Ever wanted to search your entire image archive by typing `Peter' in the search box, and all the pictures with Peter's face in them turn up? Then, enter`Steffi Graf' in the text search box and all her pictures on the web turn up? Or, just upload a picture of a piece of jewelry to a site and it'll search the web for prices of this piece?
Riya.com comes a little closer to this dream. It's an introduction to what google might do with their new acquisition - Neven Vision - a company good at extracting information from photos. Google WAS talking to riya.com before, but I guess it didn't work out.
Discover Magazine has a good writeup on Riya here. Yeah, I still read some nerd print stuff. Coz the authors are more nerdy than some of the web-only types.
Anyway, riya.com just asks you to upload some pictures of your own to their website via a 43MB picture uploader software, and they'll recognize faces, objects, etc. in your photos. Then you can tag them in a number of ways, or riya will autotag them using information from other riya users who appeared in your photos.
Normally, I'd really scream about a site with features as powerful and unique like Riya's. But photos - wow! They're really personal, and people could do bad things with them. To top it all, I've a bad feeling about Riya - check out the bitchiness of Riya's CEO in his personal blog after Google bought Neven Vision instead of Riya. And note the `sour grapes' and incredibly bitchy comments made by the same CEO about Neven Vision and Google. With such bitchiness, I don't know whether I can trust the privacy statements or not. I don't even know whether this company has a future or not. A future in India, maybe, but a global future needs a broader perspective, I think, not the bitchiness demonstrated.
And another stupid, scary thing is, to use one of the modes of autotagging, it requires you to enter your google/yahoo/etc password and username to extract user information and contacts. Come on! That is disrespect of the crudest sense. They could just have an IMPORT CONTACTS function, instead of asking you for one of the most sacred things, your password to your gmail account and of course, your entire google accounts universe, including your credit card number in your checkout account and your personal search information.
So, after they asked for my google username and password, I decided to stop my picture uploading to Riya before it began. I've gotta wait till google's debut of this type of technology. And between google and a bitchy CEO, I'd trust google anytime if I had to.
The bottom line - How much does image recognition sharpen your axe? A whole lot, I think - tagging my 12,000 or more photos, is an IMPOSSIBLE task. With computer-aided tagging, I'd do it. And once the tagging is done, based on facial and object recognition, most of the new pictures would be tagged automatically based on previous object recognition data, unless I've got a new baby or new friends in the pictures. With google's network, perhaps some of your friends have elected to share their own face recognition metrics with every one of their gmail contacts, and I may not even have to manually tag many of my new friends.
If you're a teacher and you'd have to take attendance, just snap away with your point and shoot, 3-4 pictures, and upload it, and there, all 30 of your students identified (unless someone made a funny face, but if he makes funny faces all the time, he'd be recognized too).
And if you found a nice boy and wanted to see how nice this boy really was, use your new K800, take a picture, and see whether this boy appears in some slut's blog as a `good partner'. Or, whether he appears in a picture of a Taliban training camp.
Obviously, with this, nobody can hide, nobody can run. It's pretty much beyond your control - photos usually are taken by friends, and you'd probably have appeared in photos before. Chances are a few of your friends upload the picture, and there - Mr. X identified - in name, with photos.
Doesn't bother me that much. Just hope that Google's CEO isn't as bitchy as Riya's.
Showing posts with label web20. Show all posts
Showing posts with label web20. Show all posts
Monday, August 21, 2006
Thursday, August 17, 2006
The Second Coming
By Oo Gin Lee
When I first became an IT journalist in 2000, my blood was pumping with adrenaline everyday. It was the height of the dot com boom, and money was a-plenty to fund Jeff Bezos and Jerry Yang wannabes. Heck, all you needed was a decent idea and a .com and watch your shares soar like the wind. Even Li Ka Shing wanted to be part of it, and he saw his shares in tom.com hit the roof. In fact, tom.com had nothing more than a .com in its name and the reputation of Hong Kong's most famous tycoon.
In my team of 6 at the Straits Times Tech & Science Desk, I was initially disappointed that I would not be reviewing the cool gadgets (that went to Steve Dawson, who now is with ESPN) nor the software (that was Francis Chin whose teenage son had a ball of a time with those free games!). Nope, I was tasked by my boss, Tarn How (famous playwright who wrote the screenplay for the first 2 seasons of Growing Up and now with some think tank organisation) to cover the dot commers.
My disappointment soon turned to elation as I began to see the importance of my role. I would make the dot commers famous. I would be their bridge to the world. Help them become millionaires. There was plenty of potential at that time. Patrick Grove of Catcha.com was sizzling hot with his local search engine. The team of cool and good looking dudes and gals from MTV left to start their music website SoundBuzz.com. Then there was earth9.com who wanted to create Habitats, much like what eCircles used to do. How about iteru.net, the guys who started sending SMS messages to huge screens at parties, way before StarHub even thought about Hub TV. Whoever said Singaporeans were uncreative need only look to the dot com era.
In those days, these millionaire wannabes were called Technopreuners and getting Incubated was the hip thing to do. (Incubation means getting funded and getting cheap office space so that your business could grow to a level where you are ready to hatch out of your protective shell) Dot commers were partying every night, meeting venture capitalists and networking with the whole world, including those from the brick-and-mortar traditionals who wanted to get a piece of the money-spinning action. Powering these dot com dreams was a local company called Edge Matrix, who provided the servers and stuff to host the web sites. You may not have heard of the company, but its founder and CEO Dinesh Bhatia hit the news for the wrong reasons years on. Whatever it was, there was plenty of excitement in the air.
I still remember my first break into the Prime pages of The Straits Times. After slogging out for months, I finally met these two good-looking girls who had just set-up an online lingerie store ala Victoria Secretes called efrenchkiss. One was an ex-beauty queen, the other a biz ad graduate. So my first big story, showed these two girls - beauty and brains - holding out a bra at page 4. Their smiles and lingerie filled the page. My words sadly only took up a few lines.
Anyway, as we all know, the dot com fantasy came crashing down one fine day, and with it, the dreams of millions were shattered. Patrick Grove, with his good looks, stopped appearing on the cover of a zillion managazines. He retreated for a while and then made a strong comeback by shifting to the magazine business. Catcha now publishes Juice, Stuff and other magazines. Also alive and kicking, and I suspect doing well, is efrenchkiss, whose website is still selling the sexy lingerie. I remember asking the gals why they sold panties and bras separately instead of a "set" and they shared that in truth, bras were just too expensive so gals had to mix and match! Soundbuzz as you know has made an amazing comeback by actually making people pay to buy music at their portal and signed some great partnerships witht he record labels. As for Edge Matrix and Iteru, their web domains are up for sale right now if you are keen. Earth9 never hit it off with their Habitat dreams but they went to become a leading web solutions company for Microsoft and many other big boys.
As for me. I left The Straits Times in 2002 to set-up my own writing business, mainly to look after my new baby. Thankfully, I still managed to get freelance writing assignments with the papers and IT magazines and the ink is still running in my blood. Unfortunately the demise of the dot com fantasy meant that IT became really boring. Super boring. I turned to reviewing games and gadgets. But now, I can feel my blood pumping again, I can feel the adrenaline flowing again. Now, the excitement is back. And it's called Web 2.0
Simply put, Web 2.0 is the new Web, with super cool applications and tools that you never thought would be possible. Let's start with Google. Back in 2000, Google was this wannabe search engine company who was taking on big guns like Yahoo, Alta Vista, Infoseek, and so on. I remeber telling my suit friends about Google. They poohed-poohed the name. Well, I guess Google had the last laugh. Google's success with online ads meant that it had the muscles and resources to spend some time developing some cool applications. Now with Google software, you can manage your digital picture library, get 2 GB free email, view planet Earth from outer space, earn money by placing ads on your own web-site, search your Outllook e-mail in a jiffy and much much more.
Google was the catalyst. More would follow. Skype, Bit Torrent, Mozilla Firefox are now all household names. Firefox has established itself as serious contender to Internet Explorer, and remains my personal preference for its tabbed browsing and zillion plug-ins.
There are many less well known but equally compelling ones. Jajah.com lets you make phone to phone calls for free. ScanR turns your mobile phone camera into a powerful business card and document scanner. Watch HBO, CNN and other cable TV channels on your PC with TVU
The new Web is here. Once again, I wake up in the morning with a sense of expectation, hoping to discover the next Web application that will blow my mind away. Some of these stuff doesn't even make business sense. It does sound familiar doesn't it? Yes, it's the Second Coming my friends.
When I first became an IT journalist in 2000, my blood was pumping with adrenaline everyday. It was the height of the dot com boom, and money was a-plenty to fund Jeff Bezos and Jerry Yang wannabes. Heck, all you needed was a decent idea and a .com and watch your shares soar like the wind. Even Li Ka Shing wanted to be part of it, and he saw his shares in tom.com hit the roof. In fact, tom.com had nothing more than a .com in its name and the reputation of Hong Kong's most famous tycoon.
In my team of 6 at the Straits Times Tech & Science Desk, I was initially disappointed that I would not be reviewing the cool gadgets (that went to Steve Dawson, who now is with ESPN) nor the software (that was Francis Chin whose teenage son had a ball of a time with those free games!). Nope, I was tasked by my boss, Tarn How (famous playwright who wrote the screenplay for the first 2 seasons of Growing Up and now with some think tank organisation) to cover the dot commers.
My disappointment soon turned to elation as I began to see the importance of my role. I would make the dot commers famous. I would be their bridge to the world. Help them become millionaires. There was plenty of potential at that time. Patrick Grove of Catcha.com was sizzling hot with his local search engine. The team of cool and good looking dudes and gals from MTV left to start their music website SoundBuzz.com. Then there was earth9.com who wanted to create Habitats, much like what eCircles used to do. How about iteru.net, the guys who started sending SMS messages to huge screens at parties, way before StarHub even thought about Hub TV. Whoever said Singaporeans were uncreative need only look to the dot com era.
In those days, these millionaire wannabes were called Technopreuners and getting Incubated was the hip thing to do. (Incubation means getting funded and getting cheap office space so that your business could grow to a level where you are ready to hatch out of your protective shell) Dot commers were partying every night, meeting venture capitalists and networking with the whole world, including those from the brick-and-mortar traditionals who wanted to get a piece of the money-spinning action. Powering these dot com dreams was a local company called Edge Matrix, who provided the servers and stuff to host the web sites. You may not have heard of the company, but its founder and CEO Dinesh Bhatia hit the news for the wrong reasons years on. Whatever it was, there was plenty of excitement in the air.
I still remember my first break into the Prime pages of The Straits Times. After slogging out for months, I finally met these two good-looking girls who had just set-up an online lingerie store ala Victoria Secretes called efrenchkiss. One was an ex-beauty queen, the other a biz ad graduate. So my first big story, showed these two girls - beauty and brains - holding out a bra at page 4. Their smiles and lingerie filled the page. My words sadly only took up a few lines.
Anyway, as we all know, the dot com fantasy came crashing down one fine day, and with it, the dreams of millions were shattered. Patrick Grove, with his good looks, stopped appearing on the cover of a zillion managazines. He retreated for a while and then made a strong comeback by shifting to the magazine business. Catcha now publishes Juice, Stuff and other magazines. Also alive and kicking, and I suspect doing well, is efrenchkiss, whose website is still selling the sexy lingerie. I remember asking the gals why they sold panties and bras separately instead of a "set" and they shared that in truth, bras were just too expensive so gals had to mix and match! Soundbuzz as you know has made an amazing comeback by actually making people pay to buy music at their portal and signed some great partnerships witht he record labels. As for Edge Matrix and Iteru, their web domains are up for sale right now if you are keen. Earth9 never hit it off with their Habitat dreams but they went to become a leading web solutions company for Microsoft and many other big boys.
As for me. I left The Straits Times in 2002 to set-up my own writing business, mainly to look after my new baby. Thankfully, I still managed to get freelance writing assignments with the papers and IT magazines and the ink is still running in my blood. Unfortunately the demise of the dot com fantasy meant that IT became really boring. Super boring. I turned to reviewing games and gadgets. But now, I can feel my blood pumping again, I can feel the adrenaline flowing again. Now, the excitement is back. And it's called Web 2.0
Simply put, Web 2.0 is the new Web, with super cool applications and tools that you never thought would be possible. Let's start with Google. Back in 2000, Google was this wannabe search engine company who was taking on big guns like Yahoo, Alta Vista, Infoseek, and so on. I remeber telling my suit friends about Google. They poohed-poohed the name. Well, I guess Google had the last laugh. Google's success with online ads meant that it had the muscles and resources to spend some time developing some cool applications. Now with Google software, you can manage your digital picture library, get 2 GB free email, view planet Earth from outer space, earn money by placing ads on your own web-site, search your Outllook e-mail in a jiffy and much much more.
Google was the catalyst. More would follow. Skype, Bit Torrent, Mozilla Firefox are now all household names. Firefox has established itself as serious contender to Internet Explorer, and remains my personal preference for its tabbed browsing and zillion plug-ins.
There are many less well known but equally compelling ones. Jajah.com lets you make phone to phone calls for free. ScanR turns your mobile phone camera into a powerful business card and document scanner. Watch HBO, CNN and other cable TV channels on your PC with TVU
The new Web is here. Once again, I wake up in the morning with a sense of expectation, hoping to discover the next Web application that will blow my mind away. Some of these stuff doesn't even make business sense. It does sound familiar doesn't it? Yes, it's the Second Coming my friends.
Wednesday, August 16, 2006
Abraham Lincoln and his axe

Just to state the obvious, the axe is a tool to perform what you have to do. Since the entire human race, including those living in underdeveloped states like Myanmar, has shifted in varying degrees to the information age, I can probably define the axe as `something which helps me do what I have to do faster, better and cheaper'.
I spend an inordinate amount of time sharpening my axe. In my first year at law school, I sharpened my axe till the eve of my exams for Criminal Law, and flunked it. At work, I spend almost all my time sharpening my axe.
But now, with websites like Lifehacker and a ton of like `productivity blogs' around, I find like minded souls, and I spend even more time, if it's possible to sharpen my axe. Trouble is, there seems to be almost no limit to how sharp the axe can be.
So now, I can do a whole lot of things much faster, better and easier than many of my contemporaries. I google faster, I use the spreadsheet faster, I populate the spreadsheet from the database faster. Drawing resources from experts like programmers, and other hackers, and a veritable network of friends and `productivity bloggers', the rate of sharpening is speeding up.
So much so that, in the last 6 months, I feel the gulf between the guys with sharp axes and less keen blades, has widened tremendously. More than it has for the last 3 years. I have no concrete reasons on `why' but I speculate it's because Eric Schmidt, the boss of Google, works harder than Larry Page and Sergey Brin.
Yes, in my mind, Google has driven the industry and provided it with all the catalysts for growth. Google has, by design, taken the stuffy corporate spin out of the web, and replaced it with fun. Witness their blogs - it goes something like:
Well, Google XXX has always prided itself on 2 principles:
1) Our integration of XXX with our great search engine, synergies (blah blah serious corporate stuff) and
2) Our love for jellybeans in Oreo cookies mashed with Ice Cream (fun stuff)
It's their great expertise at the mind game which is screwing Microsoft more than any other. And it's screwing all those suits at Oracle too. Make that, suits everywhere. What the hell do you wear a suit for if a bunch of fun loving kids at Mountain View earn US$800M a quarter and have fun at it? They put the emphasis on STUFFY in stuffy suits.
I'm not here to judge how genuine the fun is at google. What I have to say is that they're doing a damn good job. They put the T-shirts back at Silicon Valley.
Oh and why am I talking about google? Because, the web services which google made so powerful and attractive and fun, has done a helluva lot to sharpen my axe lately. Searches have become better. People are dying to beat google at the game, and labels and tags have given information a whole new dimension. Countless new dimensions. Information quality has improved greatly just because of the new ways to categorize it.
The bottom line: I got this blog to test Blogger Beta, but they didn't allow me to transfer my other blogs to the beta yet, and forced me to register a new name. Since I had this in mind for a long time already, almost 3 months, so I decided to register a new blog.
I don't know whether I have time to fill in this blog past this introduction, but if I do, I hope you get something outta it. I'm gonna show you how I sharpened my axe.
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