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5 things we love about WordPress 2.5

March 31, 2008

I spent some time this weekend updating my personal blog to WordPress 2.5 which was released Saturday. I've been a WordPress user for a while now, and it's worth noting that version 2.5 is one of the biggest updates since the release of version 2.0 back in late 2005. There's a huge list of upgrades on the official WordPress blog, but I thought I'd go over a few of my personal favorites so far:

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Mixx’s New Feature Aims To Get Breaking News To Home Page Faster Than Digg

March 25, 2008

Mixx, a Digg-like site that ranks news stories based on reader voting, will launch a new “breaking news” feature later today that should get real news onto the home page very, very fast. More on that below.

Since launching just last September, Mixx has been on a tear to release new products. Groups came in December, followed by private mail in Februrary. Also in February they released a clustering feature that I think would fix a big problem at Digg - duplicate stories describing the same event. With the new feature, other users could add different but related stories to the main news item. This removes the need for Duelling stories and it gives the reader more content on the stuff they just clicked on.

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Battle of the comment add-ons: 6 services compared

March 21, 2008

Commenting can play a major part in making an author's blog post deeper, and more interesting to read. It's like having a discussion in real life versus simply hearing someone speak--there are details, and alternate angles that can come of making ideas go two ways instead of one.

When creating a personal blog, or one for business there are the standard comment systems that come with your blogging platform, as well as a whole new breed of third party tools that can add extra functionality, and potentially a deeper level of discussion to your site. So which ones are worth installing?

We've picked six of the major players in this space, and talked about what makes them more useful than the ones that come built-in to popular hosted blogging services like WordPress and Movable Type. Even if you're not on one of these two platforms several of these solutions will work on a site you've built from scratch.

CoComment lets your readers subscribe to comments on a blog post, and share that thread with other CoComment users. It scrapes people's comments from threads they've replied to, so they can monitor and access the responses for multiple sites in one centralized location.

Adding CoComment to your site doesn't involve replacing your current commenting system, but it means you're signing up to be part of the CoComment network. If your users are active members of this community you might get new people discovering your content and taking part in the conversation--which could translate to site growth and prominence. The two things that turned us off to the service were the sometimes slow service and distracting ads that take are found on CoComment's main service.

Co.mments is a plugin for blog owners, as well as a simple browser bookmarklet that lets you (or your readers) track conversations regardless of whether or not the stock commenting system offers such a feature. It works similar to some of the Web commerce price trackers we've looked at before, and will notify you if there are changes. Commenters can keep an eye on all the conversations they're tracking in one spot, and quickly browse through them like an river of news with a full list of keyboard shortcuts.

If you like Wordpress' built-in comment system and Askimet spam catching-plugin, and don't want to ditch it for some completely different system then Co.mments is a simple way to add tracking services for your readers so that they will know when to come back. However, it doesn't offer some of the advanced functionality of the others, and is mainly for helping your users keep track of what's going on with various threads on your blog--not making them more advanced. Several other services we're profiling offer subscription features of their own, but we liked Co.mments' inbox that lets you go catch up on multiple conversations in one place.

Continue reading to find out the other four services and which ones we picked out of the bunch.

Disqus is a distributed commenting system, meaning if several sites have it installed, users can share the same identity (including login) on each site. Each user profile includes commenting karma and a public page that's similar to Twitter with comments showing up in a reverse chronological river.

As a blog owner this means you're buying into being in a Web ring of sorts--similar to CoComment. There's potential for users from other sites to discover your content because of user cross-pollination.

Replacing the stock commenting system with Disqus doesn't mean all your old comments will go kaput. There's a built-in tool that will slurp up all the previous comments and place them into upgraded Disqus conversations. The tool does take some of the spam and trolling filters out of your hands which advanced users might not like. The upside to that is that the "clout" system of user karma and voting helps self-police problems if you've got an active community of semi-responsible individuals. It also offers up the option for your readers to read and post comments via e-mail and mobile phones--something few others have.

Intense Debate is very nearly identical to Disqus but there are slight differences in style and presentation. Like Disqus it will import comments from your old blog in case you're in fear of losing the existing discussion from your old posts.

Intense Debate

Intense Debate threads comments and uses karma to help pick out some of the bad apples and promote the good ones.

(Credit: MarshallK.com)

As a site owner, Intense Debate is worth installing if you've got several blogs on several different platforms as there's a simple moderating interface that combines all of the comments into one feed. It's also got analytics that let you view which blog is getting the most comments and from what users, which can help your figure out which posts and which sites are getting the most audience involvement--something that can be crucial in figuring out how to cater to what your readers want.

For spam and trolling protection there's no system in place besides user moderation, which means if you have some yahoo posting on your site, it's up to you or other users to deal with him or her. The service promises to have a solution if the system becomes able to be gamed.

JS-Kit Comments is just one small part of a group of JavaScript based widgets and site add-ons that give you functionality your blog might not have had. The service offers up some of the basics like deep threading, and a WYSIWYG text editor. There are also some advanced tools like the option to leave video comments by linking up to YouTube or skinning it to match your site using CSS.

As a blog owner, compared to some of the others, JS-Kit is very customizable if you know your way around JavaScript. It also integrates Akismet, the anti-spam engine that you'll find as standard in both Wordpress and as a plugin for Movable Type. Using both systems, the tool will learn what's spam and what's not after some gentle help in the beginning.

The one thing it can't do is pull comments that were there before you installed it, making it a somewhat underpowered compared to Disqus and Intense Debate. The good news is that you can choose to simply put it in new posts going forward, while letting older posts keep the original commenting system.

SezWho is unique in that it's not a replacement for your existing commenting system, it simply enhances the one you have by offering membership into Sezwho's network. This network layers on a reputation and rating system to comments and users of your blog. Thos users can vote on the usefulness of other people's comments, and that rating goes into an aggregate ranking that's a part of a user's profile.

SezWho blog comments in action.

(Credit: CNET Networks / ducttapemarketing.com)

Rankings are universal on any site that's integrated SezWho. User moderation from other sites sort out the good and the bad commenters so you can get the heads up on a user that's been perceived as problematic by others in the network. The system also has a promising analytics service that lets you keep an eye on some of your most active commenters and track how much they're using your site at the same time.

If you're thinking about enhancing your existing commenting system, SezWho is a viable solution that's non-destructive and could potentially lead to an increase in traffic to your blog with clicks from other in-network SezWho users who are tracking sites other users are visiting. Its analytics system is also more than you're able to get from the stock commenting tools, which as mentioned above can help you figure out which stories are getting the most community interaction.

Which one is the best?


Each service has tradeoffs. Many of the ones that entirely replace your existing commenting system put your blog at risk of suffering comment blackouts in the event the comment engine goes down. As we've seen with Amazon's S3 storage going kaput, relying on a third party service for an integral part of your site can be risky, so if commenting uptime is paramount as part of a business or commerce site you might want to have a backup plan.

Out of all the ones we looked at, we think Disqus and Intense Debate are about neck and neck in terms of functionality and usefulness for blog owners to take discussion to the next level. Disqus only slightly edges out Intense Debate with the mobile phone access, which honestly isn't a deal breaker or a must-have for most people. Both offer universal profiles, great threading, OpenID login, analytics and support for catching legacy comments from any pre-existing system. If you're on the fence, both services are free and simple to add to your blog--so it might be worth trying both on a test page and seeing which one your users prefer.

A close runner up is SezWho, which is used on several popular blogs and brings a style and flavor of its own that you might simply like more than the look and feel of the others. We like that it enhances the comment system you already have, and that your user karma might mean something more as the service expands into other fields like wikis and forums in the future.

Below we've put together a chart to illustrate some of the differences and similarities between the various services. It's far from detailing each and every feature offering, but attempts to cover as much of the overlap as possible.

Do you use any of these systems or have a personal favorite of your own? Share it in the comments.

Ning: All Our Charts Point Up And To The Right

March 21, 2008

Ning certainly continues to rock and roll, at least according to data released by the company and reported by Comscore. The company, which allows users to easily create social networks, now has over 200,000 social networks on the platform and is adding another 1,000 or so per day. And Comscore-reported traffic is spiking up nicely: 3.1 million unique visitors/month, generating 71 million page views (February 2008). Ning, in short, looks like it might be a real business. Meanwhile, Ning competitor Flux, which is backed by Viacom, seems to have fallen off a cliff (we’re checking with Comscore on that data - see our earlier post on Flux growth here, including the update).



More Bells, More Whistles

Tonight at 10 pm California time Ning will launch a redesign (screencast here) that includes a updates to the photos, videos, groups, members, profile, forum and blog features (see here and here)

Ning is certainly feature rich, and users are flocking to it (a little porn never hurts, either). What I’d really like to know is how revenue growth is coming along. The company generates fees from advertising and users who want premium features. They’ve raised more than $44 million to date.

Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

The Semantic Hacker One-Million Dollar Challenge

March 19, 2008

semantic-hackker-logo.pngSemantic startups and projects are hot right now. (See Radar Networks, Freebase, Blue Organizer, Hakia, even Yahoo). But what do you do if you are a little-known technology company in Rochester, New York with a powerful semantic-analysis engine on your hands that you want to turn into new businesses?

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Yahoo Embraces The Semantic Web - Expect The Internet To Organize Itself In A Hurry

March 13, 2008

Yahoo’s embrace of all things open continues today - expect an announcement in an hour or so that they are expanding their Open Search Platform that we wrote about last month.

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Zoho People Launches for Free. Does Salesforce.com Have Anything to Worry About?

March 10, 2008

zoho-people-logo.pngIf you’ve heard of Zoho, you probably think of Zoho Office, its suite of Web-based productivity software (word processor, spreadsheet, presentation). But Zoho Office is primarily as a marketing exercise. Zoho’s real business is in offering a series of Web-based enterprise apps that it started introducing last September—CRM, Project Management, Web conferencing, an online database. And today it is adding Zoho People in beta.

zoho-recruit-small.pngZoho People is a Web-based enterprise app for managing human resources—recruiting, org charts, HR forms, an employee self-service portal. Here are some screenshots and an online demo.

Zoho People is targeted at small businesses with 50 or more employees—companies that cannot afford PeopleSoft, but cannot manage their business on Excel spreadsheets anymore. More directly, Zoho is going after WorkDay (started by PeopleSoft founder Dave Duffield), Salesforce.com, and smaller online HR apps such as Vemo’s. To get businesses to try it, the software will be free for the beta period. The pricing is yet to be determined, but will probably be in the range of $50/month for HR administrators and $4/month for other employees. It will also be available as part of Zoho’s suite of enterprise apps under blended pricing. Maybe Salesforce should just buy Zoho. Oh yeah, it already tried that.


Zoho People from Raju Vegesna on Vimeo.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Chris Anderson and Michael Arrington: Back-to-Back on Charlie Rose

March 7, 2008

Yesterday was Geek-Out Night on The Charlie Rose Show. Wired editor-in-chief Chris Anderson and our own Michael Arrington appeared on back-to-back interviews (30 minutes each, separate interviews). Anderson explains why everything on the Internet is free.

Michael hits talks about the Microsoft-Yahoo deal, Facebook, blogs, privacy, and tech policy. He even manages to plug CrunchBase. Nice haircut, Mike.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

PollDaddy launches public results database

March 7, 2008

PollDaddy Answers puts a lot of opnion in one place.

PollDaddy makes a polling engine I like so much that I asked them to provide the technology for the Webware 100 awards. Thanks to them, I couldn't be happier with the way the voting is going. As of this writing, we've recorded more than 980,000 votes. (Go vote!)

Today, the company is taking its technology and opening it up in an interesting way: polls that users create on free accounts are now accessible from a centralized PollDaddy site, and each poll also gets its own page where users can not just participate in it but add comments on the poll being displayed.

The goal, said PollDaddy CEO David Lenehan, is to, "create a community similar to Yahoo Answers, but with the emphasis on polls as opposed to open-ended questions and answers."

I like this new feature since it exposes polls on small sites to more users, and it also lets sites share polls, making results potentially more reliable. And the central clearinghouse of polls makes for good SEO bait. It could drive traffic to the polls' host sites.

PollDaddy is also launching an OpenSocial app next week, which will make it easier for users to drop polls on personal sites, and presumably share results across them.

But I do have two reservations: First, polls are not Q&A services, and it's a very different thing to troll through a database of poll results than to look for answers to questions that you may have. I looked through the polls currently on the system and found very few that were worded in a way that anyone but the original pollster would understand the results of. In other words, everyone knows how to ask an open-ended question, but it appears to me that few people know how to set up a good multiple choice opinion poll. Maybe that's my training in experimental psychology speaking, though.

Also, if you want to use a PollDaddy poll to collect opinions just from your own site's users, be advised that with the free PollDaddy accounts, you cannot opt out of this poll-sharing scheme. To keep your poll focused, you'll need to upgrade to a paid account. TechCrunch also pointed this out.

In other PollDaddy news, Scott Rafer is now an advisor to the company. Rafer recently flipped MyBlogLog to Yahoo. That experience bodes well for PollDaddy's future.

Mozilla VP talks IE 8, Firefox 3

March 7, 2008

LAS VEGAS--Mozilla Vice President Mike Schroepfer said Microsoft's decision to support a more standards-compliant mode by default should keep Web developers from having to waste so much time.

With the current set-up, he said that developers have a fairly easy time getting a site that renders properly in Opera, Safari, and Firefox, but often spend a lot of energy trying to get that same site to also render correctly in Internet Explorer.

"Web developers burn through a tremendous amount of time getting their sites to work with IE because of IE's special quirks," said Schroepfer, who I caught up with here at Mix '08.

He said that Microsoft's move toward greater embrace of standards with Internet Explorer 8 is a good thing.

"There are some encouraging things there and I hope to see more," he said.

In particular, it would be helpful if Microsoft gave a roadmap for which standards it planned to support down the road, that way Web developers could decide earlier to invest time. He said he would really like to see Microsoft support a new graphics standard known as scalable vector graphics.

"That would be a great win for the Web," he said.

Meanwhile, Schroepfer also talked up the benefits of Firefox 3, which is just hitting its fourth beta and is edging closer to a final release. In particular, he pointed to the browser's "Awesome bar" that remembers not only specific Web addresses that have been visited but also other information from the page. For example typing in "televisions" might bring up a recent TV search on Amazon, even though television wasn't in the address.

"Once you use it you actually can't use any other browser," he said. Also on tap are improved speed and antimalware features, he said.

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