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Firefox vs. FaceBook

October 30, 2007

Few days ago I’ve read a post about Mozilla-clone “web 2.0 browser” Flock to include cross-social networks interface - allowing you to view all your friends from various social network systems like facebook or twitter, in one place -> flock user interface.

This neat feature can be seen from two perspectives - both equally interesting and gaining more and more “tracking” across various blogs:

first is the issue of some kind of cross-social network “OpenID”-like mechanism, that would allow users to see all their friends from various social network sites in one place (and import those contacts to  various soc. networks as well) - instead of having to login to facebook.. to myspace.. to linked in.. to beboo… and all other sites one of which your friends happen to use. Of course from technological point of view such “open network” is more than possible,  and few companies (like Microsoft of Google) already started to work on prototype versions of thereof. However, the main issue I’d see here, is… what good can come to facebook or myspace or any other social network site, from such open system? Nothing. The strength of any website comes from its users’ visits - and by eliminating the need to go to one website, login, see the ads (SEE THE ADS!), interact, click on something - by eliminating all that through some easy to use open network ID / API - all participating sites will loose. (Of course all their users will win big time - at least until that open ID network API starts to distribute text ads like… Facebook Ads Distribution system ;-) )

So as you can see, the basic idea behind using such open ID, is that whoever became the dominant design for usage of thereof, is going to be ultimate winner of the whole social networks market. Simply because by having all friends from all networks in one place, users wont have any incentives to go back to those networks anymore.

Which leads us to the conclusion: those who controls the dominant “user interface” of one system, are automatically on the best position of getting most $$$ / benefits. What flock is trying to do by adding “transparent facebook & twitter integration” is (very  clever, indeed) stealing users from those sites - and eventually, monetizing on them…

What’s the second issue?

I’m waiting for Firefox to became a platform. Not just for web 2.0 apps like flock. And not just for “Firefox >>stupid little<< plug-ins”. I’m waiting for Firefox to became full grown web applications development platform, with its own SDK allowing to integrate as many features and as many websites as user (and developers) wants. Facebook platform was a huge success, for sure. But imagine how many users Firefox have, and how many sites (not just Facebook) it presents daily to all those users - being effectively their “user interface” to Internet. For millions of people “Internet” is their web  browser. Why not monetize of this?

Bug

October 11, 2007

I didn’t really expect to find bugs in google analytics. But hey, suprise, surprise! (ok, it’s a minor bug, but what about my user experience? ;-) )

picture-1.png

a “&quot” ? ehhm.. sorry?

seems like bugs are here to stay - no matter how big you are, and how huge your quality assurance budget is… what’s the trick to learn then?

It’s easy. Make sure you have descent, formalized quality assurance process. Don’t trust “I will do it myself” and “it worked for me” people. When it comes to software testing and business-critical applications, one thing you really don’t want to happen is the “ouups”-thing, in wrong place and wrong time. Invest in your quality assurance process. Don’t be afraid to spend 20% of your software development budget on QA.

And if you do it right, I guarantee, that the only thing you will be worrying about is minor bugs like the one above.

“&quot” ? Who cares. At least it works. Let’s fix it and then back to work…