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Introducing The Windows Outreach Team and #WinWin7 on Twitter

If you happened to be searching for “pizza” on Twitter Search yesterday or are following the @mswindows Twitter account, chances are you witnessed the kickoff of #WinWin7. The Windows Outreach Team kicked off 7 weeks of Windows 7 by sending 7 piping-hot pizzas to 7 lucky Twitter followers.

And it won’t stop there.

Throughout the next 7 weeks, @mswindows will be giving away prizes all based on the number 7 (for Windows 7). Winners must take part in the challenges and are encouraged to invite friends to join in on the fun which all culminates on launch day - October 22nd.

Make sure you’re following @mswindows and tell them Brandon sent you. Oh and watch for the official #WinWin7 hash tag too.

Speaking of the Windows Outreach Team, how about meeting the supporting cast? You may have seen them on some of your favorite blogs and forums and didn’t really know who they were. Let’s change that.

Jeff D, Cody G and Ron S, are a savvy team tasked with reaching out to users and creating a real resource within the communities on the Web.

Along with Josh T on the @mswindows account, these team members bring a wealth of knowledge (both consumer and even a bit on the “techy” side) to the table. Anywhere from gaming to watching your media across your home network, these guys have been there and tried out the fixes and know what works and what doesn’t. You can bet on them to offer advice and an open ear, not a sales pitch and a bottom line – oddly enough, none of them wanted to be a snake oil salesman growing up.

So, keep a lookout for the team on some of your favorite blogs and forums and feel free to say “hi” or just ask a question. They’ll be sure to help get you on the track to whatever it is you need.

If you have any questions for the Windows Outreach Team, just send a tweet to @mswindows. Or leave a comment here too of course.

NOTE: The Windows Outreach Team also runs the Windows Live Twitter account @windowslive too.

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Written by Brandon LeBlanc on September 4th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on Windows Outreach Team and Social Media and #WinWin7 and Forums and Windows Social Media Team and Social Networking and Twitter and Web and Web and Blogs and social and otherSoftware and Windows.

New Social Features Make Their Debut on Zune.net

The Zune Team has updated Zune.net today with several new interesting features. Their entire podcast catalog is now available to be browsed via Zune.net and can be subscribed to. When you pick a podcast to subscribe to, it fires up the Zune software and adds it to your Podcast collection. What’s even better though is all 12,000+ audio podcasts can now be streamed directly from Zune.net using Silverlight. So if there is an audio podcast you may want to listen to but not necessarily subscribe to (or download to your PC) - you can give it a listen on Zune.net. Currently, audio podcast streaming is available to folks in the U.S.

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Another new feature hitting Zune.net is the ability to create music quizzes on your user profile. This allows you to quiz your friends with all your awesome music knowledge. You create the question and answers and people try to answer.

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Zune Team member Jessica Zahn goes a little more in-depth on the new music quiz feature in this blog post.

Special thanks to Brian Seitz over on the Zune Insider for the heads up on today’s Zune.net updates. I’m told the Zune Team isn’t done making news this year so it will be very interesting to see what else they have up their sleeves.

If you haven’t already, you should check out the Zune 3.0 software. It offers a unique music listening experience and is a great way to discovery new music. Give Mixview a spin. Because music is an important part of me, I am constantly living inside the Zune software or playing music off my Zune 80 here in the office writing blogs or posting to Twitter.

Psst, you can also use Mixview on Zune.net too.

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Written by Brandon LeBlanc on March 4th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on Zune Social and Mixview and Zune.net and Music Trivia and Social Networking and Zune 3.0 and Zune and music and social and otherSoftware and Digital Media.

Where Did Web 2.0 Go?


Apparently web 2.0 has already hit and we are basking in its sunlight. Whilst this may be true, it feels more like a mild day and a few clouds have cleared. To be honest I think Web 2.0 received much more hype and attention than it ought to have. Don’t get me wrong, when I believe it has truly arrived I will be out on the deck chair basking in it I just don’t think we have quite gotten there yet. It’s hard to know whether some web adaptations have come about because of this web 2.0 or because of natural web evolution. After all, isn’t web 2.0 just that?

In terms of mainstream usage which affects practically everybody on the internet, I really don’t recall seeing that much come out of Web 2.0 other than RSS and different usages of tagging; seen in services like flickr, social bookmarking and media services like digg, del.icio.us etc. Then you have mybloglog, myspaces and other social network sites. These are all fantastic, I love and use all of these any many more. But, is that really it?

Tagging

Tagging has undoubtedly changed the way we view, navigate, consume and organise information over the internet from the original ‘hyperlinking concept’ Tim Berner’s Lee first delivered on.

“Hyperlinking was a concept published in July 1945, in an essay by Vannevar Bush called “As We May Think” The fact is Tim Berners-Lee was the first person too actually put the concept of hyperlinking to use. Tim Berners-Lee demonstrated the concept of hyperlinks in the very first web page.”

Traditionally you would find a site you like and bookmark the URL, allowing you to return to it at a later date. The more bookmarks you had, the harder became to find what you were looking for. One big hole here was obviously categorizing information to make it easier to find what you want. Folders just don’t cut it. Enter the present day, tagging is the new way of organising and categorising information. Just look at technorati, they currently index over 55 million blogs that are tagged, organised and categorised.

RSS Feeds

Really simple syndication feeds again changed the way users consumed information on the internet. Rather than having to go out and visit your favourite links to see if content had been updated, it was sent straight to you in your favourite RSS reader. This change is like getting the morning newspaper delivered to your door every morning. Only you get content you have subscribed to over the internet delivered to you whenever new content has been updated.

Gadgets

Gadgets seem to be all the hype now, Mac has had them for as long as I can remember, google sidebar has them, yahoo has them, Microsoft’s live service has them, Windows Vista has them. What’s the purpose of gadgets? To blur the line and distinction between the desktop and the internet. You might have an RSS gadget which allows you to get RSS feeds sent straight to your desktop. This brings the internet just that little bit closer to your desktop without having to open up a browser or RSS reader. Whilst not as popular, gadgets were around before the craziness of what everyone is coining web 2.0.

Greater connectivity and interfacing

Thanks to innovations like google and their google mail, calendar, notebook, reader, desktop and army of other google services we are starting to see much greater inter-connectivity between services. Use one account to connect to them all. Microsoft have finally gotten their act together in a similar fashion with their Live service. Though I believe google are playing more to their strengths and Microsoft simply see it as something they have to get into. I doubt Microsoft is going to be able to strong arm google in its current position though.

But where is the semantic web?

Around the time I first started hearing a lot about web 2.0 was when I was studying and working in the field of semantic web and ontology’s; writing intelligent agents that make use of semantic language and ontology’s to reason with each other and things in their domain. HTML is great for humans, it has been presenting information in a way that humans can make sense of it for years. But it means nothing to a computer. HTML does nothing to describe the type of data being presented. This was what XML was for. Plenty of white papers were written on the potential semantic markup could offer the internet and search engines but there hasn’t been much (to my knowledge) substance stem from it. Imagine how much more information would be available if the entire internet really was classified in taxonomies, nestled in ontology’s, relationships built through predicates, and searching capabilities extended to utilise this great power.

Web 2.0 has given us a new delivery system (RSS) and provided us with new ways to find and organise relevant information; through the use of tagging. Social media and bookmarking sites have mushroomed to create inter-connected communities and networks of people sharing knowledge and information. But where is my semantic web? Maybe semantic web was never going to be apart of the new generation of the internet; web 2.0.

Written by Joshua Hayes on February 11th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on reader and feeds and services and ontologies and del icio us and bookmarking and social and tagging and semantic and Internet and Internet and Web and Web and google and myspace and digg and RSS.