Follow up on the mousetrap

Apparently I could have been more clear in my post on the Google Authentication mousetrap, so here’s some additional summary points:

  1. It’s not so much about lock-in as it is that Google can steamroll over independent competition because of their ability to integrate and cross-promote services. In the first bubble, they called this synergy and it’s not necessarily a bad thing. It’s better for users, but worse for upstart competitors.
  2. As web apps become the norm, being able to move your data between them will become essential, and since almost all web apps require some form of authentication, you need to be able to share your credentials between these web apps to transfer the data.
  3. Microsoft Word already runs on OSX and so you already can copy and paste data between it and Appleworks. My point is that that’s not the case on the web today. Because commercial use of APIs are restricted, you have to wait for companies to forge business deals before you get the kind of interop that you already have between different company’s desktop-based applications.
  4. I feel that my view is squarely looking at reality — looking at what will happen if we don’t open up data formats and authentication protocols. I am placing my hope on microformats and OpenID — not because I care so much about the technology, but because until we have open standards for transferring data and open protocols for authenticating, it’s going to continue to be a disempowering situation for your typical end user. Like me.

The future of The John

Waterless Urinal

On a visit to Berkeley for the this past weekend, I happened to check out the lavatree (that’s phonetic mind you). To my surprise, they had waterless urinals! Cleverly, the designer of the urinals, , left their name right in the trough, allowing me to find the source of this golden nugget and pass it on to you, fair readers.

Now, not only are these urinals environmentally friendly and odorless, but they’ll save you a boatload of loot on water and sewage savings!

And here in Web2.0World we thought we were all so innovative and oh so smaht. Seems we got nothin’ on the folks building out The John 2.0.

The day Facebook stole the network

Marty Wells of Tangler (and a Citizen Agency client) has some great thoughts on Facebook’s usurping of MySpace’s opportunity to set the standard API of the social web. Basically, that Facebook came out with their API first means that they dictate the standard calls and features that everyone else will now have to offer parity with.

Joshua and the Delicious folks found themselves in a similar situation — delaying Flock’s rolling out of privacy in favorites even though Shadows had long since supported the feature in its API. And more recently, Ma.gnolia will be mirroring the Delicious API to speed up Flock integration. In the case of another incumbent, Photobucket mirrored Flickr’s API to push Flock integration.

In these and other cases, the sooner you go open, the sooner you reap the benefits. And, I have to admit, I’m happy that it was Facebook to make a move first.

See your visitors in heat vision!

CrazyEgg Heatmap

Today , the brainchild of pinkoteer Hiten Shah, finally launched.

I’ve been dying for this to come out for sometime, being the visual person that I am. While helps me make sense of the data, it’s never really shown me, per page, where the most action is happening — nor in real time overlays (not to mention that it’s gone silent as of late). And while Google Analytics has a similar link analysis tool, it’s pretty nasty to look at compared with CrazyEgg.

They’ve also gone the smart (sustainable) route with their freemium pricing model.

Cheers Hiten and co., and Edward Tufte, eat your heart out!

American Idol for apps launches

MyDreamApp

Bottom line: Phill Ryu’s MyDreamApp contest launches — could the open source community take some hints from this exciting contest?

I got a chance to hang with Phill Ryu and a few other Mac dev types during WWDC and he told me about his soon-to-be-revealed plan for an “American Idol of Software”. Well, he’s let it out of the bag and ideas (and lots of coverage) are already starting to roll in to the project called .

The rules are rather interesting, since they leave the creator only 15% of month-to-month sales, with the rest going to the contest’s organizers:

Payment. If Your Submission is Accepted, You will receive royalty payment via PayPal equal to fifteen (15) percent of the net income of the Apple Macintosh-compatible product developed by MDA based upon Your Submission. Payments to You will commence 30 days after the product makes its first sale and will continue at 30-day intervals provided that the product is profitable.

On top of that, the inventor retains zero ongoing interest in the application’s intellectual property:

Ownership of Submissions. (I) When You send MDA your submission, You are assigning MDA all rights and interests – including all intellectual property rights – in the Submission, and MDA shall be the absolute owner of all rights and interests therein;

For some, these issues aren’t a big deal and if your idea isn’t chosen, well, you keep the rights. Besides, this is pretty standard boilerplate legalese given most contest rules — and with some pretty decent prizes and an opportunity to show off your wares to folks like Kevin Rose, Guy Kawasaki, David Pogue, and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, it’s worth given up the IP rights for a chance at stardom… right?

Well, in spite of the hype, on the one hand it is. It’s pretty satisfying to see a bunch of independents and friends pull something together like this (though I didn’t realize how male-centric the Macdev community was!). It takes a lot of work and dedication to make this kind of thing happen, and so in some senses that 85% that they retain is a bet that the best ideas that come in will actually be lucrative enough to offset their efforts in organizing the contest.

On the other hand, and this should come as no surprise, I’d like to see something where the results are open sourced at the end (or at least given the choice of being open licensed), opening up the opportunity for more folks to get involved in the building out of a basic premise (and no, I’m not suggesting another centralized Cambrian House). In fact, I’d love to see the folks pick this one up and, I’m sorry to say this, but rather just than talk about it, put on your own DreamApp contest for the open source community and see what happens — hell, you’ve got the money, mindshare and, really, could use some love as the release of Firefox 2 approaches.

What better way to celebrate the launch of Firefox 2 then to sponsor a web-wide contest that results in something of real consequence for the open source community?

Building a better mouse trap

Mousetrap

I’m struggling to make sense of something here. In Blogger’s announcement about its new beta was an interesting tidbit that didn’t get much pickup: Blogger now has a Google Data API.

There’s a lot that I could say about this, and my initial reaction was actually wrong. It seemed to me that Google was going off and inventing its own blog-publishing protocol, pulling the same crap that it did with its non-standard Event Publisher API (using random values that don’t map directly to the international icalendar standard.

But, no, it turns out that GData is actually just Atom “plus some extensions for handling queries”, but branded as a proprietary Google format (kind of ironic, given the long and pained open development of Atom).

So whatever, Atom is what comes next after RSS and MetaWeblog (in particular as ).

The important thing that started to dawn on me was this part of the announcement:

So just as Yahoo had done with Flickr (inspiring a fairly wide backlash), Blogger is going to be fully absorbed into the Google Auth-borg. This continued amalgamation of services behind the Google Account Authentication has consequences beyond the momentary outcry over Google’s supposed steamrolling of companies.

Business is business and competition is a threat to any member of an ecosystem, which is why you’ve got to keep innovating, adapting and bettering to survive. But it’s different when it comes to setting protocols and standards and the seamless moving of data in and out of disparate systems. When those protocols are closed or locked up or can be sealed off at any time, the competitive environment becomes very different.

The problem that I see is Google’s ability to shut out third party services once you’ve imported yourself into the proverbial gLife. No doubt there are feeds and the aforementioned GData APIs but it’s not an open system; Google decides which ports it wants to open and for whom. Think you’ll ever be able to cross-post calendar items from to your Google Calendar? Only if Narendra strikes a deal on your behalf — even though it’s your data. Think you’ll ever be able to share your Picasa Albums with your Flickr account? Don’t bet on it. Or — or — how about sharing your Google search history with your Yahoo account? Or merging your buddy list between Orkut and Flickr? Not a chance.

In simplest terms, with the state we’re in with centralized authentication in web applications, it’s like waiting for Microsoft and Apple to strike a deal enabling you to copy and paste from Appleworks to Word. And on top of that, you’d need to have to had created an account in both apps to even boot them up. So from a “normal person perspective”, this is a situation that you’d never want to have to worry about.

But that’s essentially where we’re at.

To put it in greater perspective: Web2.0 should have been the “great wide opening” — that is, where you could be in utter control of your data and move it in and out of services at your whim, just as you can with your money, in and out of banks depending on the quality and diversity of services they offer. And indeed, they’ve got to compete just to keep your business — if you leave, you won’t be stuck with a bunch of expiring pre-loaded debit cards.

But there’s a new trend, seen in Google’s spreading account authentication that foretells of the inevitable Passport-like lock-in that sunk Microsoft the first go ’round. You see, Google’s Account Authentication API makes it easy for you to add more and more of Google services by simply using your Gmail credentials. For Google, this leads to huge network effects, because they can essentially merge behavior data from across its entire network of services to build out a better picture of you — leading to a kind of competitive advantage that no one else can touch.

The problem though, both for you and for independent developers, is that you can’t pick and choose who or what Google works with. They’ll make themselves just open enough to be above reproach but not quite open enough to allow third parties to compete with them on their home turf (man, it’d be nice if there were a “Reply by Skype” link in Gmail — oops, Gtalk only!).

And this is how Google will build a better user mousetrap by leveraging its superior cross-product integration that its authentication system affords them.

(Aside: 37Signals partially benefits from the same kind of integration in typing Writeboards into Backpack but could go further by sharing accounts between different Basecamps).

Buy NewsFire, get Inquisitor free

Buy NewsFire, get Inquisitor free

Dave Watanabe (of Aquisition fame) is offering a pretty sweet deal this weekend only:

For the $18.99 pricetag of NewsFire (his slick feed reader) you’ll also get a free license for Inquisitor, his Spotlight-like search add-on for Safari and Camino (which, incidentally, is what Flock‘s search interface is influenced by). 25% off. Not bad.

Coming clean: If you read Dave’s post, he’s offered bloggers who write about his offer a free license to Inquisitor. This post qualified me for that promotion, as David Emery points out. However, since I actually bought NewsFire as a result of that promotion, I ended up with an extra Inquisitor license anyway, so it’s not like I made out like a bandit as David alleges. Anyway, rather than be held to account for a benefit I received but didn’t disclose, there ya go — my admission of impropriety. 😉

Via Digg.

Slightly Oddica tshirts…!

Oddica rocks!!

Update: The ‘factoryjoe’ coupon code at $7 off will expire Dec 12, so make sure you get your purchases in before then!

Bottom line: Use ‘factoryjoe’ for $7 off at Oddica, another cool indie tee shop that gives 41% of sales to the artists.

Happened upon Oddica not too long ago and found their stuff to be pretty cool, subscribed to their blog. They released four new shirts and offered a promo and I could no longer resist. Bought Sheltered 2 and Oil is Evil for Miss Tara — a mere day or two later all kinds of good stuff arrived. It was practically a ValleySchwagtastic experience.

As they’re pretty appreciative of the pimpage they get, they offered a $7 discount for my readers until the end of the month. Just use ‘factoryjoe’ as your coupon code and voila! Cheap tees!

is yet another in an increasingly populated and inspiring field of cool, boutique, artist-centric shops. There’s too many to name, but a few I’ve interacted with: (who hasn’t?), (Copyleft Aeroflot and repeat BarCamp tshirt printer), (an absolute fav), (BarCampSF tshirt printer) and (featuring MeCommerce).