Posts Tagged ‘Xobni’

All posts tagged Xobni.

Posted: by carlacthompson on December 12th, 2008 | 1 Comment »

Categorized: Week in Review

I got a bee in my bonnet this week to start a regular feature on The Guidewire, posting each Friday and giving a peek into how things look from where we sit in emerging tech. There are plenty of great week-in-review blog posts out there but, frankly, I just wanted to have a little fun. Chris and I spend most weeks deep in conversation with startups, whether they’re applying to DEMO, auditioning for Innovate!Europe, or just giving us a download on their products. But I’m always keeping an ear to the ground under social media.  There’s just so much inanity lying there fallow. So I think it will be a bit of trend-watching, a bit of news update and a bit of humor to highlight the absurd parts of the Web that sometimes get lost in the shuffle.

News from the Social Media Vortex

–It was only a matter of time. The Shorty Awards are officially established, to honor those folks who achieve excellence in… tweeting. I scoff but do acknowledge that there is a fair amount of wordsmithing involved in making your point in 140 characters. (I think my most successful tweet to date involved, not technology, but a spilled pickle jar in the frig.) Keeping with the democracy of the blogoverse, you can nominate your own categories. The current breadth of categories on the site seemingly ensure a nomination to most everyone on Twitter.

Apps on the Radar

–My productivity took a dive earlier in the week when I downloaded Monopoly for the iPhone. That and Centipede should ensure hours of time-sucking during international flights next week.

–If your time-sucking tastes trend more toward inebriation, may I suggest GiveReal, a Facebook app that lets you give redeemable real-world drinks to friends. To be serious, though, I hope to see GiveReal expand their repertoire into all manner of real-world gifts. Could this be a potential revenue stream for Facebook? One can dream…

Money Money Money

–On the one hand, Accel Partners announced two new funds this week, adding a total of more than $1 billion to their coffers. On the other hand…

–The axes fell at Yahoo, with 1,500 workers affected Monday and Flickr in the crosshairs just today. Seems like interested parties should start wearing a hole in the road to the South Bay for a fire sale. Take the money (and a bit of your dignity) and run, Yahoo.

–On that note, one of my favorite tweets this week came from @xobni: “former yahoo – if you are an engineer, apply @xobni – we are hiring.” Go for it, coders. I am increasingly falling in love with my Xobni sidebar. Not to mention their new method of recruitment.

The “I Don’t Get It” Department

–Microblogging service Tumblr closed a Series B, $4.5M round.  I’d think smarter investments right now would lie in technologies that answer real-world needs for mass consumers or enterprises. Is microblogging honestly gaining enough traction to support this?

DEMO Trends – Where the innovation is with DEMO 08 applicants**

–Web discovery – A new way to find related content online, from a deep database of existing bookmarks.

–Content aggregation – information sharing built around subject, rather than the URL

–Search – Make searches more personal by building your own multi-layered concepts

**With the caveat that we can’t reveal too much about the companies at this stage. Let your imagination run wild.

Ephemera

–Condolences to Kevin Fox, who had his light-up Christmas Flamingo stolen from his yard. If I lived in the area, I’d be a prime suspect.

–Tweet of the Week award goes to @kmonson for “It was too loud in the other room, what with all the tranny opera singers.” I must start hanging out with him more.

–I’ll be headed to court soon, if this guy has any say. I am an egregious user of the ; )

That’s it for the inaugural View from Guidewire. Comments, suggestions and mild insults welcome.

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Posted: by carlacthompson on January 18th, 2008 | No Comments »

Categorized: Startups

I will likely be labeled a waffler for this but I’d like to change my opinion on Xobni. If it will help, we can call it a clarification of my initial excitement. The thing is, I’m not really using it. The analytics fan in me stepped aside long enough to allow the everyday user a peek and found that most of Xobni’s functionality goes unused. While it’s interesting to learn that my email traffic is at a peak around 11am each day… what can I do with that knowledge?

Everything I said about Xobni remains true: its sophisticated algorithms and deep search add a visibility to my email that didn’t previously exist. The question is how to put that visibility to work for me. This is a larger issue that is coming up often these days. An increasing number of products are attempting to help us with information overload and, in the process, creating an overload of their own. Remember RescueTime, the product I trumpeted a week ago? I’ve since disabled it. I couldn’t create an actionable path out of the fact that I spent three hours in Google Docs last Thursday.

At some point all the charts and graphs need to help me, rather than just inform. A service like Mint, mentioned in the same post, provides visibility into my spending habits, which can easily translate to changes in my financial actions. I’d love for Xobni to provide the same type of insight into my email.

I’m not giving up on it just yet. I’ll keep it installed for a few more weeks to see if the functionality presents itself. In the meantime, I know there are many fans of the service out there. I’d love to hear how you’re putting Xobni to work; let me know in the comments.

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Posted: by carlacthompson on January 8th, 2008 | No Comments »

Categorized: Startups

I am perhaps no more geekier than when it comes to analytics. I love viewing life – digital, financial, musical – by graphs, stats, and categories; products like RescueTime and Mint are among my favorite. So it was with bated breath that I opened my long-awaited beta invite to Xobni this morning, the Outlook add-on about which many have raved.

I’m just starting to play around with it but am already impressed with its algorithms. It ranks my email correspondents, though I’m not sure by which criteria yet. Frequency of conversations, perhaps? (Chris lands the top spot and our editor Kristin Kueter comes in second, while my husband is way down at number 11. I won’t try to interpret that.) Its analytics are deep and multifaceted and I can’t wait to pie-chart and bar-graph to my heart’s content.

I’m also really liking the search function. Typing in a first name brings up people in my contacts, relevant emails and even Web results. The options that appear when one email is highlighted are incredibly useful, including click-to-talk, previous email trails and attachments sent and received. The one nit I have so far is that it’s yet another panel in my Outlook window. But if its functionality improves my email life as much as I suspect it will, I’ll put up with that extra window. I’ll update more as I use Xobni further.