Category Internet

Τα εργοστάσια της πληροφορίας

Τον Ιανουάριο του 2006 έγραφα για την ελληνική Wikipedia και μεταξύ άλλων πρότεινα κάποιες από τις εργασίες των μαθητών σε γυμνάσια και λύκεια να επεξεργάζονται ομαδικά από τη τάξη και στο τέλος να συνεισφέρωνται στη Wikipedia. Όπως φαίνεται δε θα μπορούσα να ήμουν ο μόνος που θα είχε σκεφθεί κάτι τέτοιο. Το σχετικό εγχείρημα μιας […]

Advertising Googlocrisy.

Here's a pretty good reason why you shouldn't trust companies, even if their 'motto' is 'Do No Evil': Google seems to be penalising sites that carry paid links, while at the same time AdSense has become one of the most ubiquitous ad-schemes around. Technology aside, whether you carry paid/text links or AdSense is the same thing: advertising on your page. Google's algorithmic dependency on hyperlinks to determine content quality and relevance is nothing but it's own problem and while they can do whatever they want to their engine it kind of reflects bad on them (see abuse of market position) to penalise sites this way, especially when they run an extensive ad service too. Think of Microsoft doing the same for all pages carrying AdSense because their engine used Javascript created links to determine the page rank of a site. People would be crying foul before the bytes had settled on the press release (and they'd be right of course). Now, think of Microsoft having anywhere near the search engine market share that Google has and I'm sure someone would probably be contemplating a class action lawsuit about lost visits, profits etc. due to unlawful discrimination. Will people blink first by removing paid links and sticking to Google's ad services out of fear of losing traffic, or will the company end up losing market share in the long term as a consequence of mediocre search results and annoyed users?

Open Sesam…err iPhone.

A few completely unfounded (arguably bordering on stupid) excuses by salesman Steve. GBs of criticism on the web. A botched attempt at Reality Distortion. Numerous hacks. Dozens of semi-illegal third-party applications. Many bricked iPhones. And, now? Apple's spectacular realisation that the iPhone won't glitter forever. It was about time Apple did things right. The industry is not kidding. This is only the beginning...

Gizmo5, and Gizmo Project's Paypal issues.

Just recently Gizmo Project announced its Gizmo5 beta, a service that allows users of mobile phones to place calls for very low rates through a MIDP Gizmo client. A data connection is required just for setting up the call. In other words, the idea is that you pick a contact (or dial the number you […]

Η Συνέντευξη της Viviane Reding

Στις 11-12 Οκτωβρίου η επίτροπος για τη Κοινωνία της Πληροφορίας και των ΜΜΕ της ΕΕ, κα. Viviane Reding, επισκέφτηκε την Ελλάδα στα πλαίσια της συνάντησης του ERG. Το adslgr.com πήρε μια σύντομη συνέντευξη από την Επίτροπο που παρουσιάζει κάποιο ενδιαφέρον και επιβεβαιώνει κάποιες από τις αρχές και βάσεις της ΕΕ σχετικά με τις κατευθυντήριες σε ό,τι αφορά τη ρύθμιση των τηλεπικοινωνιών. Είναι κρίμα που παρά την υποστήριξη της ΕΕ η απόδοση της ελληνικής Ρυθμιστικής Αρχής, της ΕΕΤΤ, δεν μπορεί σε καμία περίπτωση να συγκριθεί με αυτή πολλών άλλων ρυθμιστικών αρχών στην Ευρώπη.

Κάποια στατιστικά για το ΜΠΛΟΟΓΚΛ

Πέρασαν τρείς μήνες (!) παρουσίας του ΜΠΛΟΟΓΚΛ στο ελληνικό διαδίκτυο και επι τη ευκαιρία είπα να σχολιάσω μερικά από τα στατιστικά που συγκεντρώθηκαν το καιρό αυτό. Κάποιο μέρος αφορά σε τεχνικά στατιστικά — καθώς αυτά έχουν ιδιαίτερο ενδιαφέρον — όμως θα επεκταθώ και σε κάποια στατιστικά γενικότερου ενδιαφέροντος. Από τις αρχές Ιουλίου 2007 λοιπόν μέχρι […]

Downloadable fonts and CSS

One of the main gripes of designers and users alike about the Web is its inherent dependence on the few, largely mediocre (e.g. Trebuchet, Times New Roman, Courier New) or poor (Arial, Comic Sans, Verdana etc.) fonts that Microsoft commissioned or designed more than a decade ago. This year CSS turns ten and along with it comes yet another proposal on the Web's Typographic liberation. Or sort of. This time it might work, although scores of technical and legal questions remain. A List Apart has the details.

No Really. It's up to you

Checkmate from Radiohead. One of the bands with the highest artistic integrity from the early 1990s to date, redefine music distribution by offering their new album In Rainbows on their site at a price specified by the buyer, ala Magnatune. No Really. Radiohead Rock!

National Broadband Strategy

Or how to say 'Market Failure' loudly. The FCC is waking up to the fact that the US lacks both the infrastructure and the mechanisms that would allow for its development and keep the country ahead (or even on par) with the rest of the world. Hopefully the realisation will translate to practical incentives to telcos and ISPs and regulations that would liberate the market from the ruling oligopoly and spur competition as well as a comprehensive benchmark that will guide the market towards some reference point. Alternatively, the temporary euphoria of WiMAX induced activity of the near future will probably mask the deep and basic problems with telecommunications in that country.

Amazonmp3

The first fully DRM-less music store is here, offering 'over 2 million songs' by EMI and Universal encoded in 256kbit mp3s --- the largest unencrypted music downloads offering to date. Although the service is currently in beta, I have a feeling this is going to usher a new era in music downloads and spur competition. Let's hope more record labels align themselves behind either Amazon's or Apple's store. What's sad, although completely understandable given the very low proliferation of capable devices, is that tracks are using the ageing mp3 format instead of newer and higher quality codecs, such as AAC. Maybe in the future I guess.