An Aside…But…

If any of you are baseball fans…is there some way we can publicly protest this most short-sighted of developments? I mean, Spiderman ads on the fucking bases??? I know it's getting harder and harder for advertisers to get their message out to large audiences, but…Spiderman ads on the fucking bases???…

2004-05-05-inside-baseIf any of you are baseball fans…is there some way we can publicly protest this most short-sighted of developments? I mean, Spiderman ads on the fucking bases??? I know it’s getting harder and harder for advertisers to get their message out to large audiences, but…Spiderman ads on the fucking bases??? Quite possibly the stupidest thing I have seen from the marketing cartel in quite some time.

UPDATE: Happy day, they pulled it after one day of public comment! I think that qualifies it as a major fuckup, rather than a smart marketing play.

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Web 2.0, the Conference

Today we announced Web 2.0, a conference for and about the internet industry. I'm teaming with the folks at O'Reilly and MediaLive on this event. It's in October 5-7 in San Francisco, at the Hotel Nikko. The conference is limited to an invitation list, but it's loosely joined. If you're…

web2.0Today we announced Web 2.0, a conference for and about the internet industry. I’m teaming with the folks at O’Reilly and MediaLive on this event. It’s in October 5-7 in San Francisco, at the Hotel Nikko. The conference is limited to an invitation list, but it’s loosely joined. If you’re interested, let me know by signing up for the newsletter at left (I’ll be sending a note about the conference to that list later in the month), or go to the site and request an invite and say you heard about it through Searchblog.

While it’s still early on in the program, I’m pleased to say we’ve got a great lineup of folks speaking, including Jeff Bezos, Mark Cuban, John Doerr, Mitch Kapor, Larry Lessig, Mary Meeker, and Dan Rosensweig.

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Tidbits from the S1, continued

KK points me to this post from Tristan Louis which reverse engineers how many machines Google has based on reported IT costs. Answer: roughly 50-80K machines, each with two CPUs. Honestly, I think it's more. In any case, Tristan makes the case that taken together, it's the most powerful computer…

KK points me to this post from Tristan Louis which reverse engineers how many machines Google has based on reported IT costs. Answer: roughly 50-80K machines, each with two CPUs. Honestly, I think it’s more. In any case, Tristan makes the case that taken together, it’s the most powerful computer in the world. Anyone care to disagree? I’d be interested to hear if IBM agrees.

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Forget RSS. Blow Up Atom. Here Comes….Webfeed?

The RSS renaming contest has a winner: Webfeed. I don't not like it. Background……

The RSS renaming contest has a winner: Webfeed. I don’t not like it.

Background…

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The Google Easter Egg

Google plans to raise Google's choice to raise $2,718,281,828. From Peter Kaminski's blog: It turns out that 2.718281828… (…and an infinite number of digits after that) is 'e', the base of the natural logarithm. Because it can't be expressed as a ratio of two numbers, it's known mathematically as "irrational"…

Google plans to raise Google’s choice to raise $2,718,281,828.

From Peter Kaminski’s blog:

It turns out that 2.718281828… (…and an infinite number of digits after that) is ‘e’, the base of the natural logarithm. Because it can’t be expressed as a ratio of two numbers, it’s known mathematically as “irrational” — something some bankers might say about the way Google is going public. However, ‘e’ also happens to be “transcendental,” another fancy property of a number that means it can’t be expressed by a finite number of algebraic operations. Maybe Google is making a little wordplay — saying they expect to transcend expectations — to overcome or notably exceed ordinary limits.

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Why I Love Craigslist

I met with Craig Newmark , founder of craigslist, a while back, but I don't think I posted about it. But this crossed my desk recently, and I wanted to share it with you. Can't say how I got it, but damn, it's powerful stuff. Top Web Entities (English-language traffic),…

craigslistI met with Craig Newmark , founder of craigslist, a while back, but I don’t think I posted about it. But this crossed my desk recently, and I wanted to share it with you. Can’t say how I got it, but damn, it’s powerful stuff.

Top Web Entities (English-language traffic), with employee data

Rank # Employees Company

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Lunch With Pierre

For some time I've been meaning to hook up with Pierre Omidyar, the founder and Chair of eBay. We finally got together at lunch earlier this week in Redwood City, where his foundation is based. I'd heard Pierre is just about the most down-to-earth, "normal" fellow one might want to…

Photo 6For some time I’ve been meaning to hook up with Pierre Omidyar, the founder and Chair of eBay. We finally got together at lunch earlier this week in Redwood City, where his foundation is based. I’d heard Pierre is just about the most down-to-earth, “normal” fellow one might want to meet, it in fact it turned out to be true. He kicked out of Valley life in 1999 and moved to the desert outside Las Vegas (he also spends a lot of time in France). He comes back every so often for eBay meetings and to meet with his foundation staff, and it’s this foundation that really gets him up in the morning these days. He’s made news recently by announcing a new strategy for the organization, one which blends a bent for social change with capitalism – in other words, he’s expanding from philanthropy into the investment game, but he plans to focus on businesses that connect people to each other to create the kind of wholesale change that eBay did. Omidyar repeated to me a very repeatable observation: that eBay has been the vehicle for millions of strangers to establish relationships of trust with each other.

Hence his investment in Meetup, for example. It’s the first business Omidyar has seen with the same ability to connect folks for social good. Good for Scott!

Pierre and I had a good lunch, talking over many issues for the book. But really, our conversation always came back to community, the core driver of value at eBay. We discussed Tim’s concept of the “architecture of participation” and how critical it is in the Web 2.0 world, and how much of the media world has yet to grok it. You can’t outsource participation to the ghettos of discussion threads, in other words. The online media world is still looking for its Pong, as Martin says, but I think we’re getting close. Publications are essentially reflections of communities. And I believe the best blogs are publications, in a very classical sense.

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Talk of the Nation

I'll be on "Talk of the Nation" shortly talking about – what else – the Google IPO. Streaming audio will be up in about four hours (6 pm EST) I'm told. Other guests include Steven Levy and Lauren Weinstein….

logo_nprI’ll be on “Talk of the Nation” shortly talking about – what else – the Google IPO. Streaming audio will be up in about four hours (6 pm EST) I’m told. Other guests include Steven Levy and Lauren Weinstein.

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Really..Must…Put…Google…On…Cover

Here we go again, this month's Google cover: Businessweek. Oh, they timed it for the IPO, yes they did, but those pesky engineers have yet to make those editors look like geniuses. Godammit! Well, there's time. It might happen in the next few days, or next week. Bizweek does the…

bweekvoerHere we go again, this month’s Google cover: Businessweek. Oh, they timed it for the IPO, yes they did, but those pesky engineers have yet to make those editors look like geniuses. Godammit!

Well, there’s time. It might happen in the next few days, or next week.

Bizweek does the full package. I’ll read it, and if there’s anything new, I’ll let you know. (The site requires registration.)

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