Friday 30 May 2008

Teeny weeny 'puter things

Gad but I have a cool job sometimes. Right now, it's playing with teeny-tiny components, some of which I want to remember here (just in case I feel like building some strange bots of my own). So... cool little gumstix computer, C328RS camera, and a cute little 5dof imu. Not that this is fun or anything, but... well, it's fun okay. Although the soldering-related screaming and sticking-plaster bonanza are bound to start soon...

Monday 26 May 2008

First python

Okay, so I didn't break into Google (not in the conventional sense anyways. There was this misunderstanding with an oversimple instruction and an unlocked door, but we'll gloss over that...), but I did get the building-stuff bug back again, which can only (as long as you don't have to share any space with me when I'm coding at 3am) be good.

So. Today. My first Python program. Had bought the book and skimmed the language ready for the above, and was just having a snuffle round the big G's website when I fell over their coding pages. And the Google App Engine. It's a cute little beastie (so far), but we'll see how I do when I get past the 'Wahey! Hello World!' stage. And I really need to sort my path out asap; it's not good typing in the whole thing every time...

Things to remember include: http://localhost:8080/

Monday 5 May 2008

What do Microsoft need now?

I'd never really thought about the internet advertising market til the Microsoft-Yahoo thing came up. I mean, I know that when I search on G, a load of adverts appear above and beside my search results and there's an order to the search results that may or may not have a commercial bias (at least it will if the companies are canny about things like keywords and Dmoz), but I'd never really thought about how they got there and what it means.

So. The Microsoft-Yahoo marriage is off, the bride's run away, the Maid of Honour (News Corp) won't be forgiven because she took her dress off and played best man instead, and the groom's still on the hunt for a pretty girl to hook up with (but choose wisely my friend; divorce costs). Except it's all gone a bit Babylonian bride market.

So again. If Microsoft wants to take on the internet advertising market, what does it need? In one word: eyeballs. In more words: eyeballs, search histories, processing and trust. And that's the hard part. People stay in business because they understand transactions (or genuinely do have a product that a) people want and b) not many other people can provide. But that's rare). And there are at least three sets of people in these transactions: the companies paying to gain access to people who might want to view their sites, the viewers and the matchmakers (staying on the marriage theme for a moment) between them.

Google (and this is at base all about Google)'s internet advertising works because it brings in an incredible volume of traffic (through both search and all the other tools it punts, e.g. Google Earth etc), knows what that traffic thinks it wants (search histories and profiles) and doesn't chuck too many unsuitable matches at the user (does Google have a dating service? Maybe it should...silly me; it's horrifying). Microsoft wants to match this. Although it could be argued that a more lateral approach than building its own Google would be more sensible, I'll indulge that idea for a moment. So who would I buy if I were Steve B at the moment?

Well. Potentially Murkysoft has its own eyeballs and processing, but not much in the way of search histories or trust. So a search engine or information site, preferably something large and generic (Ask? Dogpile?) or failing that a set of more topic- specific ones (Kelkoo? Multimap? About?). Trust is a difficult one; to pull this off, Microsoft would either have to get its own teams working closer together (it seems it suffers from the same internal markets that made NASA fail) or front its efforts through a more-trusted third party (in a hand-sweepy way, nobody trusts big business but everyone likes a friendly puppy). It has enough access to ideas (through its own research teams and university links); it just needs the front, the stringy bit that holds them together. Me, I'd be kicking myself for not having started a small esoteric search site, if I hadn't been doing so many cool things instead. But it will be fun to watch all the other girls applying their makeup and practicing their winks. I just hope they don't fight too badly if the answer is a harem.