I’ll make an attempt at live reporting via the weblog.
The session is a panel with Google talking about organizing the web.
Google’s Mission:
Organize the world’s information to make it universally accessible and useful.
Nice, broad, and ambitious. Gotta like that.
After describing in detail how Google manages indexes, he says, “Managing all that is a little on the tricky side.” Understatement of the day.
Page Rank: A query independent measure of value for each page.
Linking to many pages lessens the ‘value’ of page rank that yor page has. The fewer links you have, the more emphasis on your links.
Designed on the concept that everyday machines are going to die. For scalability and reliability, they have 10s of thousands of machine constantly working. Considering consumer grade MTBF, they get plenty of failures and actually buy substandard RAM to save money.
Demo of https://labs.google.com and https://www.google.com/zeitgeist
Content-Targeted Advertising -Using the search words to choose appropriate advertisement to display that may be much more effective.
Google News – Auto-generated news from 4,500 news sources arranged in an unbiased, objective way.
Froogle – Aggregates products via page rank and relevance. Google makes no money from the products themselves, but they do advertise on the page.
Intro of Evan Williams of Pyra/Blogger/Google – “Blogger is now a Google product.”
Lots of speculation and theories as to why the purchase happened. What is the secret plan of ‘world domination’? No secret plan…
Plan:
Blogger and Google Join
Blogger services remain unchanged
Building a better Blogger
Help people find blog content
Commitment to unbiased, objectve search results
“Google is one of the few web giants that values personal opinion.”
What is desperately needed is enhanced ability to search blog content. Increasingly difficult to find intersting content. Google’s expertise in searching is the key to help find the intersting content.
Reading the assumptions would make you think there are now hundreds of people working on ‘Bloogle’. Not true. Same people, but the food’s much better. A couple new guys. Still constrained by people inside Google. ‘Never enough people, all the hardware they could imagine.’
After stablization of Blogger within Google, they can work on new ideas.
There is no interest to bias Google searches in favor of Blogger. They want to help the blogger community in general. They want to work with Radio, Movable Type, and other tools.
I just asked Evan, ‘How much did you get?’ He didn’t answer and said ‘Did I mention how good the food is?’ I didn’t expect that I’d get a number, but someone had to ask…
Metatags are problematic, since the page is telling the viewer one thing, and tells Google somethign else. For this reasons, Google doesn’t use meta-tags.
Google Answers – This is not a highly public site for Google, but the usage and popularity is rising.
Google Toolbar – Future directions (asked by Anil Dash) – They may get around to a Mozilla client since Google people all use linux.
Wireless oppurtunity – They have WAP and low bandwidth services, but they are not utilized much. Pages are proxied to reduce non-mobile content.
Google has systems for local country results to allow graphics to be displayed correctly. Blogger would like to take advantage of the global reach to provide a higher service level.
Natural Language Search – Yes, they are thinking about it. They aren’t clear that keyword searches alone won’t suffice. Once voice interaction with computers is more common, they see the rise of natural language searches.
Semantic Web – Any plans? ‘Nice idea, but not now.’ They do it partially with Froogle, not in a concerted effort.
End of session. Whew.
Category: Weblog
Contentless
I looked at this page and realized I had a bunch of “I’m doing this…” posts. Not a lot of analysis going on here.
I made an attempt to get up early and transcribe my handwritten notes to the weblog, but alas I have failed. It’s about 25 mintues until the first session and I haven’t started. Mea culpa.
So while I am currently content-free, now is the time for you to create some and post it on your weblog. Do It Now….
I, performer…
The Fray Cafe was a lot of fun. At the urging of Michael, I signed up for the open mic.
To heighten the butterflys in my stomach, I ended up getting on stage at the end of the night when everyone was tired. I told the story of Zoe’s fever due to the cooties. The story was quick and I got a few laughs, but I’m not sure how well everyone liked it.
It’s late, and I need to sleep.
Fray Cafe
I’m inside the Mercury on 6th street in Austin.
The Fray Cafe is just getting started and my laptop is being used as the light for the sign ups.
I guess It’s spoken word for a few hours, we’ll see won’t we…
Video Blog!!
Keith at UnrelatedNews is the shizznit!
He’s been making video weblogs. Go check out his first set here.
The next two clips are also funny. Stop Drinking and Spring Chinese Dude.
I desperately need a digital video camera. But then again, you all would be subjected to videos of me at IHOP rather than just text & pictures.
First Post
Google, you should check out cloud.com
I just got out of a session where they revealed cloud.com a method to coalese (sp?) content voluntarily. Intentionally building the sematic web.
Not much to read on the site, but in Slashdot form, I’m attempting to first post. 🙂
Birds
Made this recording yesterday.
audblog audio post
Sunday in Lone Star
I’m sitting here in the Convention Center typing.
I haven’t had time to write up much. When I got back to the hotel last night I was too tired to boot up the computer. Shocked I know, for me to betoo tired to get on the net. My broken toe is starting to take it’s toll. It’s been understanding with all the walking, but by the end of the evening last night, I found myself starting to limp a bit. I popped a few Advil and feel fine today.
I’ve got about 10 minutes until the first session, so there’s no time to write up everything. I’ll just tell you about the Kick game. Yesterday morning they had a Kickball game that I went too. Many people knew each other from previous years. I bumped into a guy that knew my brother, Matt, from Northwestern. Strange coincidence.
Kickball is basically softball, but instead of using a bat on a softball, you kick a large rubber ball. It was great fun.
Since I was unfamiliar with the game and have a broken toe, I didn’t play and joined the cheerleader section. I met and talked with a number of cool people. BTW, the predominant name for SXSW attendees is Jessica & Michael. I have met 3 Jessicas and 4 other Michaels.
The converstation ranged all over. I spoke with Christine from Big Pink Cookie about the problems with blogging about work when your co-workers read your blog. Nice to know I’m not alone in the dilema.
After the kickball game, I went to lunch at IHOP. I had the Cheddar Turkey Melt. Mmmm.
5 minutes to session, gotta go.
Night 1
I listened to Richard Stallman talk about copyright last night. It wasn’t the usual Free Software talk, it was all about the place of Copyright in our society.
He made a few interesting points like comparing software code to cooking recipes. What would cooks think if they could not use or modify a recipe? Imagine a law against changing a recipe, or trying to figure out a recipe from tasting a prepared dish, or even disallowing you to give a copy of a recipe to a friend.
Sounds silly right? Currently, this is the case with computer software.
He also makes the valid point that all creative works cannot be treated the same way. A recipe is different that a novel and should be treated differently. Current copyright law makes all creative works behave the same way.
I don’t agree with every conclusion that he draws, but he does make valid points that are hard to simply refute. The main arguement against many of his ideas is that they will ‘break’ existing business models. This is a difficult arguement to logically defend, but it is very easy to defend it with money and politicians.
Somethings got to give between P2P networks, DRM, Trustworthy/Treacherous Computing, and the DMCA. It’s all getting caught up into a hairball and I think business is going to choke on it.
I think the question is “Will the old content creation giants be able to adapt before the marketplace adapts around them.” Xerox had the personal computer and decided it would hurt copier sales and killed plans to move forward. Will Disney & Time Warner sell people what they want before they can easily get it for free?
After Stallman’s speech I went to the Linux Top Gun at a night club. Basically several hacker groups try to hack each other. I drank a couple glasses of scotch, sniffed the ethernet packets flyign by and watched the strange interaction between those the there for the hacking event and the Film/Music people also in th ebar wondering what all the laptops were for.
Time for kickball.
Press baby…
I’m sitting the press room at SXSW sucking off free internet access. There’s a couple other people here chatting about things.
One of the guys is David Weinberger who just wrote World of Ends page. Quite interesting. I revealed that I work for Disney and that sparked a few discussion.
Time to get a bit to eat before Stallman.