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Media and Users in Chorus: It Just Works

April 11, 2008 Leave a Comment

Wow, it sounds like the main stream tech media might be catching up to what the users who have moved from Windows to the Mac OS X have been saying for a few years now: “It Just Works”:

  • Business Week: Apple’s OS Edge Is a Threat to Microsoft
  • Computer World: Windows is ‘collapsing,’ Gartner analysts warn

Not that this is anything new to a large number of people…but when a Gartner analyst makes a warning like that against one of the analyst industry cash cows…or was it just stating more of the obvious. When you read through the details, the Gartner analyst are essentially telling Microsoft to turn Windows into the MacOS.  Only Apple already swallowed the horse pill of starting from scratch and upsetting their development community 8 years ago.  It would be interesting to see how Microsoft handles the same situation (which it must).

Filed Under: Technology Ramblings Tagged With: , Apple, Microsoft

Screen Scraping Lunacy & Need for Open Data

April 11, 2008 Leave a Comment

Today I was talking with a fellow entrepreneur who told me about a new class of web2.0 companies that I had not heard of before.  Financial portal sites that you give your financial account login info to and then they screen scrape those sites to provide you a single portal view of all your information and then anonymously compare it to the community.

Are You $#@& Kidding Me?  (Pardon my censored obscenity…)

That was my initial reaction when I heard this.  Giving some 3rd party website my login to my social network or photo sharing site for data aggregation purposes is one thing (and that is scary enough), but who in their right mind would give some 3rd party website the login to their financial accounts?

And yet, that is exactly what Cake Financial, Covester (recently raised $6.5M in funding), and others are doing. Granted, I don’t know a lot about these firms at this point, I know Cake claims to integrate all your finanical data and Covester might be more of a money management social network (wasn’t this already tried with the messages on Yahoo Financials?  I know insiders who leaked data and caused possible financial damage to their companies on sites like that).   I am both surprised and not by the fact that these companies exist and are getting funding.  I just hope that they are thinking of the long term and learning from the recent financial scandels and are putting real safeguards in place to protect themselves, their investors, and most importantly their communities.

Time will tell…

But I do think this just shows the real need for Open Data sharing access that is the corner stone to the new value proposition for most of the internet based services.  This is an area that I have been doing a lot of thought and research on lately.  First by building a proof of concept demo for SnapLogic that integrates an open with a not-so-open service to show the added value of the combination.  And Second, leveraging that initial POC and my years of selling experience to come up with a number of interesting ways to leverage these two data types to provide disruptive changes in the sales process and possibly organization of sales teams (more on that later…).  I have also been working through a number of real business differentiating photography sharing capabilities that use the same concept for FocalPower.

The need for services to enable their uses to access and share their data and metadata with other services/users is real and valuable.  The real trick is choosing the right level of openness  to make it usable by the masses and proliferate while enabling new revenue generation.  You have to balance the openness with the protection of your users.  How do you do that such that you don’t prevent the innovation that this type of openness allows?  Look at all the innovative things that have come out of the open API on Flickr.  Opening up your service via an API to share data and metadata has to be an all or nothing proposition with regards to who has access to that data.  Placing too many restrictions just stifles the innovation.  Note I said restrictions, not safe guards.  There needs to be safe guards in place to protect the users.  And the ability to users to opt-in to the open access or different levels of the access.

The key thing in all these integrations is for the users to read the terms of service!   You may be invalidating your terms for using a service if you give your login information to a 3rd party.  And, like the ownership rights grab that have been making waves in the photography industry, you might not own all the information that you expect to own if you use a service.

Filed Under: Technology Ramblings Tagged With: Integration, Open API, Open Data

Green Scene Hits Your Code

March 20, 2008 2 Comments

Since my mind is on efficiency this morning (see previous post about Facebook) I wanted to share an interesting blog posting I’ve had open in a browser for a few weeks now.  Steve Sounders, web performance guru from Google and previously Yahoo, posted some interesting thoughts on how green is your web page?

Steve did a quick mental experiment of calculating the CO2 emissions caused by bad code on a large website, he used wikipedia as his example.  I find this a bit interesting on the cyclical nature of the topic.  I might be showing my age a bit here, but back when I was a lad learning how to code up on the frozen tundra, we actually took into consideration efficiency and the cost of operations (maybe it was our proximity to Cray Research that drove this…).  I find it interesting that the green movement is causing this topic to be thought of again but in a different way.

I have been doing a little fun project like this myself at home.  A friend loaned my a device called Kill A Watz, which you plug into a power outlet and then plug other electrical devices into the Kill A Watz. The Kill A Watz then measurs how much electicity you are using on that one outlet.  It can track over time and give you the KW over a time period as well as real time watt usage.  I am using this on our home entertainment center to measure how much electricity is uses when it’s in standby mode.  Watch for a posting on that next week.  (I will give a teaser and let you know that a flat panel plasma TV uses twice the electricity when displaying a bright scene than when displaying a dark one…)

Filed Under: Technology Ramblings Tagged With: Coding, Efficiency, Performance

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About latoga labs

With over 25 years of partnering leadership and direct GTM experience, Greg A. Lato provides consulting services to companies in all stages of their partnering journey to Ecosystem Led Growth.