Propeller Hits the 400,000 User Mark

30 11 2007

Propeller, the new home of Netscape social news

Don’t count out Propeller yet.

AOL’s stake in social news, previously known as Netscape, has just crossed through the 400,000 registered users mark (as spotted on the realtime user tracker):

Propeller hits the 400,000 user mark

Valleywag certainly got me curious about Propeller again after reports of Wil Wheaton seeing the next Propeller version.
Since everyone calls Propeller a Digg clone, here’s a short timeline of where Digg stands with its user base:

8/06 - 500,000
3/7/07 - 1 million
(If anyone’s got a link to a more recent reference to where Digg is at, put it in the comments and I’ll revise. My guesstimate is they are probably getting close to 2 million.)

Compare these community sizes to more recent niche social news site Sphinn, which has 5,759 registered users.

(show the math, you say? ok. Check the current users: 50 per page x 115 pages of users + 9 on last page = 5759).

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed, or follow me on Twitter. Thanks for visiting!



Mashable Open Web Awards

21 11 2007

Mashable Open Web Awards

Mashable has chosen our new group blog, Collective Thoughts, to be a selected partner.  We’re thrilled to be on there, as we are a relatively new venture!

Here is the remainder of the list:

Selected Partners

Techdirt
/Message
Blognation
Andy Beard
Gadgetell
Watch Mojo
How to Split an Atom
Luca Filigheddu.com
Marketing Pilgrim
Pulse 2.0

Stay tuned to Mashable for more details.



New Social Media Group Blog: Collective Thoughts

13 11 2007

Collective Thoughts

I’m pleased to announce a new social media group blog that I’ll be posting regularly on. The name is Collective Thoughts, and we’ll be featuring some of the greatest social media minds, including:

  • Andy Beard
  • Brian Wallace (aka nowsourcing)
  • Glen Allsopp (aka viperchill)
  • Mark Laymon(aka aglobalwarming)
  • Marty Weintraub (aka aimclear)
  • Rose Sylvia (aka flyingrose)
  • Shana Albert (aka thenanny 612)
  • Tadeusz Szewczyk (aka tad chef)
  • Tim Nash
  • Come check it out, and while you’re there, subscribe to the feed!  We’ve also entered it in the MyBlogLog contest, so if you like what you see (and how can you not :) ), join our community!



    TrueKnowledge: A Look at Natural Language Search

    9 11 2007

    TrueKnowledge

    I saw a write up of TrueKnowledge earlier on ReadWriteWeb, and must say that if this company can deliver what they are saying, they really could give Google a run for their money.

    Some might say, “big deal. Ask.com did that already with answers years ago”. Not so. TrueKnowledge seems to take things a step further by being able to translate multiple complex queries and make sense of data found in their internal knowledgebase, as well as harvest external information. The video shows a practical application of this when they ask the system to find the current time at the GooglePlex.

    Still, AskJeeves is still fresh in some people’s minds. This story speaks of the demise of Jeeves:

    The decision to drop Jeeves was a necessary step in an important re-branding process, said Crisp. When the site launched in 1997, “we had a team of editors looking at the top queries on AskJeeves and surfing the web on their own to pull together search results. This was good for popular questions, but it didn’t scale. Suddenly you needed more editors for more queries, which were becoming more diverse and specific. We were over-promising and under-delivering.”

    Undoubtedly, there will be similar concerns of scale for TrueKnowledge. However, their approach appears to be different. For instance, if you type in a question that the system doesn’t know the answer to, you as the user have the ability to add and verify facts…rather Wikipedia-esque.

    TrueKnowledge’s API information sounds promising, as does their architecture. Everyone likes architecture diagrams. And they should: such tools are a great way to explain a quick summary of system flow to both technical and non-technical crowds alike:

    TrueKnowledge system architecture

    Some of their features a very interesting to be revealed for a search engine.

    Take the recent history, for instance (click for larger view):

    TrueKnowledge recent user activity

    Their video is a must see. It even has a great British voice over by TrueKnowledge founder William Tunstall-Pedoe, to which some think sound uncannily like the guy that does those Dyson vacuum commercials (props: Tanner). Accent or not, this looks to be a very promising solution. Granted, watching a staged demo doesn’t speak to all the challenges and pitfalls of maintaining such a system on a global scale, but they appear to be setting things up in the right direction.



    Social Media Sites (Over)Heating Up

    7 11 2007

    social media issues

    It really seems like social media sites have been heating up over the past week. Or maybe even overheating. Since I’m such a sucker for looking for patterns, let’s review:

    Friday, November 2, 2007:

    Saturday - Sunday, November 3-4, 2007

    Monday, November 5, 2007

    Tuesday, November 6, 2007



    Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape