Disclaimer: This post does not reflect the opinions, thoughts, strategies or future intentions of my employer. These are solely my personal opinions. If you are seeking official position statements from Microsoft, please go here.

One of the Google folks working on OpenSocial sent me a message via Facebook asking what I thought about the technical details of the recent announcements. Since my day job is working on social networking platforms for Web properties at Microsoft and I'm deeply interested in RESTful protocols, this is something I definitely have some thoughts about. Below is what started off as a private message but ended up being long enough to be it's own blog post.

First Impressions

In reading the OpenSocial API documentation it seems clear that is intended to be the functional equivalent of the Facebook platform. Instead of the Facebook users and friends APIs, we get the OpenSocial People and Friends Data API. Instead of the Facebook feed API, we get the OpenSocial Activities API. Instead of the Facebook Data Store API, we get the OpenSocial Persistence Data API. Instead of FQL as a friendly alternative to the various REST APIs we get a JavaScript object model.  

In general, I personally prefer the Facebook platform to OpenSocial. This is due to three reasons

  • There is no alternative to the deep integration into the Web site's user experience that is facilitated with FBML.  
  • I prefer idiomatic XML to tunnelling data through Atom feeds in ways that [in my opinion] add unnecessary cruft.
  • The Facebook APIs encourage developers to build social and item relationship graphs within their application while the OpenSocial seems only concerned with developers stuffing data in key/value pairs.

The Javascript API

At first I assumed the OpenSocial JavaScript API would provide similar functionality to FBML given the large number of sound bites quoting Google employees stating that instead of "proprietary markup" you could use "standard JavaScript" to build OpenSocial applications. However it seems the JavaScript API is simply a wrapper on top of the various REST APIs. I'm sure there's some comment one could make questioning if REST APIs are so simple why do developers feel the need to hide them behind object models?

Given the varying features and user interface choices in social networking sites, it is unsurprising that there is no rich mechanism specified for adding entry points to the application into the container sites user interface. However it is surprising that no user interface hooks are specified at all. This is surprising given that there are some common metaphors in social networking sites (e.g. a profile page, a friends list, etc) which can be interacted with in a standard way.  It is also shocking that Google attacked Facebook's use of "proprietary markup" only to not even ship an equivalent feature.

The People and Friends Data API 

The People and Friends Data API is used to retrieve information about a user or the user's friends as an Atom feed. Each user is represented as an atom:entry which is a PersonKind (which should not be confused with an Atom person construct). It is expected that the URL structure for accessing people and friends feeds will be of the form  http://<domain>/feeds/people/<userid> and http://<domain>/feeds/people/<userid>/friends respectively.

Compare the following response to a request for a user's information using OpenSocial with the equivalent Facebook API call response.

GET http://orkut.com/feeds/people/14358878523263729569
<entry xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom' xmlns:georss='http://www.georss.org/georss' xmlns:gd='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005'>
<id>http://sandbox.orkut.com:80/feeds/people/14358878523263729569</id>
<updated>2007-10-28T14:01:29.948-07:00</updated>
<title>Elizabeth Bennet</title>
<link rel='thumbnail' type='image/*' href='http://img1.orkut.com/images/small/1193601584/115566312.jpg'/>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://orkut.com/Profile.aspx?uid=17583631990196664929'/>
<link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://sandbox.orkut.com:80/feeds/people/14358878523263729569'/>
<georss:where>
<gml:Point xmlns:gml='http://www.opengis.net/gml'>
<gml:pos>51.668674 -0.066235</gml:pos>
</gml:Point>
</georss:where>
<gd:extendedProperty name='lang' value='en-US'/>
<gd:postalAddress/>
</entry>

Below is the what the above information would look like if returned by Facebook's users.getInfo method

GET

<users_getInfo_response xmlns="http://api.facebook.com/1.0/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://api.facebook.com/1.0/ http://api.facebook.com/1.0/facebook.xsd" list="true">
<user>
<uid>14358878523263729569</uid>
<current_location>
<city>Palo Alto</city>
<state>CA</state>
<country>United States</country>
<zip>94303</zip>
</current_location>
<first_name>Elizabeth</first_name>
<is_app_user>1</is_app_user>
<has_added_app>1</has_added_app>
<pic>http://photos-055.facebook.com/ip007/profile3/1271/65/s8055_39735.jpg</pic>
</user>
</users_getInfo_response>

I've already mentioned that I prefer idiomatic XML to tunnelling data through Atom feeds. Comparing the readability of both examples should explain why.

The Activities Data API 

A number of social networking sites now provide a feature which enables users to see the recent activities of members of their social network in an activity stream. The Facebook news feed, Orkut's updates from your friends, and the Windows Live Spaces what's new page are all examples of this feature. The OpenSocial Activities Data API provides a mechanism for OpenSocial applications to access and update this activity stream as an Atom feed. All of the users activities or all activities from a specific application can be accessed using URIs of the form  http://<domain>/activities/feeds/activities/user/<userID> and http://<domain>/activities/feeds/activities/user/<userID>/source/<sourceID> respectively.  

Currently there is no reference documentation on this API. My assumption is that since Orkut is the only OpenSocial site that supports this feature, it is difficult to produce a spec that will work for other services without it being a verbatim description of Orkut's implementation.

There are some notes on how Orkut attempts to prevents applications from spamming a user's activity stream. For one, applications are only allowed to update the activity stream for their source directly instead of the activity stream for the user. I assume that Google applies some filter to the union of all the source specific activity streams before generating the user's activity feed to eliminate spam. Secondly, applications are monitored to see if they post too many messages to the activity stream or if they post promotional messages instead of the user's activities to the stream. All of this makes it seem difficult to see how one could specify the behavior of this API and feature set reliably for a diverse set of social networking sites.

The Persistence Data API 

The OpenSocial Persistence API allows applications to store and retrieve key<->value pairs that are either user-specific or are global to the application. An example of the former is a listing of company name and stock ticker pairs while an example of the latter is a user's stock portfolio. The feed of global key<->value pairs for an application can be accessed at a URL of the form http://<domain>/feeds/apps/<appID>/persistence/global for the entire feed and http://<domain>/feeds/apps/<appID>/persistence/global/<key> if seeking a particular key<->value pair. User-specific key<->value pairs are available at the URL of the form http://<domain>/feeds/apps/<appID>/persistence/<userID>/instance/<instanceID>.

This is probably the least interesting aspect of the API. A simple persistence API like this is useful for applications with simple storage needs that need to store user preferences or simple textual data that is needed by the application. However you aren't going to use this as the data storage platform for applications like iLike, Flixster or Scrabulous.

However I will add that an Atom feed seems like a horrible representation for a list of key<->value pairs. It's so bad that the documentation doesn't provide an example of such a feed.

Hosting OpenSocial Applications

The documentation on hosting OpenSocial applications implies that any site that can host Google gadgets can also host OpenSocial applications. In practice, it means that any site that you can place a <script> element on can point to a gadget and thus render it. Whether the application will actually work will depend on whether the hosting service has actually implemented the OpenSocial Service Provider Interface (SPI).

Unfortunately, the documentation on implementing the OpenSocial SPI is missing in action. From the Google site

To host OpenSocial apps, your website must support the SPI side of the OpenSocial APIs. Usually your SPI will connect to your own social network, so that an OpenSocial app added to your website automatically uses your site's data. However, it is possible to use data from another social network as well, should you prefer. Soon, we will provide a development kit with documentation and code to better support OpenSocial websites, along with a sample sandbox which implements the OpenSocial SPI using in-memory storage. The SPI implements:

  • Adding and removing friends
  • Adding and removing apps
  • Storing activities
  • Retrieving activity streams for self and friends
  • Storing and retrieving per-app and per-app-per-user data

The OpenSocial website development kit will include full SPI documentation. It will provide open source reference implementations for both client and server components.

I assume that the meat of the OpenSocial SPI is documentation is just more detailed rules about how to implement the REST APIs described above. The interesting bits will likely be the reference implementations of the API which will likely become the de facto standard implementations instead of encouraging dozens of buggy incompatible versions of the OpenSocial API to bloom.   

Conclusion

In general I believe that any effort to standardize the widget/gadget APIs exposed by various social networking sites and AJAX homepages (e.g. iGoogle, Netvibes, Live.com, etc) is a good thing. Niall Kennedy has an excellent series of articles on Web Widget formats and Web Widget update technologies that shows how diverse and disparate the technologies that developers have to learn and utilize when they want to build widgets for various sites. Given that Web widgets are now a known quantity, the time is ripe for some standardization.

That said, there are a number of things that give me cause to pause with regards to OpenSocial

  1. A common practice in the software industry today is to prefix "Open" to the name of your technology which automatically gives it an aura of goodness while attempting to paint competing technologies as being evil and "closed". Examples include OpenDocument, OpenID, OpenXML, OAuth, etc. In this case, OpenSocial is being positioned as an "open" alternative to the Facebook platform.  However as bloggers like Shelley Powers, Danny Ayers and Russell Beattie have pointed out, there isn't much "open" about OpenSocial. Russell Beattie asks in his post Where the hell is the Container API?

    Would people be jumping on this bandwagon so readily if it was Microsoft unilaterally coming up with an API, holding secret meetings geared towards undercutting the market leader, and then making sure that only those anointed partners get a head start on launch day by making sure a key part of the API isn't released - even in alpha. (It obviously exists already, all the partners have that spec and even sample code, I'm sure. The rest of us don't get access yet, until the GOOG says otherwise).

    Let's say we ignore that the process for creating the technology was not "open" nor have key aspects of the technology even been unveiled [which makes this more of a FUD announcement to take the wind out of Facebook's sails than an actual technology announcement], is the technology itself open? Shelley Powers points out her post Terms that

    Perhaps the world will read the terms of use of the API, and realize this is not an open API; this is a free API, owned and controlled by one company only: Google. Hopefully, the world will remember another time when Google offered a free API and then pulled it. Maybe the world will also take a deeper look and realize that the functionality is dependent on Google hosted technology, which has its own terms of service (including adding ads at the discretion of Google), and that building an OpenSocial application ties Google into your application, and Google into every social networking site that buys into the Dream.

    Google has announced a technology platform that is every bit as proprietary as Facebook's. The only difference is that they've cut deals with some companies to utilize their proprietary platform while Facebook's platform is only for use on the Facebook site. If Zuckerburg announces next week that the Facebook platform is freely implementable by any 3rd party Web site, where does that leave OpenSocial? After all, the Facebook platform is actually a proven, working system with complete documentation instead of the incomplete rush job that OpenSocial clearly is right now.

    There are all sorts of forums for proposing and discussing open Web technologies including the IETF, W3C, OASIS and even ECMA. Until all of the underlying technologies in OpenSocial have been handed over to one or more of these standards bodies, this is a case of the proprietary pot calling the proprietary kettle black.

  2. One of the things that comes along with OpenSocial is that Google has now proposed GData as the standard protocol for interacting with social graphs on the Web. This is something that I've been worried about for a while and I've written a couple of blog posts to address this topic because it is not clear that the Atom Publishing Protocol upon which GData is based works well outside it's original purpise of editing blog posts and the like. I'm not the only one that feels this way.

    Danny Ayers wrote in his post Open? Social?

    However the People Data API is cruel and unusual. It first stretches Atom until it creaks with "each entry in the People or Friends feed is a PersonKind"; then gives a further tug  (a person's name is represented using atom:title) then extends it even more (a person's email is gd:email) and finally mops up all the blood, sweat and dribble:

    Key value parameters - gd:extendedProperty - "As different social networks and other sources of People data have many different named fields, this provides a way for them to be passed on generally. Agreeing on common naming conventions is to be decided in future."

    Got to admire the attempt, but (to mix the metaphorical namespaces) silk purses don't make very good sow's ears either.

    In addition, AtomPub geek extraordinairre, Tim Bray wrote in his blog post entitled Web3S

    If you decide you totally can’t model your world as collections of entries populated with hyperlinks to express relationships, well then I guess APP’s not for you. And at the level of engineering intuition, I have to say that a monster online address book does feel different at a deep level from most online “publications” (I thought that was why we had LDAP... but I repeat myself).

    Now that we have AtomPub/GData as a de facto standard protocol for accessing various kinds of non-microcontent data on the Web as a reality, I'm done debating its suitability for the task since the horse has already left the barn. However I will continue to ask when will GData be RFC 5023 compliant?

  3. At the end of the day, the most disappointing thing about OpenSocial is that it doesn't really further the conversation about actual interoperability across social networking sites. If I use Orkut, I still need a MySpace account to interact with my friends on that site. Some people have claimed that OpenSocial will enable routing around such lock-in via applications like iLike and Flixster which have their own social networks and thus could build cross-site social networking services since they will be hosted on multiple social networking sites. However the tough part of this problem is how a hosted application knows that carnage4life@windowslivespaces is the same user as DareObasanjo@Facebook? It seems OpenSocial completely punts on satisfying this scenario even though it wouldn't be hard to add this as a requirement of the system. I guess the various applications can create their own user account systems and then do the cross-site social network bridging that way, which sucks because it will be a lot of duplicative work and will require users to create even more accounts with various services.

    Given that the big widget vendors like iLike, Slide and RockYou already have their users creating accounts on their sites that can be tied back to which social networking site the user utilizes their widgets on, this might be a moot point. Wouldn't it be mad cool if the Top Friends Facebook application could also show your top friends from MySpace or Orkut? I suspect the valuation of various widget companies will be revised upwards in the coming months.

  4. There is no mention of a user-centric application authorization model. Specifically, there is no discussion of how users grant and revoke permission to access their personal data to various OpenSocial applications. Regular readers of my blog are familiar with my mantra of putting the user in control which is why I've been so enthusiastic about OAuth. Although there is some mention of Google's Authentication for Web Application in the documentation, this seems specific to Google's implementation of OpenSocial hosting and it is unclear to me that we should expect that this is the same model that will be utilized by MySpace, Bebo, TypePad or any of the other social networking sites that have promised to implement OpenSocial. On the other hand, Facebook has a well thought out applications permission model and I would have thought it would be quite easy to simply reverse engineer that and add it to the OpenSocial spec than to simply punt on this problem.

Despite these misgivings, I think this is a step in the right direction. Web widget and social graph APIs need to be standardized across the Web.

PS: I've subscribed to the Google OpenSocial blog. So far there have only been posts by clueless marketing types but I'm sure interesting technical information that addresses some of the points above will be forthcoming.


 

November 3, 2007
@ 07:21 PM

I switched on my XBox 360 this morning only to be greeted by a green screen where the familiar XBox logo was supposed to be. In addition, it seems that I could get the sound fine but no picture. The only thing I can imagine that I did wrong was that I shut the console off while playing Marvel Ultimate Alliance instead of quiting the game before switching off the XBox 360 like I usually do.

Doing a search for "XBox 360 green screen" doesn't turn up anything particularly useful. Can anyone out there help with some suggestions on trouble shooting tips?

UPDATE: Disconnecting the XBox 360 from the power outlet for a few minutes then reconnecting it did th trick. Whew. :)


 

Categories: Video Games

In a post entitled Checkmate? MySpace, Bebo and SixApart To Join Google OpenSocial (confirmed) Mike Arrington writes

Google may have just come out of nowhere and checkmated Facebook in the social networking power struggle.

Update (12:30 PST): On a press call with Google now. This was embargoed for 5:30 pm PST but they’ve moved the time up to 12:30 PST (now). Press release will go out later this evening. My notes:

On the call, Google CEO Eric Schmidt said “we’ve been working with MySpace for more than a year in secret on this” (likely corresponding to their advertising deal announced a year ago).

MySpace says their new platform efforts will be entirely focused on OpenSocial.

The press release names Engage.com, Friendster, hi5, Hyves, imeem, LinkedIn, Ning, Oracle, orkut, Plaxo, Salesforce.com, Six Apart, Tianji, Viadeo, and XING as current OpenSocial partners.

We’re seeing a Flixster application on MySpace now through the OpenSocial APIs. Flixster says it took them less than a day to create this. I’ll add screen shots below.

Here’s the big question - Will Facebook now be forced to join OpenSocial? Google says they are talking to “everyone.” This is a major strategic decision for Facebook, and they may have little choice but to join this coalition.

Bebo has also joined OpenSocial.

I'm confused as to how Mike Arrington considers this a checkmate by Google. At the end of the day, this announcement is simply that folks like Slide and RockYou don't have to maintain multiple code bases for their widgets on various popular social networking sites. In addition, it brings the widget/gadget platform on these sites to a similar level to the Facebook platform. Of course, it won’t be on the same level unless it meets all the criteria from my post on how developers should evaluate the MySpace platform. Which is unlikely since besides MySpace, none of those sites have the userbase or engagement of Facebook users nor does any of them have the same kind of viral properties in distributing applications that Facebook platform has built-in

At the end of the day, will we see widget developers like the folks at iLike, Slide or Scrabulous leave the Facebook platform because of these announcements? Unlikely.

Will we see a mass migration from Facebook to MySpace or Orkut because you can now add Flixster or Scrabulous to your profile on these sites? Probably not.

So how is this a checkmate again?

OpenSocial simply keeps Facebook’s competitors in the game. It is more like a successful kingside castle than a checkmate.

Now playing: Backstreet Boys - Incomplete


 

In thinking about the Google OpenSocial Announcement I realized how much some of Google's recent moves remind me of Microsoft of old [for some undeclared definition of old]. We have

  • Google is now a two trick pony with two self reinforcing monopolies (Search + AdSense/Adwords) which is reminiscent of the self reinforcing nature of Microsoft's Windows + Office.

  • A scared overreaction to the growing hype of a startup that is eclipsing it in coolness. See OpenSocial reaction to Facebook

  • Several high level and very visible defections to said startup from people who were highly regarded there. Seems like just yesterday we were reading similar articles and blog posts about MSFT -> Google employee defections.

  • Said startup may be attacking Google's core monopoly in ways that were unforeseen but make sense in hindsight. See Facebook's SocialAds announcements.
  • Creation of de jure and de facto industry standards which are pitched as being great for customers but seem suspiciously like attempts at Fire & Motion. Compare WS-* to AtomPub + GData + OAuth + OpenSocial + ???.


 

James Snell has a blog post entitled Batch! which talks about the Batch processing model in GData APIs. He provides a sample of a GData batch request and points out the following

If the mere sight of this doesn’t give you shivers and shakes, let me give you a few reasons why it should:

  1. It’s not valid Atom. Note the first entry in the feed for instance. An Atom entry has an id, a title, some content, an author, some links, maybe some categories, etc. If the type of objects you want to represent does not also have those things, Atom is not the right format to use.
  2. It only works with Atom. What about binary resources like Jpeg’s? I guess we could base64 encode the binary data and stuff that into our invalid Atom entries but doing so would suck.
  3. We can’t use Etag’s and conditional requests
  4. I’m sure there are more reasons but these should be enough to convince you that a better approach is needed.

In a previous post I entitled One Protocol to Rule Them All and in the Darkness Bind Them I pointed out that since the Atom Publishing Protocol is not a good fit for interacting with data types that aren’t microcontent, it would need to be embraced and extended to satisfy those needs. In addition, this leads to problems because different vendors will embrace and extend it in different ways which fragments interoperability.

An alternative approach would be for vendors to utilize protocols that are better suited for the job instead of creating incompatible versions of a standard protocol. However the response I’ve seen from various people is that it is better if we have multiple slightly incompatible implementations of a single standard than multiple completely incompatible proprietary technologies. I’ve taken to calling this “the ODF vs. OOXML lesson”. This also explains why there was so much heat in the RSS vs. Atom debates but not so much when it came to debates over Yahoo’s podcasting extensions vs. Apple’s podcasting extensions to RSS.

Let’s say we now take it as a given that there will be multiple proprietary extensions to a standard protocol and this is preferable to the alternative, what should we have as the ground rules to ensure interoperability isn’t completely thrown out the windows? A fundamental ground rule should be that vendors should actually provide standards compliant implementations of the protocol before deciding to embrace and extend it. That way clients and services that conform to the standard can interoperate with them. In this regard, GData falls down horribly as James Snell points out.

Given that Joe Gregorio now works at Google and is a co-author of RFC 5023, I assume it is just a matter of time before Google fixes this brokenness. The only question is when?

PS: Defining support for batch operations in a standard way is going to be rather difficult primarily because of how to deal with failure modes. The fact that there is always the struggle between consistency and availability in distributed systems means that some folks will want a failure in any of the batched operations to result in the equivalent of a rollback while there are others that don’t care if one or two out of a batch of fifty operations fails. Then there are some folks in the middle for whom “it depends on the context” for which kind of failure mode they want.  

Now playing: Method Man - Say (feat. Lauryn Hill)


 

There’s nothing like a successful company with a near monopoly to force the software industry to come up with standards. Or in this case, as in many others, force it’s competitors to band together and call what they are doing the standard because more than one vendor supports it.

From TechCrunch’s article Details Revealed: Google OpenSocial(To Launch Thursday we learn

Google wants to create an easy way for developers to create an application that works on all social networks. And if they pull it off, they’ll be in the center, controlling the network.

What They’re Launching

OpenSocial is a set of three common APIs, defined by Google with input from partners, that allow developers to access core functions and information at social networks:

  • Profile Information (user data)
  • Friends Information (social graph)
  • Activities (things that happen, News Feed type stuff)

Hosts agree to accept the API calls and return appropriate data. Google won’t try to provide universal API coverage for special use cases, instead focusing on the most common uses. Specialized functions/data can be accessed from the hosts directly via their own APIs.

Unlike Facebook, OpenSocial does not have its own markup language (Facebook requires use of FBML for security reasons, but it also makes code unusable outside of Facebook). Instead, developers use normal javascript and html (and can embed Flash elements). The benefit of the Google approach is that developers can use much of their existing front end code and simply tailor it slightly for OpenSocial, so creating applications is even easier than on Facebook.

Similar details are available from folks like Om Malik and Marc Andreesen

This is a brilliant move. I’ve blogged on multiple occassions that the disparate widget platforms in social networking sites is a burden for widget developers and will lead to a “winner takes all” situation because no one wants to support umpteen different platforms. If enough momentum gains around OpenSocial, then three things will happen

  • Widget developers will start to favor coding to OpenSocial because it supports multiple sites as well as targeting the Facebook platform  
  • Eventually Facebook platform developers will start asking Zuckerburg and company to support OpenSocial so they only need to worry about one code base (kinda, it won’t be that easy)  
  • Other companies with proprietary widget platforms or plans to create one will bow down to the tide and adopt OpenSocial

Of course, this requires a popular social networking site with a wide audience (e.g. MySpace) to adopt the platform before we see this kind of traction.

However this is the only thing Google could have done that makes any sense. Building a clone of the Facebook platform like some social networking sites planned would have been dumb because that would be the tail wagging the dog. Similarly building a competing proprietary platform would also have been dumb due to the winner takes all problem I mentioned earlier.

This is the only move that has a chance of actually giving their anti-Facebook platform a chance of being successful.

I wonder how my coworkers in Windows Live are going to take this news?

Now playing: 50 Cent - All Of Me (Feat. Mary J Blige) (Prod by Jake One)


 

Web companies are primarily media companies. Their job is to assemble audiences and then sell ads to their captive audiences. This is what the newspaper, television and magazine industries did before them but for some reason Web companies like Google love to claim that they aren’t media companies.  The irony is that Google stumbled on the most lucrative media property of all time (Web search results) as well as the most lucrative way of monetizing it (auction based keyword sales).

Web 1.0 was about gathering a bunch of eyeballs and then entertaining them with a bunch of content you created. Web 2.0 is all about gathering a bunch of eyeballs then having them entertain themselves with content they’ve created (also known as UGC). The most important thing hasn’t changed, it’s about gathering eyeballs.

This takes us to social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook which have taken the act of gathering eyeballs and then having your users entertain themselves with the help of random developers and elevated it to a fine art.  Things get interesting when you realize that a lot of these “random developers” have built compelling experiences and have gathered a significant audience in their own right on the backs of these social networking sites.

In a blog post entitled Scrabulous Jason Antonelli writes

I've become addicted to Scrabulous on Facebook…I'm on my 3rd game of Scrabble with my mom (yes I won two games so far) - and it usually starts with a phone call where we play for a bit and chat about various mom/son things.  My mom lives 3000+ miles away -- she's in Wilmington, NC and I'm in Seattle.  After a while when one of us needs to go do something else - we'll go ahead and play it throughout the day - maybe each making a 1-2 moves a day.

This is so much fun (though I wonder how much it would be if I didn't have a 100% win rate) and it clearly is bringing social networks into the mainstream.  The fact that this game is hosted on the Facebook platform (although it does look like it has a standalone site as well) gave two major wins to Facebook.  First I actually convinced by mom (I'm 33 so you can only guess her age!) to signup for Facebook - the first person I got to sign up to any social networking application even including the one I've worked on.  And second, both my mom and I log in to Facebook multiple times a day.

I’m similarly hooked on Scrabulous on Facebook and estimate that 75% of my page views to *.facebook.com are actually to the Scrabulous application page. I’m definitely see more ads hosted within Scrabulous than I see those hosted within Facebook*. Which leads me to wonder especially when I notice that Scrabulous now sports an ads by Google logo. I specifically wondered about the reach of the most popular widget makers and was surprised when I took a look at the Slide.com About Page which informed me that  

Slide is the largest personal media network in the world, reaching more than 134 million unique global viewers each month and 30 percent of the U.S. Internet audience. We help people express themselves and tell stories through personalized photos and videos created on Slide.com and viewed anywhere on the web or desktop.

Slide widgets — including Slideshows, Guestbooks, SkinFlix and FunPix — are popular on top social networking and blog platforms, including MySpace, Facebook, Bebo, Hi5, Friendster, Tagged, Piczo and Blogger. Slide is also the leading application developer on Facebook with more than 63 million applications installed, including SuperPoke and Top Friends, the most active application by more than four times that of any other 3rd party developer.

Whoa. I suspect that once MySpace ships their platform which relaxes the rules on advertising within widgets, companies like Slide will start to look like very interesting acquisition targets. Or maybe there’s enough money to be made generating the majority of the page views on the most popular social networking sites in the world, that there’ll be no incentive to cash out. Interesting times ahead.

* I do think I’ve clicked more on Facebook hosted ads than those hosted within Scrabulous so that may not be a useful metric. Smile

Now playing: Fabolous - This Is My Party


 

Dave Winer has an interesting post where he asks Facebook app or Firefox plug-in? 

Which is a more interesting platform -- Facebook or Firefox?

This was a topic of conversation at the Web 2.0 Summit last week in SF, not on stage, but in a LobbyConversation between myself and venture capitalist Bijan Sabet.

Bijan Sabet: "I like that Firefox developers don't have to live in a world where they lie awake at night worried that the platform company is going to make life hard for them."

You can guess my answer to the question so I won’t bother answering. I will point out that I doubt that the developers of Flock would agree with the statement that Firefox doesn’t do anything to screw developers on their platform. 

I also question anyone who claims that there are more opportunities to make money off of Firefox plugins than there are selling ads in your Facebook application.

Now playing: 2Pac - Fight Music (feat. Xzibit)


 

Categories: Platforms

October 26, 2007
@ 04:00 AM

Via Greg Linden I found the the summary of a recent survey 1,001 US adults conducted by Kelton Research. The summary was posted on Search Engine Land in an article entitled Report: 7 Out Of 10 Americans Experience 'Search Engine Fatigue' which states

The report discusses user frustration with clutter and the content of search results:

When asked to name their #1 complaint about the process, 25 percent cited a deluge of results, 24 percent cited a predominance of commercial (paid) listings, 18.8 percent blamed the search engine’s inability to understand their keywords (forcing them to try again), and 18.6 percent were most frustrated by disorganized/random results.

There was also a desire among many users that search engines be able to "read their minds":

Kelton asked survey respondents whether they wished that search engines like Google could, in effect, read their minds, delivering the results they were actually looking for. . . That capability is something that 78 percent of all survey-takers “wished” for, including 86.2 percent of 18-34 year-olds and 85 percent of those under 18.

That sounds like an argument for search personalization.

Search personalization is just one of the many ways to deal with end user frustrations with search results. For example, no amount of search personalization will be as effective as statistical analysis to discover and automatically fix mispellings in search queries (e.g. all the misspellings of britney spears Google has to deal with). Without spelling correction, a user will leave frustrated because they get few or no results when in truth they typed a misspelling into the search box.

The folks on the Live Search team have a first in a series of blog posts about how they tackle the problem of determining a user’s intent from their search queries entitled “Do what I mean, not what I say!” [Part 1 of 2]. It contains the following excerpt

We've been working on returning the very best search results for your intent, not just for the particular search terms that you happen to have chosen as a vehicle to transmit that intent.  There's an important difference there and it's been our focus for quite some time.

AutoSpell Correction

The first example of this is our new AutoSpell feature.

If we are absolutely, completely, totally, "no doubt about it" confident you misspelled one of your search terms, we automatically deliver a page that includes spell-corrected results, rather than a page of misspelled results accompanied by a "Did you mean _______?" link at the top.

For example, there's this pizza place near Microsoft called Pagliacci Pizza that is fantastic.  The problem is that I can never remember the correct spelling of the place.  My misspelled attempts are usually something along the lines of Pagliaci Pizza, Pagliaccis Pizza, or Paggliacci Pizza...

Stemming 

Another improvement in the "Do what I mean, not what I say" category is stemming.  Stemming means matching on the "stem" (or root) of the word rather than the exact word.

For example, users told us that the search half price book Redmond returned horrible results.  Searching for half price books Redmond produced much better results.   In our new release of Live Search, searches for half price book Redmond automatically include results with books in them as well.

Our team knew that tackling stemming would give us the improvements we needed for searches like these.  But we had to be careful, because you can't just stem all the time-you have to be smart about it.  An example of this is the word cable.  When you search for "cable," you could be looking for information on cable TV providers.  When you search for "cables", you could be looking for power, telephone, or network cables. 

These are just two techniques beyond just personalization which gives users better satisfaction with their search results and the impression that the search engine is “reading their mind”.

The main problem I have with personalization is that you need to give the search engine a private, personal information amount of information before it has tangible effects on search results. In the recent past, Marissa Mayer has pointed out that user studies have shown that location is the only significant factor which impacts perception of the relevance of search results when it comes to personalization. I suspect that true personalization will come from doing things like analysing my profile or my social graph friends list instead of the approach popularized by Google Personalized Search where previous search queries are analyzed.

Of course, we live in an era when 10% of the Internet population doesn’t see anything wrong with brain implants to connect them to the Web so maybe I’m being paranoid when I worry that the next major leap in search engine relevance will only occur after we allow search engines to spy on us.

Now playing: Busta Rhymes - I Know What You Want (feat. Mariah Carey)


 

Categories: Windows Live

October 26, 2007
@ 04:00 AM

Before we got married, Jenna and I talked about pets and both agreed we didn’t want any. We didn’t want some animal that would urinate on the carpet, need to be taken outside for walks where I’d have to pick up it’s excrement, and that would create an additional inconvenience every time we decided to go out of town.

I’m sure you know where this is going…

We pick him up next week. Since I’m so against the idea, I get to name him. So far I’m torn between “Socks” and “Buster” both of which my wife thinks are horrible names for a dog. Any suggestions?

Now playing: Snoop Doggy Dogg - Doggy Dogg World


 

Categories: Personal