Links & Comments: Another Badly Needed Application

I’ve already provided one roadmap to riches via my killer podcast application post.

But if you want to start on a slightly smaller scale, here’s another one.

Someone needs to build a cross platform, highly configurable online application that will pull recent inbound links from Technorati and Google blog search, weed out duplicates AND allow the user to select which ones appear in a list that can be easily added to a blog or other web page. It would be a centrally administered and more feature rich version of the list I manage this way. You could also do the same thing for a list of recent inbound comments (pulling the comments directly from the blog- not via a central location like coComment), and allow both lists to be administered from a single web page.

Why you say? Two reasons: spam and demand.

Almost every post of mine gets picked up by at least one spam blog and often 2-3 of them. Contrary to what Scott Karp says, Technorati is doing a ton better at weeding out spam links and keeping accurate link counts, but it is a full scale war, fought every day. Spam is like roaches, there is no way to keep them all out, and so you still have to rely partially on a kill them when you see them approach. That’s why Scott’s, mine and undoubtedly a ton of people’s link counts go up and down like the cast of the Gillmor Gang.

If I am having this problem, I am sure a lot of others are too. A quick survey of some other reasonably popular blogs confirms this.

If there was a way to validate the inbound links that show up in that list, sort of like you can do now with comments and trackbacks, it would allow people to weed out those links before they show up. And it would take away some of the incentive to spam.

People would flock to this program, and people would happily pay a few bucks a month for it. Look at all the great work done at Freshblog and other places trying to find a way to do things like this within the confines of various platform limitations. Give us one stop shopping, and we will give you money.

I’ll type my fingers off about it here, as would hordes of other appreciative bloggers.

Those of you lucky enough to be on WordPress may rightfully say that there are plugins that already do this for you, but there are plenty of people like me who are stuck in Hotel Blogger and elsewhere who would use it. Plus, we’re all about cross-platform, right? So if you build it well, we will come. From Blogger and from WordPress. From all over.

What are you waiting for. Go build it and I’ll get ready to send you my subscription fee every month.

Farmgate on the Future of the Cowboy

Farmgate, one of my daily reads, has an article today on the status and future of cattle farming.

The long and short of it is that drought conditions combined with rising corn prices courtesy of ethanol demand are not doing the cattle farmer any favors. An average $49 profit a head (small to begin with) has turned into a $97 per head loss.

LGMI, which Farmgate describes is accurately as “crop insurance for cowboys,” is available in 20 states, including Texas, and can help a little. But it has deductibles and inclusion limits.

The bottom line for cattle farmers is that for the time being a thin margin is getting thinner.

It gets harder and harder for the farmers who have fed this country for 230 years.

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Rumble in the Jungle 2.0

catboxingNow that Lee Gomes has taken the WBS (World Blogging Slugfest) belt away from Chris Anderson in convincing fashion (it’s really not about whether the book moved up the top seller list) we have another heavyweight bout brewing.

Mike Arrington, fresh from his all too brief stint as the blog rage eradicator, and having turned in his badge to rejoin the Gillmor Gang (hopefully with Nick Carr) at the behest of the most enraged of all bloggers (more on that below), takes on Nick Douglas of Valleywag fame over some emails Nick Douglas allegedly sent around inquiring if Mike is an investor in some startups, presumably to see if Mike has any secret investments in the companies he writes about.

I don’t know Mike, and I have been critical in the past of what I perceived at the time as a rock star attitude. But I have read enough of his posts to be very surprised if he invested in a company and then wrote about it without disclosing the investment. For one thing, Mike strikes me as an honest guy who, at least most of the time, can still remember what life was like before TechCrunch. I also know that Mike is an attorney – and I know that for him to do something like that would put his law license at risk. Whether he needs it to make a living or not, he probably isn’t keen on having it publicly jerked away from him.

So I would put the odds of Mike investing in a company and then writing about it without disclosing that fact at about zero.

And I suspect that Nick Douglas knows this as well. Which means that he either wrote these emails just to stir the pot a little (one of the many things to love about Valleywag is that it occasionally makes great fun of the so-called blogging elite) or for some other reason.

It’s the possibility of another reason that I find interesting.

Mike believes that Nick may be taking some preemptive shots in the face of greater competition from the TechCrunch family of blogs. Mike seems pretty angry about the whole thing and even tosses out the L-word (libel).

But there could be more to it. Nick told me tonight that Steve Gillmor called him and “advised” him to stop writing about Mike. Nick tells me that when he told Steve he was going to continue to look into these TechCrunch issues, Steve got huffy and ended the conversation by telling Nick he wouldn’t talk to him anymore.

Note to Mike: As stated, I don’t believe for a second that you secretly invested in any companies. But you can certainly find a better ambassador than your once and future podcast mate, Steve Gillmor.

This could get very interesting.

Update: Nick posts some thoughts at Valleywag.

Flickr TagFight

[App & Photo Repository Joined the Deadpool- too bad, it was a glorious victory]

Well, OK. So my long lost cousin Bunny had a little somthing to do with it. Maybe no one will notice the fact that almost all of the Rubel photos are him and none of the Newsome photos are me.

A pretty cool little application. Go pick a fight!

Davis Freeberg TKO's Real Networks

Davis Freeberg, who shares my dislike of anything connected to Real Networks, lands some well deserved blows in this very interesting post.

He correctly points out the absurdity of Real’s obsession with Microsoft’s not even released yet Zune player and then sums up his version of what I have called the Real Player Syndrome in this flurry to the jaw:

“I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had to uninstall their software from my computer. Everytime I swear off their Real player, some clip comes along which I need their proprietary software to use. It’s neat that Real wants to put an end to DRM that locks consumers into proprietary systems, but I’d like to see them address their own service before they complain about big bad Microsoft.”

Amen brother.

That’s why I will forego watching something rather than install what is, in my opinion, computer-hijacking bloatware.

The Real Beneficiaries of the Web 2.0 Craze

web20Donna Bogatin at ZDNet has an interesting article today asking who’s making the real money in Web 2.0.

Is it really the application developers who spend countless hours and piles of money creating occasionally amazing products that they turn around and give us for free? No, at least not yet.

Or is it the VC community with a ton of money that needs to be invested somewhere, who are trying and mostly failing to recreate the once lucrative greater fool pipeline to sell these free products to rich fools like Yahoo or poor IPO-happy fools like you and me? No, at least not yet.

Or is it the thoughtful user who takes a free product, mixes in some hard work and self-promotion and becomes a new media star? Yep, at least so far.

If you don’t agree, ask yourself this: would you rather be a fledgling Web 2.0 developer, which is the functional equivalent of being in a pick-up basketball game and hoping to make it to the NBA, or would you rather be Mike Arrington or the guys at Techdirt, which is like being Bob Costas?

Would you rather be working on the 5,913th free online calendar application, or would you rather be the woman known as “Forbidden” on MySpace?

One more. Would you rather develop a YouTube clone, or be a film maker growing an audience and a reputation on YouTube’s nickel?

The real winners are the people who use the free infrastructure provided by these so-called businesses to create something that is both valuable and portable- a brand. If someone builds a freeway that leads to fame and fortune, it’s not the builder who makes the real money, it’s the people who ride that freeway as far as it will take them.

It’s almost like Web 2.0 has turned business theory upside down. It’s not the author of the book that gets the run in Web 2.0, it’s the company that binds the book. Maybe that’s the price they charge for giving everything away.

If so, that’s OK.

Forbidden and others will laugh their way to the bank, while the Web 2.0 companies sit and wait for the next AdSense check to arrive.

Knowing in the back of their minds that the next one might be the last one.

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Washington Post on the Crack in the IM Wall

Rob Pegoraro of the Washington Post has an article about the crack that has developed in the IM wall thanks to the deal between Microsoft and Yahoo to allow their IM clients to cross proprietary borders and communicate with each other.

In addition to pointing out the fact that users have to have the latest version of each application to speak cross-network and outlining some some hiccups that have occurred thanks to the lack of an open standard and the resulting difficulty in erecting a bridge between two walled-in networks, Rob also describes the main reason my use of IM clients is very limited:

“Unfortunately, both program’s installers are as pushy as ever about adding browser toolbars, loading extra start-up software, and changing your home-page and Web-search preferences; choose custom-install to opt out of those intrusions.”

I call this the Real Player Syndrome. It’s the genesis of my intense dislike of everything Real- well, that and the fact they make you call them to unsubscribe to things you subscribed to online.

In the race to add features, the IM applications have become bloated caricatures of their former selves. People don’t want to use IM applications as browser-substitutes. They just want to be able to chat with other people, without network limitations.

And what about AOL? Rob says that AOL may be tiptoeing in the right direction:

“AOL is no longer reflexively hostile to letting outsiders hook into its system, having stopped trying to block AIM-compatible third-party software. But the company has only tiptoed toward interoperability, opening its network strictly to far smaller competitors. For instance, users of Apple’s .Mac service have been able to tie into AIM since 2002, and AOL says that by the end of the year, the Google Talk network will also connect to AIM.”

It’s a risky business for the IM applications with the biggest market share to knock down the walls and allow cross-network communication. But it’s inevitable and it will happen.

There’s a crack in the wall. Let’s sit back and watch it grow.

My Favorite Records:The Guess Who – Canned Wheat

This is the another installment in my series of favorite records.

In yesterday’s podcast I talked about the Guess Who, and how I believe they are greatly underappreciated, given the incredible amounts of great music (not to mention big hits) they generated in the 60s and 70s. And as luck would have it, we’re to the end of the G’s in my Top 50 Album series.

The Guess Who made 4 excellent records in a row between 1968 and 1970, starting with Wheatfield Soul (hard to find, except on an oddly paired double album CD) and ending with Share the Land. Any of them could be on this list, but I’m going to settle on just one- Canned Wheat from 1969.

cannedwheatCanned Wheat is the best place to start for those who remember the Guess Who only for their long string of radio hits. This is an excellent rock record that features some fine Guitar work from Randy Bachman and Burton Cummings’ great voice.

No Time, the first track, is a classic rock standard, that you’ve heard before. Minstel Boy is a beautiful and sad number inspired by a Thomas Moore poem. Laughing and Undun, two classic rock gems, follow.

Every other song on this record could easily have been a hit. In fact, this record could be a greatest hits record for a lot of popular bands. And it’s just one of 4 great records in a row by this under-appreciated band.

One of the things that impresses me the most about the Guess Who’s records is how well they have aged. These records sound like they could have been recorded yesterday. The true sign of musical genius is the ability to make music that still sounds fresh 20 years later. Bob Dylan does it. Springsteen does it.

And so did the Guess Who.

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RanchoCast – July 28, 2006 Edition

I did a new podcast last night.

The theme was great, but under-appreciated, guitarists. I played deep album cuts by Peter Green, Frank Marino, Brownsville Station, Derek & the Dominos, The Guess Who and more. The finale is a 12 minute blues jam by Boz Scaggs.

I also talked a little about HR 5319 (the MySpace Law) and the underground blogosphere.