Call it a law, or dictum, or just a big stick, but it goes like this:
The value and influence of an idea or piece of information is limited by the extent that the information provider has embraced the Google Economy; unavailable or unfindable information buried on the second or tenth page of search results might [...]
Posted August 31, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: availability, big stick, dictum, findability, google, google economy, idea, ideas, influence, search, search results, value. 2 Comments.
Just when I was beginning to feel a little on my own with my talk about the Google Economy here, I see two related new books are coming out. The first is Peter Morville’s Ambient Findability. The second is John Battelle’s The Search.
Findability appears to ask the big question that I’ve been pushing toward. From [...]
Posted September 14, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Books, Movies, Music, Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: ambient, ambient findability, digital networks, find, findability, finding, global marketplace, google, google economy, john battelle, new books, peter morville, search, the effects of findability, the search. One Comment.
Danah Boyd posted about the biases of links over at Many2Many the other day. She looked for patterns in a random set of 500 blogs tracked by Technorati as well as the 100 top blogs tracked by Technorati. She found patterns in who keeps blogrolls and who is in them, as well as patterns about [...]
Posted August 10, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Blink, Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: bias, biases, blog, bloggers, blogs, gender, gender differences, google, google economy, link, linking, rank, ranking, social life of information, technorati. 3 Comments.
Roger over at Electric Forest is making some arguments about the value of open access to information. Hopefully he’ll forgive me for my edit of his comment (though readers check the original to make sure I preserved the original meaning):
…keep the [information] under heavy protection and you will find that people ignore this sheltered content [...]
Posted June 7, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: accessibility, accessible resources, google, google economy, information, integration, kudos, leading the way, libraries, library, open access, search, trustworthy, wikipedia. 3 Comments.
The Speakeasy Speed Test is an okay way to waste some time, but the most amusing thing is how easy they make it to promote them. The Speakeasy badge here looks like any web ad, but they’re not paying for it. All they did was post a link saying Add Speakeasy Speed Test to Your [...]
Posted August 13, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: amusing, google economy, internet marketing, marketing, marketing tip, speakeasy, speakeasy speed test. One Comment.
The New York Times last week announced that it’s giving away TimesSelect to students and faculty that hold a .edu email address. TimesSelect, of course, is the paid access site that debuted in January 2006 to a confused and critical web. Editor and Publisher repeated the Times’ claim that they’re doing this for the good [...]
Posted March 19, 2007 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Politics & Controversy, Technology. Tags: google economy, new york times, nyt, timesselect. One Comment.
I talk a lot about the Google Economy here, and how that and other ideas are driving changing modes of communication. Today I learned of arXiv. Henry Farrell describes it at CrookedTimber:
[I]t’s effectively replaced journal publication as the primary means for physicists to communicate with each other. Journal publication is still important – but as [...]
Posted August 25, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: academic publishing, arxiv, blogging, blogs, disseminate, google economy, journal publication, modes of communication, pingback, pingbacks, trackback, trackbacks. 3 Comments.
I’m rather passionate about the Google Economy, so it shouldn’t be too much of a surprise to learn that I just wrote about it in my first ever Wikipedia entry.
Here it is:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_economy
“Google Economy” identifies the concept that the value of a resource can be determined by the way that resource is linked to other resources. [...]
Posted August 29, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: citation analysis, dr. eugene garfield, eugene garfield, google, google economy, information consumers, larry page, link, linking, links, media filters, print publishing, search, search engines, sergey brin, value, web pages, wikipedia, world wide web. Be the first one.
The sale of Weblogs Inc. to AOL last month for $25+ million got a lot of bloggers excited. Tristan Louis did the math and put the sale value into perspective against the number of incoming links the the Weblogs Inc. properties. It’s an interesting assertion of the value of the Google Economy, no?
The various properties [...]
Posted November 25, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: ad revenue, ad revenues, aol, assertion, blog, blogger, bloggers, bought, citation analysis, google economy, link value, linking, links, sale, sale price, sold, technorati, weblog, weblogs, weblogs inc, weblogsinc. 3 Comments.
37signals takes on Google and suggests some improvements.
tags: 37signals, consulting firm, design, google, google search, improvements, improving google, search, search improvements, usability consulting, web, web design, web search
Posted September 5, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Blink, Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: 37signals, consulting firm, design, google, google search, improvements, improving google, search, search improvements, usability consulting, web, web design, web search. 3 Comments.
Wendy Seltzer gave a shout-out for Yochai Nenkler’s The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom, describing it as…
…an economic history of information production. We’re moving from the age of industrial information production to one of social information production. Ever-faster computers on our desks let us individually produce what would have taken [...]
Posted April 20, 2006 by Casey
Categories: Technology. Tags: big thoughts, information production, network economy, new economy, peer production, social economy, social networks, social production, social software, The Wealth of Networks, Wealth of Networks, Yochai Nenkler. Be the first one.
Way back in April 1997, Jakob Nielsen tried to educate us on Zipf Distributions and the power law, and their relationship to the web. This is where discussions of the Chris Anderson’s Long Tail start, but the emphasis is on the whole picture, not just the many economic opportunities at the end of the tail.
Here’s [...]
Posted November 1, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: academia, academic library, google, google economy, googling, group think, jakob nielsen, libraries, library, lowest common denominator, networked information, popularity, quality, research, search engines, search rankings, search result rankings, search results, wikipedia. One Comment.
From O’Grady’s PowerPage:
I have no interest in true hacking (i.e. rummaging through people’s private junk) although viewing random unprotected IP cameras around the world in public places and controlling their panning and zoom functions is kind of mind-blowing. There are a ton of fun GHacks out there - like spelling out words in pictures using [...]
Posted July 17, 2005 by Casey
Categories: Blink, Technology. Tags: google, google hack, google hacks, google image search, hacking, ip cameras, powerpage. 655 Comments.
Google Gears: create web apps that work offline
google, offline ajax, web development, ajax, offline, google gears
Posted June 19, 2007 by Casey
Categories: Blink. Tags: ajax, google, google gears, offline, offline ajax, web development. Be the first one.
This post started with Ryan sending me this link demonstrating a KML overlay of county borders of his bifurcated state in Google Maps.
Then I found this Roundup of Google’s Geo Developer Day (btw, I so wanted to be at Where 2.0) with tales of the new geocoding feature of the Google Maps API, more details [...]
Posted June 16, 2006 by Casey
Categories: Blink, Technology. Tags: geocoding, geographic information systems, geolocation, geotagging, gis, google earth, google maps, kml, sketchup, where 2.0, where20. 97 Comments.