Monday, October 25, 2004

Yahoo Makes a Deal With Adobe - Yahoo's Toolbar Multiplies Like Rabbits

Well this is pretty interesting. Yahoo is teaming up with Adobe to produce a cobranded toolbar. The vision thing about this deal is that the toolbar will be able to turn web pages into PDF files.

Oh goody.

Does this mean that a web page that took 2 seconds to load will now take half a minute to load from your desktop where you saved it? And is it possible that this will make it easier for people to archive and steal your content? Does anybody really need this? Maybe some people do, but I can't imagine Joe Surfer getting too excited over this feature.

So what's the percentage for Yahoo? Adobe has promised to integrate Yahoo search into the next iteration of Adobe Reader. With an installed user base of 500 million (meaning everyone on the internet), this could possibly represent a huge coup for Yahoo.

Tuesday, October 19, 2004

Behind an Illusion of Technical Innovation Lies a Mind Numbing Sameness.

A couple weeks ago Ask Jeeves' mascot got a change of clothes and they added a few bells and whistles. A brief amount of chatter then AJ returned to it's usual anonymity.

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The LATimes announced a service that allows consumers to shop online (what a concept). It was nothing new, just a subdomain of shoplocal.com.
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Later that day I went to MySearchYahoo to try out their beta myYahoo Search. They had a cool MyYahoo Search button to install but I couldn't get it to work. It asked me to drag it into my Links toolbar, like a Favelet, which I did. But it didn't work.
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Then my eyes glazed over reading an eWeek interview with Rick Rashid, senior vice president for research for Microsoft. He talks about the personalization of search, seemingly bluffs his way through a question about realtime blog search, and well... it was... not that exciting.
It was not exciting for the same reasons the other search engine news weren't exciting: A follow the leader mentality has set in.
Even worse, the so-called innovations are awkward and rushed out too fast. Google's book search is a good case. A book publisher who signed up earlier this year told me that Google is behind schedule indexing books. Another fiasco was Amazon's A9 search engine that returned obscene images for ordinary searches.
The innovation will be where it all began: in Search. And once again Google will lead the way. The big question is whether or not it will be clumsy like last years Florida update, or if this time Google will go for the elegant solution.
Webmasters are waiting for the shoe to drop.