer to each other as cousin just because everyone seems to think we are. I told you that story to get to LinkedIn. LinkedIn does seem to be the professional version of Facebook. It’s more of a professional networking site than Facebook, which is more fun. Is that a fair assessment? SREENIVASAN: I think that is a fair assessment. It isn’t as Web 2.0, if you will. It doesn’t feel as kind of new and constantly being updated, and there aren’t photographs. And that’s one of the things I like about LinkedIn is it’s kind of more professional compared to Facebook. ANDELMAN: Now, your starting point is the same for both of them. As a matter of fact, for a lot of these services is that, if you want to really get into it, you upload your email contacts from your email program. And then once you get in there, it’s fascinating the way these programs do this. They can actually tell you who know who’s already in their network so you can instantly have a network. SREENIVASAN: Exactly. And that makes a big difference so that you’re not having to start from scratch every time. ANDELMAN: The thing that I get asked a lot by, like I’ve got 4,000 contacts in my address book, and I’m kinda working my way through them, inviting them on or seeing if they’re already on. But the people who aren’t on, they worry about a couple things. They worry about, “If I upload my address book is that public knowledge?” They wonder, “Am I giving out private information?” And then what they really want to know is, “How on earth can this benefit me?” How can just having a bunch of people in my network be of benefit? And that’s the question. I guess that’s the first one that I really wanted to ask you about that. SREENIVASAN: Well, I guess there’s sort of two separate questions there. The first, about whether these services will have access to your email or anything else like that. I wouldn’t use the uploads or contacts feature on some brand new site that I know nothing about, but LinkedIn and Facebook are now two real companies and have business models and have privacy policies in terms of service where they promise not to do things like that. And you kind of end up trusting those people in a way you may not trust someone else. The other thing is that it’s very hard to explain exactly how it’ll benefit, but being in a network is always helpful. And many of us are already in networks, and we just don’t realize it. We’re okay, well, I’m not a social networker online, but we use it for all kinds of things. You’re part of your high school alumni network, you’re part of your college alumni network. If you’re a season ticket holder and you go to the same seats, you’re in a network of people who sit next to you at every game for whatever team you follow. And being part of networks like that has tremendous benefits offline, and those benefits are amplified and some of the problems are amplified online. So you still have to have a good way of using it, a systematic way of using it, but the easiest way is just to try and keep in touch with your friends and family and your closest friends first. Many people say to me, “I don’t want this because I can barely deal with the friends I already have. I don’t want to make any new friends.” And I tell people, “You don’t have to look at it that way. Look at keeping better touch with the friends you already have.” My wife and I are an example of this. She and I talk on the cell phone a couple of times a day. We text message each other. We email each other. But we’ve now worked Facebook into our routine. And they have this funny little feature called “Poke Somebody,” and what she’ll do is, instead of sending me an email, she’ll go on Facebook and she’ll poke me. What that does is it’s kind of a nudge or an alert. If I’m available and online, I’ll respond, and then we’ll either have an email, phone, or Facebook conversation. If I’m not there, it’ll alert me that she was looking for me. So it’s a very subtle way of using Facebook. It’s not for everybody. But, as we’ve seen, young people are on this and also older people are on. There are Facebook groups for people over fifty, and it’s not an age thing at all. ANDELMAN: Maybe you could speak to this. Both of these services, I guess most of these services, have kind of a cascading effect in that you and I connect, for example, and then I can see all of your contacts on LinkedIn, or I can see all of your friends on Facebook. And that opens up a whole new world to me. We both do freelance writing, for example. If I’m curious and looking for other contacts, I may see you have a contact at Forbes magazine or BusinessWeek, and I can go through LinkedIn, and I can say Sree, can you give me an introduction to this person? I can’t just directly contact them on LinkedIn, but I could ask you if you would do an introduction if you feel confident about me and confident about the other person, you might open up a door. SREENIVASAN: Yes, and that’s one of the best things about LinkedIn. I have now taken to using LinkedIn exactly in that fashion. In the old days, that is before a couple years ago, if someone said to me, “I’d like to talk to Bob Andelman,” I would just email you and that person, cc: you and say, “Bob, meet Jim.” You’re stuck because, you’re a decent guy, you will feel some kind of obligation to respond to Jim and partly Jim also has your email address now. So now you’re in this kind of loop with Jim even if you didn’t want to be. So instead Jim says, “I’d like to meet Bob.” What I tell him is go to LinkedIn, find Bob on there, and then connect through me. Jim goes home, sets up a LinkedIn account, and then he emails, using the system, he emails a note to you, but it stops at my desk first. I then decide whether it’s worth connecting Jim to you, and I forward it to you. You then see this note, and you have the option of whether you want to respond or not. And if you decide not to respond, no problem. Jim never got your address. And that’s one of the most basic ways in which this works, and that’s what makes it so useful because your email address has not been compromised by me. You are choosing to respond to him or not. And I know many, many cases where I’ve done this with very busy, very important people, and many of them have appreciated this kind of new way of connecting. And it’s different from yet another email in your inbox so that’s why people are looking into things like this. ANDELMAN: Now, the way we’re talking about these, people might think that we’re thinking of MySpace as yesterday’s news. Personally, to me, it is yesterday’s news. I find it to be very sloppy, very messy, just way too wild for my taste professionally and personally. Is there a backlash going on for MySpace, or am I just too particular about my friends? SREENIVASAN: Well, MySpace was bought for $800 million, I believe, by Murdoch and the folks over at News Corp, something in that range. And that was because it was one of the biggest sites on the planet at that time, and it’s still very, very big. But I do find it kind of yesterday’s news, partly because it was never meant for people in my age group. It was aimed at much younger folks even though there are people older than me on it. It didn’t have a sense of aesthetics, design, or a kind of welcoming environment. When I teach technology to my students, I tell them that I can teach you two of the three T’s, the letter T, T for tools, T for technology. I cannot teach you the third T, which is taste. And when you go to a lot of MySpace pages, they look like they’ve been made in fingerpainting class. And so I never felt comfortable. You go to Facebook, there’s a certain, what we call user interface. It’s got a good user interface. The information architecture is nice. But mainly, it’s intuitive and easy to understand. One other point I’ll make is when we talk about money and the hundreds of millions of dollars that were offered for MySpace. One of the first of these social networking websites was Friendster. And the founder of Friendster turned down a billion dollar buyout a few years ago, and I believe he’s come to regret it since. And Friendster is nowhere near where Facebook is, but in recent weeks, Facebook has turned down or reportedly turned down a $6 billion buyout offer itself. So it will be interesting to see if Facebook ends up like Friendster or ends up like Google. No one knows where it’s gonna go. I’d also say that we in America tend to be very eccentric about these things. And something like Friendster is very popular outside of America but not used as much in America. Even Google has a product which has not done well in America called Orkut, which almost no American I know of is on but is huge in Brazil. Literally, if you were trying to have the equivalent of a Super Bowl ad in Brazil, you would get it on Orkut, not on Facebook or Friendster or MySpace. So culturally and for other reasons, some other groups are on other services and not necessarily the ones we’re on today. And that might change again in a couple years. Click Here to Keep Reading! © 2007 by Bob Andelman. All rights reserved.
YUI Theater — Joseph Smarr: “High-Performance JavaScript: Why Everything You’ve Been Taught is Wrong”YUI Theater — Joseph Smarr: “High-Performance JavaScript: Why Everything You’ve Been Taught is Wrong”
from Yahoo! User Interface Blog
August 29, 2007

Joseph Smarr is the Chief Platform Architect at Plaxo, Inc., where he s led the engineering of Plaxo s address-book integration application. In the course of building Plaxo 3.0, which involved an ambitious foray into rich internet application design, Joseph and learned a host of lessons about the importance of performance and the means by which it can be achieved. Many of those lessons ( premature optimization is the root of all evil ) will be familiar. But some run contrary to what are commonly thought of as best practice in frontend engineering for example, the Plaxo team found that in some cases they could achieve substantial gains by attaching event handlers inline using DOM level 0 syntax (e.g. div onclick="someGlobalFunction();" ) rather than attaching them via DOM level 2 s favored addListener. In sum, Joseph argues for a four-point approach to achieving maximum performance in your web-app: Be lazy: Don t load or do things before you need to; maybe you won t need to load or do them at all. Be responsive: Make things happen quickly. If you can shave 100ms off of an interaction by responding to a mousedown event instead of a click event, do it. Be pragmatic: Frontend engineering is hard enough. Don t make it harder than it needs to be. Be vigilant: Blank web pages are fast. Web pages become slow because you put stuff in them; slowness is your resonsibility. Vigilance is required to prevent slowness. Joseph visited Yahoo! this week to reprise his recent talk from OSCON in which he enumerates these lessons and fleshes them out with practical detail and the wisdom of experience. Our thanks to Joseph for the visit and for allowing us to share his presentation publicly on YUI Theater. This video is available in Flash format on Yahoo! Video and as an MPEG-4, iPod-compatible (and iPhone-compatible!) download (change the extension from .m4v to .mp4 if your video software doesn t recognize the extension). Joseph also features in a video this week from the ScobleShow on PodTech (iPod compatible download), where he discusses some upcoming Plaxo features including an online identity aggregator based on microformats. In Case You Missed Some other recent videos from the YUI Theater series: Matt Mlinac: The YUI ImageLoader Utility (Yahoo! Video | .m4v download) Shawn Lawton Henry: Web Content Accessibility Guidelines Update (Yahoo! Video | .mp4 download) Joe Hewitt: An Introduction to iUI (Yahoo! Video | .m4v download) Karo Caran: An Introduction to Screen Maginfication Software (Yahoo! Video | .m4v download) Tags: Joseph Smarr, Plaxo, performance, javascript, optimization, web development, frontend engineering, tutuorial, video