Posts Tagged ‘New Paradigm’
Lonely Planet Launches Augmented Reality Apps
Lonely Planet Launches Augmented Reality Apps
Popular travel book publisher Lonely Planet has begun selling Augmented Reality apps for 10 US cities for $5 each in the Android Marketplace. The apps were built in conjunction with Mobilizy, the company behind user generated content AR app Wikitude.
In addition to offering Lonely Planet content overlayed on top of locations you view through your phone’s camera view, you can also plan itineraries and get step by step directions from the app. Augmented Reality is a technology in a formative stage but support from the Lonely Planet brand is a big, if unsurprising, step.
Will consumers go for it? GoMoNews is skeptical, pointing out that AR technology is still clumsy and Lonely Planet’s offering is very limited so far. National Geographic’s travel blog voices no such concerns.
Travel is the most logical application of consumer-focused Augmented Reality, but we expect a large number of consumer and marketing companies to explore this new paradigm of layering data on top of the viewed world.
Some of the most interesting applications of Augmented Reality are outside the consumer market; AR could prove very useful for medical procedures or mechanical repair, for example. The technology remains limited, though, by the inability of most applications to process live video of what they are actually looking at, instead of merely offering up data based on what’s believed to be in a given GPS position.
What is The Memex? Xerox Presents Trailmeme
What is The Memex? Xerox Presents Trailmeme
Last week Google chairman and CEO Eric Schmidt wrote a guest article for the Wall St Journal, discussing the need for new forms of newspaper publishing to replace the old print paradigm. Another not-so-new paradigm, but one more suited to the networked computer age we live in today, is Vannevar Bush’s 1945 pre-hypertext concept the Memex.
Trailmeme is a product by Xerox that models itself on The Memex. It’s a destination site for Xerox Trails, which is being promoted as "a new kind of Web-based publishing technology."
We last saw a product attempting a Memex-like service over 3 years ago, when we reviewed Trailfire in 2006.
Trailmeme enables users to map a set of web pages or other digital objects. So what is the Memex? Unfortunately, no one can be told what the Memex is. You have to see it for yourself. Check out this example using a ReadWriteWeb post: ReadWriteWeb’s Top 5 Web Trends of 2009.

Trailmeme includes a "collaboratively filtered" destination site, a bookmarklet and a toolbar for consumers, and a set of plug-ins compatible with WordPress and Media Wiki.
Xerox has created Trailmeme in the hope that it will be one solution to the decline of paper use and print publishing. The problem is, the Memex as a concept has been around for over 50 years and it has yet to catch on.
Nevertheless, just as Google is looking for ways to rejuvenate the publishing industry (see the Google Labs project mentioned by Schmidt in the WSJ, Google Fast Flip), Xerox is searching too.
Top 10 Consumer Web Apps of 2009
Top 10 Consumer Web Apps of 2009
Every year at ReadWriteWeb, we look at hundreds of new web apps aimed at everyday users. Occasionally, we come across a service that stands out from the pack because it offers a novel solution, disrupts the way incumbent market leaders do business or changes the way we experience the Web.
Here is our list of the top 10 consumer web apps of 2009. These are apps and services that helped consumers use the web in new ways this year; and brought technologies that were previously only geared towards advanced users to a mainstream audience.
Some of these apps aren’t new – but just like last year, we’ve tried to select a mix of applications that either reached the mainstream this year, or that we think will be big in the year to come.
This is the second part in our series of top products of 2009:
Bing
Until earlier this year, Google didn’t have any serious competition in the search market. Now, however, thanks to Microsoft’s Bing – which launched in July – users finally have a choice when it comes to search engines. Bing’s market share climbed steadily over the last few months, and Microsoft keeps adding interesting new features like visual search, hover previews, integrated Twitter search and a smart integration of some of Wolfram Alpha’s most compelling features.
Bing, which bills itself as a “decision engine,” tries to give its users more than just 10 links. Instead, Bing focuses on giving users answers right on the search results page. A search for a football or baseball player, for example, will bring up recent stats, while a search for flights brings up data from Microsoft’s Bing Travel service.
Wolfram Alpha
No other new web service was greeted with the same amount of hype as Wolfram Alpha this year. Inevitably, Wolfram Research’s “computational knowledge engine” disappointed many who were looking for a Google killer, but Alpha introduced a new paradigm for search engines: Instead of giving you a long list of links, Alpha tries to give users an answer based on information from reputable sources. If this sounds familiar, it might be because Microsoft’s Bing is trying to do something very similar – even if Microsoft’s approach isn’t quite as radical. Because of these similarities, it also doesn’t come as a surprise that Bing was the first search engine to integrate search results from Wolfram Alpha.
While it isn’t useful for everybody yet, the Wolfram Alpha team has worked hard to expand Alpha’s knowledge. If you are an engineer or scientist, Wolfram Alpha might just be the most useful web app for you. For the rest of us, Alpha’s ability to solve anagrams, aggregate weather data and tell you the distance between two cities proves to be useful, too, though not as useful as the service’s ability to solve complex math problems. We still have to wait and see what the future holds for Wolfram Alpha.
For now, the service is a great experiment and even if it fails (which we don’t think it will), its influence will surely extend to other search engines like Bing and Google Search. In the spirit of trying something different, Wolfram also launched a $50 iPhone application in October. Even though Wolfram Alpha’s web interface is available for free, the company insisted that its mobile application offered enough new features to justify this price.
Google Chrome
Google launched the first beta version of Google Chrome in late 2008. Even though Chrome still only holds a small share of the browser market and doesn’t offer a stable version for OSX or Linux yet, Chrome has already changed the browser market. Chrome’s relentless focus on speed helped to reignite the browser wars and even Microsoft now compares the performance of the next version of Internet Explorer to Chrome. Thanks to its fast JavaScript rendering engine and interesting new technologies, Chrome is changing the way developers are thinking about browsers. Even if you don’t use Chrome, you will see Chrome’s influence in the upcoming versions of Firefox and Internet Explorer.
Chrome, of course, is also the basis for Google’s upcoming Chrome OS, so chances are that we will see a lot more of Chrome in the next year.
Posterous
Whether you want to open up a new blog without any fuzz or just share photos and messages easily on multiple services like Facebook, Flickr and Twitter, light blogging service Posterous has you covered. The service launched in May 2009 and was definitely one of the most interesting new arrivals in the blogging landscape this year. What makes Posterous stand out is its ability to cross-post updates to other services (Flickr, Facebook, Twitter or your own blog, for example). In addition, it’s also extremely easy to set up a new blog. Just email a message, photo or video to post AT posterous.com and your new blog is ready to go. Advanced users can also port their own domain names to the service and theme their blogs.
With PicPosterous, the company now also offers an easy to use iPhone app.
Hulu
Thanks to its prominent ads during the Super Bowl, Hulu became a household name in the US this year. Even before this publicity campaign, however, Hulu had already established itself as a the #1 destination for finding episodes of TV shows online. Hulu started out as a joint venture between FOX, NBC and other TV networks. In April, ABC also joined this group. Thanks to this, Hulu now offers one of the only destinations to easily find TV shows online in the US. While Hulu is currently available for free, it’s worth noting that Hulu could start charging for subscriptions as early as next year.
Next page: Consumer web apps 6-10