Updated: 2003-03-11; 9:11:27 AM
Doug's Inner Net News
    News and views from a software developer's perspective

daily link  Saturday, February 15, 2003

Joe Gregorio writes about The Well-Formed Web.

Joe's RESTLog looks pretty cool. 

9:52:49 PM  permalink 


A Daniel Brandt complains about Google's Page Rank.

A complaint that the search engine's users don't get good results is valid. A complaint that a webmaster can't get his pages to rank highly for certain generic search terms is not valid. We have to take the search user's point of view, not the webmaster's.

We all know what search was like before Google: page after page of totally useless results. So even a complaint from the search user's viewpoint must take into consideration what is possible. Google is a remarkable improvement over the first generation of search engines.

Here's another interesting question to ponder: How did Google itself become a popular site? No, they didn't rely on search engines. 

8:44:48 PM  permalink 


Where would we be if we didn't have free, throw-away email accounts available, like the accounts from HotMail and Yahoo?

Here's one thought: Without throw-away email accounts, people would be much angrier at email marketers, including the e-tailers who think they are legitimate. As it is, anyone who is not a novice at email knows to get a throw-away account when they need to communicate via email, but don't want to compromise their real email account to email marketers.

In a way, this is a really disfunctional relationship. There are so many people or companies out there that will abuse email, that email users are driven to sign up for throw-away accounts. The companies that offer the throw-away accounts know that these are throw-away accounts, which are likely to receive a much higher percentage of spam. But they offer them for free, probably because they think they can push advertising on their accounts' subscribers, or maybe because they want to be able upsell their subscribers to a non-free account.

Can this situation continue? Can Yahoo, Hotmail, and other companies continue to offer free, throw-away accounts that get a disproportionately large amount of spam? Does the current situation change if the spam problem gets worse? What happens if we get to the point where free, throw-away accounts are no longer available? 

11:34:45 AM  permalink 


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