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Yahoo! Acquires WebJay (and a KM digression)

Webjay logoO’reilly Radar reports that Yahoo! has made another acquisition in their drive to transform the company’s web properties into a Web 2.0 über-community. This time it’s the music playlist community Webjay created by Lucas Gonze.

Yahoo! seems determined to be a player in the Web 2.0 world, and they just might succeed.

danah boyd writes:

I often hear people talking about how Yahoo! is buying up Web2.0, but i don’t think it’s just that. It’s not only about tagging, social bookmarking, sharing, etc. It’s about rethinking the innovation process when handling social technologies. Take a look at some of the characters recently hired/acquired – Caterina Fake, Stewart Butterfield, Joshua Schachter, Andy Baio, Cameron Marlow, Chad Dickerson, Tom Coates… These aren’t even your typical Web2.0 crowd – these are creatives with attitude who have no problem telling corporate what they think and pushing for changes that they feel are essential.

What is the glue that holds all these many seemingly disjointed pieces together (Flickr, del.icio.us, Webjay, etc.)? The people, first of all. People with innovative ideas and the drive to express them. What about from the perspective of the community member? Well, there’s authentication, something that Yahoo! can help unify. There’s commenting and discussion. And there is tagging.

A KM Digression
I had a conversation last week with Darryl, Randy and Kevin about tagging. Not the folksonomy-style tagging familiar in the Web 2.0 world, but old-school taxonomy. Specifically, how much emphasis structured taxonomy (i.e. tagging with a predefined vocabulary) should have in an enterprise knowledge management environment, and whether there is a place for folksonomy in such an environment.

People clearly “get” the value of tagging. As they use web sites like Flickr, del.icio.us and Last.fm, they see firsthand how tags add value on both a personal and a community level. The debate is whether free-form tagging can apply inside the corporate firewall. I believe there’s a place for both. Structured tagging (taxonomy via vocabulary) by knowledge managers; folksonomy tagging by everyone else. Imagine being able to see three levels of tag clouds: enterprise, community, and personal. At a glance you would see what matters most at each level. Color coding could make it more revealing. Corporate tags (vocabulary) gets green; community tags get grey; personal tags get blue.

Are you with me?

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No Blogs Next Year

I ran across an interesting article on the ClickZ Network by Gary Stein titled “No Blogs Next Year.” In the article, Stein describes his experience at the recent ad:tech panel he chaired earlier this month about advertising with blogs. He asked Phil Kaplan (of F*ckedCompany.com fame) what he thought of the blog phenomenon. Kaplan’s response tells it all. “In my day,” he said “we called them web sites.”

Clearly “blogs” are just a content management and publishing technology and nothing more. What you do with a blog (or any other CMS) is where the value lies.

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Now Playing – last.fm

I’ve been running Brandon Watt’s Now Playing plug-in for Windows Media Player for ages. I like seeing what music interests other people and discovering new music, and want to return the favor. Today I discovered a website that take the “now playing” concept and expands on it, creating a very clever social community of listeners — aptly named last.fm.Flickr Photo

When you register for last.fm, you download a plug-in for your favorite media player. They provide plug-ins for iTunes, WMP, Winamp and most popular media players, with support for both Windows and Mac OSX. As you play your music, last.fm keeps track of what you’ve listened to and displays it on your user page (here’s mine).

Once you’ve built up some history, you begin to see some neat extras. Last.fm identifies your musical “neighbors” — other users who share your musical taste. You can tag your music, and search for other music based on those tags. You’ll get recommendations of new music, based on the songs you’ve previously listened to. And everything you play gets added to the Last.fm charts for complete stats on what’s hot. Last.fm also includes a forum (of course), friends (track what they’re listening to), groups, your own journal, and the ability tune into 128kbps MP3 streams.

What is last.fm missing? I’d love to be able to access my “recently played tracks” via RSS so I could parse and display on my blog or website. Maybe a dynamic image in various formats (for a blog, or a forum signature), with album art for the “now playing” track. But they have a very good start — the best I’ve seen for this type of site — and I recommend checking out last.fm.