Archive for the 'Next Big Thing' Category

04
Mar

The Future is Now - Video Goggles Remember Your Entire Life

I’m a big believer in becoming a cyborg in the relatively near future.

I’ve got little to no qualms about adopting technology as part of my body and ultimately believe it’s going to be in us all. In the long run, nanobots won’t be that different than vitamins or other supplements you put in your body.  But for the time being they’ll still freak the fuck out of everyone which is entertaining to watch.

Something I’ve always lobbied for (when I get to lobbying with friends) as part of my becoming part-machine was the ability to record and tag everything my eyes see and to store all that info forever - thus entirely eliminating the need for my brain to remember any of it. I’m already so terrible at remembering things that it’d be a great relief to both myself and to my wife to have a tool like this and I’d be awesome to just pick a point and see it in an instant.

Long story short, it looks like the Japanese are well on their way to making something like this work.

22
Feb

You Tube XXX Filter Off? - Porn On Most Popular Video Page

This is weird. There’s a hardcore Japanese porn video on YouTube’s most popular video page.

Some NSFW pictures below.

Japanese YouTube #2

Japanese YouTube #1

Normally they’d have filters that stop this kind of stuff from getting up there. I’m guessing this is going to be a big deal.

14
Jan

Three Unusual Blog Posts Nick Denton’s New Pay Scale Hath Wrought

So things are a little nutty over at the Gawker Empire.

Most of us already know that there was a shake-up at Gawker recently, mostly over what seems to be a relatively smart change in the way that Gawker bloggers are being paid. Essentially it moves them from a pay-per-post system to what amount to a pay-per-attention structure. Which might make perfect sense in the world of quality = pageviews and/or readership.

However, there have been some interesting turns of events as the bloggers there look to cash in on the system. And thanks to Gawker’s open policy of posting page views, we can see what each of these attempts might be pulling in for the bloggers in terms of extra scratch.

First, Nick (not Denton) Douglas at Gawker posted about 2girls1cup, goatse and a number of other not-so-nice internet memes. The crowd there (at Gawker) did not take to this well and had their say in the comments, going so far as to continue the discussion on other blogs. To me, the post seemed relatively harmless and perhaps was just ill-timed to be connected to the page view change.

TOTAL VIEWS TO DATE: 27, 514 VERDICT: Meh.

Next, Gizmodo has drawn the ire of the tech blogging community for what’s been dubbed ‘Gizmodo-gate’, the use of a TV-B-Gone device to turn off of several TVs (some during demos) at CES 2008. While this ’scandal’ continues to play out and the blogger who filmed/edited the bit has now been banned from CES, he’ll most likely end up with the equivalent of the ‘monthly sales plaque’ because people are watching.

TOTAL VIEWS TO DATE: 558,090+ VERDICT: Bingo. Traffic baby.

And finally, something that jumped out at me today, a post from the mostly-awesome Jezebel that pretty much live blogs an intimate encounter directly following a long day at AEE, the Adult Entertainment Expo. Now as a reader of nearly all the Gawker blogs, including at times Fleshbot (the adult media themed Gawker property), I find it’s still relatively rare you have the opportunity to read such a raw and unfiltered look at a personal intimate encounter (or if you will a PIE). That said, I read it and I’d read it again.

TOTAL VIEWS TO DATE: 24,129 VERDICT: On the way up. Probably will at least triple today.

Anyways, it’ll be interesting to watch what else comes out of this. Maybe Nick, happy with the nest egg he’s made, is just sitting back watching this whole thing play out as some giant human experiment. It’s certainly kinda freaky.

12
Jan

Penn Jilette - The Next Ze Frank

This is going to be huge. Penn Jilette nails the vlog form as well as anyone.

It’s basically like Penn & Teller’s Bullshit in tiny, teeny little bite-size form.


29
Oct

Hulu - Interesting Play For Big Media Anywhere

Techcrunch has the first big look at Hulu, NBCU & News Corp’s not-You Tube.

Interesting things of note:

  • No user gen content. Interesting recognition that this battle isn’t about UGC but more about who owns TV distribution (or what was TV distribution) in the future.
  • Movies. According to TC, movies are going to be availible to watch over the service. On-demand movies from anywhere? Netflix, meet your new competition. Oh, and the competition happens to make the content. Sorry.
  • Embeddable players. This could be big. Imagine a Ning page built around Lost with the last four episodes of Lost embedded in it? That’s pretty sweet.
  • But wait! Stuff goes away after five weeks? Hmmm. This is going to be strange. While I disagree with TC about the long tail possibilities of this stuff (I just don’t believe that after five weeks something from MSM has that much breakout potential), I do think it’s weird that users are going to see a lot of black boxes embedded pages.

Anyways, it’s going to be an interesting ride from here on out.

12
Oct

High Def Streaming - No Going Back Now

Get ready for a whole new copyright fight. And a hard drive, storage space fight.

Vimeo has beautiful HD flash based on-demand video. And it’s awesome.

Via Kottke.

12
Oct

Testing the YouTube AdSense Player - Is This It?

I’m not really sure if I’m into this or not. Or exactly what this means. Seems to me to be a pretty easy way to start a video blog using only this content and make $.

UPDATE: Okay, it doesn’t want to work well in a blog post.  I guess it has to go somewhere sandwiched within the blog.

Maybe there’s an issue with the version of WP?

09
Oct

BuzzFeed vs. Mahalo

I tend to have a pretty wide, top-down view of the web, catching little parts of a lot of new things. This is thanks in part to my job, in part to my side projects and in part to my general curiosity about stuff at large.

I also tend to have very fleeting relationships with sites other than blogs, mostly due to attention deficiency. Blogs (like newspapers & magazines) employ content creators to write & organize new material. That alone can generally keep me interested, especially if they focus on a subject I care about. However, most new sites (web 2.0 types) are webtools of some sort and unless I’ve got a dire need for their tool (which I generally don’t) I stop visiting after the initial sign-up.

That said, there are two interesting start-ups that I think interestingly meld the two things (blogs + webtools) and I think cover very similar ground, although I’m relatively sure both companies would feel awkward about being compared to one another.

First, is BuzzFeed which bills itself as a way to ‘Find Your Favorite New Thing’. BuzzFeed uses both an algorithm and editors to see what’s making news or (more likely) making cool out there in the blogosphere. As someone who sees a lot of net stuff very quickly, I find that I’m often beating it to the punch in terms of discovery, but it does a fantastic job of following up on important subjects (such as the now proven-fake Meg White sex tape) by providing links per subject. Even better it has a tendency to do a lot of this quickly, which can help from a research stand point.

On the other hand is Mahalo, Jason Calacanis‘ people-powered search engine which provides detailed, editorial driven search results for some of the most popular topics on the web. Mahalo Guides, those people who edit the individual pages, do a pretty good job of grabbing links & content that (mostly) does a better job than Google at providing relevant links. It seems that lately Mahalo has been focusing more on trying to provide expert-based pages on both breaking content (like news or media phenomenons) and how-to stuff.

Which is where I begin to see a cross over between the two services and perhaps an advantage towards BuzzFeed, at least for me. BuzzFeed seems to be doing a much better job of providing not only detailed info on stories that are important to me. I go back there a lot and really pay attention when it appears in my Feed.

How do they know what’s important to me? They probably don’t. But most likely, I’m much more like those people (that is, the people who edit BuzzFeed) than I am like everybody (or the potential audience for Mahalo).

I think that this might be Mahalo’s fatal flaw. While I find myself understanding the idea for a people-powered search engine, I’m not sure if going wide is ever the way that this is going to work. However, perhaps if there were mini-Mahalos, smaller search sites with focus (either narrow based on topic or wide based on personality) it might work better?

All I know is that I’ve yet to find the reason to return to Mahalo. It’s not delivering me an experience that causes me to want to return. I’ll keep trying as I think it’s an interesting idea and I’d really like to see it succeed.

20
Sep

Two Awesome Things - NYT Now Free & Garfield Variations

Tonight I love the internet!

1. It brought me lots of awesome stuff via Jason Kottke pointing out the incredible archive that the NYT has created for the public by opening it’s doors for free! Can I get a mash-up with something like Amazon maybe? Is there any reason why I should be able to find NYT reviews for every single thing I might want to buy?

2. It also brought me the NSFW Garfield Variations. It’s Garfield as blank canvas. Paint him as you will.

Gentleman Caller Garfield

30
Aug

Maps For Us Dot Org

Maps For Us Dot Org

I made this for work on Monday. It’s not really what I should be doing, spending an hour of time tweaking wordpress themes when there are people to manage but new idea comedy blogs wait for no man. I’m half considering switching this blog over to that theme. It’s a nice one.

Joshua Brentano deserves credit for the idea and has been working for me to update it regularly. Lots of people sending in very awesome maps. BoingBoing just linked to us.

It is mad fun. As such.