iPhone + Webkit + Digg = Mobile Digging Done Right


Webkit browsers, which the iphone uses will now be able to digg while mobile.

Delta Tang Bravo has more details on their blog:

“”

We just launched a special version of Digg today intended to be browsed on an iPhone. It’s available at digg.com/iphone but you’ve got to either be on an iPhone, in Webkit, or possibly on a Webkit-enabled device like some of the fancy Nokia phones.

It’s really fun to be developing for the iPhone. First off, it’s a welcome change to be developing for a single rendering engine… and a decent one at that. Plus, you’ve got the run of all of Webkit’s features, including advanced pseudo-selectors, text-overflow ellipsis, and simple rounded corners in CSS. While I do enjoy making bulletproof designs in my normal web design, there’s also some freedom in not having to consider text-resizing, extreme page resizing (you need to support 2 dimensions), and other hurdles when you’re developing for the iPhone. Of course, we’re still following standards pretty strictly, but not having to cope with the lowest common denominator (or even any rendering discrepancy) certainly makes things interesting — and fun!

Even more fun is developing specifically for the user input quirks of the iPhone. When your primary input device is a honkin’ fat finger, it changes the way you think about links and buttons. Everything’s got to be bigger… way bigger. The yellow digg box and Digg It button are about twice as large on the iPhone as on the normal website. I also made the clickable area of the Digg It button even larger than the button itself so if you click on the edge of it, you’ll still get a press. You also have to make sure buttons aren’t too close together so that you don’t mash one when you intend to hit the other.

Joe (the Digg dev who coded the project) and I started from Joe Hewitt’s excellent proof of concept and then adapted the javascript and the rest of the code. We’re using jQuery (thanks to the jQuery team for their assistance) to render the sliding effects to mimic a ‘real’ iPhone application’s functionality.

Joe and I threw this together over the weekend with Kevin’s help storyboarding it. Good times were had. I’m really looking forward to messing around more with developing specifically for the iPhone. Fun fun fun. Can you tell I think it’s fun?

UPDATE: One thing I forgot to mention is that page loading takes a long time on an iPhone. Actually sending and receiving a request over At&T’s slow network (when you’re not on wifi) is especially slow. So, we’re actually doing one larger load to bring in both the story list and the contents of the stories. Then you’ve only got one request (and we made sure it wasn’t huge) and you can browse the 10 stories on the page without loading again.

Update 2: Also see Joe’s write-up on some of the technical aspects of the Digg iPhone version
“”

July 11th, 2007 From admin

Mobile Marketing, Social Media, Tagging, Blogging, Web 3.0, Video Blogging, Technology, Mobile, Video

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Social Media Power Brings Down Digg


The founders of Digg.com – which has been rocked by an unprecedented user revolt over the release of an HD-DVD decryption code – accepted sponsorship from the organization behind HD-DVD last year.

Episodes of the DiggNation video show were sponsored by the HD DVD Promotion Group. DiggNation is produced by Revision3, a company run by Digg founders, Jay Adelson and Kevin Rose. Rose is also a co-host of the DiggNation show. The image below shows the HD DVD logo displayed at the beginning of one such episode.

During the past 24 hours, Digg administrators have apparently deleted dozens of stories which included references to the HD DVD decryption code. These included one story which appeared poised to become the most popular ever seen on Digg, with almost 16000 votes within 20 hours. Administrators have also apparently begun deleting stories criticizing their actions, and also banned numerous members – according to angry statements posted by Digg users on the site and elsewhere.
diggnation sponsored by hd dvd.jpg32 Dangerous Hex Digits

The 32 digit hexadecimal code can be used to make copies of HD DVD movies by using software such as BackupHDDVD. A number of websites and individuals have reported that they have been sent legal notices ordering them to remove the code from their servers. These notices have come from US lawyers representing the Advanced Access Content System Licensing Administrator LLC (AACS LA). Digg itself has not yet issued any statement on the case or its legal situation (but see update 2 below).

Digg, one of the world’s fastest growing social networking sites, recently celebrated its one millionth user account – although the number of active contributors is believed to be considerably smaller than this figure.

All Digg content is submitted by users, who then vote for the stories they like. The company has made much of the community-administered aspect of the site. However, some users are now complaining that the recent events cast doubt on this.

Digg co-founder Jay Adelson has now made a comment regarding Digg’s position on the HD DVD code, at the official Digg blog.

May 1st, 2007 From admin

Social Media, Tagging, Technology

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Digg is Down due to the HD DVD Fiasco


I just checked again tonight and Digg is down - did they pull the plug?

May 1st, 2007 From admin

Social Media, Tagging

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I’m Heading to San Fran For the PodCastHotel Event


I’ll be heading down to San Francisco this weekend to attend the PodCastHotel event, and I’m really excited about this one!

The Podcast Hotel is a conference that is going to allow people to get together to hear people speak but also to create their own works, learn a ton, discuss issues and exchange ideas. The Keynote speaker is Andrew Baron, Founder, Rocketboom, which has become of of the most successful video podcasts in the world. I’m looking foward to hearing him speak!

A few of the speakers are:
Chris Pirillo, Founder, Lockergnome
Mary Hodder, chief executive officer, Dabble
Josh Wolf, The Revolution will Be Televised
Robert Scoble, Vice President, Media Development, Podtech

This should be an awesome event, and I’ll post some notes from the speakers over this weekend!

April 18th, 2007 From admin

Marketing, Social Media, Tagging, Interviews, Blogging, Local Search, Video Blogging, Technology

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Venture Capital Activity: Technorati Buys Personal Bee, Akami Buys Red Swoosh, LinkedIN, Y Combinator


Technorati Buys Personal Bee
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Technorati said Wednesday that it has acquired Berkeley-based Personal Bee, an online service which allows people to create their own personal sites using RSS feeds. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. Ted Shelton, founder of Personal Bee, will join Technorati as its VP of Business Development.

Akamai Buys Red Swoosh
Akamai Technologies said today that it is acquiring San Mateo-based Red Swoosh, a developer of client side technology for media distribution, in a deal worth $15M. Akamai said it purchased Red Swoosh in an all-stock merger transaction, and that it will use the acquisition to augment its services. Akamai said that Red Swoosh will be integrated into its existing engineering team in California.

LinkedIn Claims 10M Users
Palo Alto-based LinkedIn, the online social networking web site focused on business professionals, said today that it has reached 10 million users for the site. The company said that it is currently growing at the rate of over 130,000 members a week. LinkedIn provides social networking tools targeted at business users, and has received funding from Sequoia Capital, Grelock, Bessemer Venture Partners, and the European Founders Fund.

Y Combinator is Breaking VC Ground!
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The Mercury News has a good description of how Y Combinator works:

Here’s how it works: twice a year, Y Combinator invites “hackers,” or programmers, to fill out an online application, outlining who they are and a business idea. One winning batch of teams is funded in winter and the other in summer. With Y Combinator’s help, each becomes a real company - one that is expected to create its product within three months. The amount of money Y Combinator gives each group - $5,000, plus an additional $5,000 per founder - is a pittance for what it asks in return, which is, on average, a 6 percent stake in their start-up. That money has to really stretch. Beyond their living and working expenses, it must also cover relocation costs, as the winter winners must relocate to the Bay Area and the summer winners to the Boston area.

April 14th, 2007 From admin

Search Marketing, Mobile Marketing, International optimization, Venture Capitalism, Valuation, Social Media, Tagging, Domains, Local Search, Brand Management, International Marketing, Technology

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Google to acquire DoubleClick for $3.1B


Seeking to expand its already well-honed ability to sell targeted Internet advertisements, online search leader Google Inc. said it has agreed to pay $3.1 billion in cash to acquire ad-management technology company DoubleClick Inc.

The two companies announced the deal after the markets closed Friday. The boards of both companies have approved the takeover, which is expected to close by the end of the year.

New York-based DoubleClick helps its customers place and track online advertising, including search ads, which Google — more than its nearest search competitors Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news) and Microsoft Corp. — has turned into an extremely lucrative business.

Shares of Mountain View-based Google rose 3 cents to $466.32 in after-hours trading. DoubleClick has been privately held since 2005.

The sellers are San Francisco-based private equity firm Hellman & Friedman, along with JMI Equity and DoubleClick management.

Commentary:
From DoubleClick’s announcement of the exchange:

Using the new platform, publishers and other sellers make specific inventory available for purchase. Sellers define a minimum bid value - or “reserve price” - for the inventory and specify rules to restrict certain advertisers, formats and content. In parallel, buyers specify the inventory they wish to purchase, and the associated bid value for that inventory. They can also specify a rule to dynamically control the bid so that the bid price is automatically adjusted in line with inventory performance.

From the New York Times:

DoubleClick, which was founded in 1996, provides display ads on Web sites like MySpace, The Wall Street Journal and America Online as well as software to help those sites maximize ad revenue. The company also helps ad buyers — advertisers and ad agencies — manage and measure the effectiveness of their rich media, search and other online ads.

DoubleClick has also recently introduced a Nasdaq-like exchange for online ads that analysts say could be lucrative for Google.

“Google really wants to get into the display advertising business in a big way, and they don’t have the relationships they need to make it happen,” said Dave Morgan, the chairman of Tacoda, an online advertising network. “But DoubleClick does. It gives them immediate access to those relationships.”

From Bloomberg

`Deep Pockets’

Google declined to give financial details for DoubleClick, whose headquarters are in the same building as its own New York offices. The purchase eclipses the $1.65 billion Google spent to buy video-sharing Web site YouTube in November and was 50 percent more than Hellman & Friedman had wanted. A person with knowledge of the talks said last month the firm may seek about $2 billion.

“The amount is mind-blowing,” said Richard Fetyko, an analyst at Merriman, Curhan and Ford in New York. Fetyko follows DoubleClick rival AQuantive Inc., which he rates buy and doesn’t own. “Apparently there was very competitive bidding. Microsoft has deep pockets, but apparently everything has its limits.”

April 13th, 2007 From admin

Search Marketing, Venture Capitalism, Valuation, Marketing, Social Media, Tagging, Google, Local Search, Brand Management, International Marketing, Technology

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Facebook Buy Passed up and Mozilla’s COOP Launch: I bet you Missed these Important Marketing Developments Today


Facebook was a goldmine – and Yahoo passed on it!
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Co-written by analyst Mark May, an analyst report that covers consumer Internet, references Facebook’s most recent traffic numbers (about 1.5 billion pages/day) and says social networking could one of the most important growth areas of the Internet over the next five years.

By referencing Facebook’s doubling in growth, the reports also implies Facebook may be worth twice what it was last year, suggesting the business may have a $3 billion value to a buyer based on last year’s supposed $1.6B Yahoo “offer.”

Was Facebook’s Mark Zuckerman ready to sell? – Maybe, should Yahoo have wined and dined him until he was willing to sell. YES.

Mozilla released a new product called the COOP – which is social networking for your browser.

Check out Mozilla’s Coop!

coop-by-friends-2-thumb.jpg

April 5th, 2007 From admin

Mobile Marketing, Marketing, Tagging, Blogging, Local Search, Brand Management, Technology, Mobile

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Russia’s Yandex Acquires Biz Social Networking Site


yandexlogo.jpg

Yandex, the Russian portal and WiFi network operator, has acquired Moikrug.ru, which claims to be the country’s largest social networking site for professionals. This is much like Linkedin, but in the Russian business space. Moikrug roughly translates to MyCircle.
Regular and active a:c euro reader Yakov Sadchikov, co- founder of Russia-based search company Quintura, uses the term ‘acq-hired’ to describe the deal, suggesting the know-how and experience of the team at Moikrug was the attraction. Moikrug is said to have some 100k registered users.
No disclosure on price but rumors range from $1.5M to up to $5M including cash and Yandex stock options.

Read the full story - Yandex buys social network MoiKrug.ru

April 4th, 2007 From admin

Search Marketing, Venture Capitalism, Social Media, Tagging, Video Blogging, Technology, Russian Marketing

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Matt Cutts Blog Hacked on April Fools Day


Ok, I was a bit surprised to see this nice little piece of hacking work done on Matt Cutt’s site by the DarkSEOTeam.

Click for the full size screen capture of Matts Blog:
mattcuttshacked.gif

Once you take a look at Matt’s Site, you’ll want to cruise over to the www.darkseoteam.com site where you’ll see the following:

Of course I’m lying when I make everyone believe that content is King.
Of course black hat SEO and spamdexing are the only Kings.
Google is just a stupid algorithm relying on spammy backlinks.
But you guys had no right to let everyone know. That’s why I defaced your bloody DST site. To show the entire world how evil a white hat can be.

In fact, I’m as evil as my employer ;-)
All your backlinks are belong to us !

Elaborate April Fools Joke? Or really good hack job?
You be the judge!

April 1st, 2007 From admin

Search Marketing, Marketing, Social Media, Tagging, Domains, Google, Interviews, Blogging, Local Search, Technology, Matt Cutts

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Yahoo Answers is a Political Campaigners Dream!


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I noticed today on the front page of Yahoo a link to the Answers section of the site where they have featured Democratic hopeful Barak Obama with a question for everyone to answer.

How can we engage more people in the democratic process?
I will be asking questions to help create dialogue around this and many other important topics so please add me to your Answers Network so that we can begin exchanging ideas and hopefully make changes that will benefit the future.

This question was posed 6 days ago and there are 15 days left for you to lodge your own answer. The total number of answers is nearing 3k, being at 2,954 Yahoos that have answered Obama’s question.

This is a great way for a young candidate to reach out and have his policies be heard by young votes – this is the type of campaigning that will make a huge difference in the 2008 election, one that we may see social networking strategy be a huge part of the outcome!

So, What’s your Answer?

March 27th, 2007 From admin

Marketing, Social Media, Tagging, Yahoo, Politics

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Find The Best Happy Hour Tonight With Unthirsty.com


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So if you’re cruising around the town and want to find a local spot and hit up their Happy Hour but don’t know where to go, Unthirsty.com is the place to go! Matt King, a fellow PDX Designer has taken part in creating this unique mashup of Google Maps and Happy Hour Hotspots.

March 24th, 2007 From admin

Search Marketing, Mobile Marketing, Social Media, Tagging, Google, Local Search, Oregon

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MyUlist is Targeting the Lucrative College Classified Market


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Think of the Facebook and Craigslist smashed together into a very lively mashup of classifies for college students. MyUlist is just that, featuring articles on their site have been submitted by college students across the country- giving the site a little “local flavor” – which I think is one of the key ingredients for any new site to stand out in a crowded web 2.0 world.

One drawback that MyUlist requires a .edu email address to participate, but unlike other social networks, this stipulation actually makes sense and, honestly, makes the environment much more smoothly run and friendly to doing business.

The company hasn’t launched across the nation yet, the main pilot test is at UNC, but it’s also testing Cal, Penn, Stanford and Drexel and they have plans to be nationwide very soon.

The companies founder, David Yu has funded the company thus far and is looking for more funding from interested parties.

March 22nd, 2007 From admin

Search Marketing, Venture Capitalism, Social Media, Tagging

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Offline Tagging: Kwiry Takes Tagging to a New Level


Founded by a few junior TellMe employess, Ron Feldman (now CEO) and Jon Sugihara, Kwiry promises to reshape how you “tag” the offline world. Using text messaging to share your tags with you friend, Kwiry says it “will revolutionize the way you interact with your offline world. Bookmark information you see in your offline world to store in your locker.”

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Start off by creating a proprietary “kcard” and then use that to share information with your friends and new acquaintances. Kwiry has now raised $1M in Series A funding from Hummer Winblad Venture Partners.

March 20th, 2007 From admin

Social Media, Tagging

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