May
19

Along our curious path we have the occasion to converse with some really BIG thinkers. Thinking Out Loud is the raw stream from some of these encounters.
On this edition: Extracting concepts from the real-time net with Open Calais. A conversation with Thomas Tague, Thomson Reuters Calais Initiative Lead and Krista Thomas, Vice President, Marketing and Communications, Open Calais.
You may have noticed that there's a lot of data streaming around the intertubes these days about 'smart data sets.' Google, Yahoo, newcomer Wolfram and other teams are trying to figure out what that web page of yours really means to other humans.
Trying to teach machines how to read concepts was once only fantasy. How do we code understanding of large ideas in a way that IT becomes relevant to the rest of us? One theory is to embed smart data into the headers of each blog post or news articles. This is 'bottom-up' approach is just not going to be widely adopted by bloggers or the general public. One of the barriers beyond the tech-x-pertise is financial. You need a dedicated team inputting rich meta-data into each post - simply out of reach for the rest of us. This leaves the 'top-down' approach of scanning the data and pulling out the 'meaning.' This is exactly what Open Calais is doing- today.
Recently Robert Scoble mentioned Jimmy Wales on FriendFeed which prompted me to search Jimmy. What came back was Jimmy's Wikipedia page (seems fitting since he's the Co-Founder.) What really got my brain excited was the Feedly data overlay powered by Open Calais. As you can see in the picture, Feedly/ Calais was smart enough to read real-time data from Scoble's FriendFeed stream and alert me that Robert was conducting a live interview. I jumped on the phone with Robert and got to engage Mr. Wales with a few questions. Ponder this for a second- I was able to connect with Robert Scoble and Jimmy Wales because Feedly and Calais extracted real-time data from various sources and served up rich information while I was reading the Wikipedia page. Richard MacManus of Read Write Web has an excellent series of articles on Calais and "Understanding the New Web Era: Web 3.0, Linked Data, Semantic Web". Worth reading if you want to glimpse into OUR future.
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msw
Apr
03

Along our curious path we have the occasion to converse with some really BIG thinkers. Thinking Out Loud is the raw stream from some of these encounters.
On this edition: A discussion with Edwin Khodabakchian, developer of Feedly - the Firefox extension that makes your gReader sing and social. We cover managing your RSS feeds, smart data sets, extracting 'concepts' out of news and the forthcoming v2 of Feedly
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Nov
03

We had a fascinating conversation with Jonas Lamis, Executive Director of SciVestor and the Co-Organizer of the Singularity Summit. As the idea of Singularity becomes more mainstream, the focus is moving away from Sci-Fi dreams to Scientific reality.
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Jonas touched on the emergence of the Semantic Web and sites like Twine. Through more effective information gathering tools we become better connected with one another and perhaps, more productive. We'll also be watching the developments of innovative projects like Siri.
With great technological advancements, the question becomes what will we use this new found power for? 60 Minutes ran a touching story of hope last night. Watch "Brain Power" and you'll get a sense of the possibilities.
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msw
Aug
29
There's been a lot of discussion regarding online music streaming lately, an issue I'm deeply interested in. The good folks at ReadWriteWeb had a great tech centric conversation that got my mental wheels spinning. I've been thinking about the online music streaming experience and the apparent void of true communal services. The biggies need to become more social. Of course, iTunes changed the way we listen to music but we can do better. Services like blip.fm are among those trying to figure it all out. Last.fm comes close in many ways but still lacks the customized playlist that is shareable across many sites.
I reached out to music guru Dr. Tony Shore of Obvious Pop to get his take on the matter-
Apr
29
29/04: Twit.tv
Please do yourselves a favor and join in on the podcasts, show notes and twitters from Leo Laporte and friends over at Twit.tv

I have been blissfully geeking out to the latest developments in web 2.0 and more.
Enjoy,
msw

I have been blissfully geeking out to the latest developments in web 2.0 and more.
Enjoy,
msw
