Entries from March 2008 ↓
View original post found on TechCrunch authored by Michael Arrington
March 31st, 2008 — fun
When we hear from Aviary it’s bound to be something entertaining and fun. The New York based company remains in private beta but adds to its suite of image manipulation products regularly. The newest tool is called Dodo, a web-based time machine.
A video demo is below. You upload an image to the service and it will “age” it based on user input. An example: upload a picture of yourself, tell it how many years out you want it to age you, tell it how much you drink and smoke, and not any planned plastic surgery. It will then show you what it thinks you’ll look like down the road.
Aviary says the tool isn’t just for fun - that it may also be useful for “tracking down long missing children,” and “determining if a girlfriend will end up looking like her mother.” Demo video below.
What’s the technology behind it? Well, it’s pretty close to magic. Anything is possible in early April, it seems.
Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.


View original post found on Gizmodo authored by Adam Frucci
March 31st, 2008 — tech
How dedicated are you to using a Bluetooth microphone with your phone? Are you dedicated enough to drill a small hole in your teeth to install a tiny mic? Well, if so, here’s one for you. Hit the jump for a picture of it in-mouth and a word of warning about DIY dentistry.

The durable composite resin filling is designed to fit in a hole 2.2mm in diameter and 1.7 mm deep and will pick up sound and vibrations from your mouth to produce incredibly clear sound.
I don’t know about you, but I think I’d rather stick with a regular Bluetooth headset, especially when this thing still requires you to wear something in your ear so you can hear what’s going on. But hey, it’s up to you. And as Chinavasion, the seller, reminds you, don’t go drilling holes in your teeth yourself. “All dental work should be performed by a qualified dentist, Chinavasion does not take responsibility for injury resulting from the installation of this product.” Yikes. [Product Page via Geek Alerts]




View original post found on Boing Boing authored by Cory Doctorow
March 31st, 2008 — cool
An unknown artist fashions animals out of plastic bags and fastens them to subway gratings, and the hot air inflates them and makes them puff up and wiggle.

The story we heard at dinner tonight is that there’s an artist who’s been making these animals out of discarded plastic bags. He (or she) ties the bags to the ventilation grates above the subway lines so that when the subway rushes through underneath, the animal jumps up and springs to life.
Link
(Thanks, Marilyn!)




View original post found on TechCrunch authored by Duncan Riley
March 29th, 2008 — rss
WordPress 2.5 has been released with a major overhaul to the interface and a range of new features.
The biggest change is in the appearance of the administration backend, which is described as being a “Cleaner, faster, less cluttered dashboard.” The WordPress dashboard is now widget friendly, and users can include items such as stats, offering similar functionality to MovableType.
Other new features include multi-file uploading, one-click plugin upgrades, built-in galleries, salted passwords and cookie encryption, media library, code friendly WYSIWYG, concurrent post editing protection, full-screen writing, and improved search.
A demo video from Automattic’s Matt Mullenweg above, and further details on the WordPress blog here.
Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.


View original post found on ReadWriteWeb authored by Sarah Perez
March 28th, 2008 — rss
Have you heard about Toluu yet? This new RSS-based service, currently in private beta, lets you share your OPML with others in order to discover new feeds, see what your friends are reading, and even discover new people who share your same interests. If that sounds familiar, it’s probably because Toluu is very much like the reincarnation of the once-popular site, ShareYourOPML (now defunct), which used to do the same thing. But Toluu not only revives that site’s spirit, it does so it a much better fashion than ShareYourOPML ever did.
Toluu is the latest newcomer to the RSS scene, joining a crowded space dominated by online readers and communities like Google Reader, Shyftr, Bloglines, and aggregators like RSSMeme, the soon-to-return Readburner, and the everything lifestream of FriendFeed. Unlike those sites, however, Toluu doesn’t aim to take you away from your current RSS reader. Instead, what Toluu offers is a way to share your feeds with others in a quick and easy way.
So why does this feed sharing service have so many other bloggers talking? And why should you bother with yet another RSS service? Here are 10 good reasons why you should give Toluu a look:
- You can sign up with OpenID: Toluu starts out on the right foot by letting you sign up for the service with your OpenID. You can also choose to save yourself some typing by letting them import your profile using the hCard microformat on your profile at flickr, twitter, Technorati, Last.FM, or Upcoming. Not into OpenID yet? A regular sign-up form is still provided.
- It’s Easy: There’s not a whole lot to it. Sign up, login, and upload your OPML. You don’t have to find your friends or fill out a big user profile.
- You don’t have to do anything: Besides uploading your OPML, there isn’t anything else you have to do to benefit from the service. Although you can go through your feeds and mark your favorites, those of us with hundreds of feeds won’t take the time and we don’t have to. Toluu can make recommendations based on your feed list alone.
- Collaborative filtering helps Toluu learn: As activity on Toluu increases, what you and your friends read and tag as favorites will help you discover new feeds that you may enjoy reading. The recommendation engine is right on target. It shows your matches, what percentage compatibility you have with them, what feeds you have in common, and which ones you like. This is much better than anything ShareYourOPML ever offered.
- You won't be recommended "one-hit wonder" blogs: Remember that one guy who wrote that one post that one time? The one that hit Techmeme and then you never heard of him since? That feed wouldn’t be recommended to you, unless you showed interest in actively reading the rest of his feed on a regular basis.
- The Toluu bookmarklet helps you add new feeds with ease: Because re-importing your OPML after ever new feed added would be a pain, Toluu offers a bookmarklet that lets you add a feed to both Toluu and your preferred feed reader which will first add the feed to Toluu before continuing on to add it to your RSS reader.
- It’s not trying to replace your RSS Reader: If you wanted to, you could use it as an RSS reader, but that’s not what it’s designed to do. So it’s not a matter of you having to switch readers to enjoy using this service.
- The Feeds! No matter how many feeds you currently subscribe to, you’re bound to find more that you didn’t know existed. Plus, you can spy on the shared feeds of anyone, provided you know their username, which is a great way to find out what people read.
- The Activity Stream: The Toluu activity page gives you a quick glance at what your friends have been reading and doing on the Toluu service.
- The Potential: Granted, this, like most services today rely on having a decent userbase to find success. However, based on ShareYourOPML’s former popularity, Toluu has a great shot at filling the void that was left behind when that site disappeared.
A Toluu Profile Page
All that being said, the site still needs a bit of work before it can really take off, but since it’s still in private beta, they have the time to work out the kinks and maybe even add a couple more features, too.
For example, a search feature to find other Toluu users would be a big help, especially as they grow. Also, the notification preferences are all switched on by default, which means you’ll get emails whenever someone adds you as a contact, adds or removes a feed, or recommends a feed, and you’re automatically subscribed to the newsletter. That’s a bit much.
If you’re interested in joining Toluu, you can request a beta invite or you can comment here. I have seven to give away, so first come, first serve.
UPDATE! There are 100 invites available now. Comment here for yours!


View original post found on Ajaxian » Front Page authored by Dion Almaer
March 28th, 2008 — ajax
The Dojo team has released version 1.1 which includes from over 800 improvements:
- An easy to use and significantly improved Dojo API Viewer with some seriously great features, including the ability to easily find the original definition of a method that is “mixed-in”
- A growing collection of demos, tutorials, and articles
- A new BorderContainer Dijit, which is a much better way to handle layout-based widgets than SplitContainer and LayoutContainer
- Significant performance improvements to dojo.query and dojo.fx
- Support for Adobe AIR and Jaxer, and updated dojox.flash and dojox.offline APIs
- Major improvements to Dijit infrastructure and widgets
- All around Dijit theme improvements including the CSS structure for themes, refinements to the Tundra theme, re-introduction of the Soria theme, and the newly added Nihilo theme
- DTL, the Django Template Language, is now available for use in widgets with dojox.dtl
- Vector graphics animations
- Additions to DojoX including an analytics package
- Improvements to Dojo Data and RPC, and support for JSONPath
- Many improvements to the build system including CSS optimization, multiple-versions of the Dojo Toolkit co-existing in the same document, and other great tools for optimizing performance
What is next for Dojo 1.2?
On to 1.2, where the focus will be on continuing to refine Dijit, the Dojo Grid, Dojo Charting, a better approach to DojoX, and much much more.
View original post found on Ajaxian » Front Page authored by Rey Bango
March 28th, 2008 — ajax
With the YouTube API recently released, there’s bound to be lots of cool controls coming out soon. Thorsten Suckow-Homberg spent a weekend hacking up a Ext-based user extension that leverages YouTube’s chromeless API to build The Ext.ux.YoutubePlayer.
The Ext.ux.YoutubePlayer allows developers to embed youtube videos into Ext applications, using native Ext components for controlling the video playback. It’ll show the buffer status and let’s you jump to any part in the video using a slider component.
Cool features include:
- Showing the buffer status
- Playback slider that let’s you jump to any position in the video playback
- Mute/unmute the video
- Overall volume control

I whipped up a demo for all to see.
View original post found on Ajaxian » Front Page authored by Rey Bango
March 28th, 2008 — ajax
When Jay Salvat set out to build markItUp!, he wasn’t trying to build the next FCKEditor or TinyMCE. He just wanted to build a simple editor that could allow developers to add enhanced markup capability to textarea elements.
markItUp! is a JavaScript plugin built on the jQuery library. It allows you to turn any textarea into a markup editor. Html, Textile, Wiki Syntax, Markdown, BBcode or even your own Markup system can be easily implemented. markItUp! is not meant to be a “Full-Features-Out-of-the-Box”-editor. Instead it is a very lightweight, customizable and flexible engine made to meet the developer’s needs in their CMSes, blogs, forums or websites. markItUp! is not a WYSIWYG editor, and it never will be.
The usage is very straightforward. The following code demonstrates the ease of using markItUp!:
CSS:
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<link rel=“stylesheet” type=“text/css” href=“markitup/skins/markitup/style.css” />
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<link rel=“stylesheet” type=“text/css” href=“markitup/sets/html/style.css” />
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JAVASCRIPT:
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<script type=“text/javascript” src=“jquery.js”></script>
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<script type=“text/javascript” src=“markitup/jquery.markitup.js”></script>
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<script type=“text/javascript” src=“markitup/sets/html/set.js”></script>
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<script language=“javascript”>
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$(document).ready(function() {
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$(‘#html’).markItUp(myHtmlSettings);
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});
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</script>
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The code generates a very intuitive markup editor as demonstrated below:

The script also provides several different options for the editor which adjust the style of editing. You can see those on the examples page.
The main highlights of markItUp! include:
- Fast and unobtrusive integration
- Support for keyboard shortcuts
- Toolbar and drop down menus
- Fully customizable and scriptable
- Editor’s features callable from any place
- Ajax dynamic preview
- Customizable Skins
- Tested on PC: IE6/7, Firefox 2, Opera 9+, Safari 3
- Tested on OSX: Safari, Opera 9+ and Firefox 2
- License: MIT/GPL
- Packed naked engine is about 5.5 kb
View original post found on ReadWriteWeb authored by Sarah Perez
March 26th, 2008 — web20
When researching FuseCal this morning, one of the things that made it so appealing to try was the fact that you could just enter in a URL and see the service in action right away. No sign-up forms, no logins. This got us thinking about UI design as it applies to today’s web services. Lately, it seems that less and less services are using sign-up forms…at least, they aren’t requiring you to sign up right away in order to try them out. Instead, the trend seems to be to let you jump right in and get to work. This is definitely a good move, in terms of usability of the site, and it’s not the only UI trend we’ve noticed lately.
Trend #1: Try It Now!
An excerpt from an upcoming book by Luke Wroblewski, "Web Form Design: Filling in the Blanks," posted on A List Apart helps to point out the issue with sign-up forms on the web. When you're recommended a new web service to check out, Luke writes "you arrive eager to dive in and start engaging and what’s the first thing that greets you? A form. We can do better."
Instead of forcing users through a dreadful sign-up process when really they just wanted to take a look, he promotes the idea of "gradual engagement." After you play around with a web service and get an idea about what it does, you can then choose to take the path to complete your profile in order to create an account, save your work, share the results of your creation, etc.
Luke uses a few examples to make his point: one, Geni, an online family tree creation tool lets users make a family tree as soon as they visit the web site. Of course, as you fill out your name, you also enter in your email, so while you're busy building your tree, you're also being sent an email from the service, reminding you of your account details if you ever want to return to work on your tree. However, this vague "did I just create an account?" design may have worked for Geni, who generated 5 million profiles in 5 months, we would argue that it should be more obvious whether you are creating an account or not.
Geni’s “Sign Up” Process
Another example of gradual engagement came from TripIt, a service which lets you plan your trips. The interesting thing about TripIt is that the service also ditches the sign-up form for a more interesting option: you just email plans@tripit.com when your travel plans, be them airline confirmation email, hotel confirmation emails, whatever. TripIt extracts your name and email from the form instead of forcing you to enter these details yourself.
Personally, I recall Twiddla (our coverage) an online whiteboarding service, as implementing the "try-before-you-buy" option really well. Upon visiting the Twiddla homepage, a big button "Try it now in the sandbox," lets you test out the service along with other users in a public sandbox. This way, you can not only try it out for yourself, but you also might see someone else testing a feature you would have otherwise missed. You could also just click "Start a New Meeting" from the homepage and instantly use the Twiddla app with the others who you invite via email, no signing up required.
Twiddla’s Buttons
Trend #2: We Really Care
Another trend spotted in the wild is UI design that shows customers that the company cares about them. Take Samatha Warren’s experience with Wufoo, an app that helps you design and build online forms. After finding herself in need of tech support, she noticed an odd form field on the Support Request page: "Emotional State."
The drop-down included choices like excited, confused, worried, upset, panicked, and angry. Samantha chose the feeling that best described her mood ("worried", by the way), and then made a startling discovery:
"As I made my selection and moved the curser to hit the submit button a feeling washed over me that was unlike anything I had ever felt with a webservice online. I felt like they cared. I felt confident that my problem would be solved. I felt like I was contacting PEOPLE who have beating hearts, and families, who had felt worried about their missing contact e-mails too. How very humane of them!"
WuFoo’s Support Form
Some say this is cheesy, others find it annoying, but WuFoo isn’t the only service to utilize this idea.
Xobni (our coverage), the "social network in your inbox," also asks for user feedback by asking you how you feel. They built the "Are You Happy?" box. From a Xobni employee’s blog, Gabor Cselle describes why:
Instead of a popup, we add a little box on the bottom of the sidebar every couple of weeks and ask: "Are you happy?" There are two buttons, Yes and No, and an optional comment field. This is the most lightweight method of collecting user feedback. Note that:
- We’re not popping up an annoying window.
- We ask a simple question.
- There are only two options – "yes" and "no" - and no Send button.
Xobni’s Emotional Feedback Pop-Up
While an argument can be made that opting out of the happiness check should be more readily available, apparently most of their users don't seem to mind. The feedback is 90% "Yes."
A more obvious place to find "emotional feedback" form fields is on people-powered customer service site, GetSatisfaction.com, (which, by the way, also forgoes a long sign up process by allowing you to fill in a basic form - name, email, CAPTCHA, with further profile information optional.)
Company feedback, ideas, and questions can tagged with a smiley/frowny face depicting how you feel. After you select the face, a box pops up to allow you to pick out a related word like "happy," "anxious," "indifferent," or "unsure."
GetSatisfaction’s Emotional Feedback
While emotional feedback doesn’t work for everyone - some find it patronizing, especially when they’re reporting a critical issue - an opt-in emotional feedback box could at least gather information about requests/complaints and help a company analyze and prioritize their incoming feedback.
Conclusion
Gradual engagement and emotional feedback are only two of many UI trends seen lately, but two that stand out as they seem to be ramping up in terms of usage by web companies. Hopefully, more companies will take note that there are a number ways to generate accounts for their service besides the traditional, boring sign-up form, or at least start supporting OpenID as an alternative.
As for emotional feedback? It’s a more risky choice since some users detest it, but done right, it could bring a new level of information about to product feedback while making users feel valued by the company.
Do you have any examples of either of these trends that you want to share? And…how does that make you feel?


View original post found on TheNextWeb.com authored by Mark Schiefelbein
March 26th, 2008 — startup
Welcome back to “After the Funding“, the series about key management challenges for startups that have secured funding and now must focus their energy on flawless execution.
Today I will talk about the importance of a product roadmap to create alignment between expanding departments.
Align Business and Technology around a Product Roadmap
Business and technology align easily for early startups. The team is small; business and technology work side by side, often in the same office. There is no standard product to sell and no history of successfully closed deals, so business will want to discuss every deal with technology. And the number of prospects and customers is low so technology will value being involved with many of them to get necessary feedback. All in all, communication lines are direct, there are few opportunities and commitments and hence few challenges to maintain alignment.
As business grows, the sales force will start focusing on volume and there will be pressure to go after prospects that fit the product value proposition poorly. This is especially true when expanding geographically or selling indirectly through partners and resellers. And as technology advances, there will be less and less tacit market knowledge within the expanding development team. Communication will get more complex as more specialized roles such as marketing, support and consulting are created. From now on the company needs to work hard at maintaining focus and avoiding becoming a disoriented “jack of all trades, master of none”.
You will need to introduce a product roadmap to align business and technology. The roadmap will map out product direction over the following six to twelve months. It will help business defining its target market and get an early start at pitching future products and features. It will provide guidance to technology in setting priorities and allocating resources. The roadmap will assure consistent communication which is essential for survival as Steve Johnson explains convincingly by comparing it to NASA’s Capsule Communicator (CAPCOM), the single communication agent between space shuttle and mission control.
After the Funding
In the first post of the series I explained that decision-making needs to be based on long-term strategy. In a rapidly growing company, the owners need to spend time defining a clear and concise strategy while day-to-day decision making shifts to others based on their roles in the company.
And last week I cautioned about the risks of premature expansion of the sales force. Owners must set-up a repeatable sales process first and then expand the sales force.
Next week I will turn to release planning and explain how heartbeat release schedules improve productivity.
More on Product Roadmaps
Here are two good pointers to learn more about product roadmaps:
- The Pragmatic Marketing site with its hundreds of relevant articles is a good starting point. You can also follow their blog, sign up for webinars or subscribe to their newsletter.
- Or read about perspectives on the technical and commercial aspects of software at “Business of Software” - a conference cum blog like TheNextWeb. The conference features Joel Spolsky who I will write about in a future post about creating teams.
