Posts Tagged ‘web2.0’
Brownbook: joining up is worthwhile
The most websites whose content is derived from its users, build on the users’ good will and willingness to participate. The UK-based Web2.0 web directory Brownbook offers its users also a pecuniary incentive- for new entries or ratings earn financial rewards.
This takes place when signed-up businesses reward user entries or ratings, in response to one or more (paid) ads placed using the portal’s advertising-options. Brownbook pays you a slice of anything it earns make from businesses that ‘claim’ their listings and promotions, as a result of users making contributions to Brownbook.net.
For example, an ad could cost UK £ 5 (or US $10) to a ‘claimed’ business. 20% of the Brownbook fees to that business go to the user who last edited the entry. (See “How much can I earn?“)
The new ‘User Earnings Program’ is discussed in a video in the company blog by Brownbook co-founder and CEO Dave Ingram. The principles are also announced in a press release.
Those who want to earn money with Brownbook must register online, and also need a PayPal account where the payments may be transferred. And one must really be diligent about writing entries and ratings.
Brownbook appeared unofficially in December 2007 and went ‘public’ in february 2008 in the United Kingdom. The operators describe the portal as a free and open Wiki-like online directory, where users can search for local firms, rate and describe these or add new entries. The content which derives substantially for the users, is able to be edited by any other user, at least as long as a company has not claimed control over the content. The platform has been targeted internationally, as of July 2008. A recent figure (October 2008) announced by the operators listed over 27 million entries for 230 countries. The most entries are generated in the UK, USA, Canada and Australia.
OpenStreetMap: Hamburg almost complete
The Hamburg participants of the collaborative world map OpenStreetMap (OSM) have proved themselves as especially diligent at collecting geo-data.
On the go for about the last four years, this Web2.0 map project aims to establish a free, open database with map data covering the entire globe (see our post). As announced by the Hamburg OSM-Community in a press release, nearly 8,000 streets of their city have been documented, thereby becoming the first large German city to have all of its streets registered in the freely available world-map.
For the purposes of checking the accuracy and completeness of the OSM listing, a comparison has been made with the Hamburg Street and Area Directory of the Hamburg Statistics Division, resulting in a 99,8% overlap in accuracy. Still, there’s a lot still to be achieved by the Hamburg OSM team to cover small foot and cycle paths. And the surroundings are still showing many white patches of undocumented areas.
Townster is sold to highest bidder on eBay
After Townster, a local search and ratings portal with networking capability, was offered for several months for sale on eBay, it was recently finally sold.
As can be seen in the offer page on the online-marketplace, the virtual hammer fell for Euro 37,827.77 for the platform. A real bargain, considering more than Euro 150,000 had been invested in the project. The new owner of the portal is the Ex-OnVista head Michael W. Schwetje, posted Townster co-founder Gleb Tritus in his personal blog.
Townster was launched in summer 2007 (see our article). After an unsuccessful financing round and disputes among the founders in November 2007, the hunt for a buyer was started for this local search presence. According to a post by Gleb Tritus in Townster’s company blog, the sale did not happen at that stage, because the interested parties were only interested in taking on the portal with the full team. The team members had by that stage essentially been dissolved and were committed to other projects. Finally, it was decided to offer the platform via ebay auction. However, even after the successful sale, Townster is still a topic for its previous owners- they are planning to “support Michael & Co. as they hunt for suitable new team members, so that Townster can relaunch on the same track as beforehand.”
pointoo finally leaves its pilot phase behind
Pointoo officially was launched in July 2006, and at the end of May 2007, the portal finally ended its beta-status. Since its recent relaunch the local search engine, operated by the publishing group Georg von Holtzbrinck, now offers more content, new functionality and an improved user interface.
The operators, in a press release, announced this a short time ago.
Differing from other localized search and ratings platforms like Qype, Dialo.de and others, pointoo is foremost a ‘location bookmark service’. Users are able to undertake location-based searches for places such as restaurants, museums, shopping facilities, doctors or service providers, etc. and, if logged in as members of pointoo, save interesting found locations in their own personal locations collection. pointoo has however, some similarities with the aforementioned ‘competitors’- it allows its users to add comments and publish them linked to their saved locations. And for users who cannot find their beloved/preferred local hangout or bakers via the search option, pointoo also allows users to add these locations to the portal. The latest update also enables users to add detail (such as opening times) or photos to existing search results.
Another new feature, is that content is now also provided by other ratings platforms, as well as by the operators and user contribution. According to the operators, the platform is now working with well-known partners, for example: Helpster.de (in the medical ratings sphere) or Autoplenum.de (for the motor zone). Negotiations continue to include further cooperative partners. Found results are now compatible with many navigation devices, allowing for quick and easy transfer to these devices.
pointoo is however, not only a search and bookmarking platform – since its relaunch it now displays even more of a community character. The exchange of contact information among users now facilitates an adjunct to the pure information provided by the site, building a people network, consisting of like-minded or interested users. So when users interested in, for instance, motor cross routes (perhaps a few hundred people in Germany, in an example cited by the operators), thanks to the new functionality of pointoo, they will be enabled to find and connect with each other.
skobbler – cell phone navigation and Local Search with User Generated Content
As of the end of September, skobbler has been in ‘public beta’ status and as such is available o the general public.
Developed originally by the Hamburg navigation provider Navigon, skobbler was rounded out in September and now run by skobbler GmbH in Hamburg. The name ’skobbler’, according to Oliver Kühn, a member of the management team, in an entry in the company’s blog, is derived from the Latin word “copula” – meaning tie, cable or connection. By their own statement, skobbler wants to bring people together.
skobbler has two strengths. One is the so-called off board navigation system for cell phones, where the required data is only sent upon request from the server to the end device, incurring costs to the user for data, calculated according to the providers and contracts involved. Otherwise skobbler is free. To use the system for navigation, the user needs a GPS-enabled device or external add-on, plus the “skobbler mobil” software, which is available on the website. There, users can also check on compatibility with mobile devices.
The offering above doesn’t differ much from other similar alternative competitor solutions such as Ö-Navi (see our post), however one specialty of skobbler is that alongside a route planner option for motorists using distances under 5 km, a special pedestrian navigation option is available.
The other strength of skobbler is their locality-specific search and ratings platform with ‘community-character’ on the Internet. There, registered users can perform a local search, for cafés or hairdressers in a particular location, and also rate them and upload appropriate photos. In an interview with Locale Suche Blog, Oliver Kühn detailed how the service uses data from providers including Navteq and Mecomo, as well as User generated Content (UGC). Also really neat is the SMS-function – search result addresses discovered through the local search option, can also be sent to the user via free SMS. The extensive contents of the website is also accessible per mobile devices using local search.
“Talking Points” – local information for seeing-challenged and seeing
Imagine walking along a city street and receiving on one’s cell phone all kinds of information on buildings, businesses or restaurants, in real-time as one strolls along. Using a new Bluetooth system, this may soon become a reality.
It’s called “Talking Points” and has been developed by scientists at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
A press release reports that the system is foremost intended for the visually impaired, to convey information to them en route about their direct surroundings. For the sight-challenged, it is possible to get from point A to point B, but usually what they pass from A to B remains unnoticed, says James Knox, one of the service’s developers. “Talking Points” should change this situation. It should enable this group to locate, for example, public toilets, police stations, bus stops and stations, or restaurants providing menus in Braille.
However this service could also be useful to the seeing, added Knox. Uses for the system could be special offers being broadcast when passing businesses or stores. Also imaginable is the possibility to call up reviews and ratings of other users, relating to the firms or restaurants in the immediate vicinity.
The system works using a Bluetooth transmitter, which costs less than $20 US, and can be used everywhere where information can be beamed to passersby… shops, restaurants, parks, tourist attractions, city facilities or other important locations. A mobile end-user device would then receive the Bluetooth signals and convert them as necessary onto the display or sound information, according to the needs of the user. Also being considered is that the information for the specific location could be edited by the operator via a website and updated as needed. Further, all users will get the chance to comment and rate the offerings, via the Internet.
The scientists do admit that similar systems already exist. “Talking Points” is however the first service to use Bluetooth technology, broadcasting to non-seeing and seeing users alike, and allowing the user to be served entirely via speech, and allowing user generated content to be collected.
OpenStreetMap notches up four years
The collaborative world map OpenStreetMap (OSM) is enjoying steadily growing popularity. At the present time, a few weeks after its fourth birthday, the OSM-community encompasses approximately 60,000 members.
According to the community’s statistics, the numbers have almost doubled since April 2008. This is almost certainly to do with the massive growth in popular interest during 2007. There has scarcely been a week since early 2008, when there hasn’t been some media coverage, at least in Germany, of the project. Above all, this has to do with the Web 2.0 concept of this project.
Brought to life in summer 2004 by the Brit Steve Coast, its goal has been to build a collaborative, freely accessible geo-database. Since then, anyone can access and involve themselves with up-to-date global surveys, and contribute their GPS-generated data (on hikes, bicycle tours, vacations) and submit the gathered data (streets, rivers, forests, footpaths or buildings etc.) to the OSM project. Users can add all and any data that may be of cartographic interest, known as “Mapping”. Users without GPS-capable devices are also welcome, being able to contribute by checking, updating/completing, approving and labeling photo material or working on the software interface.
As the community is itself responsible for generating/creating extensive information in this way, it also possesses copy- and other rights, and is able to negotiate for the use thereof. This means, all registered users are able to share in the use of the data at no extra cost, and are able to process and transform the data as desired, also for commercial purposes. The resulting data must however also be license-free, and credit OSM as the data source. A specific plus, is that users are not only able to use the maps, but can also access the geodata in raw format. This is in stark contract with other map services such as Google Maps. As discussed by OSM in their FAQs, Google provides its maps free of charge, but without access to the related geodata. The Google material is only useable as presented.
During the last four years, the project has grown amazingly. Of course, there are radical differences in the depth of coverage of different regions, resulting from the collaborative dependence on the users. Consequently, many large cities in Germany are covered in much greater detail than by OSM’s alternatives. One can find such information such as mailboxes, bus stops, recycling containers or cafés on OSM. On the flip side, many rural areas show large gaps in material– many streets are even missing, or end ‘nowhere’, small communities appear to be non-existent, and even in smaller town only major roads may be documented. Even less documented are enormous swathes across the globe.
In Germany and many wealthy industrialized nations, the data deluge will certainly expand exponentially, in contract to less-developed countries, where computer coverage, internet access and GPS-ownership is sorely lacking.
11880.com now with ratings from other portals
As of January this year 11880.com has been offering its users the chance to read ratings gathered from other providers or to deliver their own ratings (see our post). This Web2.0 feature has now been further expanded.
To this end, this information portal is collaborating with other portals and has combined the gathered ratings into its own web presence. A post in the company blog lists the partners in this enterprise as the information and ratings platform for drivers Autoplenum.de, the patient portal DocInsider.de, as well as gastronomy sites Hotel.de and Restaurant-Kritik.de.
Through this cooperation, the blog post states that there are at present over 80,000 ratings to be found on 11880.com. The company plans to broaden its partner base in the future.
Qype for business
The local search and ratings portal Qype has started a new service for companies and service providers, called “Qype for business”.
This was announced by Qype C.E.O. Stephan Uhrenbacher in the German-language blog of the Web 2.0 portal. According to Uhrenbacher this service offers the business owners additional functions to those previously available, so as to facilitate a web presence. Business can update their information, upload a short description and unlimited photos, assign keywords and categories, and all that gratis. Also new is that the businesses receive a daily e-mail summary of all pertinent ratings and uploaded photos, delivering the advantage of being in close touch with user activity.
With these innovations, Uhrenbacher states that the new additional Qype data will improve discovery by Google’s search engines. “For many undertakings, Qype can serve as the simplest version of a homepage in the web”, said Uhrenbacher about the improvements.
Nokia acquires localized ‘social activity’ service Plazes
The Finnish mobile phone manufacturer Nokia has bought the Berlin-based (launched in 2004) start-up Plazes. In so doing, Nokia implements a further expansion of their localized services, in the direction of time-linked activity planning, as announced by the concern in a press release.
Plazes augments social networking by linking together the elements of ‘location’ and ‘time’. In essence, this concerns the question of in which connection someone is at a specific location at a specific time. Or stated mores imply: the user of Plazes.com can keep other members of this service informed about what and where they are currently doing. This is visible in real-time either for all members, or visibility can be limited to a circle of choice. And, whether for a private date or a business meeting, the users can make appointments among themselves.
“The acquisition fits within our service strategy and helps Nokia to accelerate our vision of bringing people and places closer together”, said Niklas Savander, Head of Nokia Services & Software about the takeover.
The purchase is expected to be finalized in the 3rd quarter 2008, according to Nokia. Details of the purchase price have not been divulged.







