From http://tummelvision.tv/2011/01/06/tummelvision-47-tom-coates/
plindberg / collective / tags / yahoo
Tagged with “yahoo”
(6)
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TummelVision 47: Tom Coates on Yahoo!, social software, and being a proto-tummler
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LukeW | Audio: Innovations in Web Input
Jared led off the discussion, by diving into one of Google’s latest public innovations, Google Instant. If you’ve missed the hubbub, Google Instant starts searching and returning suggested queries as you type. Luke saw this technology developed during his time at Yahoo!, back in 2005. They ended up not using the technique on Yahoo!’s search because… Tune in for the details.
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Introduction To Yahoo Geo Technologies
By Christian Heilmann
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Tom Coates — Instrumenting your life
New product ideas are increasingly based around the surfacing, exposing and recombination of data - and people are the biggest source of data there is. The last few years have seen us exploring the possibilities of social data and we’re on the brink of the mainstreaming of location - so what’s next? What parts of our lives can we track and instrument? What new product possibilities emerge? And what of data portability, ownership, brokerage and privacy? http://www.webstock.org.nz/talks/speakers/tom-coates/instrumenting-your-life/
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How to Make Excellent Products: A Soapbox Podcast with LukeW
LukeW’s no stranger to lighting fires – as Senior Director of Product Iteration at Yahoo! Luke overseas the world’s most trafficked web page, the Yahoo! homepage. Luke came over to ZURB to talk to us about what it takes to make excellent products.
http://www.zurb.com/article/233/how-to-make-excellent-products-a-soapbox-
Tagged with design lukew luke wroblewski ux product consumer electronics innovation yahoo
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Evan ‘Rabble’ Henshaw-Plath on Fire Eagle
"Evan ‘Rabble’ Henshaw-Plath of Yahoo, Brickhouse, gives a brief talk about the very exciting work he is doing on Fire Eagle, a Yahoo! owned service that acts as a store for user location (in real-time!) information. A backbone for other location and geo-aware based services and applications.
Rabble argues for Fire Eagle, as the coming glue between what services service providers want to provide, what information they have access to about their users. And what services that the users and customers of said service providers ask for. Through Fire Eagle, users can decide, which services, and service providers they want to share their private information with. And how service providers need to give their users tangible, compelling reasons to get access to private information about these users."
