Why Google missed a beat with Buzz

March 5, 2010 by Gordon  
Filed under Features, Guide, News

Reprinted with permission from my original article featured on the TalkTalk Blog

The attraction of social networking is undeniable. Posting status updates, photo tagging, ‘poking’ and telling each other how pretty we look has been like catnip to web surfers for many years now. In fact, if Facebook were a country its 400m members would make it the third largest country in the World behind China and India and 25% larger than the United States. Understandably, as widely recognised king of the Internet, Google felt it was being left behind. It wanted to catch up, and – as is Google’s obsession – fast.

From the moment it made this decision, however, the problems started. The cleverly named Google ‘Buzz’ was launched on 9 February to widespread disdain. At best, Buzz was deemed a me-too service with little to distinguish it from Facebook or Twitter, and at worst an invasive, assumptive robot that led to genuine privacy concerns and even fears over personal safety.

Google Buzz

Buzz off

What had gone so terribly wrong? On the outside Buzz is a simple, almost Twitter-like, status update service which allows users to share their thoughts across other Google offerings such as Picasa, Reader, Blogger and YouTube as well as integrating with Flickr and Twitter. The key message: that Buzz would bridge the gapbetween work and leisure.

The problem, to my mind, was that Google hadn’t thought enough about the ’social’ element of ’social networking’ – that, at heart, it is founded on people’s need to interact and to do this with all of the quirky, illogical, endearing and infuriating methods that make up the human condition. Google isn’t a company based around the quirky, illogical, endearing and infuriating. It isn’t even really a fan of the human condition. To me, Google is more of a fan of ones and zeros, of computer logic and crunching the numbers, of building by formula and that silicon chip approach is ill-fitting with the unscientific heart at the centre of social networking.

Consequently the key message was the most fundamentally misplaced: the gap between work and leisure is often there for a reason. Those who we email most often are not necessarily our friends or the most important people in our lives; in fact they may be the people we least want to know out innermost thoughts and ramblings. Computers don’t pick up on this and neither did Google.

Consequently Buzz automatically conscripted all Gmail users, their friends lists were determined by frequency of communication and their personal information spread between them. The result? Your boss was suddenly told about the slacking you did in the afternoon, your parents about how drunk you were at the weekend, you ex-partner about your latest love life revelations. Understandably, criticism flooded in and emotions ran high.

Back to the drawing board

Thankfully Google was quick to respond to feedback. Within 48 hours it had added privacy options to hide personal information from so-called ‘friends’ and introduced the most basic of human needs: the ability to block people who start following you. Another 48 hours passed and on 13 February yet more changes appeared with fundamentals such as giving users the right not to automatically follow their most emailed contacts. Your personal Picasa Web Albums and Google Reader stories of interest were also not fair game to anyone who had reason to speak with you regularly.

Google Buzz

To anyone not using the world’s most powerful collection of servers to make their business decisions these would have been obvious omissions from the start and Buzz product manager Todd Jackson spoke to BBC News acknowledging “tens of millions” of users were “rightfully upset” and that it was “very, very sorry”. I wonder why everything was so rushed? Perhaps Google was upset that Orkut, its previous attempt to hop on the social networking bus, lags far behind Facebook with just 100m users (the majority of which, famously, live in Brazil). Perhaps it didn’t want to rely on the importance of Twitter for real time search. Or perhaps it was just a little frustrated and desperate – two very real, but unfamiliar emotions during its meteoric rise.

Google is famous for launching products unfinished, but this is dangerous with social networking. And you can’t make up for lost time by forcing a social network together out of Gmail users, anymore than you can force users of the same telephone company into a room and tell them to be friends.

The irony in all this is sublime. Google is a company obsessed with collecting and analysing data on human behaviour, yet when it came to the crunch I don’t think it really understands us at all…

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Microsoft Announces Multi-touch Windows Mobile 6.5.3

February 6, 2010 by Gordon  
Filed under News

Now here’s a surprise: Microsoft has quietly released a significant new version of Windows Mobile 6.5 for Sony Ericsson’s upcoming Aspen handset (pictured), ahead of the expected unveiling of WM 7 at Mobile World Congress next week.


WM Microsoft Announces Multi touch Windows Mobile 6.5.3

Windows Mobile 6.5.3 on the Sony Ericsson Aspen

ZDNet has been sent the official feature list and it’s impressive:

  • Capacitive touchscreen support
  • Platform to enable multitouch
  • Touch controls throughout system (no need for stylus)
  • Consistent Navigation
  • Horizontal scroll bar replaces tabs (think settings>system>about screen)
  • Magnifier brings touch support to legacy applications
  • Simplified out-of-box experience with fewer steps
  • Drag and drop icons on Start Screen
  • (Mobile) Internet Explorer Page load time decreased
  • IE Memory management improved
  • IE Pan & flick gestures smoothed
  • IE Zoom & rotation speed increased
  • Updated runtime tools (.NET CF 3.5, SQL CE 3.1)
  • Arabic read/write document support
  • Watson (error reporting) improvements and bug fixes

Is Microsoft back in the game? Not solely with this, but it is a promising stepping stone for Windows Mobile 7. Let’s hope Microsoft gets its finally gets its act together in the smartphone market. After all, the more competition the better…

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An Inconvenient PR Truth

January 28, 2010 by Gordon  
Filed under News

We get a lot of PR contact as journalists, possibly too much – if I get less than 100 emails a day I’m checking for server problems. Much of it is well intentioned, but even more is aimless so I have given my support (and name) to the ‘Inconvenient PR Truth‘ campaign.

This isn’t set-out to bash individuals or agencies and much of what it says has been said before. Where the campaign stands out, however, is its organisation and professionalism so let’s see if we can’t build some momentum and help bring a universal standard of practices to our hectic and exciting industry.

LINK: An Inconvenient PR Truth

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PRWeek Video Podcast: the relationship between PRs & Journalists

January 21, 2010 by Gordon  
Filed under Features, Guide, News

What makes for a good relationship between PRs and journalists? I sit on the PRWeek sofa with Paul Borge, head of digital at Consolidated PR, to discuss this. Comments welcome.

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How Twitter will change internet search forever

November 23, 2009 by Gordon  
Filed under Features, Guide, News

Reprinted with permission from my original article featured on the TalkTalk official blog

The name alone instantly polarises reactions, but ‘Twitter’ looks set to have a far greater impact on our lives than anyone could have imagined.

If you haven’t heard the phrase already, ‘Real Time Search’ is likely to become one of the buzz words of 2010. What it refers to is the ability to search for information published on the Internet as it happens and it is something Twitter has perfected as it sought to organise the tens of millions of tweets sent through the service every day. Consequently Twitter users can immediately see what the ‘trending topics’ (read: hot topics) of the minute/hour/day/week are, read about developments and get involved.

Twitter - real time search

High profile examples of this during 2009 include the breaking news of Michael Jackson’s death, the Hudson river plane crash and the Trafigura waste dumping scandal. In fact multiple heavyweight news organisations now scan Twitter on a daily basis for breaking news and trends in public opinion – all of which is pulling traffic away from traditional search engines. After all, why use Google to find what the weather is like in Madrid when a Twitter search can pinpoint a local who made comment on it in the last five minutes and posted a picture?

The keyword in all this is ‘relevancy’. The battle for web supremacy lies in the service which can provide the most relevant information to the user and a key aspect of this is speed. So while traditional search engines work by web search crawls which index them into a logical order, the delay can take hours when the goal is seconds. Consequently the Twitter licensing deal will initially see users Tweets integrated into Google and Bing search results (Twitter users have the right to opt out) and the impact of this is profound.

While what Ashton Kutcher or Stephen Fry had for breakfast is unlikely to trouble CNN, it means the on-location reports from (for example) the Hudson River crash would now break through search engines not the BBC or Reuters. Never before has such people power been harnessed. Of course such a system is also open to great abuse, the recent tasteless fad for spreading fake celebrity deaths on Twitter is a prime example, but with this door now open it is extremely unlikely to ever be closed.

Still not convinced? YouTube and Facebook have recently both announced plans to integrate this technology into their respective sites. So that’s Microsoft, Google, Facebook, YouTube (Google by proxy) and Twitter all focused on real time search. Resistance is understandable, but in the long run it’s futile.

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The real point of Google Wave?

October 16, 2009 by Gordon  
Filed under News

The evidence is irrefutable…


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BEST. EPIC. FAILS. EVER.

October 11, 2009 by Gordon  
Filed under News

Title says it all really.

Adopt an evil perspective and click play…


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Social Media for Businesses. Is it a load of crap?

October 2, 2009 by Gordon  
Filed under News


Not entirely, the world is becoming a more and more informal place. Novels and films narrated in first person, smart casual attire to the office, working from home and the rise to prominence of blogs over traditional press releases, websites and even newspapers. That said, this video cuts very close to the bone. It’s all about common sense, people…

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First A-Team Cast Photo Doesn’t Bode Well

October 1, 2009 by Gordon  
Filed under News, Rant

(Horribly mis-) Cast of the new A-Team movie

(Horribly mis-) Cast of the new A-Team movie.

Comingsoon.net has managed to grab the first on set photo from the new A-Team film and it looks like yet another of our fondest childhood memories is going to be put through the mincer. Directed by Joe Carnahan, it stars Liam Neeson as John “Hannibal” Smith, Bradley Cooper as Lt. Templeton “Faceman” Peck, Sharlto Copley as Captain “Howling Mad” Murdock and Quinton ‘Rampage’ Jackson as Sergeant “B.A.” Baracus.

So the obvious question to all: why does Hannibal look like Steve Martin, Howling Mad Murdock look like Face and Face & B.A. look like no-one?! Ho and indeed hum.

via Comingsoon.net

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Upgrade fever hits Mac and Windows worlds

September 19, 2009 by Gordon  
Filed under Features, Guide, News

Reprinted with permission from my original article featured on the TalkTalk official blog

Unless you live in a bunker on the far side of the Moon (in which case, congratulations on finding your way here) then you’ll know we are entering a huge couple of months for the computer industry with the launch of Windows 7 and Mac OS X 10.6 ‘Snow Leopard’. Windows 7 arrives on 22 October and Snow Leopard is already here having touched down on 28 August.

Both are expected to help drive computer sales during this wretched global recession of ours. Each has more things in common than either Microsoft or Apple fans would care to admit, but perhaps the biggest is this: both are essentially service packs with price tags.

Snow Leopard

Yes, there are plenty of counter arguments to this controversial viewpoint and many can argue Windows 7 in particular offers far more upgrade benefits to PCs than Snow Leopard does to Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard users. I’d say that’s because there was far more to fix in Vista than there ever was in Leopard. Whatever your standpoint however we are ultimately looking at spring cleans not root and branch surgery.

Now before I incur too much wrath, or get into a tit for tat feature comparison battle, let me say I think this is a good thing. It’s the way software should be – or at least it’s a step in the right direction. Gone should be the days of waiting 3 – 5 years for your next OS. In fact, ideally there shouldn’t even be a ‘next’ OS. Whatever platform we choose should see continual evolution and be as seamless to the user as possible. After all, what version of Gmail are we on now or Google Search? iPhone OS may be up to its third major iteration, but new and old iPhone models alike continue to benefit.

There are practical applications too. Incremental improvements mean end users don’t need retraining on wholly different systems – they are constantly learning as changes are made little step by little step. I’d also argue there would be less resilience to a small monthly fee than singular upgrades dumped upon us at hundreds of pounds (though Snow Leopard’s £25 RRP is a notable exception here), it would also make piracy more difficult.

Windows 7

The web will play a huge role in this vision with real time updates, virus protection and the continual offloading of processing onto farms of remote servers as witnessed every time you perform a Internet search (you really didn’t think your computer was doing those immense calculations did you?). I believe we don’t want Windows XP, Vista, 7 and Mac OS X 10.4, 10.5, 10.6 we want ‘Windows’ and ‘Mac OS’: smoothly evolving platforms that detect your hardware and optimise appropriately for computers old and new.

Of course, there is one group where I’m largely preaching to the converted. Many Linux distributions have long worked in this way and current Linux leader Ubuntu releases upgradeable versions free of charge every six months under such fabulous code names as Fiesty Fawn, Hardy Heron and Jaunty Jackalope. Ubuntu is free, technical support and services earn it revenues.

The obvious (though not necessarily inevitable) next step to all this is Cloud Computing, a system whereby the bulk of the OS is hosted online and users can forget entirely about such matters as updates and upgrades. It also makes the bulk of an OS mobile, allowing users to hop from one computer to another as if they were all the same machine. Cloud Computing is something Google hopes we will latch onto with Chrome OS (which I discussed back in July), but its weak point is the reliance on a reliable and near-constant Internet connection.

In the meantime and despite the furore surrounding Windows 7 and Snow Leopard, I’d be happy just to see the back of these generational OSes…

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