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Thursday, September 24, 2009

Google Adds Meta Comments to Toolbar

Sidewiki, Google's newest online gizmo, gives its toolbar users the ability to write annotations and read the comments of others. Pretty cool and definitely worth a look, but I am unsure of how well it will be adopted. IMHO web users already have their hands full with existing tools.

Basically Sidewiki opens a column on the left-hand side of your browser where you can view and respond to the comments of others.

Comments will, of course, be organized by Google's mysterious, ever-evolving algo. This raises the issue of...drumroll please...SEO implications. Will these comments figure into page rank and SERPs? How long until SEO spammers render the whole system irrelevant? Will a page full of paid comments add or take away from your web experience? How will Google combat this?

Interesting to see how this tool will be used. Stay tuned...

Best,
Bobby

Friday, September 18, 2009

Facebook announces plans for voice chat. Skype buster or too many features?

An effective website, much like a good sandwich, can actually suffer from having too many ingredients. With Facebook announcing voice-chat (currently in closed beta), one must wonder if this will propel Facebook even higher in the web2.0 stratosphere or turn it into a cluttered beast that operates too slow (i.e. the demise of AOL). My Facebook page has already turned from a simple wall posting and messaging with friends platform into a advertising and data-capturing behemoth. If they don't watch it... I'm going back to IRC.

We as a software development company are excited about it. If voice chat works well, it will give our developers a new platform for our custom software applications. If the chat doesn't function as it should we can always improve upon it using Facebook's developer tools.

I expect the chat to work well. Facebook has engaged Vivox to offer ut, who provides voice service for Second Life and EVE Online. With a user base of over 15M users one would presume the kinds are all ironed out. The service will offer one-on-one and group discussions. Dinosaurs who don't have a Facebook account can even use a free number to join in on the phone.

A few things I wonder:
1) Since it supports conferences, this will clearly be used as a business tool. As Facebook courts businesses more will they lose their core base of college students and people with not enough to do at work?
2) With a third party vendor involved clearly they hope to monetize this. Would you be turned off by voice advertisements? How do they think they are going to earn using voice chat?

Either way, another story about web portals becoming increasingly integrated and taking business from the old industrialists (phone companies). Drop me a line and let me know what you think.

Best,
Bobby

For a screen-shot of the demo view and more info, take a look at the CNN article.