Archive for April, 2009

On the Sideline

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

I don't personally have a Twitter account -- you might say that with all of this Tweet-mania, I've simply been watching from the sideline. This is easier for me to do now that I've been introduced to the aptly named Sideline, the product of an internal Yahoo! hack, which provides a slick interface for keeping up with Twitter trends and following particular subjects that interest you. The application is build on top of Adobe AIR, meaning there's an extra download/install process in there, but once you have that set up, it becomes ridiculously easy to pick out a couple of search keywords and comb through vast fields of 140-character messages to see what people are thinking on those topics. Sideline also saves all of these search groups for later, so you can always have the most up-to-date chatter on subjects that you care about close at hand. Maybe it's not as cool as getting into the fray yourself (I mean, even Oprah is doing it!), but a seat on the Sideline is a good enough substitute for me.

Pirates vs. Ninjas

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

It is an age old question, one that we can finally answer thanks to Flickr Trends, a cool little app put together using the Flickr API:

"Which is photographed more often, Pirates or Ninjas?"

Pirates vs. Ninjas on Flickr Trends

Trick question. Ninjas cannot be photographed.

Let it snow!

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

If you happened to celebrate it, I hope you had a very happy Easter over the weekend! Of course, while Easter isn't for everyone, Easter eggs are something that we all can get behind. Nicki over at Yodel Anecdotal was nice enough to collect together some of the best Easter eggs from across the Yahoo! sites, most of which I'd seen before but a couple that still managed to surprise. The one that I enjoyed most was the revelation that 'tis always the season for snow over on Flickr, regardless of which holiday you might be in the middle of. It joins the exploding photos in the Organizr and the ho ho ho hats as one more of the many reasons why Flickr is truly eggstraordinary.

IM Mobile

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

See, it's an ironic title, because there's finally a version of Yahoo! Messenger that you can take on the go. The iPhone version of Yahoo! Messenger seems to do all of the things you'd want from a mobile messenging app -- lets you send messages, receive messages, overuse emoticons, etc -- but also has a ton of nice little touches like integrated status updates and photo sharing. The icing on the cake is the fact that you can use the Yahoo! Messenger SMS capabilities to get free outgoing and incoming text messages from your phone, although given how much you're paying for an iPhone data plan already, maybe that's not too critical. Definitely check out the demonstration video over at the Messenger blog, and get a move on downloading it today.

Getting Yo’ Satisfaction

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Yahoo! Music has reopened its shiny, new, updated doors, and good gosh, it looks awesome. There's almost too much to cover, which is great, because it means that I can spread it over a couple posts -- two, three, or four birds with one Rolling Stone, if you will.

The centerpiece of this redesign, the new Artist page, deserves its own post regardless. As Michael Spiegelman eloquently covers in his previously linked blog post, the main focus of this refresh is to give the user more choice, whether it's about how they see their music site or even what they see on their music site. There are so many excellent music resources on the web -- Last.fm and Pandora, the Amazon music store, YouTube for illicit music videos or maybe even Yahoo! Music for licensed ones (heh, okay, fine, also the Live Sets, which are pretty sweet) -- and you should be allowed to remix them however you want through Yahoo!. So when you're looking at your favorite musician and want to see their videos from YouTube, go ahead and add that module -- play the video inline, too. Swap out the iTunes module for albums on Amazon, because who wants DRM anyway? Your custom layout will follow you around to all of the artist pages across the site, meaning you'll get the experience you want, exactly how you want it.

It can be hard to jump around the web to collect all of the different ways to appreciate your favorite music, and now you barely have to try. That's satisfying.

Picture frames

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

For a while, it's been standard operating procedure for image search engines across the web to link off to a result page for each image that displayed a bit of random detail about the specified image at the top of the page and iframed the source page beneath that. It made a lot of sense, given that the image you were looking for could be hidden at any random location on the page, but it wasn't particularly exciting.

The best way to make things more exciting? Give them a darker background, of course, and the new Image Result pages have got that in spades. But what, you want more than mere design improvements? Fine. I guess you'll need to be satisfied with the easy access to your original search results, or larger image thumbnail, or ability to navigate to other image results from the same query without reloading the page, or the inclusion of fun related images in case you want to go exploring. My only complaint is that the included source page is a bit compressed now, but with such a useful frame, who needs the rest of the picture?

Fool Parties

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

While our internal April Fool's Day message from our CEO was way more hilarious, I'm glad that we also entered the public fray by releasing Ideological Search, the premier search engine for finding political opinions just like yours. Ironically, Ideological Search, which lets you filter search results based on whether they lean left or right, works well, looks great, and is actually a really interesting application of BOSS search technologies. I'd almost hope that we keep it around post-April 1st. Go ahead and check it out here!


Yahoo! Font by Daniel Gauthier
Feed Icons by Matt Brett