Author: Ben Brooks

  • New York Times Paywall Goes Up January 2011

    It is obvious that the New York Times did not read my post about saving the news industry. One thing that strikes me about this is that they may serve ads behind the paywall.

    It is one or the other, ads or pay wall you can thane both. Users expect no advertising if they have to pay.

  • Google To Shutter Sales of Nexus One Online

    Carriers still have quite the stranglehold on everyone not named Apple.

  • Facebook Updates to Correct Wrong Part of Privacy Concerns

    Matthew Shaer:

    According to Facebook’s Lev Popov, beginning today, Facebook fans can flag the devices they use to sign onto the site – an Apple iPhone, for instance, or your laptop – and then request a notification when someone logs on to their account using an unapproved device. A similar functionality has long been available on platforms such AIM, but until now, it was absent from Facebook.

    Don’t get me wrong this is a great move, but it is not what people are really concerned about. We want to control our privacy.

  • Dell Makes a Device to Fit Between Your Smartphone and iPad

    Priya Ganapati:

    The Sony PlayStation Portable-sized Streak isn’t directly an iPad competitor. The Streak has a 5-inch capacitive touchscreen, a 5-megapixel camera on the back, a separate front-facing camera that can be used for video conferencing, a standard 3.5mm headphone jack, Wi-Fi and 3G connectivity and a Qualcomm Snapdragon 1-GHz processor.

    Just right for the times when my iPhone is too small and my iPad is too big.

  • Paying Homage to the Space Shuttle

    Boston.com’s “Big Picture” tribute to the Space Shuttle. If you want to see how technologically advanced we are, just look at this amazing engineering.

  • This is how Apple rolls

    John Gruber:

    They achieve spectacular results one year at a time. Rather than expanding the scope of a new product, hoping to impress, they pare it back, leaving a solid foundation upon which to build.

    This is a must read.

  • Twitter Search Now Parses Shortened Links for Keywords

    Sarah Perez:

    It’s now parsing shortened URLs in order to discover additional keywords to aid in searches. In other words, Twitter isn’t only returning tweets where your search term is found in the 140 characters of text contained in the tweet itself, but also when your search term appears in the URL behind the pre-shortened link, like those from Twitter’s default URL-shortening service, bit.ly, for example.

    Sweet.

  • Cellphone Users Don’t Use Their Minutes

    Jenna Wortham for The New York Times:

    The one thing she doesn’t use her cellphone for? Making calls.

    “I probably only talk to someone verbally on it once a week,” said Mrs. Colburn, a 40-year-old marketing consultant in Canton, Mass., who has an iPhone.

    I use my phone for work and personal calls, rarely do I get personal calls.

  • iPhone to Work with Facebook Natively?

    Dan Frommer:

    We also anticipate — but don’t know — that Apple may build some sort of Facebook messaging features into the iPhone. Perhaps you’ll be able to send Facebook messages to contacts just as easily as text messages. This wouldn’t cost any money — it wouldn’t use up your text message allotment — and could be just as instantaneous. But again, this part is pure speculation.

    I could see Facebook and Apple integrating some contact syncing, much like they do with MobileMe. I however do not see these messaging features coming to the phone, though I may be made to look a fool shortly.

  • Adobe, You Brought An Advertisement To A Gun Fight

    MG Siegler (whom right now is probably one of the top 5 tech writers out there):

    You gave Jobs three years worth of solid data (massive iPhone sales) to prove he didn’t need you. And now he’s using that knowledge in the iPad, the device which may or may not be the first step in the future of computing. And now others are rallying to his side because he grabbed the position of power.

  • The iPad as Thought in 1988

    Very cool that a group of students in 1988 thought up a device so similar to what the iPad is today.

  • Google’s Chrome OS is Close

    MG Siegler for TechCrunch says that while the highly anticipated Google operating system is coming along very fast, it is still not ready. There have been reports of a possible Chrome device being launch by Acer in June, though previewed sounds like a better word to use.

    Siegler:

    That schedule originally stated that Chrome OS would launch in the 2nd half of 2010, with devices ready in time for the holiday season. The Computex Taipei show, where Acer will supposedly show off the first Chrome OS device, runs June 1 to 5, which is technically still the first half of 2010. So unless the Chrome OS project is ahead of schedule (which we’re hearing it isn’t), you can probably expect any devices shown to be running a still incomplete version of Chromium OS. And judging from the current state of the code, that seems to be the case as well.

    also of note:

    It seems there may only be limited trackpad gestures at launch. Google wants at least 2-finger scrolling to work, but it’s a bit buggy as of a couple months ago.

  • My Thoughts on How to Save the News

    I recently posted about an article for The Atlantic that talked about how Google is working closely with traditional media outlets (newspapers mainly) to help them survive and become profitable again. This is a very noble cause, but one I am not sure Google alone can solve.

    Why Google Will Struggle

    Google is full of people much smarter than I, however, as evident in their products, they are not on the fore-front of design. Just take a look at their Google News page if you don’t believe me (it looks like a sideways box of Crayons). Google has a ton of smart engineers, and it would seem that design gets pushed to the back burner most of the time.

    For instance which would you rather use:

    Google Reader as presented by Google, or Google Reader as presented by HelvetiReader?

    If you are me the latter is the only way to go, this is the same product with some time and thought put into the look and feel. Saving newspapers is about far more than just monetizing the model, but making it a place the readers want to go to read. It is about balancing ads, design, and readability with the content.

    Whether or not a reader thinks they care about looks, does not matter, because the human eye always cares. We have a natural distaste for products that look like crap, and are drawn towards those that please us visually. One reason people prefer to read magazine articles in a magazine instead of on the web is because most of the time the website looks crappy in comparison to the magazine. In order to move people to prefer the web, content providers need to make their sites more attractive.

    Dynamic Ads

    Let’s take the New York Times homepage as our example, they are using 6-columns (grids) to align their content. Some ads span two columns and some just one. Something that was mentioned by Google was creating what they called dynamic ads, and I rather like the idea of this.

    Ads change in size, automatically rescaling content based on the reader (more on this in a bit) and the amount of money the advertisers are willing to pay. So if an advertiser 1 wanted to have a large ad, perhaps it will span two columns on a homepage, but only for readers making $50k a year and up. Otherwise a smaller one column ad is displayed from advertiser 2, who is paying less for the smaller ad being served to a different target audience.

    In this model both the ads are different (based on the reader) and the sizing is different (based on the amount advertisers paid for the space). This is a traditional model and one that is certainly in place, except for the fact that they are not dynamically set up for an algorithm to automatically change with no human interference, ever.

    This would be a huge benefit for the readers of the site as well. I for one should not have to see impotence ads and rolex ads for quite a while. The ads would be far more valuable to me because they are now tailored for me, for what I like.

    Requiring Registrations

    Linking into the above concept is required site registrations. These registrations should be free, and very quick (1 minute at the most – no email verification). They should require the following information be provided: sex, age range, income range, username. That is all you need to accurately market to people, I would add race, but that is always a touchy subject to get into. (You can get their interests by tracking their habits)

    This registration data would provide advertisers with a deluge of information and would allow the site to track what that reader likes to read. Now you would know several things for targeting ads directly at the user: what they can afford to buy, and what they are interested in. Most advertisers would kill to be able to target ads that directly at people.

    All of this tracking and data collection of course will lead to more data, and with more data we can make more assumptions and better changes to how we direct users around our sites and the ads that advertisers direct at the users.

    Higher Quality Ads

    This is the biggest and most important aspect of trying to turn around news sites. The ads that are being displayed on the web these days are for the most part, terrible. The only advertisers that display nice looking ads are The Deck and Fusion, everyone else’s are terrible, Google’s ads seem to think you want to see more of their crappy text ads.

    Now think about the advertising that you see in Magazines, not the crap that is stuck in the back, but those that are displayed near the front. They spent money making and designing those ads, thought was put into them and it shows.

    The web needs higher quality ads, and it needs them now.

    Any ad that moves or emits sound should never be displayed next to content that you want someone to read. Doing this distracts the reader, and detracts from the content.

    Less is often more, you certainly want to get the reader to look at the ads, but you don’t want them thinking how much they dread your ads because it distracts them from reading what they want to read. There is a fine line to be struck here between ads that draw attention and ads that annoy people.

    River Content Streams

    Another thing that was mentioned in the Atlantic article was content streams referred to as ‘rivers’. This was done to help newspapers rank better in Google searches, given that they are always posting smaller updates to larger stories (instead of long recapped posts that are out of date). This is a phenomenal idea, one that needs to be better used and leveraged to help readers do more then get better search results.

    If newspapers are not already tagging their content, they should be. If all articles are tagged, then why would you not let your readers create their own content page. There have been personal home pages in the past for The Wall Street Journal, but they only let you select sections of the paper. Tags should be the new sections.

    It would be great for people to be able to say I want a page (and RSS feed) that shows me only articles tagged as ‘social media’. You could have your own customized news stream based on what you want to know. The possibilities are endless – the result is a happy customer and better targeted ads.

    This approach gives the reader a reason to keep coming back, it adds value.

    Pretty Pictures

    Photography: this is where magazines and news sites can and should slaughter free content providers such as blogs. Bloggers don’t have the time, staff and resources to go out and get great photos, they are not posting AP and Getty photos, they are posting stock images, sometimes.

    Newspapers (magazines and other news outlets as well) have these at their finger tips, moreover they have citizens willing and ready to hand over their photos and videos of stories as they are happening. Yet this very rarely makes into play.

    News organizations need to do a better job of leveraging visual stories with the rich media that they have at their disposal. Writing an article on a congressional hearing? You should have videos showing the key players talking about the issue, include a slideshow the the key players and the things they are talking about.

    One such news outlet that gets this is The Guardian a U.K. paper that release an iPad App called Eyewitness, displaying one picture a day. This is one of my favorite apps on the iPad, and they are making money off it through ads, yet they don’t bug me one bit.

    The Guardian partnered with Canon to show these images, the Guardian selects the image and writes a caption, Canon has a watermark of their logo, and provides information on how best to recreate the image using professional photography techniques (this is my best guess of how it works). This is a very smart approach, so why has it not been carried out every where?

    Dump The Paper

    All you hear about Newspapers is how they lose money by continuing to print paper editions and deliver them. So get rid of the paper, or raise the price. As of this writing for me to get The New Yorks times delivered to my door each morning it would cost me a little over a dollar a day. That is nothing.

    If you really want to keep with selling paper copies, raise your prices, and cut the production. Make it profitable through pricing, don’t try selling more for less, try selling less for more.

    The Future

    I don’t know the future and I have never worked in publishing, so I have no clue wether these ideas will work. However, my schooling in business, my knowledge of technology, my love of design, love of news consumption, and general frugalness leads me to believe that this is a feasible approach. There is no reason for the media outlets to not try some of these ideas that I have proposed, or the ideas that many others around the net are coming up with.

  • Recovery.gov Goes to the Cloud

    J. Nicholas Hoover:

    The recovery board expects to save about $750,000 over the next two years — $334,000 this year and $420,000 in 2011 — by running Recovery.gov on EC2. This represents about 10% of the total $7.5 million the board has spent overall on the site so far, including development costs. “Significantly” more savings are expected over the long term, according to the recovery board.

  • Two weeks of travel, Ten iPad lessons

    Michael Gartenberg:

    The iPads method for dealing with document management leaves much to be desired. Attempting to manage files from the increasingly ill named iTunes is a mess. Worse, there’s just flat file storage for iWork which makes it frustrating if you have more than a few documents.

    This quote is not representative of the article, as I think Gartenberg really likes traveling with the iPad. However this is one of the biggest holes for the iPad right now.

  • Android Tablet Review

    No where in the review do they mention the iPad, instead compare it repeatedly to a Kindle. That says it all.

  • Proof Zuckerberg Hates Facebook Users?

    Take this all with a grain of salt, but supposedly Zuckerberg responded to an IM regarding his users and why they would trust him. He allegedly said:

    Zuck: I don’t know why.

    Zuck: They “trust me”

    Zuck: Dumb fucks.

    Facebook has since issued this statement on the matter:

    The privacy and security of our users’ information is of paramount importance to us. We’re not going to debate claims from anonymous sources or dated allegations that attempt to characterize Mark’s and Facebook’s views towards privacy.

    Everyone within the company understands our success is inextricably linked with people’s trust in the company and the service we provide. We are grateful people continue to place their trust in us. We strive to earn that trust by trying to be open and direct about the evolution of the service and sharing information on how the 400 million people on the service can use the available settings to control where their information appears.

  • Adobe Passive Aggressively Attacks Apple With New Ads

    Jacqui Chen:

    Adobe launched an ad campaign Thursday that pushes back against Apple’s decision to outlaw most third-party compilers from creating iPhone OS apps. The ad, spotted running on Ars as well as other sites, says “We [heart] Apple,” before flipping over to say that the company doesn’t support “taking away your freedom to choose what you create, how you create it, and what you experience on the web.”

    There is also an open letter from Adobe’s founders. Nothing to note worthy here, other than the way they are responding.

  • The Newspaper Industry Sucks So Much They Can’t Even Afford a Convention to Brainstorm Ways to Save Themselves

    Eric Pfanner:

    The conference and an accompanying forum for editors had intended to focus on new business models to help newspapers manage the difficult transition to digital publishing.

  • Leaving on a Jet Plane (aka I Quit Facebook)

    My reasoning for why I am deleting my Facebook account. I am doing it on June 13th, 2010 unless Facebook makes some serious privacy changes.