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As Twitter microblogging captures the mainstream media's imagination, Google Analytics has quietly relaunched Measure Map analytics for bloggers. Email invitations went out this week to alpha users of the blog tracking software.

The bad news for Measure Map bloggers: historical analytics data from the original Measure Map can't be imported into the Google Analytics / Measure Map platform.

We reported on the acquisition of Adaptive Path's Measure Map by Google back in February, 2006. Since then Jeffrey Veen and his team have redesigned Google Analytics and integrated new features such as Website Optimizer with great success.

Sitepoint's Technical Editor Andrew Tetlaw posted a question on April 11, 2008 in a dormant Google Groups forum for Measure Map:

Is it just me or does anyone else get the feeling MM has been abandoned?

Performance is terrible, the browser report still doesn't even
recognize Firefox 2.0....

That post seems to have spurred the Google Analytics team to email all the original users of Measure Map to test the newly rebuilt analytics software for bloggers. You can ask the MM team questions in the resuscitated Measure Maps Google Group.

Andrew also told me that to convert to the new and improved Measure Map you need to sign up for a Google Analytics account and add GA tracking code to your site. For an update, check out Andrew's excellent post today in Sitepoint: Measure Map Redux.

We're not sure whether the original MM "Date Slider" will be reinvented but it was one of the original cool tools for Analytics that had wide appeal (even if it seems clunky by today's Web 2.0 standards).

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Ich vote, du votest, er-sie-es votet, wir voten, ihr votet, sie voten: Es lebe die Deutsche Sprache. Es lebe das Internet. Viva VANDES. VANDES ist von der MUZ (Musikzentrale Nürnberg e.V.) auserwählt worden, gegen vier andere Bands in einem Internet-Voting der Sparda-Bank (Hauptsponsor Bardentreffen) anzutreten. Der Gewinner dieser Abstimmung spielt im August 2008 auf einem [...]
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Gibt es Strom bald auch kabellos?

Posted in Read this at April 29th, 2008 / No Comments »
Fokussierte Mikrowellen könnten eine drahtlose Stromübertragung möglich machen.
Das äußerst ergebnislose Basteln von Playlisten für ein lang angedachtes Selfmade-Album (oder wenigstens eine Selfmade-EP!) ist frustrierend. Sehr frustrierend. Und weil’s einfach nicht gelingen will, weil’s noch nicht rund ist und weil die Dramaturgie einfach noch nicht stimmen will (weil der Anspruch zu hoch ist?) gibt’s erst mal weiter vereinzelte kleine Appetithäppchen. Und zwar [...]
Adobe gibt GoLive zugunsten von Dreamweaver auf
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Sie ist drauβen

Posted in Read this at April 25th, 2008 / No Comments »
Es ist soweit, Gisberts CD ist drauβen und macht auf Amazon bereits eine sehr gute Figur…
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Sie ist drauβen

Posted in Read this at April 25th, 2008 / No Comments »
Es ist soweit, Gisberts CD ist drauβen und macht auf Amazon bereits eine sehr gute Figur…
...

Sie ist drauβen

Posted in blogging-elsewhere at April 25th, 2008 / No Comments »
Es ist soweit, Gisberts CD ist drauβen und macht auf Amazon bereits eine sehr gute Figur…

Yahoo’s CTO Ari Balogh and Chief Architect (Platforms) Neal Sample filled in a few more details today around their new Yahoo Open Strategy (called YOS internally).

Background

Yahoo wants to turn itself into one big social network-driven site, and simultaneously open many of its core services to get users and developers thinking of Yahoo as their Internet hub. They’ve been talking about parts of this since last November. First were details about how webmail will serve as the social networking hub, followed by more tidbits in January. In March they joined the Google-led Open Social initiative. And they’ve made a series of announcements around Search Monkey which will allow third parties to enhance Yahoo search with structured data.

Yahoo Open Strategy

Yahoo mashes the social stuff and the open stuff under the same banner of YOS. There are three components to the additional news announced today - platformization, opening services, and portability. It’s important to note that nothing has launched, and there’s no public timetable for the launch of any particular part of YOS. Sample said in a briefing today that the pieces will be released over the coming months.

Below is Balogh’s presentation at the web 2.0 Expo:

Platformization: Users will notice this most, as the overall Yahoo experience becomes social. This is driven by (1) the reduction of the dozens of profiles (for each service) they have today to a single, unified Yahoo user profile, and (2) the promotion of the email inbox as the center of the Yahoo experience. Once the profile is centralized they will begin to socialize the services. Think friends lists, activity streams, etc.

Clearly Yahoo isn’t bolting yet another social network onto their existing services. They keep saying that, of course. But even the fact that they refer to this part of it as “platformization” internally shows how they are thinking of this. They’re moving Yahoo to a massive new social network platform, and rewriting large parts of the core functionality.

Open Yahoo: This encompasses a few different things. First, they are now deeply involved in OpenSocial and will allow developers to get access via those common APIs. But they are layering their many existing (and planned) APIs on top of OpenSocial to allow deeper integration with Yahoo services. Users will be able to add these third party applications, built on Open Social and the Yahoo APIs, into Yahoo.

The other piece of this is Yahoo Application Platform (YAP) - which will be a direct competitor to Google App Engine. Users can host their independent applications on Yahoo’s bandwidth, storage, database and CPU resources. At first they’ll support SecurePHP applications only, but they’ll expand to additional languages over time. The model will be very similar to Google’s - free usage up to a point, metered after that. They’ll also offer various developer tools as well.

Portability. Yahoo is also going to promote the spread of Yahoo around the web to third party apps and services. This isn’t just widgets - they’ll also let user data out of the ecosystem. For example, Sample said in the briefing, they’ll facilitate the synchronization of the Yahoo address book with Plaxo (Facebook hated the idea of users doing this, by the way).

Yahoo: Sticky, Viral, Friendly

Yahoo continues to compete in search marketing, the big driver of revenue. But they realize they’ll always be second to Google in that game. So the win for them is to make Yahoo as sticky, friendly, and viral as possible. They have 500 million worldwide visitors per month - nearly 60% of the total Internet audience visits a Yahoo property every month (Google has 72%) (Comscore). That audience can clearly be leveraged, and this is a war that, unlike search marketing, Yahoo thinks they can win.

They still, of course, have to actually launch this massive project - for now it’s all ideas and vaporware. And no one knows what Microsoft thinks of all this, or what happens to YOS if that deal is done.

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

Etwas verspätet, aber nun doch: Earth.org ist seit 22.4.2008, dem offiziellen Tag der Erde online. Da ich in der Planung der neuen Reise-Wiki-Gutestun-Plattform beteiligt war und das Projekt schon seit geraumer Zeit kenne (es gab mal eine Zeit, da sollte das ganze Hitiki heissen… voll der Insider, krass) nehme ich mir vor an selber Stelle sehr bald mehr über Earth.org zu berichten… Für den Moment nur so viel:

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  • es ist ein Special Interest Wiki zum Thema Reisen, als solches sicher nichts Neues
  • in Zukunft soll es zu einem echten Reiseportal wachsen, mehr als nur ein Wiki bieten (die Pläne sind in der Schublade)
  • der Domainname ist natürlich der Hammer
  • das Design gefällt mir vom Ansatz her sehr gut, aber es hapert noch an der Usability
  • der Ansatz “Open Travel Guide” und “kein Kommerz” tun dem sonst gnadenlos schlechten Internet-Reiseinfo-”Markt” megagut und ich freue mich drauf zu erleben, wie entsprechende “Zielgruppen” drauf reagieren bzw wer so anfängt die Plattform in welcher Art zu nutzen…