I came across this tool today that allows you to make comparisons of google searches between comparable things. It takes the volume of searches and displays the searches by volume. So this way you can easily compare things
It's a wonderfully elegant thing however my comparison of men and women makes extremely depressing reading...
Get it after the jump at: http://hint.fm/seer/
In today's semantic web enabled world, there is an imbalance in the information available and the money made from it. The Analytics Arbitrageurs are constantly looking for ways to recognize value in this overlooked 'stock' then swoop in to buy it before everyone else gets the same idea and drives up the price. Welcome to our world
Friday, 17 September 2010
Thursday, 16 September 2010
A good analogy...
'Imagine you’re in a huge building with several storeys, each with an incredible large amount of rooms. Each room has tons of things in it. It’s utterly dark in that building, all you can do is walk down a hallway till you bang into a door or a wall.
All the rooms in the buildings are somehow connected but you don’t know how. Now, I tell you that in some rooms there is a treasure hidden and you’ve got one hour to find it. Here comes the good news: you’re not left to your own resources. You have a jinn, let’s call him Goog, who will help you. Goog is able to take you instantaneously to any room once you tell him a magic word. Let’s imagine the treasure you’re after is a chocolate bar, and you tell Goog: “I want Twox”. Goog tells you now that there are 3579 rooms where there is something with “Twox” in there.
So you start with the first room Goog suggests to you, and as a good jinn he of course takes you there immediately; you don’t need to walk there. Now you’re in the room you put everything you can grab into your rucksack and get back outside (remember, you can’t see anything, in there). Once you are outside the building again and can finally see what you’ve gathered you find out that what is in your rucksack is not really what you wanted. So, you have to get back into the building again and try the second room. Again, and again till you eventually find the Twox you want (and you are really hungry now, right?).
Now, imagine the same building but all the rooms and stairs are marked with fluorescent stripes in different colours, for example a hallway that leads you to some food is marked with a green stripe. Furthermore, the things in the rooms have also fluorescent markers in different shapes. For example, Twox chocolate bars are marked with green circles. And there is another jinn now as well- say hello to LinD.
You ask LinD the same thing as Goog before: “I want Twox” and LinD asks you: do you mean Twox the chocolate bar or Twox the car? Well, the chocolate bar of course, you say and LinD tells you: I know about 23 rooms that contain Twox chocolate bars, I will get one for you in a moment. How can LinD do this? Is LinD so much more clever than Goog? Well, not really. LinD does not understand what a chocolate bar is, pretty much the same as Goog does not know. However, LinD knows how to use the fluorescent stripes and markers in the building, and can thus get you directly what you want.
You see. It’s the same building and the same things in there, but with a bit of a help in forms of markers we can find and gather things much quicker and with less disappointments involved.
In the Linked Data Web we mark the things and hallways in the building, enabling jinns such as LinD to help you to find and use your treasures. As quick and comfortable as possible and no matter where they are.'
All the rooms in the buildings are somehow connected but you don’t know how. Now, I tell you that in some rooms there is a treasure hidden and you’ve got one hour to find it. Here comes the good news: you’re not left to your own resources. You have a jinn, let’s call him Goog, who will help you. Goog is able to take you instantaneously to any room once you tell him a magic word. Let’s imagine the treasure you’re after is a chocolate bar, and you tell Goog: “I want Twox”. Goog tells you now that there are 3579 rooms where there is something with “Twox” in there.
So you start with the first room Goog suggests to you, and as a good jinn he of course takes you there immediately; you don’t need to walk there. Now you’re in the room you put everything you can grab into your rucksack and get back outside (remember, you can’t see anything, in there). Once you are outside the building again and can finally see what you’ve gathered you find out that what is in your rucksack is not really what you wanted. So, you have to get back into the building again and try the second room. Again, and again till you eventually find the Twox you want (and you are really hungry now, right?).
Now, imagine the same building but all the rooms and stairs are marked with fluorescent stripes in different colours, for example a hallway that leads you to some food is marked with a green stripe. Furthermore, the things in the rooms have also fluorescent markers in different shapes. For example, Twox chocolate bars are marked with green circles. And there is another jinn now as well- say hello to LinD.
You ask LinD the same thing as Goog before: “I want Twox” and LinD asks you: do you mean Twox the chocolate bar or Twox the car? Well, the chocolate bar of course, you say and LinD tells you: I know about 23 rooms that contain Twox chocolate bars, I will get one for you in a moment. How can LinD do this? Is LinD so much more clever than Goog? Well, not really. LinD does not understand what a chocolate bar is, pretty much the same as Goog does not know. However, LinD knows how to use the fluorescent stripes and markers in the building, and can thus get you directly what you want.
You see. It’s the same building and the same things in there, but with a bit of a help in forms of markers we can find and gather things much quicker and with less disappointments involved.
In the Linked Data Web we mark the things and hallways in the building, enabling jinns such as LinD to help you to find and use your treasures. As quick and comfortable as possible and no matter where they are.'
Tuesday, 14 September 2010
The best twitter visualisation of all time!
Yeah, yeah...now i'ma let you finish but did you see the MTV VMAs over the weekend? Actually more impressive was this beautiful visualization of VMA-related Tweets created by Stamen Design
Despite winning 8 gongs at the awards, the gaga phenomenon didn't win this event. It was dominated by the anniversary of Taylor vs Kanye. No matter Kanye being such a prolific tweeter sorry, ranter through twitter he couldn't overhaul the Taylor sympathisers
Despite winning 8 gongs at the awards, the gaga phenomenon didn't win this event. It was dominated by the anniversary of Taylor vs Kanye. No matter Kanye being such a prolific tweeter sorry, ranter through twitter he couldn't overhaul the Taylor sympathisers
Thursday, 9 September 2010
Instant Ads
Google is out there, filling the MOMA in San Francisco (looks like they have learned a thing or two from Jobs), the new service, Google Instant, delivers faster search results.
The headline screams 'Google Instant could save the world a total of 3.5 billion seconds a day!'
Try it; if you start typing a search query, Google begins guessing what you’re looking for even before you finish. Its like predictive text but predictive search, it doesn't only recommend your search terms; it lists the links in real time!
The technology is cool. It's fast, I mean super-fast...so fast you could get motion sickness. At the launch, Marissa Mayer termed it 'search before you type' - love it. And the company estimated that using Google Instant would save users anywhere from 2 to 5 seconds per search.
Here is the price; those guys at google aren't stupid - thats why they are so rich. Instant delivers links, many more of them and yes, that means more sponsored links (Ads)
I am going to Budapest in a couple of weeks, I wanted to check the weather there so as I type 'B' I get an ad for 'Budget Insurance', quickly google guesses I am looking for Budapest but gives me 'Budapest Stag-Do's' (batchelor parties) before it correctly gets me to where I want to be as soon as I hit 'W'
So yes, the technology is very cool, but if I do 20 searches a day I will see 1.5 million more ads over the next 5 years than under the traditional search approach
The headline screams 'Google Instant could save the world a total of 3.5 billion seconds a day!'
Try it; if you start typing a search query, Google begins guessing what you’re looking for even before you finish. Its like predictive text but predictive search, it doesn't only recommend your search terms; it lists the links in real time!
The technology is cool. It's fast, I mean super-fast...so fast you could get motion sickness. At the launch, Marissa Mayer termed it 'search before you type' - love it. And the company estimated that using Google Instant would save users anywhere from 2 to 5 seconds per search.
Here is the price; those guys at google aren't stupid - thats why they are so rich. Instant delivers links, many more of them and yes, that means more sponsored links (Ads)
I am going to Budapest in a couple of weeks, I wanted to check the weather there so as I type 'B' I get an ad for 'Budget Insurance', quickly google guesses I am looking for Budapest but gives me 'Budapest Stag-Do's' (batchelor parties) before it correctly gets me to where I want to be as soon as I hit 'W'
So yes, the technology is very cool, but if I do 20 searches a day I will see 1.5 million more ads over the next 5 years than under the traditional search approach
Wednesday, 8 September 2010
IPad was going to win wasn't it?
I really like the way infographic displays enough confusion to show how the IPad is taking on all comers and established old hands but also allows you to dig in a get real insight.
The iPad is fossilizing these other products, its beauty is in the integration of the services (oh and the services themselves)
Each one of these speciality devices has somehow been left playing catch-up...how did that happen. Are we all really being hoodwinked by great design and marketing?
The iPad is fossilizing these other products, its beauty is in the integration of the services (oh and the services themselves)
Each one of these speciality devices has somehow been left playing catch-up...how did that happen. Are we all really being hoodwinked by great design and marketing?
What is your country known for
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