Google and Yahoo to share web ads
Yahoo and Google, the world's two biggest search engines, have announced a two-week experiment that will see them share advertising space.
During the pilot, Google will be able to place ads alongside 3% of search results on Yahoo's website.
Analysts say the move is designed to frustrate Microsoft, which has offered to buy Yahoo for $44.6bn (£22.6bn), or extract a higher offer.
The news came as both sides were reported to be forging other alliances.
The idea would be to combine three of the world's most visited websites: MySpace, Yahoo and MSN.com.
News Corp had previously discussed working with Yahoo to see off Microsoft's offer.
At the same time, Yahoo is looking to Time Warner's AOL to keep out of Microsoft's hands, according to the Wall Street Journal.
It reported that the deal would involve Time Warner making a cash investment for 20% of the merged firm, which Yahoo could then use to buy back shares.
'Less competitive'
Microsoft criticised Yahoo's advertising trial with Google, saying any lasting deal would not be in the consumers' interests.
"Any definitive agreement between Yahoo and Google would consolidate over 90% of the search advertising market in Google's hands. This would make the market far less competitive," Brad Smith, Microsoft's General Counsel said.
But Yahoo said the testing did not necessarily mean that "any further commercial relationship with Google will result".
Investors reacted positively to the announcement, with Yahoo shares rising 7%.
"Yahoo has made a really clever move here," Cowen and Co analyst Jim Friedland said.
"It looked like Microsoft had all the cards, Yahoo is at least now able to use this for leverage to get Microsoft to pay more," he said.
Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer on Saturday gave Yahoo three weeks to agree to the company's offer or risk having the offer lowered.
Joint offer
Microsoft and News Corp are discussing making a joint bid for Yahoo, according to the New York Times.
5:52 AM | | 0 Comments
Music festival fashion wrap-up
Whether they were out to impress, attract attention, make a statement, or it was just an excuse to wear something they wouldn't normally ever wear out in public, fashion was taken to a whole new level at music festivals in the summer of 2008.
NEWS.com.au mixed it with the cool kids at Homebake, Big Day Out, Good Vibrations, Future Music and V Festival to pinpoint only the wackiest and most wonderful outfits the punters could possibly parade for us.
We've trawled through the galleries from the summer music festival season and picked our 50 favourite punter pics, showcasing the talent, the effort and the downright hard work that went into creating that perfect, or not-so-perfect outfit.
1:19 AM | | 0 Comments
How Should I.S.P.’s Tell You if They Want to Track Your Surfing?
The term “unavoidable notice” has been bandied about by a group of Internet advertising executives recently as they explored whether to endorse proposals for Internet service providers to keep track of where their customers surfed and what they searched for.
One theory goes that such systems would be acceptable if customers were informed of the plan in a way that they were sure to see, with a clear way for users to choose not to have their activities recorded. (There are some who say that it is simply unacceptable for an I.S.P. to record the content of its customers’ communications under any circumstances.)
One of the leading companies involved in this concept, Phorm, says it is developing a plan that would in fact force users to see an explanation of its program and give them an explicit choice about whether to participate. Since the company won’t start operations for a few weeks, the details, which are very important, haven’t been disclosed.
The other company, NebuAd, which started operation last fall, seems to be going out of its way to avoid being noticed by the users it monitors. It won’t disclose the Internet providers or advertising companies it is working with. And after the Washington Post discovered two Internet providers it works with — Embarq and Wide Open West — those companies have refused to answer any questions about their relationship with NebuAd.
It always struck me that one good test of an idea is whether the people behind it are willing to stand up in public and say exactly what they are doing and why. And that seems a particularly apt way to look at these companies, which claim that their seemingly invasive plans are in fact very sensitive to the privacy of Internet users.
Both NebuAd and Phorm understand this. Both have hired public relations consultants and reached out to privacy advocates. Indeed, as I’ve written, the chief executives of both Phorm and NebuAd reached out to me and spent a long time discussing their companies and how their systems worked.
It’s early, but so far Phorm appears to be more committed to openness than NebuAd. It may have more of a hurdle to overcome to build trust. The company, under its previous name 121 Media, distributed software that displayed pop-up ads on users’ computers. Privacy groups, like the Center for Democracy and Technology, said the company’s software was spyware because it wasn’t disclosed properly when it was installed and was hard to remove.
Now that it has changed its business, Phorm says it is pursuing an open approach. It has published the names of the I.S.P.’s it is working with and some sites that will use its advertising system. It has hired Ernst & Young to audit its system. And it says it will allow others to examine the system as well.
Most significantly, Kent Ertugrul, Phorm’s chief executive, told me that it would not start monitoring users until after it pops a screen in front of their browsing to explain the system. He wouldn’t say what the screen would look like. And the choice to opt out of the system, he said, might be on a second screen, not right next to the choice to opt in. Still, he promised that “the opt-out will be more transparent than anything else,” referring to other ad targeting systems.
BT Broadband, one of the three British Internet providers that are working with Phorm, will in fact give users the choice to participate or not on the same screen, at least in its initial tests. Emma Sanderson, BT’s director of value-added services, sent me this in an e-mail describing how the disclosure will work:
The concept though is pretty straightforward…. the webpage will appear when a customer starts browsing, there will be a description of the service and three buttons - Yes I want the service, No I don’t want the service and I want more information (not these words exactly). If they request more information they will be taken to another page with more detail on it.
She said the company would start testing the service with 10,000 customers in coming weeks. It will be presented as a way to both reduce the number of irrelevant ads users see and also as an aid to online safety because Phorm also helps detect some fraudulent Web sites.
Ari Schwartz, the chief operating officer of the Center for Democracy and Technology, said that this approach may well be appropriate, depending on how easy it is for consumers to understand and how actions are interpreted. If someone closes the pop-up window without making an explicit choice, he said, it should not be considered consent to have their actions monitored.
NebuAd’s approach to disclosure, by any measure, is much further away from “unavoidable notice.” Robert Dykes, NebuAd’s chief executive, told me the company would force I.S.P.’s that participate to notify their customers about the program. But this can be by e-mail, an insert in a billing statement or some other format where boilerplate that consumers don’t read is placed. Of course, it requires that the companies also disclose the system in their privacy statements, another graveyard for unread legalese.
The privacy statement of Embarq is particularly terse. It doesn’t mention NebuAd. It does have a link to opt out of the system which goes to a Web site called Faireagle.com, which is run by NebuAd. Wide Open West has a somewhat more articulate privacy statement. It gives a brief example of how the system may work. It names NebuAd and gives several links where consumers can get more information.
In what other way, if any, did these companies notify their customers? That is one of many questions I had for them that they refused even to consider answering. Peter Smith, the vice president of programming for Wide Open West, declined to comment and declined to say why he was declining to comment.
I then called David Burgstahler, a partner of Avista Capital, the private equity firm that owns Wide Open West. He wouldn’t talk to me either. Amanda Heravi, an Avista spokeswoman, said she would see if she could find someone to talk to me, but I haven’t heard back yet.
At Embarq, Debra Peterson, the company spokeswoman, e-mailed this statement, saying she would entertain no further questions:
Like other companies, we are evaluating behavioral marketing tools, but we have not decided whether to move forward with them. Our Privacy Policy anticipates and alerts customers to possible future use of these tools, and offers customers the opportunity to simply and quickly opt out. EMBARQ takes its customers’ privacy very seriously and we take every precaution to ensure information about our customers remains secure and anonymous.
Embarq by the way is the big local phone company unit spun off from Sprint that is publicly traded.
In my conversation with Mr. Dykes, I asked several times why he wouldn’t name the Internet providers he works with. He said, “It is inappropriate for a vendor to talk about its customers.”
I asked him why users should feel comfortable being involved with a system when the companies using it are afraid to stand up in public and discuss it. I also suggested that customers may want to know in advance whether Internet providers they may choose to do business with will sell information about their browsing to ad targeting firms. He said there is no need to disclose that in advance, particularly because NebuAd allows people to go to its site and request a cookie on their computers that will indicate they don’t want to participate in its tracking program on any Internet provider.
“If someone thinks this is really important, they should simply opt-out,” Mr. Dykes said.
It’s not clear to me that these are the policies that will build the trust level that Mr. Dykes says he needs in order to convince the large Internet providers to sign up for his service.
1:16 AM | Labels: I.S.P News, Internet News | 0 Comments
Cameraphone Used to Control Computers in 3D
A camera-equipped cellphone can be used to control a computer as if it was a three-dimensional mouse, thanks to prototype software developed by UK researchers.
The software makes it possible to move and manipulate onscreen items simply by waving a handset around in front of a screen, a bit like the motion-sensitive Nintendo Wii controller.
"It feels like a much more natural way to interact and exchange data," says Nick Pears, of York University, UK, who made the system with colleagues Patrick Olivier and Dan Jackson at Newcastle University, also in the UK. "Most people who see it think it is really cool."
Pears says the current prototype, which can be used to control a desktop computer, is just the first step.
"The invention really comes into its own when you realise that modern large public displays are really just computers with big screens," he says. For example, the software could let people interact with video advertisements.
To control a screen, a user simply aims their cellphone's camera at it. The handset then connects, via Bluetooth, to the computer that operates that screen.
Extra dimensions
Once a connection is established, the computer knows exactly where the phone is pointing because it places a reference target on top of the normal video feed and compares this to the phone's picture (see image, top right).
The distance between the cellphone and the screen is based on the way the screen's size changes due to perspective.
The computer translates the phone's movement and rotation in three dimensions into the actions of an onscreen cursor. It possible to use the phone like a 3D mouse, interacting with objects by pressing the phone's buttons or rotating the phone.
In testing, volunteers were asked to resize an image on a screen. They selected the picture using a button and manipulated it by moving or rotating the phone. Moving the phone closer to the screen enlarged the photos, and drawing it away made them smaller.
Another trial involved sketching a house using the phone.
Natural interaction
"I like this because connecting phones and computers is just such a pain right now," says Mark Dunlop, who works on user interaction and mobile phones at the University of Strathclyde, Scotland. "You should be able to see something on screen and just get hold of it."
Mobile phones may be ubiquitous, but people are only now starting to use them for more than just calls and messages. "We're still looking for more natural ways of using them to interact with other devices," Dunlop says.
Better prototypes need to be tested first, he says, but it is important to enable people to download information from public displays to their cellphone.
"We need ways for people to get that public information onto their personal devices, for example from a train station display," he says. "This could be one way to do it."
A paper on the prototype set-up will be demonstrated at the International Conference on Computer Vision Theory and Applications in Madeira, Portugal latSource:technology.newscientist.com
6:20 AM | Labels: Mobile Technology News, Multi Media Technology News | 0 Comments
Future directions in computing
Silicon electronics are a staple of the computing industry, but researchers are now exploring other techniques to deliver powerful computers.
Quantum computers are able to tackle complex problems |
A quantum computer is a theoretical device that would make use of the properties of quantum mechanics, the realm of physics that deals with energy and matter at atomic scales.
In a quantum computer data is not processed by electrons passing through transistors, as is the case in today's computers, but by caged atoms known as quantum bits or Qubits.
"It is a new paradigm for computation," said Professor Artur Ekert of the University of Oxford. "It's doing computation differently."
A bit is a simple unit of information that is represented by a "1" or a "0" in a conventional electronic computer.
A qubit can also represent a "1" or a "0" but crucially can be both at the same time - known as a superposition.
This allows a quantum computer to work through many problems and arrive at their solutions simultaneously.
"It is like massively parallel processing but in one piece of hardware," said Professor Ekert.
'Complex systems'
This has significant advantages, particularly for solving problems with a large amount of data or variables.
"With quantum computing you are able to attack some problems on the time scales of seconds, which might take an almost infinite amount of time with classical computers," Professor David Awschalom of the University of California, Santa Barbara told the BBC News website recently.
In February 2007, the Canadian company D-Wave systems claimed to have demonstrated a working quantum computer.
At the time, Herb Martin, chief executive officer of the company said that the display represented a "substantial step forward in solving commercial and scientific problems which, until now, were considered intractable."
But many in the quantum computing world have remained sceptical, primarily because the company released very little information about the machine.
The display also failed to impress.
"It was not quite what we understand as quantum computing," said Professor Ekert. "The demonstrations they showed could have been solved by conventional computers."
However, Professor Ekert believes that quantum computing will eventually come of age.
Then, he said, they will not be used in run-of-the-mill desktop applications but specialist uses such as searching vast databases, creating uncrackable ciphers or simulating the atomic structures of substances.
"The really killer application will probably be in designing new materials or complex systems," he said.
Source:bbc.com
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Ibm Software Launches New Software Technology
NEW DELHI: Global IT major IBM on Monday launched a software, ProAct, which will help service sectors like call centres and hospitality to get better insights of their operations.
The new business intelligence technology, developed by IBM's India Research Laboratory, would help organisations gain new business insights that can be used to improve customer satisfaction, develop new products and services, IBM India Research Laboratory Senior Manager (Information and User Technologies) Mukesh K Mohania told the media.
The software would provide business intelligence to sectors such as call centres based on the information gathered by companies during customer service calls and other interactions. However, the service can be extended to other service industries like hotel and hospitality, he added.
Moreover, ProAct can successfully reduce the customer-agent interaction data analysis time from 10 minutes per enquiry to only 30 seconds for the entire record of data, he said.
The software has already been deployed in some call centres.
For most companies, valuable information that can help improve their businesses is often buried within the e-mail, text messages and transcribed call logs used to document interactions between customers and service agents, he said adding ProAct automates previously manual analysis of customer service calls and provides timely insight to help companies rapidly assess and improve their performance.
ProAct also can help automate a call centre's tasks, enhance their agent performance and identify new or expanded sales opportunities.
Source: economictimes.indiatimes.com
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11:07 PM | Labels: CallCenter And Hospitality Technology, Software Technology News | 0 Comments