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May 16, 2006

Funny movies and videos widget new on Spotback

A new widget is now available on Spotback that allows users to see funny movies and videos directly inside Spotback. If you are visiting Spotback for the first time, look for the 'Hot videos' box with thumbnails on the right hand side. If you are a returning user, you can add the video widget by using the 'add widgets' page.

May 12, 2006

The Spotback Philosophy

The first week since our launch was pure madness. We literally read hundreds of reviews and emails from bloggers and users and we are truly overwhelmed with the reactions and thank each and every one of you (including those who are not Spotback die hard fans). Your comments and opinions are the fuel that drives us to make Spotback better.

It is no secret that the Internet is exploding with fresh information. 75,000 new blogs open each day according to David Sifry. While it is true that there are a lot of poor quality information sources, the ones that are good are enough to make processing and filtering impossible for a single human-being. Before the birth of Spotback I was registered to approximately 150 different feeds. These feeds alone injected more than a thousand new stories to my RSS reader each day waiting for me to filter through the mess. It was insane! The fear of losing anything important turned me into a sleepless zombie.

The amount of information is only one aspect of the problem. Here is another: how do you find the best sources in your areas of interest? Do you think that everything is as easy as reading TechCrunch, Om Malik, Scobleizer, eHub, Mashable and a number of other great sources to know what’s going on? Think of people who are interested in, god forbid, things such as arts, health or science. Think of your parents. They have 20 minutes to spend in front of the computer - this machine that everybody tells them is so cool - and they do not know where to start. They probably have Google as their homepage and they just kill time by entering random keywords only to sink a little deeper into the 70 zillion search results they get in 0.02 millisecond.

This brings me to another problem: maybe you, unlike your parents, do know how to get decent results out of search engines, but what about those times when you don’t know what you are looking for? The success of Google (and other major search engines) made us think of search as the ultimate cure for all mankind problems. I seriously believe that there is more depth to people than that - we are far more complex and personality rich than to be happy with search alone.

That said, how does Spotback try to contribute to a better information ecosystem? Spotback was formed around the idea of personalization through rating and interaction. Our technology transforms the power of the community as the most powerful filtering system available anywhere into an instrument that is used to deliver each user in the community better, more personalized content.

Since each person is different and unique he/she should also receive unique personally tailored experience. Each user should receive his/her favorite content based on their personalities and preferences. We are not against the notion of finding the ‘top stories’ in a community with mutual fields of interest. There is no contradiction between that and what Spotback id doing. The two services are simply different, yet important (after all, look at the success of services like Digg which we also frequently visit and like a lot).

News is a great way to utilize our technology (which is not limited to news or to text for that matter). Spotback was designed so that it will build a profile for each user. Our algorithms analyze each user in two main axis’: fields of interest and style (or taste if you will).

I think that an example from everyday life can help. I, for example, read the same two financial newspapers every day. I spend approximately 20 minutes reading them front to back and usually find a few stories that interest me (sometime none). If I had a good friend that knew me very well and knew what I am interested in and maybe what I may be interested in, it would have been great if this friend could make clippings for me from those newspapers and save me the trouble of filtering out the stories that I care very little about from the ones I do care about. Hell! come to think about it, some of us have assistants that do exactly that. Now imagine the same thing but with thousands of the best sources on the Internet in dozens of fields and not only with two newspapers - that’s Spotback mission in a nutshell.

Spotback in the blogsphere (partial list):
TechCrunch and TechCrunch France
Geeking with Greg
Mashable!
fluxam
Frontiering Talk
str1ke

May 09, 2006

Tech update: del.icio.us and digg support

We added digg and del.icio.us support to make stories easier to bookmark. To bookmark a story, please use one of the following options:
1. Click on the 'comments' link below the story to switch to single story view (the digg and del.icio.us icons will appear below the story); or
2. Save a story and go to your 'Tracked' stories section: http://spotback.com/Tracking.aspx

May 04, 2006

Tech update: Fixes and enhancements

New version update. This version includes:

  • Added a story rating slider to the popup window that opens when you press the 'more' button in long stories.
  • It is now possible to add comments to a saved story.
  • We removed the decimal precision from the rating slider. People were having difficulty choosing rating with decimal precision. The rating is now from -5 to +5 in intervals of 1
  • Profile box (right upper box with the user picture) now has links that allow each user to track stories he commented on and stories he rated positively.
  • Added link to Spotback blog.

Tech update: Opera browser is now supported

Spotback is now compatible with Opera (tested on version 8.54).

May 02, 2006

Spotback to hit #1 on digg.com homepage

Story about Spotback on TechCrunch made it to the #1 place on digg.com homepage!

We’ve been TechCrunch’ed

This is the second time that Spotback is mentioned at TechCrunch. The first time was when Mike Arrington visited Israel and met with a number of start-ups including us. Mike’s first story brought Spotback to the spotlights and took us out of anonymity - if we could only share the opportunities those very few words at TechCrunch opened for us you would have never believed it anyway. Today Mike wrote a full review about Spotback at TechCrunch almost immediately followed by numerous other bloggers.

TechCrunch is really a perfect example of how the new Internet and economy works. The ability to easily voice out ideas and form a loyal community around mutual fields of interest and styles as TechCrunch managed so successfully to do, inspires us in our efforts to create a service based on the power of the community to filter out the gold from the tremendous amount of fresh information floating out on the Internet.

I am sure we will follow up on the TechCrunch effect in the future.

Thank you Mike.

May 01, 2006

Welcome to Spotback

Welcome to Spotback! Before anything else we would like to thank the wonderful people who participated in our private beta - we are truly thankful for your support and feel that we made Spotback a product worth using with your help and feedback.

We will use this blog to announce new features, discuss existing features and share other information with you. We promise that more posts will be coming very soon so stay tuned.

Thanks,

The Spotback Team