internet

On Metrics

July 23, 2011

Kids these days...Ah, metrics. Everyone loves a horse race. Of course, in a horse race it is not as if the horses are allowed to take a hyperspace jump to various points in the track outside of the assumed finite length of a race track. Enter the dilemma of any so-called “marketing intelligence” service selling you a stopwatch to determine who wins the race.

Wait? What? See the article linked below my own footnotes. This mini-ramble is about Hitwise making a graph or something showing something growing or not growing or winning or not winning. I’m not picking on the article or Hitwise per se but the general notion of tracking service utilization in the fast paced world of iterative development with anything but the very broadest and most fluffy of metrics.

Specifically, I question the ‘moving target’element that Google+ and any such property tracked would exhibit. Consider that the way Hitwise tracks [1] today may not necessarily be the way tracking is done as properties evolve into new signatures, A/B testing, deep personalization, mobile or closed loop networks, leverage of partners or complementary partners, or shifts in the delivery infrastructure to favor SSL enabled experiences throughout [2].

Looks like I need a new blowerHow do such services really compare the signature of today to the signature of next year? How do such services account for the possibility of egregious errors or failure to adequately capture the intentionally or unintentionally obtuse / obfuscated traffic indicators?

Indeed, the quality of the time spent and the sharing gestures (text updates vs. photos vs. movies) may be harder and harder to glean as this data is considered part of the privacy contract and the salable asset of the property. Remember, you are the one feeding the machine as a user. As someone much more clever put it, “if the product is free that means you are what is for sale”.

That may mean third party services that seek to classify and quantify user patterns are forced to disclose methodology in greater detail (ultimately owning up to how little they do know), striking deals with destinations to truly map such trends with a firehouse of data, or they are simply relegated to selling more art than science.

Perhaps being the ‘outside view’will come to be an even more literal condition.

[1] http://www.hitwise.com/us/about-us/how-hitwise-works
[2] relegating most characterization to blunted techniques i.e. packet and flow based accounting

source: http://venturebeat.com/2011/07/22/google-plus-ranking/

Private Clouds Ahead

October 18, 2010 [ Read more... ]
acadia.png

I have an announcement to make… I have accepted a position with Acadia. My new title is Principal Technology Consultant. In my new role, I’ll be helping companies realize and harness the full potential of private cloud solutions. At this point you might be asking, well, several things… so let’s start with a F.A.Q. OMG! Are [...]

Short URL Link Rot

June 27, 2010 [ Read more... ]

The notion of “link rot” comes up from time to time in blog type discussions where someone has a passing preservation or historical bent.  The real-time nature of content being consumed and the promoted concepts of brevity have led to the perceived need for short URLs.  Now witness the glory of short URL services. Of [...]

It’s Still Complicated

June 25, 2010 [ Read more... ]

My experiment back on May 10, 2010 appears to have finally worked.  I deleted my Facebook account.  The Earth somehow still manages to rotate.  I know you were worried too. *phew* But… you see, I opened another account to confirm this happened.  There’s no email from Facebook that says “You are dead unto us” or “Your account [...]

Security Elements Everywhere

June 3, 2010 [ Read more... ]

Diclosure: I donated to Diaspora. I’ve been asked the same question a few times these past few weeks So, Jay… What would it take for you to come back to Facebook? It’s a valid question.  Sure.  Let’s work through this as a mental exercise.  In fact, I did just that.  I thought long and hard [...]

Android vs iPhone

May 16, 2010 [ Read more... ]

I am heading to Google I/O and it is apparently time for my iPhone to develop envy. I am typing up this post from my Droid with WordPress official apparently. Not any more or less functional than the iPhone equivalent.

It’s complicated

May 10, 2010 [ Read more... ]

Update: It’s Still Complicated This is a very late Friday Fudge. The reason why is I’ve been furiously trying to determine the impact of deleting (disabling) my Facebook account(s). I’ve been on Facebook since it opened up for non-university access or maybe a bit before… I had an alumni address for NCSU. It was fun. [...]

Expiration Dates

April 18, 2010 [ Read more... ]

One of the better writers you’ll come across on the Interwebs is MG Siegler. I’ve followed his writing since his days at VentureBeat and now at TechCrunch. Lately, I’ve noticed he just is not producing as much. Then I realized that he was taking a… a…. VACATION!?!?!?! What follows is how I personally dealt with [...]

Mayor vs Payor: Location-Based Services

April 11, 2010 [ Read more... ]

I made a comment. That’s usually how it starts. This time is it is my take on another take on two other takes on location-based services (LBS). I’m still thinking that checking in is still too much work. It’s the same if not greater friction of the earlier iterations of the “simple” Twitter update. You [...]