tumblr!

Yahoo! is buying Tumblr for $1.1B US. Cash, not stock paper-shuffling. Why? Marissa Mayer says:

In terms of working together, Tumblr can deploy Yahoo!’s personalization technology and search infrastructure to help its users discover creators, bloggers, and content they’ll love. In turn, Tumblr brings 50 billion blog posts (and 75 million more arriving each day) to Yahoo!’s media network and search experiences. The two companies will also work together to create advertising opportunities that are seamless and enhance user experience.

Gee. That sounds awesome. If only my blog had access to personalization technology and search infrastructure to help users discover creators and content. And, if only my blog had Yahoo’s media network and search experiences. And I was thinking just the other day, that things would be so much better, if only I could create advertising opportunities that are seamless and enhance user experience.

Said no one. Ever.

I’m holding out to cash in on leveraging synergistic paradigms by extending audience reach and engagement in order to drive personalization of advertising placement. That’s where the money is.

on Yahoo + Microsoft

So MSFT is trying to spend $45 BILLION dollars to buy Yahoo. Rumour has it that the borg want Yahoo’s search and advertising stuff, which would be a little odd – I can’t remember the last time I searched using Yahoo, or saw a Yahoo-powered ad. Whatever.

Yacrosoft!

But, Yahoo does own two resources that I care a great deal about. del.icio.us and Flickr. It’s pretty safe to say that neither of those are worth $45 BILLION, so it’s likely that they aren’t the direct targets of the acquisition attempt.

The first reaction of a vocal group of Flickr users is “cheque please. outta here.” They’re saying that they’ll pull up and move if Redmond is able to sign on the dotted line.

Again, whatever.

Yes, I could very easily host my own photographs (using Gallery2, or even just a simple photoblog – I’ve done both) but the real value of Flickr (and also of del.icio.us) isn’t in the software or the service provided. It’s in the community. Taking my ball and going home would be the wrong thing to do. It’s not about who owns the ball, it’s about playing the game. If I dump Flickr or del.icio.us just because some company bought the company that bought the company that built the playing field, it just isn’t a rational reaction. This isn’t a religious crusade, it’s a community.

Now the risk I see is that MSFT might scare all of the cool out of Flickr and del.icio.us. That’s probably the biggest risk – engineers, designers, UI folks, etc… Will they bail because the borg is coming? If they stay, will they still be able to do cool stuff, or will they have to work on Windows Live Photo Publisher™ integration or somesuch nonsense? I’d hope not. Microsoft IS able to let effective business units keep doing their cool stuff. Bungie kept pumping out the Halo, and the MacBU keeps pumping out their version of Office, which consistently kicks the crap out of the Windows versions. I’m hoping that Balmer has the sense to run the Flickr and del.icio.us units at an arm’s length (or at least not to throw any chairs at them) so they can keep going.

My data is all safe – my photos all live happily in Aperture, and I don’t use Flickr as a repository – it’s strictly a sharing service and community for me. What concerns me most is all of the images I’ve got in the 134 posts on my blog that use Flickr for hosting – any switch will cause a LOT of grief in updating all of those.

I’m willing to wait and see. Microsoft would have to do something pretty stupid to make it worth leaving Flickr or del.icio.us.

Yahoo! Shortcuts!?

Jim posted about Yahoo! Shortcuts, and while the WordPress plugin sounds cool (it claims to scan a blog post and automagically find links to blog posts, flickr photos, and other sources of info), I’m not sure how well it’ll translate into real life. It looks like it scans the blog entry as you’re writing it, and when done it’ll run some code to insert stuff into the post before publishing.

I’m wondering if this is like StructuredBlogging with some automated lookups. How does the output look? Is this something worth using? How accurate is the logic for finding relevant links and photos? I’m just going to leave this post however Yahoo! Shortcuts generates it, as an example. And maybe to get the free t-shirt…

Jim raises a very important point – is this just a tool to embed content from Yahoo! endeavors? Will we be able to add other sources? Automatic lookups of Wikipedia pages? IMDB lookups? Or, is this just a tool to increase the Google Juice of Yahoo! properties?

So far, it looks like it just inserts hyperlinks around some predefined keywords, and points them to Yahoo! search pages. Not very useful, and something I find very annoying on the big sites that use this strategy. A link should point to a page, not a generic query. Anyone can do a search for a keyword without having these blasted hyperlinks inserted all over the place, with their annoying pop-in preview windows. Ick.

Update: wtf? looks like it uses javascript to embed the links and content. so the content doesn’t really exist, and the links don’t really mean anything from the perspective of search engines etc… this isn’t an intelligent structured blogging at all, it’s a javascript insertion. don’t like that one bit… And for some reason it’s adding the span tag several times for some of the identified keywords. Think I’ll be disabling this plugin. It’d be pretty cool if they released the cool CC Flickr photo finder as a separate plugin, perhaps with a more fully-featured Flickr photo inserter function…

Lifehacker: Create your master feed with Yahoo! Pipes

Maybe Eduglu is just a set of metapipes? LifeHacker gives a thorough howto for creating a personal überfeed from all of your separate feeds, complete with sorting and filtering.

Now, I'm off to play some more with Pipes

ps. this was blogged using BlogBridge's cool new "blog this" feature. Slick.

Maybe Eduglu is just a set of metapipes? LifeHacker gives a thorough howto for creating a personal überfeed from all of your separate feeds, complete with sorting and filtering.

Now, I'm off to play some more with Pipes

ps. this was blogged using BlogBridge's cool new "blog this" feature. Slick.

Yet Another del.icio.us Outtage

Here’s hoping the Yahoo! team throws more (or better) hardware at the del.icio.us server. This sign was spotted at the current colocation facility:

del.icio.us safety sign

I hadn’t noticed that del.icio.us was down, but a comment from Rob tipped me off.

Here’s hoping the Yahoo! team throws more (or better) hardware at the del.icio.us server. This sign was spotted at the current colocation facility:

del.icio.us safety sign

I hadn’t noticed that del.icio.us was down, but a comment from Rob tipped me off.

del.icio.us is em.pty?

This has me a little nervous. I sure hope Joshua/Yahoo! have decent backups…

del.icio.us is empty

There were over 700 bookmarks in there this morning. Now it’s saying my account is empty. Man, that would suck. Definitely the major downside of using an offsite bookmark manager…

It seems like del.icio.us was more stable before Yahoo! got involved. Maybe this is just a big Moving Of Servers from Joshua’s basement to the Yahoo datacentre?

It looks like it might be just my account. I’ve checked several others, and they all appear to be behaving normally. Crap.

Update: Whew. It’s back. Running delicious2Safari now…

Update 2: OK. Got my stuff backed up just before stuff started hitting the fan… All del.icio.us pages are now responding with this:

Due to the power outage earlier in the week, we appear a number of continued hiccups. We’ve taken everything offline to properly rebuild and restore everything. I apologize and hope to have this resolved as soon as possible. Thank you for your continued patience.
Updates will be posted on our blog as we have them.

This has me a little nervous. I sure hope Joshua/Yahoo! have decent backups…

del.icio.us is empty

There were over 700 bookmarks in there this morning. Now it’s saying my account is empty. Man, that would suck. Definitely the major downside of using an offsite bookmark manager…

It seems like del.icio.us was more stable before Yahoo! got involved. Maybe this is just a big Moving Of Servers from Joshua’s basement to the Yahoo datacentre?

It looks like it might be just my account. I’ve checked several others, and they all appear to be behaving normally. Crap.

Update: Whew. It’s back. Running delicious2Safari now…

Update 2: OK. Got my stuff backed up just before stuff started hitting the fan… All del.icio.us pages are now responding with this:

Due to the power outage earlier in the week, we appear a number of continued hiccups. We’ve taken everything offline to properly rebuild and restore everything. I apologize and hope to have this resolved as soon as possible. Thank you for your continued patience.
Updates will be posted on our blog as we have them.

del.icio.us issues

Come, on, Yahoo! Get del.icio.us into your data centre… Apparently there was a power failure in the server hosting facility where del.icio.us has been living (assuming it’s not in Yahoo Central yet), and it’s been barfing all over everything all day. I just went to get some links from my account, and got this instead:

del.icio.us error report

Come, on, Yahoo! Get del.icio.us into your data centre… Apparently there was a power failure in the server hosting facility where del.icio.us has been living (assuming it’s not in Yahoo Central yet), and it’s been barfing all over everything all day. I just went to get some links from my account, and got this instead:

del.icio.us error report

del.yahoo.com

Well, this explains a lot – first, a serious congratulations to Joshua, and kudos to Yahoo for picking up del.icio.us. (and thanks to Les Orchard for the heads up)

I’ve been wondering about the business model for del.icio.us since before I started using it – wondering how it was going to be paid for. It’s a free service, with no ads. Soaking up ungodly amounts of resources and bandwidth. Now that it’s Yet Another Yahoo Family Member, it should benefit from Yahoo’s infrastructure, and lose the imperative to “monetize” – since it’s part of the value-add for Yahoo.

Here’s hoping the first thing the Yahoo server fairies do is throw some über high-end hardware at the service to help alleviate the occasional performance issues…

Well, this explains a lot – first, a serious congratulations to Joshua, and kudos to Yahoo for picking up del.icio.us. (and thanks to Les Orchard for the heads up)

I’ve been wondering about the business model for del.icio.us since before I started using it – wondering how it was going to be paid for. It’s a free service, with no ads. Soaking up ungodly amounts of resources and bandwidth. Now that it’s Yet Another Yahoo Family Member, it should benefit from Yahoo’s infrastructure, and lose the imperative to “monetize” – since it’s part of the value-add for Yahoo.

Here’s hoping the first thing the Yahoo server fairies do is throw some über high-end hardware at the service to help alleviate the occasional performance issues…