Archive for the 'News' Category

Firefox add-on wins Yahoo! Kimo Open Hack Day

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

This news is a few weeks old but I was pleasantly surprised to hear that a Firefox add-on, built by a team called kekeke, was the winner of the 2008 Yahoo! Kimo (Taiwan) Open Hack Day. If anyone has any more information about the team who won, or the add-on that was developed, please leave a comment.

The winners, kekeke, wrote a Firefox extension which allows users to select any keyword on any website and receive a summary of several Yahoo API search results (Flickr, Map, Knowlege Plus, and Lifestyle), without opening a new browser window. More relevant results will display in a stronger colour and users can save for later, or share results with friends.

How to Travel at a Million Files a Minute

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

The New York Times has a nice piece on what to do to make your web surfing faster: How to Travel at a Million Files a Minute .  They recommend a faster broadband connection (ideally FTTH), more RAM for your computer, and Firefox and Safari over IE. The NYT has also misspelled tranquility (see below).

TWEAK YOUR BROWSER
Another player involved in Internet speed is the browser you use to navigate the Web. Choosing the right browser has become pretty simple: Most experts recommend Firefox, which you can download free from mozilla.com/firefox.

Firefox’s open-source architecture means it has been tested and tweaked by far more people than proprietary browsers like Internet Explorer from Microsoft. Firefox also uses less of your computer’s memory, freeing it up to handle other tasks. (Microsoft says it will release an upgrade in August that will increase the speed of Explorer.)

But Firefox’s real advantage is its collection of user-generated add-ons. These are small, free modifications to the Firefox browser that can do many things (like change the browser’s appearance, help manage content and integrate third-party search features).

If you’ve ever noticed that a site is slow to load because of graphics-heavy ads, you can install the Adblock plug-in, which eliminates ads from your browser (blocking ads has benefits beyond improving speed — cleanliness and tranquillity [sp] are two that come to mind).

Sites that use a lot of animation (known as Flash animation) can also be slow; Firefox has another plug-in, called Flashblock, that allows you turn the Flash portions of a site on or off. For these reasons, Macintosh users may also want to download Firefox. While Apple’s Safari browser is quick (and far less susceptible to viruses), it does not work with any of these add-ons.

Why Bandwidth Is the Oil of the Information Economy

Friday, August 1st, 2008

Tim Wu, who I met briefly at the OECD event in Seoul in June has a great op-ed in the NYT: OPEC 2.0 or Why Bandwidth Is the Oil of the Information Economy. I know that I and most of the people that I work with are addicted to bandwidth.

In an information economy, the supply and price of bandwidth matters, in the way that oil prices matter: not just for gas stations, but for the whole economy.

And that’s why there is a pressing need to explore all alternative supplies of bandwidth before it is too late. Americans are as addicted to bandwidth as they are to oil. The first step is facing the problem.

Americans are not the only ones- I would say that anywhere where broadband has a significant penetration there is an addiction to bandwidth.

Firefox 3 profiled in the New York Times

Monday, May 26th, 2008

EDIT: The article is now on the front page of the BOTH the Business section AND the Technology section!

NY Times, Business section, front page, Monday, May 26th

NY Times, Business section, front page, Monday, May 26th

NY Times, Technology section, front page, Monday, May 26th

NY Times, Technology, front page, Monday, May 26th

The New York Times is my hometown paper, and I’m a regular reader of The Grey Lady, so it’s a pleasure to see Mozilla’s efforts for Firefox 3 profiled in my paper: Open-Source Upstart Challenges the Big Web Browsers.

With tasks like e-mail and word processing now migrating from the PC to the Internet, analysts and industry players think the browser will soon become even more valuable and strategically important.

“People in the industry foresee a time in which for many people, the only thing they’ll need on a computer is a browser,” said Mitch Kapor, the software pioneer who now sits on the board of the Mozilla Foundation and has created a start-up, FoxMarks, that is developing a tool to synchronize bookmarks between computers. “The browser is just extraordinarily strategic.”

That notion has helped to rekindle the browser wars and has resulted in the latest wave of innovation. Firefox 3.0, for example, runs more than twice as fast as the previous version while using less memory, Mozilla says.

The browser is also smarter and maintains three months of a user’s browsing history to try to predict what site he or she may want to visit. Typing the word “football” into the browser, for example, quickly generates a list of all the sites visited with “football” in the name or description.

Firefox has named this new tool the “awesome bar” and says it could replace the need for people to maintain long and messy lists of bookmarks. It will also personalize the browser for an individual user.

links I thought were interesting today

Friday, April 25th, 2008

more great links, versione due!

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

various and thoughtful links

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

various and sundry, 21 April 2008

Monday, April 21st, 2008

various and sundry, 16 April 2008

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

various links 14 April 2008

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

I’m catching up on some older info so there’s some articles from last week here but all relevant to Asia.