Archive for the 'Web' Category

What is Yahoo doing with Kelkoo?

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

Kelkoo logo

This last week has been so strange. As some of you know I left left Kelkoo/Yahoo last year, as one of many the original Kelkoo management board team. About a week ago a new design was launched (which feels extra strange since the old design was my baby), then almost at the same time news leaked out from Sunnyvale(?) that Yahoo considers selling Kelkoo.

Other blogs have details on the story/ies:

Book a Fuzzberry

Sunday, September 9th, 2007

Lord Purr Purr of the Fuzzberrys

The web is a place for many ideas. Some are good, some are just amazingly amazing. Like the Fuzzberrys. This is a site where you simply book a live web chat with a muppet-like puppet. Useless, some may think. Entertaining, others will undoubtedly say. Certainly it’s the closest most of us will come to a live s.. chat :-D

If this could be a new way to daily bread and butter for the 100.000’s of struggling actors in the world (or even just some of them) it’s already a great idea. Now you too can start earning with your web cam - only this way you don’t need to freeze. Enjoy!

And oh - btw - my favourite you wonder? Lord Purr Purr - no doubt about that.

Wikio Raises €4 million

Tuesday, January 23rd, 2007

Pierre and Wikio

How kool is that! The start-up of my former boss Pierre Chappaz  - Wikio - just raised a first non-FFF round of financing. Wikio is in a way a competitor to Digg - only they try to take the concept further. Great news Pierre - good luck down the road! Story on TechCrunch and Kelblog (if you read French).

Truly cool mash-up

Tuesday, October 17th, 2006
Testing Retrievr to find a sportscar
ProgrammableWeb points to a truly cool way of searching images on Flickr: Sketch a simple drawing and it will find pictures with similar curves, shapes and colours. Once through with the facination of something I hadn’t tried before, I was a bit disappointed by not finding a red sports car despite my accurate drawing though… ;-)

The search that gets back to you later

Tuesday, October 10th, 2006

Bill Burnham has nicely coined a new term: Persistent Search. Imagine doing a normal search on Google and everytime there is a new (and really relevant) result you would get a mail, new ping in your feed reader or messsenger. Actually the term may be new, but the idea is not - I have been using GoogleAlert for years and it was really cool as long as it was free (wonder if Gideon has found a way to make it free now - AdWords or AdSense should be able to do it for him?). Googlealert does more or less exactly what Bill is looking for - it tells you (via mail) what new results have popped up for your queries - like Google News only looking at the index as a whole, not only news sites.

Searchmonkey

A company I think may be positioned for a good run for the future race on “persistent search” is Attentio, which today is a B2B company focussing on temporal search and tools for figuring out the online buzz related big brands. With not much tweaking the founders Simon and Per could help the avereage search user do a persistent search across a number of targetted search collections (like news, blogs, web, etc.)

What happens to your LinkedIn profile when you die?

Thursday, September 28th, 2006

Welcome to Startspin.com!

Searching my mailboxes the other day, I found a mail from a very dear old friend of mine who passed away much too early. I bet not many of you have mails from people who have died lingering in your mailboxes. The Internet is not that old, and most of the users haven’t had time to die yet.

So what happens on-line when you die? Not much I guess. You’ll still be recieving spam. You’ll have a lot of accounts with free web services to which no one probably knows the login - frozen accounts (not with Hotmail, though, since they apparently destroy non-active accounts).

Modern epitaph
But with all the social networks now bearing proof of users’ existence as on-line personalities - what will be your afterlife on-line? Let’s take Linked-In as example. I assume that if no one tells them you’re dead, you’ll be just a frozen account there - an image of your status and network at the moment you passed away. But what if people in your network starts mailing LinkedIn with news of your death? Two options:

  1. LinkedIn finds proof you’re dead and pull you out of the site. No traces of you will remain. It would be too bad, don’t you think?
  2. LinkedIn decides to honor your epitaph by creating a different font colour for you and put a nice little cross nest to your name. You live forever (on LinkedIn). Woudln’t that be nice?

I decided to ask the people at LinkedIn myself. Mail and possible answer will be posted as comment to this post.