Posts Tagged ‘yahoo’

Twitter Search Indexes Links

In today’s real-time web, searching is king.  Google/Live.com/Yahoo/Wikipedia are the new household names, but typically when someone tells you to “google it”, you know what they mean.  Where I love the fact that between the four above sites (not necessarily in that order) I can prettymuch anything I’m looking for online, there is still usually a time delay that can range from a few hours to a few months depending on what the site tells engines to do.

For as long as I’ve been in the business this was just something you accept.  When you want a realtime search for things based on Blogs, Articles & More you would head to Technorati. But with the rising popularity of Twitter (and specifically their sexy new search), this completely changes things.

As a business owner, you can follow users who are posting about their thoughts on your company or need for your product, as a hobbiest you can see the latest and greatest with what you like to do, and as an average geek you can follow trends and watch what you’re internet rockstar heros care about.. all in realtime. Now with the inclusion of their search also indexing outgoing links, this really shows they mean business.  I look at it as the Sprint Now Network of search.

It may seem like a simple thing, but when your mind needs to work like mine as a programmer it opens more doors than the Keymaster in The Matrix 3.

Hey @Google – @Twitter To Start Indexing Links For Search

Twitter Search is easily the most promising aspect of Twitter. People talk about mundane updates, or connecting with companies, or following celebrities — but that’s all small scale. The real power of Twitter lies in its aggregate data. Why do you think Google and every other company out there is interested in them? It’s not just because they are the hot ticket in town right now, despite what some would have you believe. It’s all about the data. And Twitter knows that too — and is apparently on the verge of some interesting moves with Twitter Search that will better highlight that.

Speaking on a panel today, Santosh Jayaram, Twitter’s new VP of Operations, had some very interesting things to say, Webware’s Rafe Needleman who moderated it, reports. The most interesting thing is that Twitter Search will soon begin crawling the links that people tweet out and indexing them. This immediately takes Twitter Search, which is still a very basic service, to the next level. This means that no longer will it just be a stream of textual tweets, but it will include millions of web pages as well — web pages that are more or less already curated by the individuals who tweet them out. Sure, there will be some spam, maybe even a lot of it, but this user curation should help real good content from around the web bubble up.

Apparently, Twitter Search will index the content of these pages as well. Yes, this is what Google does. So it should be no surprise when I say that Jayaram was the former VP of Search Quality for Google.

What are your thoughts on search today, how does something like this matter to you when it comes to things your looking for?

Yahoo! Music Store Closing

For the poor folks at Yahoo! who are still left, this just must hurt more and more every day that goes by.  Unfortunately they pain is nothing like the unknowing suckers who signed up for their DRM laden subscription based service will feel.

The Final Days of DRM: Yahoo Music Store Closing, Will Eat Your Purchased Music 

Digital Rights Management technology is dying, it’s becoming understood that hobbling tunes to enforce scarcity isn’t the best way to monetize the music business online. What about all the suckers who bought DRM laden music in recent years, though? When the Yahoo! Music Store closes its doors this fall, the company announced today, past customers dependent on their music “phoning home” to get license approval before playing are out of luck. They’ll be able to continue playing purchased tracks on a single computer, until they make any changes to their operating system.

Yahoo! now encourages customers to burn their music files to CDs. That may not be a terribly onerous requirement, but the point is that when you purchased a license for songs, everyone really meant it when they said this might not last forever.

The rise and fall of the Yahoo! Music Store will make for an interesting story some day, but for now the DRM story is particularly important. …

This is just classic.  Yahoo! wont put out any software that will clean up their mess from here because it will get abused, so you’re stuck with that quickly dying version of XP for as long as you can enjoy that Jonas Brothers LP.