Archive for the 'Yahoo' Category

Is twitter being crushed by it’s own weight?

May 31st, 2008 | Category: Microsoft, Yahoo, twitter

I’ve been developing some twitter apps for the last couple of months. Which is a lousy excuse for letting this blog gain spider webs.
I’ve managed to get access to the public timeline via jabber and was delighted to work with so many skilled developers and build some quite successful apps.

But for the last weeks Twitter started to fail consistently. Downtime became a major factor and to avoid downtime Twitter decided to cut down some services.

One of the services that are now on hold are IM updates. This is the core of third party twitter apps, and all of them are out in the dark. Sure they could resort to scraping the public timeline RSS feed, but that will only cover around 85% of the updates, which for some may be enough to keep their sites running.

Some people are starting to turn to jaiku. Which in turn is being “invaded” by Brazilians, much like to what happened in earlier orkut years.

Right now the social microblogging market is ripe for a new major player to appear and steal the show. I’m sure both Microsoft and Yahoo have been watching this market. Both have IM clients that could easily integrate to a web microblogging platform.
Yahoo also has flickr which already works well with mobile tech and mobile picture uploading.

One thing is for sure, I wont be “wasting” so much time coding twitter apps soon.

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Talking to a mayor in Yahoo Live

March 13th, 2008 | Category: Yahoo, democracy, live, politics, twitter, video

I’ve been having some fun with Yahoo Live for some time now. We’ve all heard about the technical problems that have plagued the service since it’s beginning a couple of months back, but I’ve enjoyed watching anonymous people playing guitar or displaying their DJ skills for a couple of friends and casual spectators.

I’ve subscribed to Yahoo Live twitter user, and i get occasional announcements of stuff going on in Live. I was quite surprised to see that there was a town hall being held. An actual Town Hall, from a small city in Spain called Jun, with an actual mayor, talking to actual people concerned about their town needs.

I caught the event early on and was able to talk to mayor José Salas about this, and he was quite happy to explain to me that he’s been doing this sort of stuff for some years now. Jun is known for having an Internet friendly stance, being regarded by the European Community as the birth place of the active teledemocracy.

These are the things that make the endless hours of roaming through the web worthwhile. If you hurry up you can still catch the event live at http://live.yahoo.com/alcaldejun. You can also check the Mayor’s blog for the next event.

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Yahoo is still alive and kicking

February 09th, 2008 | Category: Microsoft, Yahoo, money

According to The Wall Street Journal Yahoo’s board will reject the bid made by Microsoft earlier this week in an attempt to buy some time and get a better deal out of the whole process.

Most analysts like this stalling move, but I think it will just make Microsoft more committed to the acquisition. The ball is now on Microsoft’s court.

We should expect some kind of formal statement from Yahoo tomorrow and I don’t see MS waiting too long to strike back.

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Microshoo - The cat’s out the bag

February 05th, 2008 | Category: Microsoft, Yahoo, money

microshoo

The biggest thing since Youtube’s acquisition by Google last year has just hit the intertubes like a storm. The hostile move by Microsoft to acquire Yahoo.

Everybody is talking about the consequences that this 44.6 billion dollar deal will have on the web. The obvious concerned party by this bid is Google who already made a very aggressive statement about the monopolistic nature of Microsoft and how they would potentially use Yahoo web assets to threaten Google’s in several business niches that Google leads undisputed, like the web advertising market.

But Google went beyond issuing a public statement, according to the Wall Street Journal:

Google Inc. Chief Executive Eric Schmidt called Yahoo Inc. CEO Jerry Yang to offer his company’s help in any effort to thwart Microsoft Corp.’s unsolicited $44.6 billion bid for Yahoo, say people familiar with the matter.

Google can’t contemplate the idea of fighting a bidding war for Yahoo against Microsoft, not only because Microsoft would probably outbid them in the end, but also because anti-monopoly laws would make Google’s bid a legal mess.

But a corporation as large as Google has a few cards in the sleeves, and according to the New York Times:

Google’s lobbyists in Washington have also begun plotting how it might present a case against the transaction to lawmakers, people briefed on the company’s plans said. Google could benefit by simply prolonging a regulatory review until after the next president takes office.

In addition, several Google executives made “back-channel” calls over the weekend to allies at companies like Time Warner, which owns AOL, to inquire whether they planned to pursue a rival offer and how they could assist, these people said. Google owns 5 percent of AOL.

borgIt seems that this will be a long and hard war to be No. 2 on the web. Yahoo employees seem to be worried about losing their corporate identity and be engulfed by Redmond’s money making machine.

The timing for the bid seems to be perfect, just when everyone had their eyes set on the Super Bowl and Super Tuesday election for the President of the United States.

As a user of web services from both companies (Hotmail and Flickr) I find all this quite amusing and concerning at the same time. Anyway this seems to be a Borg takeover where resistance is indeed futile.

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