Archive for July, 2008

The future of software is in hardware and branded web applications

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

Taking a look at this presentation at TED:

Kevin Kelly on the next 5,000 days of the web.

And it’s brilliant. Kevin Kelly orginally starts taking about something that most people call, or understand as, The Singularity. The Singularity is where all computers are connected in some way, and they work together and more importantly, they/it are/is smarter than all the humans put together.

One of the quotes: “By 2040 computer processing power will surpass the processing power of all the humans combined.”

Kelly mentions thinking of devices like your sneakers as “Chips with Heels” and cars as “Chips with Wheels”. I couldn’t agree more. The future of software, and specifically web software, is in tying the offline together with the online. It’s probably always been the case, but now even more so, as we’re finally moving into understanding how the potential.

Image of Internet Fridge

Does anyone remember the Internet Fridge? Fantastic concept, but ridiculously expensive and it never really took off, most probably because there was never the concept of a web application for the actual fridge. I’d want to be able to “zoom” into my fridge, see what I’m buying, how often I’m buying it and what I’m wasting. Should I buy less cheese (because I’m not eating everything before the expiry date)? How long has that piece of chicken been sitting in the back there? Although I like the idea of mustard, am I actually using it?

A fridge that ties in with a web application and that can pick up on your consumption habits and deduce trends is much more exciting than one that just scans the barcode and orders new stuff for you (even if that is kinda sexy).

Nike is doing something similar now with Nike Plus+. It’s the “Chip with Heels” and it’s already here. How about uploading your recent trip into the Kalahari to a site where you can share that, and download other trips? If you were looking for an add on to your Jeep social network then there’s your idea.

In the next couple of years/months we’ll start seeing more apps that add value to users, advertising will move to the sideline and branded web applications will move to the fore.

The Singularity of constantly connected apps won’t come from a single source or actor, but consumers will start to want to be able to share their data on multiple sites. That will mean more open API’s and more need for interoperability. Right at the end Kelly touches on Data Portability when he says you’ll be able to sign in/up to sites without having to put your data in… again. That’s what Facebook Connect is taking mainstream now and what OpenID has been trying to do for the past couple of years.

on Women and location based systems

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

After reading this:

This is HERD: More stats about women online.

And some of this Location Technologies Primer:

But being location aware more than makes up for those limitations. Social networking will fundamentally change as your device knows who’s around you, for example. Startups like Loopt, Brightekite and Limbo are all offering social networking products that leverage location awareness.

And having the though for some time: I’d love to get the opinion from some women on Location Based Systems and what they think of being able to share their data like that.

Reason I’m thinking is that if I was a girl, I really wouldn’t want to let the entire bar that I’m in at the moment know that I’m single, give access to my photos and then be open to approach. Sure, if I would be single and looking I’d like to broadcast that I am, in fact, single and looking, but you don’t want every single guy to come up to you and start chatting you up. You’d want to be selective.

Quite a few of the apps that I’ve caught being released all have some kind of broadcasting system built in – you broadcast your status, and people can then connect with you. Naturally that’s in the “discovery” field of social networks, but sometimes you’d broadcast to only your already existing friends (which is a different model of social network). I don’t see the point in having an LBS network that doesn’t do this really… With LBS’s I’d like to see very granular privacy settings, because without that I can’t imagine people people broadcasting their location.

So, what do women think about LBS and broadcasting your info like that? Would you do it?

I suppose there are people who would want to broadcast their location, sexual preference and favourite movie….

What Facebook connect will mean for Identity 2.0

Friday, July 25th, 2008

Dick Hardt, the guy who sort of helped kickstarted OpenID and had that awesome presentation, has blogged about an abbreviated history of identity systems. It’s a pretty good read if you want to understand since when the whole Identity 2.0 thing has been coming – and how Microsoft might actually have been on the forefront of the movement, but did it in a sucky way.

The part that struck me most, and what I believe is really important for the web, is that we are seeing the web mature more. I posted about signs of a maturing web earlier in reference to more complex advertising and how digital advertising is coming into its own.

What Facebook Connect will mean is that we’ll see your real identity commenting on this blog and moving with you on the web. Which says a lot. OpenID is a cool way to do that already, you can create a profile and sign-on easily, but how do I know that it’s really you? Current commenting systems suck even more at this.

For example, here we have Nelson Mandela commenting on the Facebook Connect post on Quirk’s blog:

Many services have been suffering from a similar problem – fake or multiple identities. 24.com regularly suffers from spammy comments and Muti has also gained flak for allowing people to register multiple profiles (and thereby game the system).

Magnolia has an interesting way of getting around some of these problems – you can’t register an account with an email address (as these are quite disposable), you can only register with a select group of services. While this doesn’t directly solve the issue of identity, it was one of the first services that I saw that used a type of Facebook Connect before there was a Facebook Connect.

Now. What we’ll see is more of this, better identity with Real People in commenting. Real Identity. And this is why the web is maturing even more. It’s moving away from the geeky world of AcidBurn76 commenting on everything, to a more mature web where you are responsible. I find this exciting because it also opens up the opportunity for web communities to flourish more.

(As a side note, Facebook is the first service that has managed to get probably everyone to use their real name to sign up. It’s quite incredible really.)

The Five Dollar Comparison

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

The Five Dollar Comparison

Another small web-app from Nokia.

The fivedollarcomparison.org site was put together by an advanced design and research team in Nokia. We focus on identifying and understanding future disruptions and opportunities, looking 3-15 years out into the future and using these insights to help develop potentially new ideas for products and services.