SML Search

Showing posts with label data. Show all posts
Showing posts with label data. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Share / SML Network Theory

2 comments:

“Seek first to understand, then to be understood.” —Steven Covey, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People: Habit 5  ”Seek first to share, then to be shared. Seek first to like, then to be liked.” —SML Network Theory / SML.20121230.PHIL

“Seek first to understand, then to be understood.”
—Steven Covey, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People: Habit 5

”Seek first to share, then to be shared.
Seek first to like, then to be liked.”
—SML Network Theory

I know a lot of people (artists in particular) who are completely dumbfounded by social media. Following the advice of their friends, they signed up on Facebook, on Instagram, on Twitter, on Flickr, on LinkedIn, because their friends told them that if they sign onto one of these networks they will gain exposure.

Yes, you will. But you need to participate. Simply creating a Facebook account and a page and not participate in anything is much like appearing on an island in the middle of nowhere and expect travel tours to flight over as a travel destination.

If you talk about other people and be interested in other people’s work, people will be curious about your work in return. The same philosophy opined by Covey is the same in social media.

But be sincere about it — often I see companies / brands / people liking all kinds of random things in hopes of gaining followers. You won’t go far. You might be able to fool the dumb search bots in hopes of gaining linkbacks via SEO but ultimately humans are the ones who care about your content. If you want people to care, then care about others. Never follow accounts in hopes of being followed back.

That tactic is seen all over Twitter. I see it all the time—they follow you, as soon as you follow, they send you a direct message as spam and then unfollow immediately—it was so annoying that I have stopped seeing who is following me anymore. I blame that unhealthy number-game on Twitter to the promptly displayed stats. And is the number 1 reason why I suggest companies to not actively display stats visibly on people’s profile as it creates an unhealthy ecology.

In the hayday of social media analytics, the follower/following ratio is often used to calculate one’s influence and thus popularity. If being well-read is a sign of intellectual maturity, then one must question how logical that influence analytics data really is. Thus you will see that better analytics engines such as Klout calculates influence based on engagement, and I think that kind of calculation is much more accurate.

/ SML.20121230.PHIL
/ #smlphil #ccby #seeminglee #smluniverse #smlnet #smlopinions #smlanalytics
/ #network #theory #socialmedia #facebook #likes #twitter #flickr #LinkedIn #Klout #philosophy #marketing #strategy #opinions #analysis #analytics #influence #engagement
/ #HongKong #HK #China #CN

Friday, September 25, 2009

Synergy: an unfocused approach to learning about oneself

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A lot of people prefer web destinations to have a very specific focus, but it appears that I am inherently an unfocused person, and therefore my web destinations also are rather unfocused.

Most Interesting SML Flickr: Synergy in data analytics: art + design + hacks + inspiration + photography / 2009-09-20 / SML Data

Most Interesting SML Flickr: Synergy in data analytics: art + design + hacks + inspiration + photography / 2009-09-20 / SML Data (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

Available Sizes
+ Medium (500 x 465 JPEG)
+ Large (1000 x 953 JPEG)
+ Original (4974 x 4629 PNG)

Screenshots captured by SML Bio Bot on 2009-09-20
+ 500 Most Interesting SML Flickr: Page 1
+ 500 Most Interesting SML Flickr: Page 2
+ 500 Most Interesting SML Flickr: Page 3
+ 500 Most Interesting SML Flickr: Page 4
+ 500 Most Interesting SML Flickr: Page 5


In the beginning, SML Pro Blog was just the SML Blog, and it contains pretty much everything that my life contains, until I am getting some negative feedbacks from professional colleagues who wish not have their photos appear next to blog posts relating to my gay activities, which is when SML Gay Blog was born. Then some folks who got really annoyed with my massive photography output, and so SML Photo Blog was born. Then after a while I started to have so many blogs that I cannot keep track on, so I have now reconsolidated the SML Thank You and SML Notebook back into this blog, because it soon became *very* challenging to manage them all.

Conversely, I take a very-me approach when it comes to content on Flickr. I post pretty much everything onto it: my designs, my photography, my hacks, my screenshots, and source of inspiration all bundled up together. It's me, after all. By not separating these data, I gain a much better insight into which of my stuff is good and 'interesting' to folks.

I know far too many people who keep a separate Flickr profile for their "professional" life vs their "play" life but when I view the content, I can't tell the difference and reason as to why they are separate. Consolidation is good. Just filter, and tag. I think that via my very unfocused postings, I have successfully cross-marketed my designs to people who came to my stream because of my abstract photography; or that they discovered that I am much much more than a photojournalist who run around events.

Because of this content cross-pollination, I also learned based on my data that what people find to be interesting is also very all-across the board, and that is interesting to me. I made screenshots of the top 5 pages from the 500 Most Interesting Flickr (set) and bundled them together, and it provides a great sign-post as to where I should be headed next.

Related SML
+ SML Pro Blog: Philosophy
+ SML Pro Blog: Synergy
+ SML Flickr Tags: Synergy
+ SML Wiki: Flickr Analytics
+ SML Wiki: Interestingness

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Google Page Rank, Domain Names, Technology Platforms and Platform Owners / SML Analytics

2 comments:

Recently I did a tally of Google PageRank in the SML Universe: Analyzing a single person's Web presence on different domains, the technology platform, the platform owner, and the corresponding Google PageRank data.

Google PageRank in the SML Universe / 2009-09-18 / SML Data (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)
View large size (1024 x 903 JPG)
View original size (3846 x 3391 PNG)

What I found especially interesting is that the highest PRs concentrated on properties owned by Yahoo, namely: SML Flickr (5) and SML Pipes (5), followed immediately by Google properties (4): SML Pro Blog (4), SML Photo Blog (4), SML YouTube (4) and perhaps Google's friends: SML Twitter (4), SML Vimeo (4).

SML Amazon (5) perhaps should be expected as Amazon is a hub, but I do find it interesting that its PR is so high since it really receives no publicity nor direct URL.

SML Facebook (0) does not get anything likely because Facebook is a close-walled garden. SML Wiki (0) failed to a zero recently which I contribute to my recent Flickr Censorship saga as I pump most of the content on the wiki via the Flickr API, and failing that means failing all my content. (ouch!) which is why I'm brewing SML Data (1) right now. As historic data has shown, generally speaking, registering a domain name will pump Google PR to at least 1. If you don't even get that, you are doing something wrong and it usually means that Google has placed you on a blacklist and you should definitely watch out.

Here's my 2009-09-18 data on Google Docs for those who prefer raw text:
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=t6xebhQalrxo9LpGAqo2WGg&output=html




Related SML
+ SML Flickr Sets: SML Data
+ SML Flickr Sets: SML Information Design
+ SML Pro Blog: Data
+ SML Pro Blog: Google
+ SML Pro Blog: Google Page Rank
+ SML Pro Blog: Information Design

TwitterFeed = Great RSS to Twitter Tool

No comments:

TwitterFeed (Twitter:twfeed) is a useful service which pumps RSS feeds to your Twitter account.

I tested out the server a couple of weeks ago because I wanted a separate feed for some more focus tweets, namely, for SML BW (Flickr Group / FriendFeed / Twitter), SML Fine Art (Flickr Group / FriendFeed / Twitter) and SML Graphic Design (Flickr Group / FriendFeed / Twitter).

Another reason I'm doing this is because, oh, my friends on Twitter was complaining that I tweet too much. So now I can be tweeting without getting massive unfollows: I think that interesting things deserve to be seen and heard. There are more than enough talented people scattered around the Net that are super-talented and waiting to be discovered. So for those who don't mind the extra infos, follow @smlbw (black and white photography), @smlfineart (art), and @smlgfxdesign (graphic design) which is an accumulation of stuff I blogged as well as the super talented folks who post to the Flickr pool. Since Twitter is not inherently visual, it might be easier to follow their Friendfeeds (links above).

TwitterFeed lets you connect separate Twitter Feed with different accounts, which is uber useful because that means that I don't have to create multiple accounts to do that. Additionally it allows you to use a myriad of URL-shortener services. I use bit.ly because it reports analytics data, but you can use pretty much anything available in the market.

If you are feeding with a FeedBurner feed, it gives you additional insights into the feed clicks as well, but it does not work with Feedburner's default settings:

TwitterFeed: Error calling feedburner awareness API / 2009-09-18 / SML Screenshots (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

In order to get TwitterFeed to report traffic data, go to Publicize > Awareness API and activate it.

FeedBurner: Publicize: Awareness API / 2009-09-18 / SML Screenshots (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

After activating the FeedBurner Awareness API, TwitterFeed successfully captures click data via Feedburner vs bit.ly — which is useful if you are an uber data freak like me!

TwitterFeed: Reporting Feedburner and bit.ly clicks / 2009-09-18 / SML Screenshots (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

Related SML
+ SML Delicious: Tools
+ SML Flickr Tags: Tools
+ SML Pro Blog: Tools
+ SML Pro Blog: Twitter


Bug in Flickr Stats Server?

No comments:

I have noticed some oddity on my Flickr Stats recently. This problem was particularly noticeable since Flickr's recent server outages happening in August. I created a related forum post about this: Flickr: The Help Forum: Bug in Flickr Stats Server?

Unknown Source Referrals

I have noticed that when I posted my photos past a certain hour (usually after 2am local time EST), my photos would pick up an abnormal amount of views all within minutes after uploads. According to the Flickr Stats Referral detail, they all come from Unknown Sources, and I can't quite get a grasp at what's going on.

Flickr Stats Referrers: Abnormally High Unknown Source / 2009-09-23 / SML Screenshots (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

If those were actual views, I have no problem with it, but just how some photo of a back alley accumulate 98 views over a minute on Flickr is close to impossible knowing my own stats history.

This is definitely a problem. I haven't tweeted about this photo, nor have I shared this anywhere with any social media sites, you can't blame bit.ly for this. Bad data makes it impossible to evaluate actual performance of the photo.

If any of you are having the same problem, please reply to the forum post: Flickr: The Help Forum: Bug in Flickr Stats Server? as Flickr appears to think that it is a localized problem which happens to only a few of the users.

As far as I know it, this does not happen to me personally. I know of a few Flickr contacts who are having the same problem as well.
+ flickr.com/atomische
+ flickr.com/numbphoto
+ flickr.com/gerryvisco

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

SML Data

No comments:

I have been building my CMS for a while now. The idea of building a database came from noting that I have lots and lots of content that needs to be indexed. I'd like to put everything happening in my life so that I can possibility find hidden structure (emergence) within the structure. I believe that my multitudes of interests (the leaves) are preventing me to discover what I'm about (the tree).


Coming up with the database structure and figuring out an efficient way of accessing those data with unknown criteria was problematic. I'm not a database architect, most certainly lack the know-how to structure a scalable database architecture that can index everything about my life. So I decided to create my outsourced my CMS and database--free CMS database via user-generated content sites.


It works something like this:

  • bookmarks: delicious
  • music: acidplanet
  • writing: blogger (or wordpress, haven't decided yet)
  • photography: flickr
  • portfolio: flickr
  • flash 'experiments': still looking for a good database
  • videos: you tube
  • books: librarything
  • book recommendations: amazon
  • mails: most likely gmail
  • news: probably twitter

Utilizing ugc sites to manage my content has many benefits

  • My data are hosted on very safe environment, usually with very good backup systems, all for free
  • Management of the content can be performed using tools specifically created for the management of those content.
  • The CMS on those sites will continue to improve as the next generation comes, and I save on the need to improve my own administrative tools, which can become time consuming
  • Accessing data on the services are easy through the their respectively constantly improving APIs
  • The application to drive all the content become very easy to host--as the size required to host the large database is no longer an issue

Putting my data access API together is still at the works since the original idea from 2007--but the important fact is that it hasn't stopped me from content creation. One of the key problems in many startup is not having data to play with. Now that all of my 3rd-party content portals have enough data to play with, the development effort has been moving much rapidly since the original idea inception back in 2007.

Monday, November 17, 2008

QDOS = Digital presence tracking metrics

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See-ming Lee's QDOS profile / 2008-11-17 / SML Screenshots (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

Screenshot: http://qdos.com/user/See-ming-Lee/3a0f686c608b5a3da8200b97aacdfc48/html

QDOS is an service which measures a person's digitial presence, which is a formula based on the person's popularity, impact, activity and individuality.

QDOS index fluctuates overtime, and was most evidential in my recent absence from Internet play. The charting application (not shown here) can plot a person's QDOS over time. I wish that there is a way to chart multiple person over time though.

According to today's report, I have higher influence than Julia Stiles at the moment, having a Q4916 (the higher the better) and a ranking of #2,166 out of 67,660 actively tracked profiles.

To put things into perspective, Robert Scoble has Q6064 (ranking #628) while Pete Cashmore (Q7313) is at #187. Barack Obama has a Q11733 and is the top-ranked person at the moment, followed immediately by Britney Spears, 50 Cent and Beyonce Knowles.

What's your QDOS like? Find your QDOS and post a screenshot on Flickr.

©2008 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe

Monday, June 23, 2008

Many Eyes = Community for data and data visualization

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I found an interesting site called Many Eyes a few weeks ago. It's a collaborative environment where users can upload data sets and use one of the site's visualization module to create interesting visualization.

Many Eyes: SML Flickr Tags: All / 2008-05-24 / SML Screenshots (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

To create the visualization seen above, I first grabbed the complete list of tags from my Flickr account using the flickr.tags.getListUserPopular method. I then formatted the results (tags and tag count) to the format required by the site. After my data is uploaded, I chose to visualize my data using the Bubble Chart format.

Here's an interactive version where you can explore my tags in detail, or search for a tag.

In the screenshot captured above, I searched for my initials SML and highlighted all the tags that contain it. The reason there are so many instances of it being used is partly because I like to use very specific tags, such as SML.Graphic-Design and SML.Appendectomy to easily get to my stuff on the public pool without the need to use combinations or username.

©2008 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe

Sunday, January 20, 2008

10,000+ views on a Flickr set

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Who would of thought that my 200 Most Interesting Gay Pride New York 2007 (set) would have reached 10,172 audience since I put them up on Flickr last June?

As such I've decided to create a quick slideshow of all the photos (no audio track for now... but will try to put some grooves on it later:


200 Most Interesting Gay Pride New York 2007 / SML from See-ming Lee

Thank you all for the faves + comments as well.

©2008 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Saturday, January 5, 2008

Flickr Analytics: The making of interestingness / SML Analytics

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Dangeroos / 2002 / SML Graphic Design (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

As part of an ongoing effort to document myself to better understand myself, I posted this design concept I created for Eric Roos' music business Dangeroos onto Flickr in August 2007.

The piece was designed back in 2002, and was a quick sketch or mood board for the Dangeroos Web site. The identity Dangeroos is a play on Eric's last name, so the choice for Interstate (the typeface) was obvious. Red was chosen because it suggests danger. Wave morphs, color rectangles and circular compositions dropped in to support the idea of sound.

Shortly after I started a project called Flickr Analytics to analyze Flickr's interestingness algorithm. Because of that, I become fairly aware of the individual image's ranking over time. To my surprise, this design stays consistently within the top 20 most interest images, and over the past few months, reigned as the number one most interesting image on my entire Flickr stream.

What was even more interesting to me is that the image also drives much traffic: more than 4000 views within the last 5 months, which amounts to 25+ views a day. That's a lot for an image with no human element.

So when Flickr Stats launched on 2007-12-17, it was a God send, for it enables me to analyze traffic and get a better understanding of where traffic is coming from.

How to get to Flickr Stats

Flickr UI: Additional Information / 2008-01-04 / SML Screenshtos (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

To the bottom right corner, below the list of tags of an image on Flickr is what I would call the utility area of the page. This is also where you can access the Photo stats of the image in question. Clicking on the link will bring to a page similar to the one below:

Photo Stats

Flickr Stats for: Dangeroos, 2002, SML Graphic Design / 2008-01-04 / SML Data (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

At this time, Flickr Stats only allows you to view detailed traffic information from the last 28 days, which is not as flexible as most site analytics tool, but is still much better than none at all.

The first time I saw this page I was stunned. Previously I had guessed that the reason why the Dangeroos design was popular had to do with that it was the first image on my 100 Most Interesting Design (set), which is why I had kept it on my Flickr homepage all these time. Data suggests otherwise. In fact, 54% of its traffic (1,041 visits) came from images.search.yahoo.com and 30% (572 visits) came from flickr.com.

Really? What were people searching for on Yahoo? I clicked on the domain name and get to the referrer detail page for the Yahoo Image Search:

Flickr Stats: Referrers for: Dangeroos, 2002, SML Graphic Design / 2008-01-04 / SML Data (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

Apparently, I'm getting a lot of hits from Yahoo from people search for graphic design. FlickrStats has a nice feature which allows you to click on the keywords to go directly to the search results in question. This is where I noted that apparently back in 2007-12-18, searching for graphic design on Yahoo put this piece on the first 5 results:

Yahoo Image Search: Graphic Design / 2007-12-18 / SML Screenshots (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

Image Search Algorithm

If you think about how difficult it is to develop a useful text search algorithm, you can image how challenging it must be to create a good image search algorithm. Indeed, until most recently, Google Image Search relies on the image's file name alone to feed you results.

Aside from gaining a huge user base, Yahoo's decision to buy Flickr is obvious: image tagging data.

Tagging is a voluntary act by the user: creating meta data to organize his collection fo photo much easier. To the search engine, however, tagging is free metadata association. One strategy is deciphering whether the tags are accurate can go like this: each time someone search for a search term, say graphic design, my search engine will throw 20 images associated with that tag on the search results page. An image that's more related to that search term will more likely to be clicked on by someone searching for that result.

With time and patience, it would be possible for me to figure out which tags are valid and which tags are not. People who search for the search term and then either favorited or commented on that photo would mean that image is more relevant (and thus "interesting") to that search term.

The same strategy can be applied to Flickr Groups. When you post an image to a particular group, the group usually is associated with certain keywords. When users click on an image among all others, they are functioning as bots with very advanced algorithms to do things that machine cannot yet do: identify the good images from the rest. I call humans participating in these activities BioBots.

The key in these systems is to identify the experts. Once you have collected enough data on a user and noticed, for example, that they have a degree in graphic design, working in the graphic design field, and perhaps are members of mostly graphic design groups, it may be fair to say that their opinions on graphic design matter more. You can thus put in your algorithm to give their opinions more weight for the same reason why KOL (key opinion leaders) in pharma talk has their role in medical sites.

©2008 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

AdAge 2008 Annual: LBi International = top 25 marketing organizations

No comments:

The print edition of my Advertising Age arrived in the mail today and I noticed that I have missed out an important fact to report: LBi International (parent company of IconNicholson) is ranked #19 in the top 25 marketing organizations globally according to net revenue.

AdAge 2008 Annual: Top 25 Marketing Organizations / 2008-01-04 / SML Screenshtos (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

The rest of the figures are:

  1. Omnicom Group
  2. WPP Group
  3. Interpublic Group of Cos.
  4. Publicis Groupe
  5. Dentsu
  6. Havas
  7. Aegis Group
  8. Hakuhodo DY Holdings
  9. aQuantive (bought by Microsoft in Aug. '07)
  10. Asatsu-DK
  11. MDC Partners
  12. Sapient Corp.
  13. Carlson Marketing
  14. Epsilon
  15. Aspen Marketing services
  16. Cheil Communications
  17. George P.Johnson Co.
  18. HealthStar COmmunications
  19. LBi International
  20. Media Square
  21. inVentiv Communciations
  22. Cossette Communication Group
  23. Harte-Hanks Direct
  24. Clemenger Communications
  25. Doner


©2008 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Wikipedia: more audience than New York Times

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AdAge published top sites by parent companies in their 2008 annual and I find it interesting to note that Wikipedia has more audience than the New York Times:

Top sites by unique audience: Top 10 parent companies
|||||||||||| 121.3 million - Microsoft
|||||||||||| 120.3 million - Google
||||||||||| 111.9 million - Yahoo
|||||||||| 103.8 million - Time Warner
||||||| 73.1 million - News Corp.
||||||| 68.6 million - eBay
|||||| 64.6 million - IAC / InterActiveCorp
|||||| 60.3 million - Amazon
||||| 49.9 million - Wikimedia Foundation
||||| 49.6 million - New York Times Co.

Advertising Age Annual 2008: Top sites by unique audience: Top 10 parent companies / 2007-12-31 / SML Screenshots (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)
Copyright 2007 Advertising Age. All rights reserved.

If the content by Wikimedia Foundation gets so much audience, there is a definite advertising market for wiki. Wiki is open-source but I am not sure if you are allowed to use its content for commercial purposes (I must check).

Meanwhile, it makes me wonder how the Answers.com business model work, as they clearly sell ads and clearly uses wikipedia content.

Advertising Age Annual 2008: Top sites by unique audience: Top 10 web brands / 2007-12-31 / SML Screenshots (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)
Copyright 2007 Advertising Age. All rights reserved.

Also interesting to me is the amount of time users spend on these sites. I'd assume that the data plotted above are the average amount of time per users on these sites. If people are spending 4 hours on AOL and 2 hours on MySpace everyday, it suggests that there is much money to be made via subliminal advertising on the site. The key for advertisers is to find fun and unintrusive way to promote their products in these spaces.

I'd happily throw hp-branded electronic boards at my friends on Facebook if the graphics are cool. The latest hp-flickr promotion is interesting also. User-centered services and promotion are key for corporation to extend their brand reach into the Web 2.0 space. Most ideas are out there, it just takes a good matchmaker to tie them together to create value to both the consumer and the business. (See: SML Pro Blog: Innovation = Synergy of Existing Ideas)

SML Copyright Notice
©2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Queen Elizabeth II Christmas Broadcast, 2007

No comments:

Queen Elizabeth II joins her country folks and posted her annual Christmas Broadcast this year on YouTube:

YouTube: The Christmas Broadcast, 2007 Embedding disabled by TheRoyalChannel so you have to see it on YouTube - Read transcript

The video was uploaded at 3pm GMT on 2007-07-25 and so far has been favorited 288 times, over 900 ratings with 123,651 in 3 short hours. At the time to this writing, it has received 7 honors:

+ #7 - Most Viewed (This Week) - United Kingdom
+ #2 - Most Viewed (This Week) - People & Blogs - United Kingdom
+ #11 - Most Viewed (This Week) - People & Blogs
+ #7 - Top Rated (This Week) - United Kingdom
+ #96 - Top Rated (This Week)
+ #4 - Top Rated (This Week) - People & Blogs - United Kingdom
+ #12 - Top Rated (This Week) - People & Blogs

TheRoyalChannel joined YouTube 2 months ago, has 19 videos posted, and now has 14,680 subscribers and 732,121 channel views. Fairly impressive.

Web 2.0 save the queen.

Related SML Universe
+ Life 2.0
+ SML Channel
+ SML Data
+ SML YouTube

SML Copyright Notice
©2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Google Web History: See-ming Lee: Web Activity: 2005-2007 / 2007-12-04 / SML Data

No comments:

Screenshot / visualization of my web activity on Google from 2005 to 2007:

Google Web History: See-ming Lee: Web Activity: 2005-2007 / 2007-12-04 / SML Data (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

My hypothesis is that my Google search activity is:

1. inversely proportional to the number of production-heavy projects
2. proportional to the number of research-oriented projects

In fact, I think that it's likely that my projects would follow a heavy-search (research) start and then progressively go down the slope because I'd have to produce a lot of stuff so no time / no reason to search.

I shall find out when I map my time-sheets to this visualization :)

Related SML Universe
+ SML Data
+ SML Google
+ SML Philosophy
+ SML Research
+ SML Viz

SML Copyright Notice
Copyright 2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Ideas / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Tom Ajello / SML Thank You

No comments:

I would like to thank Tom Ajello (SML Wiki) to keep up posting awesome stuff onto his various social networks—from del.icio.us to Flickr, Facebook to Twitter—they most definitely keep me entertained.

Tom Ajello
Image Source: Tom Ajello's profile on Vimeo

I love data and I enjoy seeing things that are inspiring and original, and most definitely enjoy seeing someone who appears to share the same belief that great things ought to be shared with the world. It is my belief that the human race will progress a whole lot smoother if knowledge, awareness and education are better spread throughout the universe.

I am delighted to find someone who shares my believes.

Tom, thank you.

Related SML
+ SML Network

SML Copyright Notice
©2007 See-ming Lee / SML Thank You / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Friday, November 9, 2007

Thoughts on Google Personalized Search Results

No comments:

I did some random Googling this morning and found that my initials SML is featured on page one again (Google: SML) which is sweet. However, I noted something interesting when I performed the same search at work.

In both cases, I was logged into Google account—which technically speaking should give me the same results. Well, apparently not. I did some screenshots so you can scrutinize it:

Home: SML Flickr: Google: SML / 2007-11-08 / SML Data

Google: SML / 2007-11-08 / SML Data (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

Work: SML Flickr: Google: SML / 2007-11-08 / SML Data

Google: SML (from work) / 2007-11-08 / SML Data (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

Noting this, I can't help but wonder if Google uses algorithms to randomize results a bit to test which links people would click on in various times—a strategy that I hypothesize is being used on Flickr to determine interestingness as well.

In turn, this suggests an interesting visualization exercise: what would the results pages look like if I search for the same thing over and over again by taking screenshots of the results page? It would be a kind of a SERP time-lapse, if you will. And if the data is available, all the merrier. It would surely be nice to see search results nodes moving at real time. Now I just need two more instances of SML working on these projects while I can still live my 24-hour day.

More random searches
Additional random searches that I like to do are Google: Google SML vs Google: SML Google, which gives different results. This means that Google's search algorithm give weights to the ordering of the words. By how much? I'll let you genius programmers find out. Feel free to email me your results when you do. I LOVE DATA!

Related SML Universe
+ SML Data
+ SML Google
+ SML Search

SML Copyright Notice
©2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Zero Punctuation = Crazy = Good

1 comment:

So I was tweeting yesterday about the game called Orange Box and antikewl picked up my tweet and sent me to The Escapist, adding that Portal is worth the price alone. I was not surprised, given that I pretty much looked into buying this game based on the Gamespot review of it alone.

But this post is not about the Orange Box, because I haven't gotten it yet. This post is about this absolutely insane amount of information fired by Zero Punctuation:





This guy is funny + to the point + sarcastic + information-stuffed + crazy which equates to fantabulous in my dictionary. I don't think that I have yet experienced information-overload in this capacity before.

I am in awe.

Reviews of Orange Box at Gamspot
+ Gamespot: The Orange Box (PC)
+ Gamespot: The Orange Box (Xbox360)

SML Thank You
I would like to thank antikewl for being a fantastic Internet news correspondent from the UK. You rock! Much love :)

SML Friends
I met antikewl aka Trevor May when he was "shipped over" from London from IconMedialab (now LBi) to work on a global B2B content portal. Because of Facebook / Twitter / LinkedIn / Flickr and all these social networking goodies, we stayed in touch after almost 7 years now!

SML Copyright Notice
©2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Sunday, November 4, 2007

SML Flickr: Google Page Rank = 5

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Craig Konieczko (Google / SML Wiki) got me into checking my page rank last night, and it is my pleasure to congratulate myself for achieving:

+ 5 for http://www.smlflickr.com
+ 4 for http://www.seeminglee.com
+ 3 for http://blog.seeminglee.com

Here's a screenshot of SML Flickr with the PageRank widget on Google toolbar:

SML Flickr: Google Page Rank = 5 (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

Related SML Universe
+ SML Data
+ SML Flickr
+ SML Wiki: SML Flickr

SML Copyright Notice
©2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Saturday, November 3, 2007

Microsoft Live Maps v2 = Google Earth in a Browser

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http://maps.live.com

Microsoft released Live Maps v2 on 2007-10-16. I meant to blog about it a while back but did not have the time. This release, codename Gemini, has a lot of nifty features, one of which is the ability to view 3d maps inside a browser (a la Google Earth) — and it works for both IE and Firefox, which I assume it should work for Macs as well (but I don't use Macs so let me know).

Microsoft Virtual Earth (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

Other cool features include:

  • Party Maps = 1-Click Directions. Display directions to get to a destination from multiple starting points to a single end point. Great for party invites.
  • Route Around Traffic. Replot directions based on traffic.
  • Data Import. Import data in GeoRSS, GPX, KML and mashup with Virtual Earth.
  • Birds Eye views in 3D. Birds Eye view has always been unique in Virtual Earth, and it's even more useful to see it in the 3D context, which superimposes the image taken by real-live camera on top of the perspective 3d view.
  • 3D Tours and Videos of Collections. While Google requires users to throw in 400 bucks a year to get the Google Earth Professional account in order to record a video of tours, you can do it in Virtual Earth for free at 640x480 resolution.
  • 3D Modelling. Microsoft partnered with Dassault to allow user-generated 3D buildings using the 3DVIA Technology. Download 3DVIA Technology preview (PC only)
  • Enhanced Details Page. Business listings show specific data about the business. For example, when search for a data, also list their gender, age, medical school, year of graduation, etc.


Details of the release can be read on Microsoft Virtual Earth / Live Maps' official blog

©2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Maka-Maka = Google's Facebook

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TechCrunh: Google's Response to Facebook: "Maka-Maka" / 2007-10-29

Highlights (SML transcription in semi-SML.SML syntax):
  • Maka-Maka encompasses Google’s grand plan to build a social layer across all of its applications.
  • Google to "out open" Facebook with new APIs for developers to build apps for Orkut, iGoogle and eventually other applications as well.
  • Google new APIs for social network expected announcement = November 8 or 9th
  • Number of partners that have created apps on top of the APIs = 50
  • Of the 24.6 million monthly visitors to Orkut, only 500,000 of those are in the U.S.
  • Google should bring everything (Contacts in Gmail + Feeds in Google Reader + IM buddy list in Gtalk + Events in Google Calendar + Widgets in iGoogle) into a social application without your realization that you just joined another network.


SML Copyright Notice


©2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.