Tag Archive for 'twitter'

What Are Microformats and What Do They Mean to Mobile?

Microformats + Mobile = ? Microformats are a set of simple, open data formats built upon existing and widely adopted standards. I am a big fan of microformats and you can find them frequently in this blog. Before I write about what microformats mean to mobile, let me briefly explain, for those who are not familiar with them, what the buzz is all about and why you should use them…

What the heck? Why do we need microformats?

It might not seem so on the first glance, but computers are incredibly stupid, even though they can do impressive things like adding up all the data in your huge Excel file within a blink of an eye. However, those machines can only understand us if we provide them with exactly the input and commands they are expecting. They cannot understand our human languages (yet).

HTML is a markup language to describe how a website should be displayed — not to describe the meaning of a website’s content. Some meta information on the content can be given to a computer by using semantic (= “meaningful”) XHTML.

So instead of writing

<font size="13">What Are Microformats and What Do They Mean to Mobile?</font>

to markup my heading I use a heading tag like

<h3>What Are Microformats and What Do They Mean to Mobile?</h3>.

To display the heading in the preferred size, font, color I can use Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). I do not need the <font> tag anymore… at least a computer now knows that this is a heading.

Today, search engines are only analyzing key words on a spidered page. In addition to those key words they determine a ranking for the page to know how important that information might be for others. For search engine optimization (SEO) a semantic markup code in XHTML is a plus, as search engines can better understand the content. If you are writing a post on your blog with the title/heading that contains the keyword “microformat” then the search engines assumes that the whole paragraph below should somehow deal with that topic. Therefore, your site gets a higher ranking for “microformats” compared to a site that just used the word in a paragraph.

Now lets assume a user comes along searching for some content by key words… the search engine digs into its huge databases to see which sites contain those key words and displays the results ordered by their secret ranking algorithm on the screen. But there are so many crappy results that do not interest our fellow searcher… why is that?

Well, search engines don’t understand the content of a website, they only scan it for its key terms based on a statistical analysis. Efforts for text recognition exist, but for the Yahoos and Googles in this world it would not be feasible today to crawl the whole web trying to understand the content of each single page in detail. This might work for a short text, but does not scale to the entire web.

Even many humans are overstrained on understanding texts in their mother language and to determine its meaning. When I think back to German classes in school and the poems we read from Kafka and other poets half of the pupils (including me) didn’t understand the meaning of the text. Did you understand all of that? How should a computer determine the content of a poem by only looking at key terms? In poems the author might leave room for interpretation on purpose. On a news article and most other written text this should not be the case…

How do microformats help?

Microformats are a forerunner of the Semantic Web, which some folks even call Web 3.0. The problem with the “real” Semantic Web is that the new standards are complicated and it takes lots of time and brainpower to use them. We still have to wait some years for the Semantic Web to happen, as this will be a major version change of the web. If we will switch to it at all…

Microformats are “Web 2.5″, simple and built upon open existing standards that web developers already know. They are bridging the gap between the current and the Semantic Web. Instead of using new technologies and standards XHTML class names and other attributes are leveraged to add meaning for machines, helping them to understand the content better.

This does not only help search engines to find the results you are actually looking for. It also helps them to display the results in a better way just as Yahoo showed with their recent announcement of the Yahoo Open Search platform.

Yahoo Open Search Platform

Microformat are not only making searches better. Add-ons for browsers exist with which you can grab microformatted data from a site with two clicks and export the data to other applications such as an address book or a calendar. Firefox 3 will have those capabilities build-in. FF 3 will be released in 2008, not decades ahead of us. Rumors say Microsoft is planning to include microformats in Internet Explorer 8. No more Copy/Paste needed.

What microformats are out there?

Plenty of microformats with which you can attach semantics to the markup exist already (or are in the making):

  • hCard – People and Organizations
  • hCalendar – Calendars and Events
  • VoteLinks, hReview – Opinions, Ratings and Reviews
  • XFN – Social Networks and Blogs
  • rel-license – Licenses
  • hReview – Reviews
  • geo – Geographic coordinates
  • adr – Address Information

I do not want to go into details on how the markup code for those formats looks like, a good example can be found on Wikipedia.

If you are missing a microformat in the list above, check the microformats website first, if you don’t find it, collaborate, specify a draft and create it! Microformats are created by the community in an open process. Everybody is able to propose and elaborate on new formats. The only requirement is that the format solves a problem.

What do microformats mean to mobile?

Obviously many of the previously mentioned microformats make sense on a mobile phone. Instantly add a contact from a mobile web site to your address book with hCard, add an event to the calendar with one click (hCalendar) or directly click on an address to navigate to it, if you have a GPS-enabled phone.

Input to mobile device is cumbersome and should be avoided whenever possible, microformats offer a solution to some of these input problems. Meaning less stupid text prediction à la T9, less Copy/Paste (I even heard some smartphones don’t support this =) but a better experience for the user. A better experience equals more fun, longer sessions, more ad views, higher conversion and more money for the site owner. What does it cost to add microformats to a website? Almost nothing, you basically just have to add some class names to the XHTML markup.

Microformats, Nanoformats, Picoformats Photo by dlemieux

Although strictly speaking not microformats, because they are not built on XHTML, there are special efforts to bring microformats to mobile – in particular to the plain text in mobile messaging: nanoformats and picoformats.

Nanoformats

Targeted at microblogging services like Twitter and Jaiku, nanoformats try to add semantics to your jabbering. They extend the capabilities of microblogging and provide standards for commonly used parameters:

  • @username – Reply to another user
  • L:Berlin – Referring to a specific location
  • tag++, tag–, username++ – Vote for or against a tag or user
  • #tag – Categorize your tweet with a tag
  • lang:en – Specify the language
  • event: – Describe an event, should be combined with L:

And why should you waste some more characters in your short 140-character tweet? It’s the same reason as for microformats. To describe the stupid computers what you are talking about. Nanoformats enabled services like Hashtags, Tweet Translation and Plusplus Bot, making it easier to monitor topics of your interest.

Picoformats

Communicating and executing commands with mobile devices over SMS is becoming more and more common. Plazes, Remember The Milk, Dopplr, Facebook mobile, Twitter and many others allow users to control the application by sending in specific SMS commands. Picoformats represent an effort to codify those different standards and to openly pursue a nomenclature and syntax for SMS commands.

The question is if it will be possible to standardize these short SMS commands. For applications with similar use cases this might be reasonable, but in general most applications are having very different domains and finding an easy way to interact with the service by SMS is a key aspect of development. The only observation that I could make was that .command is used frequently to send commands to a service and ?query to request the delivery of information to a phone. Unix-based command-line tools have many different purposes as well and face the same problem but most tools obey the standard. So why shouldn’t this work for the SMS-terminal?

So What?

Everybody hopefully understands my passion for microformats, if you made it this far in the article. With only small efforts it is possible to add semantics to your website. When publishing something on the web you want your content to be read, used and distributed. Otherwise you wouldn’t be doing it, would you?

Microformats help to spread your word and make things easier for your visitors, especially on a cell phone when mobile browsers are going to add support for microformats in the future. And as this is happening on the desktop we probably won’t have to wait a long time for this feature.

Nano- and picoformats, the microformats for mobile messaging, are still in their infancy and only a couple are frequently used on services today. It is questionable if these efforts will take off. Creating web sites is something that is done by skilled web designers that (hopefully) know the languages they are using. It should be easy for them to understand the benefit of microformats. Twitter and the others microblogging services are still used by many web geeks, but in the end, they are tools that anybody can use. The idea behind nano- and picoformats is great, I just do not think my sister will want to spend time to produce a semantically correct tweet, do you?

Comprehensive List of German Mobile Startups

Did you ever wonder what is going on in the mobile startup scene in Germany?

I crawled through the German web and – besides noticing and wondering how many new mom&dad, sport and pet communities we have – collected a decent list of mobile startups.

If you know a company that is missing please add it in the comments. I will keep an eye on any new startups and follow up on this in the future.

Mobile Content
dailyme.tvApplication to automatically grab videos to your phone. Nokia only so far.
hiogiText any question when you are on the go to a short code number and the community will reply with an answer.
itsmyMobile content community. Site looks like Jamba TV ads.
ViiFStream yourself with video telephony function of your phone and view videos. See the detailed report.
yasssuReformat content to mobile. For media companies.
Mobile Gaming
ewaveProvider of mobile multiplayer games.
Mobile Services
Beem it up ScottySend any file over the web to your mobile device.
cellityApplication for your phone to make cheap phone calls
indyphoneCreate wallpapers for your mobile phone.
Mobile Social Networks
aka-akiCreative and promising startup. Uses Bluetooth technology to connect with people around you.
KWICK!German social network with new large mobile website.
PlazesCreate activities to let your friends know what you are doing where. See recent coverage.
peperonityMobile community. Did they do this retro-design on purpose?
plexmeConnect with people in your region. SMS-based.
qeepNice design. Cheap messages to other devices.
QiroPromising application for your phone. Similar to loopt.
Rock-It-MobileCreate your own groups and chat with SMS.
scaanooMobile messenger community. Do they think the design of the logo brings success?
TownKingsExplore your city.
TownsterSee above.
Youni-mobileCommunity and virtual network operator.
Microblogging
1youSeems like Twitter for dating. Did the designers actually look at the rendered page?
baluuBasis microblogging. Only a few posts a day on the system.
brabblrBroadcasts messages to various microblogging platforms (Twitter, Jaiku, tumblr, …)
dasbeepAnother Twitter-clone
dukuduGood looking clone. Not much going on anymore.
FrazrMost active German microblogging service.
niimoFormer texteln.de. Quite active.
Slogr*Yawn*
WamaduNumber for each mobile operator so most folks can use their included messages.
Was geht bei dir?*Yawn* again…
Mobile Tagging
BeeTagMobile Tagging system (Switzerland)
KAYWAProvides mobile blogs and QR reader + other services. (Switzerland)
kooabaMake a picture of the real-world object and easily get further information. (Switzerland)
TagYourCityPost stickers with encoded information in your city. (Austria)

Crowdsourced Live Streaming – Will Mobile Photoblogging Provide Ubiquitous Webcams?

A picture is worth a thousand words is the new slogan of Twitxr, a photo-enabled Twitter clone that has recently been launched by Fon Labs. The launch created buzz in blogs and the media even though similar Twitter variations already appeared such as Zannel or Twit Pic.

I didn’t test all the services in detail but Twitxr seems to be different as it is automatically adding location details to the picture and text which makes it much more powerful. Recently, I just had the same idea and really liked it…

Today we are viewing public webcams to get a glimpse of the current weather, skiing conditions or other things on certain places. If real time geo-tagged mobile photo blogging is taking off we will basically have ubiquitous webcams all around us where interesting things are happening.

Soccer World Cup in Italy Photo by Giampaolo Macorig

Imagine the FIFA World Cup Final 2010 between Italy and Germany in South Africa. Do you want to know what is going on around the stadium, on the streets in Berlin, Rome or anywhere else (when Germany will – of course – win)? Go to a twittervision-like website that supports photos and geolocation, zoom in on the area of your interest and you will instantaneously see what is going on there. Brought to you live, with comments and feelings by real people like you and me and not the traditional media.

Crowdsourced live streaming of any place or event – your vacation destination, a football game, a demonstration or even coverage of a terrorist attack as it happened in London where people quickly started to upload pictures to the web.

Twitxr doesn’t provide exact pinpointing of your location to date. Hence, this is still a vision but more and more phones contain GPS receivers and mobile plans become cheaper. What do you think? Will we have a broad distribution of mobile photo blogging services by 2010 or is this to optimistic?