02/09/2007

AutoRoll, a new way to browse around blogs

My company Criteo has launched AutoRoll, a widget for blogs.

What is all about?
AutoRoll is a blog widget that displays links to blogs with a strong affinity with your blog. We trace the number of visits of each unique reader on each blog that has installed AutoRoll. This information is fed to the Criteo recommendation engine which computes blog affinities in real-time. The more often a reader visits and browse a specific blog, the greater his affinity is with this blog.

In terms of benefits for blog owners, first of all, you will provide your readers with a very entertaining blog roll, as it is based on other readers with similar reading habits.
Moreover, another huge benefit for you ton install AutoRoll is to get highly qualified incoming traffic for your blog. Indeed, as other similar blogs display your blog on their AutoRoll, they will feed you with new readers with a strong affinity with your blog.
Last but not least, you will also get a complete private reporting module with valuable statistics on impressions and click through rates from and to your own blog.

To be part of this Beta, just sign up here
It takes 2 minutes to install and it's real fun to use.

01/29/2007

Mashup: the new web modeller

What is a mashup? To fully understand mashups, it is necessary to go back to another concept: public API. An API is an interface which makes it possible for two software programs to communicate together. Public API simply means an API published on the web and available for public usage.
To offer a public API became a must for any Internet site which claims to be Web 2.0. But why did this become so fashionable?
Well, it is related to the structure of the Internet. In a broad picture, one can consider Internet as a kind of giant publication tool.
You have this great content you want to share with other people. For that, you create an application to publish this content on a Web site. It looks simple, but in real life it can get very complex. Indeed, the issue is to present this content in the most appealing, intuitive and efficient way. The trouble of course is that these three characteristics are most often contradictory. Searching for the perfect balance, web publication results into eternal creative compromises. From a given piece of content, there are plenty of different marketing choices, resulting into a very large variety of concepts.
This issue has brought the following idea: I have some great content which I wanna share with the public. Potentially, there are thousands of different ways to publish this content. Sure, I can try to test myself all kinds of marketing ideas. But why not delegate this huge task to others?
For that, I just need to publish on line a public interface which gives free access to my content. In this way, a great number of independent developers will be able to publish my content each one with its own creative approach. Clearly, I no more control the whole value chain. But who cares? Collective intelligence has such a power that among all these pilots, there is a strong probability that some very good idea for my content will prevail.
For this reason, public API became very popular, especially among web 2.0 sites. Leveraging on the net community, it is likely to create more value than by controlling verything. Today, content accessible through a public API is huge. It ranges from Amazon cultural product catalogue to Google Maps geographical layouts, including also Flickr personal pictures and sophisticate predictive calculations for Criteo (yes, yes, you can check our public and free API!).
public API to produce a completely original service. A smart example of a mashup is the combination of Flickr + Navx + Google Maps which makes it possible to position pictures from a ski trip on a map using a GPS tracker.
Mashup potential seems endless. This is why in the coming years, you will see more and more of those smart hybrid applications launched every day on the web.