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Orkut gets widgets, Gigya gives widgets



Gigya spotted that orkut had opened up for widgets, and quickly added them as a destination.  Way to go, guys! Well, they are (claim to be) the third largest network.

Orkut – The 3rd biggest network worldwide opened for embeddable code and Gigya quickly responded to allow quick posting for this network. We now support quick posting to 19 destinations (in the Flash version only): MySpace, Friendster, Facebook, Tagged, Blogger, Hi5, Freewebs, Xanga, LiveJournal, BlackPlanet, MyYearBook, Piczo, Wordpress, Typepad, Multiply, iGoogle, Netvibes, PageFlakes, and now also Orkut.


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Widget based revenues for Netvibes

CNNMoney covers a panel at the MIT Emerging Technology conference that included Tariq Krim from Netvibes where Krim gave his view of widget based revenue on Netvibes:

Are we already moving on from traditional social networking?

But Krim is the first to acknowledge these are early days for widgets. Publishers have to create more, better designed widgets. Advertisers need to figure out how best to advertise on them and through them, and how to sell that advertising.

And did I mention there are no plans for banner ads? Krim says Netvibes should be entirely neutral. There will be advertising, he says, but it will happen entirely through widgets, and those widgets will be added by users. The pressure is on advertisers to come up with creative ideas that appeal to users. But the users, according to Krim, are growing – to 10 million last month.

The Business & Technology of Facebook

The Business & Technology of Facebook

Graphing Social Patterns: The Business & Technology of Facebook

Announcing Graphing Social Patterns: The Business & Technology of Facebook, a conference for developers and marketers on how to build and distribute apps for the Facebook Platform. This event is for both business executives & technical developers who want to learn more about the Facebook environment, and how to reach online communities using social networking platforms and applications.

Widgetbox's App Accelerator turns widgets into Facebook apps

Webware's Jessica Dolcourt has the scoop on the new Widgetbox Facebook converter:



Widgetbox's App Accelerator turns widgets into Facebook apps | Webware : Cool Web apps for everyone

Widgetbox today announced App Accelerator, a step-by-step guide and tool for creating Facebook applications from Widgetbox widgets. The blandly named App Accelerator shrewdly connects the community developers of Widgetbox's widget marketplace with Facebook's burgeoning user community. Talk about viral marketing.

The conversion works by adapting Widgetbox's Flash and HTML/JavaScript code for Facebook compatibility. There's a lot of link-swapping involved, and much of App Accelerator's ease-of-use can be attributed to Widgetbox's assumption of several routing URLs.

Burning Widgets!



Burning Widgets has rolled out a new concept: widgets that you 'buy' and attach your brand to.

Burning Widgets - Profiles Catch on Fire!

Viral content to carry your brand name over the globe and drive traffic back to your site.

Burning Widgets work on MySpace, Friendster, Facebook, Tagged, Orkut, Blogger, Hi5, Freewebs, Xanga, LiveJournal, BlackPlanet, Piczo, Wordpress, Typepad and more!
From their FAQ:
Why would anyone buy a widget
If you own a website this is a terrific way to add cool content, spread your name over the globe and drive traffic back using the flash link and a textual "Get this widget" link.

What do I get when I purchase a widget? Do I need PHP /mySQL ?
You get a flash file (swf) with your brand and a backlink to your website, html code, and distribution license.
With 3 widgets (Random Jokes, Light Bulb Jokes and Funny Quotes) you get an additional mysql table and a PHP script to be installed on your server -
Only for those 3 widgets PHP & mySQL are required. Installation is quick and simple, and you don't need to know PHP coding.

Amazon Announces Amazon Widgets

Problogger covered the 'launch' of Amazon widgets - though when they looked a bit closer they noticed that most of what was announced was not exactly new. Some of it looks quite interesting:

Unbox Videos

Show studio previews for a huge range of recent and classic movies or tv shows available from the Unbox video download service.



Slideshow

Make elegant slideshow widgets out of images chosen from
products across the entire Amazon catalog - CD cover art, DVD’s, books,
anything!


Product Cloud

Take tag clouds one step further by showing Product Clouds - clusters of product titles relevant to your page



My Favorites

Express yourself by recommending and commenting on products from Amazon.com. Let everyone know how you feel and what you like!


Amazon-Widgets















Amazon Announce Amazon Widgets for Associates
The Amazon Associates Program has entered the 21st Century by announcing Amazon Widgets.

They’ve gone fully into it with 16 widgets for your blog covering a range of functions.

Some of the widgets are open to everyone - others are exclusively for Amazon Associates (those enrolled in the affiliate program).


Update - exploring these a little deeper reveals that some of the 16 are actually just ‘classic link’ options (ie things we could already do. There are a few new options - but those options listed towards the bottom of the list below were already available.

Publish a SmartLink Widget



AdaptiveBlue - SmartLinks: Publish a SmartLink Badge

A SmartLink badge is a collection of your most recent BlueMarks displayed as a fun, interactive flash widget that shows a details view of each BlueMark containing its image, title, and a SmartLink launcher. It's a great way to showcase the items you're collecting and the pages you're visiting while browsing on the web. Setup is done only once and the list will automatically update as you add, remove, and edit from it.

Widgets Craze In Full View



MediaPost Publications - Widgets Craze In Full View

AT OMMA'S WIDGET SESSION TRACK on Tuesday, executives from RockYou and Slide.com, two companies at the forefront of the widget craze, said their portable applications netted 90 million and 134 million unique monthly page views respectively (and Slide didn't even count Facebook users).

But when asked how many of those viewers had actually loaded the widget onto their page, the numbers dropped to about 15-20 million for RockYou, and 30 million for Slide--roughly one out of five for both companies. This distinction between page views and actual user engagement with widgets (and ultimately, the brands associated with them) was a focal point of the panel's discussion.

According to panel moderator Seth Goldstein, CEO of the Facebook ad network SocialMedia, the widget "users-to-viewers" ratio was an important takeaway for all marketers in attendance. "The big numbers you hear are people that are passively encountering the widget," said Goldstein. "And any time a company can throw out [stats] in the millions and billions, that's a sign of where dollars are going to go. But it's the level of engagement for marketers that's the question mark."

According to Sonya Chawla, senior director of ad sales at Slide.com, "We're open to every platform. Some people call them widgets, Google calls them Gadgets--but we call them TV boxes internally because it's like letting users take a little TV and put it on their own profile pages."


Digitas Sees Widgets At Forefront


MediaPost Publications - Digitas Sees Mobile on Margins, Widgets At Forefront

Digitas Sees Mobile on Margins, Widgets At Forefront
by Gavin O'Malley, Wednesday, Sep 26, 2007

According to its vice president and media director Jordan Bitterman.

"Our marketers are looking for scale."

Earlier this year, on the heels of its $1.3 billion acquisition of Digitas, Publicis announced plans to accelerate its position in digital media and interactive marketing services, with the goal of deriving 25% of its total company revenues from digital interactive and mobile marketing services by 2010.
Bitterman said he and his peers at Digitas can't get enough of widgets.

"With widgets, we've had some good experiences," he added. "We're seeing click-through rates of 10%, and engagement beyond that click is also very high."

Emerging as a viable ad channel, over 81 million consumers in North America--or a full 40.3%--were exposed to Web widgets in April, according to a widget tracking service recently launched by comScore.

Marketing With Widgets



Good overview from MarketingSherpa

MarketingSherpa: Special Report: Marketing With Widgets - Usage Data, Tactics & Test Results


Marketers have jumped onto the widget bandwagon as they conduct tests to see how well widgets can generate and convert traffic. In our latest Special Report, we have all the data on widget usage, marketing tips and strategies surrounding this hot topic. Plus, three marketers tell us about their results involving widgets. One has already seen 1250% ROI.

Musestorm offers monetization and mobile widget distribution with new platform



At DEMOfall today Israeli widget company, Musestorm, will launch a new product for building widget and applications of any kind and distributing, tracking and monetizing them. Although one of the early players in the widget space, MuseStorm have been quiet for the last few months as the widget space has accelerated hugely. However, it looks like they have been raising money, opening a west coast office and rebuilding their core product in response to the marketplace.
MuseStorm are, not unexpectedly, joining the Widget Distribution Platform companies along with Clearspring and Google. Competition here will be fierce, but there are differentiating factors and a lot of integration work still to be done. For example, MuseStorm are offering mobile widgets - so far I think only yourminis have the mobile platform in their lineup. MuseStorm are also talking integration of monetization within their platform, something that only Google Gadget Ads have really launched so far.

Content Engagement Platform
MuseStorm are calling their new product a Content Engagement Platform, though to me it looks like a Widget Distribution Platform. The new platform allows users to build content widgets and distribute them through social networks.

  • Authoring: We provide an editing interface that allows editors to easily create rich media and textual widgets as well as update them at any time
  • Distribution: Our content distribution fulfills all of your current & future needs: Web, Desktop, Instant Messengers, Mobile
  • Analytics: Our industry leading analytics stands alone in providing insights  into your content distribution as well as every users’ interaction
  • Monetization: As a key syndication partner we monetize your content via contextual advertising, including the delivery of rich media




The new widget authoring tool for building new widgets


Configuring widget

Adding content


MuseStorm are also rolling out a new tracking and analytics solution for the new platform













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Widgets now with heatmaps

http://blog.yourminis.com/WindowsLiveWriter/image_2.png

yourminis rolled out an update last night and added heatmaps, better Facebook support and more reporting. They now track all clicks within the widget which allows for the generation of a Heat Map report. An image of your widget with a heat map indicating where users are clicking gives a great perspective on how the widget is actually being used in the real world.

Other changes:

  • Facebook - Upgraded support for Facebook applications. When a user adds a Facebook application widget they will be prompted to notify their friends about the application. Once a user adds the widget to their profile, they can change the settings of the widget.
  • Custom Tracking Reports - Exposed API calls which allow a widget developer to completely track all clicks within a widget with a path. The end result is a text based view into what users are clicking on, which can be broken down by the usual parameters (geography, user, domain, etc.).
  • CSV Export - Users can export the data in any of the reports, making those reports available outside of our system.
  • Custom email templates. Use custom HTML code to send out the "invite a friend" message.


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Commercial Widget Distribution Platforms

Clearspring - Springwidgets - Wildfire - Widgetbox - Widgetavenue - yourminis

There's a fast growing list of widget distribution platforms, and as I find myself talking to more and more corporates who want to know how to build and distribute, the functionality and differences between these platforms becomes more important. It's amazing how an entirely new category of business can arise in a short period of time, and even more amazing to watch different solutions evolve in relation to eachother. Obviously it's early days and most of the business models that these companies have are unproven to say the least. We're seeing a sort of arms race as companies who have started off in fairly different spaces start to congregate where they think the money (or commercial success is).  If you're looking to build and distribute a widget, take a look a these. This is a short list from a much longer set of ways to construct and distribute widgetized content. I have only included services that allow you to put what you want into the widget, not services that allow you to construct from a controlled or technology specific set of services. I'll cover those companies soon.

All the information here is more or less taken from public web sites with a bit added from conversations. If anything is wrong or missing, that's most likely because I can't find it on the website.

Free use - looks at what the product is in its basic 'free' version
Commercial version - what the commercial version of the product consists of, assuming there is one
Facebook - how does the widget handle Facebook
Metrics - what tracking data is available
Distribution - what destination sites are embedded in the platform

Clearspring
Clearspring are the original independent widget platform startup who have set the pace for widget delivery and tracking using their fairly unique model. This is the 'wrapping' model where your widget is wrapped by them on delivery. The Clearspring wrapper adds distribution and tracking services.



Free use
Widget can be made in Flash, JavaScript, HTML, or an image, then you "register" the widget by submitting its URL. The widget is pulled from the site and wrapped in the Clearspring wrapper, served from Clearspring back-end which then loads the widget in-turn

This wrapper:
          - tracks everything that happens with your widget (and you can view it all in the analytics console)
          - offers a user interface and back-end that allows users to grab your widget and share it across the web (social networks, start pages, etc.)
          - offers some advanced programming features to the widget itself
          - loads super-fast

Each Clearspring-enabled widget can be given a default homepage on the Clearspring site. This page allows visitors to grab any widget using any of the supported viral services, and to leave you comments and ratings.

You can use the platform to make API calls to interact with your widget, and to make your widget aware of it's surroundings.

Use the Clearspring console to publish your widget into the leading galleries.

Commercial version
Increased branding control, no Clearspring branding
Control over domains including configuration page
Greater flexibility over creation and customization
Multi-account management capabilities, multi account billing etc
Control distribution
Deeper analytics & reporting
Dedicated Client Services team

Facebook

Widget developers can use the Clearspring distribution platform to configure their widget for use on Facebook, and even set it up as a Facebook Application. End users can use the viral sharing services built into every widget to install it into their Facebook accounts.

Metrics

Clearspring claims huge investment in widget tracking and analytics, with detailed real-time analytics data to help you track distribution and determine optimal content placement.

Views

  • number of views by the top sites that your widget is being viewed on (up to 20).
  • A view is counted every time a user views the widget on any domain.

Unique Viewers

  • number of unique viewers per day, sorted by the top 20 sites.Locations

Geographic

  • number of widget locations per day, sorted by the top 20 sites.

Viral Hubs

  • number of widgets that were created per day sorted by the top 20 sites.

Geographic

Computer Information

  • number of views per day by Operating System, Browser Type, and Flash Version

Live Traffic

  • number of Views & Unique Viewers per hour your widget has received over the past 48 hours.

Distribution

MySpace, Facebook, Friendster, Google, Windows Live, Windows Live Spaces, Netvibes, Pageflakes, Webwag, Blogger, Typepad, Freewebs, Xanga and Eons

Springwidgets

Springwidgets is a part of Fox Interactive Media who are part of the Murdoch empire who own MySpace, so they are theoretically close to developments in the social networking space. Widgets created within the SpringWidgets system work on the web, the desktop and in social networks like Myspace that restrict the use of Javascript. Springwidgets have taken a Software Development Kit (SDK) approach, where you download the SDK and create the widget on your desktop. The Springwidgets approach offers both desktop widgets and a configuration page and free widget hosting as integral parts of the offering.



Free use
Users have two options for working with SpringWidgets: First and most simply, through the "Express" process, where widgets can be created in a manner of minutes if you have an RSS, OPML,
or Podcast feed to create a blog widget or if you have just a logo or image, you can quickly create a countdown widget.

Widgets assembled using the SpringWidgets SDK are also free to distribute, The "Always Sunny in Philadelphia" widget shows off some of these API benefits well, with some features that only appear on the desktop, like a second, hidden embedded "Puppet" widget and a built in alerting system for desktop users. Any widget on the SpringWidgets "free use" platform is centrally served, which means two things, a centrally managed update system and free hosting for your widget files

Commercial version
SpringWidgets does have a commercial version of their platform, though details are not yet available on the website. Advanced customization, tracking options, strategic consultation and custom widget development are available. Don@fimlabs.com for information about commercial applications.

Facebook
Currently Springwidgets don't handle it as a platform. They will build out custom Facebook applications on a client by client basis and place their widgets in those apps.

Metrics
The word from SpringWidgets is that a comprehensive metrics announcement is going to happen within the month.

Distribution
MySpace, Blogger, iGoogle, hi5, Xanga, AIM, Bebo, Friendster, Live Spaces, Multiply, Piczo, Tagged

Yourminis

The yourminis platform focuses on development with a comprehensive set of APIs for development, syndication and measurement. They also have their own 'start page' for widgets to live on.
We support not only web platforms (including facebook), but also desktop with vista and air support.
Yourminis1Yourminis2

Free Use

The yourminis platform offers a comprehensive set of re-usable components and an advanced API framework to enable rapid development of widgets, ranging from simple badges to complex miniature applications. Once a widget is developed on the yourminis platform, it is hosted and syndicated through our global content caching network to deliver optimal performance. You can syndicate your widget by offering a simple end user “copy me” button on each widget for syndication to top social networks, start pages, blogging platforms and even the desktop. They also publish your widget to other top widget galleries to increase awareness, distribution and discovery.

They have created an extension to the Flash IDE for widget development. This extension simplifies widget development by plugging in intellisense to help with syntax, a panel which allows for one-click local testing and debugging and integrated help documentation for all methods, events, and properties.

The yourminis widget platform can run on the desktop as well as the web, supporting desktop widgets using adobe's air platform as well as natively in Windows Vista. Mac support is coming shortly.       

Facebook

The platform enables widgets to run as full facebook applications leveraging the Facebook APIs.  They also allow you to customize the widget inline as an application, save settings, share with your network, etc.

Commercial use

Widget development fees
Tiered pricing for widgets served
Deeper analytics & reporting
Feed management
1 year reporting data history
Dedicated services and support team

Metrics

yourminis' advanced set of widget management and reporting delivers real time stats on widget views, users, interactions, clicks, geocoding, and other advanced metrics to help you understand and measure your success.

- widget management console you are presented with a dashboard view. This view displays all of your widgets and a few quick widget stats including status, views, copies, date created and date modified.

- The summary view has a graph that shows views and trend for the widget by day for 30 / 60 / 120 days. You can select any of the days to get the stats for that day including views, top referrer, interactions, dicks, unique viewers and copies.

- The default views report displays a graph of all of the views for your widget, across a selected date range and across selected domains. You can also view additional views reports sorted by domain, country, remix, avg views and geocoding.

- The default copies report displays a graph of all of the copies of your widget, across a selected date range and across selected domains. You can also view additional copy reports sorted by domain, destination, source and country.

- The default interactions report displays a graph of all of the interaction for your widget, across a selected date range and across selected domains. An interaction is defined as an action inside of the widget, including a mouseover that a user performs.

- The default clicks report displays a graph of the number of clicks for your widget, across a selected date range and across selected domains. A click can be defined as any click action taken within the widget, whether or not that opens up an external link.

Distribution

MySpace, Facebook, Friendster, Freewebs, Piczo, Xanga, Netvibes, yourminis, iGoogle, Live.com, Pageflakes, Blogger, Typepad, Vista sidebar

Wildfire (Gigya)
Gigya's Wildfire product takes a different approach, offering a simple way to add viral distribution and tracking to your widgets by wrapping them in the Wildfire code.

Free use
Gigya provides widget creators with smart and simple tools to help distribute, track and monetize widgets. Their widget distribution platform enables simple posting and sharing of widgets across social networks and blogs. When integrated, anyone can grab and post widgets from your site to their profiles and blogs. Widget providers also get access to detailed reports including information on widget distribution and performance.   

Gigya's aim is quick and easy implementation, and with as little as one line of code, Gigya’s tool can be up and running. The tool is fully customizable to match the look and feel of any Web site.

Facebook
Can post your widgets directly into the users profile using the generic "My Stuff" Facebook application. This application takes advantage of the various social viral features on Facebook, allowing users to share your widget with their Facebook friends, etc.

Commercial use
Gigya do not offer a commercial version. However, the only stipulation they make is that the Gigya logo/link remains on the widget, the system is free to use for commercial purposes. This may or may not be acceptable to commercial clients.

Metrics

  • Posts – number of times a widget was posted
  • Wildfire loads – the number of times the Quick Posting interface was loaded.
  • Posts / loads – the ratio between the Quick Posting interface loads and number of posts.
  • Impressions in profile – the number of times your widgets were viewed on the pages they were posted on.
  • Stickiness – the ratio between daily profile impressions and daily
  • posts. Higher numbers suggest widgets stays longer on page.
  • Posts by Social Network – The number of posts per social network for the entire chosen date rate

Distribution

MySpace, Friendster, Tagged, Blogger, hi5, Freewebs, Xanga, LiveJournal, BlackPlanet, MyYearBook, Piczo, Wordpress, Typead, Multiply, iGoogle, Netvibes, Pageflakes, Orkut

Widgetbox
Widgetbox is more of a widget aggregator, though they have built a good widget wrapping service that allows you to use your own widget within their service. Although they provide most of the tools that their competitors do, their service is still firmly based within their own gallery of widgets. This offers both opportunities and problems for commercial use of the platform.

 

Free use
Widgetbox allows an external website to configure a widget on behalf of a blogger and pass the configured widget on to Widgetbox for installation onto the user’s blog.

The developer registers the widget via Widgetbox’s widget registration wizard. The widget can be one of several types: flash, image, remote HTML or hosted HTML. The wizard allows the developer to build a configuration screen, which allows bloggers to personalize the widget for their site.

All widgets go into the Widgetbox gallery from where they can be configured and downloaded. Widgets are stored either on the developer's server or hosted at Widgetbox.

Commercial use
Widgetbox have a Certified Partners program (though this is currently free). Partners are

  • rotated in as a featured widget on the front page,
  • included on the partner page, and
  • benefit from promotions

Facebook

Your widget must be registered as a Remote Flash widget (http://docs.widgetbox.com/developers/guide/flash/) as the Facebook App currently supports only Flash.  If you would like it to appear under a specific category in Facebook, your widget should be tagged that way.

They are working on a new version of the app that will make all of the widgets in our gallery available.

Metrics
Each widget has an analytics dashboard that tracks key metrics like # people who have subscribed to your widget, where your widget is being used, # page views, and which subscriptions are driving other people to get subscriptions themselves.

  • Subscriptions - A “subscription” occurs when a blogger or web page owner personalizes a Widgetbox widget and gets it for their web page.
  • Hits - A ‘hit’, or page view, occurs when a web surfer views a web page with the subscribed widget on it.
  • Referrals - A ‘referral’ occurs when a web surfer viewing a web page containing your widget clicks the ‘Get Widget’ button underneath the widget. This takes them to the widget’s home page on Widgetbox. At this point they can themselves subscribe to the widget.
  • Conversions - A ‘conversion’ occurs when a person who has been referred to a widget subscribes to that widget.
  • Break down the data by specific subscriptions to a widget. See what internet domains those widget subscriptions are placed on.
  • Break down the data by time period.   Hourly, daily, weekly and monthly increments.
  • Charts a widget’s new subscriptions and active subscriptions over a time period.

Distribution
TypePad, Blogger,  Blogger post, MySpace, Facebook, Netvibes, Pageflakes, iGoogle, Freewebs, hi5, Piczo

Widgetavenue
Widgetavenue is the newcomer to the party, only launching this week in beta. However, they come to a party deliberatly and straight on, promoting themselves as a Widget Distribution Platform. Their product is built on an automated three step process. Filling out a form that points to your widget, wraps it in their own wrapper and provides some basic widget services with more promised in the near future.

Widgetavenue2Widgetavenue3

Free use
Through their web based form, hoose a standard format such as basic HTML, Flash, Image Files, or Javascript. Make sure your content looks  nice in a small window, and is easy to use.
Use the  shaker. Just  fill a quick form, and create a cross-platform widget, that you can use on many different widget platforms including Desktop widgets.

Commercial use
No information about commercial use yet

Facebook

No information about Facebook yet

Metrics
You can even monitor the traffic of your widget using the analytics link inside the widget.

Distribution
iGoogle, Netvibes, Microsoft Live, Pageflakes, WebWag, Dashboard, Vista sidebar, MySpace, Facebook, Blogger, e-mail


Collating this information has been a lot harder than I expected it to be. I thought I knew most of this, but when I went to double check I found it very hard to track down a lot of detail. It's almost as if several of these companies don't really realise the need to compare products. They are all looking to compete in the same space, but no-one has even got as far as offering a comparative chart yet - standard marketing fare in most industries. It would be almost impossible for a casual user to choose one service over another - maybe that's a reason at this stage not to rock the boat.
I'm sure I've missed a few. I know about a lot more services that could be listed here - but I decided to keep it pure.

Blowing the web apart, Part X

I've long been telling people to fragment their content and throw it to the winds for distribution by the hive mind. Generally they look at me as if I've gone mad. Now Google have come along and told them the same thing, maybe they'll listen. Interesting times.

Google breeders cross widget with ad, create gadget

“Consumers are pulling in content from multiple sources” said Christian Oestlien, a business product manager at Google who is overseeing the new ad program. “It is what we are calling the componentization of the Web. The Web is sort of breaking apart into smaller pieces.”

If Widgets Morph Into Spyware, Bad Things Could Happen

Following the euphoria over Google widget networks andthe like comes some provocative thinking from Cory Treffiletti at OnlineSPIN

Widgets have become the unexpected buzzword of 2007; just a few weeks ago I discussed how they can be used for marketers to disseminate information. But I’m realizing that this buzz is eerily similar to the buzz that surrounded desktop applications in the late ’90s. Desktop applications and embedded applications became hot — right up until they became overused and exploited. Basically they morphed into a nasty little term called “spyware,” and companies like Gator and WhenU took the heat for the majority of the ills facing online advertising, either deservedly or undeservedly.
Fast-forward to 2007. Users are being tasked to download little applications or plug-ins that provide a minor value or are just something fun. These range from desktop ski report applications to music management applications to daily trivia applications. In sites like Facebook, with these widgets you can send a drink or throw food in a virtual food fight — or almost anything that you can imagine. You can track your effect on the environment with “going green” widgets, and you can track your packages without opening the browser through a UPS widget.

All these are user-initiated and relatively harmless, but it’s only a matter of time before marketers of less-than-ethical standing start once again to use these as a gateway to the user’s desktop, and widgets tread dangerously close to the spyware category that we are all trained to stay away from.

Google Gadgets as Ads in AdWords - overview

Google has started to open up the AdWords and DART ad networks to widgets. The widgets that can be distributed through these networks are effectively modified Google Gadgets. There are obviously many questions, both on the technical side and on the advertising side. This is an overview of the main issues and questions around Google Gadget Ads.

There is so much potential here, as for the first time the full power of widgetised content can be pushed out through paid distribution. Well crafted widgets with viral drivers should benefit from a kick start. Although Google list a bunch of 'Success Stories' on the site, I have to say at this point that most of them are dull and unimaginative and all fail to really use the tools available. As Google open up access and freelancing creatives and coders get their teeth into this, we should see some stunning results.

Google Gadget Ads
You can use AdWords and DART to distribute modified Google Gadgets on the Google content network. All the usual tools for creating campaigns on these platforms are available, or will be as accounts open up to Google Gadget Ads. Targeting by site, category, demographic, geographic location means that widgets can now be pushed into the distribution chain very efficiently.

Note that a campaign must have the content network enabled in order for gadget ads to run. Anywhere an image ad can be placed today on the Google content network, a gadget ad can run - i.e. not everywhere.

Pricing is the standard AdWords model, by CPM or CPC based on Google auction model. There are no creative fees and no per-campaign charges to use gadget ads. Moreover, because gadget ads are just simple HTML gadgets, development costs are typically lower than other rich media formats. You can push the same widget into iGoogle and the iGoogle gallery and all use of your widget within iGoogle is free.

" You should bid for your gadget ads as you would for any other ad in your AdWords campaign. CPC ads are charged when users click through to the landing page, but not if the user interacts with the gadget ad without clicking through to the landing page. CPM ads are charged for every impression, whether the user interacts with the ad or not. If you decide to run a gadget ad campaign using CPC pricing, please be aware that you may need to increase your bid to compete against CPM campaigns. If users interact with your ad but don't click through to your landing page, you will not pay for a click but your ad will also not be credited with a click that could increase its Quality Score. For this reason, you should design your gadget ad to optimize clickthroughs to your landing page. "

There are no serving or hosting costs. You can host your ad and content anywhere, and Google's caching infrastructure will allow you to serve at scale. Regardless of where it is hosted, Google will fetch a copy of your gadget ad every 1-2 hours and cache it on their servers. This reduces the impact on your web servers and avoids incurring bandwidth charges.

You can host video content on YouTube to ensure that you can handle traffic and load coming from your gadget ad. You can also use your own branded Flash player to playback YouTube hosted content. Google have a list of approved content delivery networks (CDNs) that can handle your hosting if you need it.

Google Gadget Ads are nearly identical to Google Gadgets, except that they run as rich media ads on the Google content network. By adding a small bit of code called a click URL to your Google Gadget, the gadget becomes a Google Gadget Ad, capable of running as an ad on thousands of content network sites. Otherwise, the two can be identical in their basic construction and content.

Because they run as ads, Google Gadget Ads must conform to IAB standards and to Google's accepted policies on rich media and dynamic advertising. For example, audio cannot play by default upon loading. (Because some web pages feature multiple ads, audio on loading could lead to conflicting sounds.) Gadget ads may not set cookies. Gadget ads may not contain objectionable content and must load quickly without using excessive bandwidth. Google has developed an initial set of editorial guidelines.

All gadget ads should have at least one exit link defined where users can click on the link and be redirected to some remote destination, usually a landing page of some kind. In order to determine clickthrough rates for your gadget ad, you need to track all clickthroughs on all your designated exit links. This requires a slight implementation change in the way you define your links.

There are dozens of interactions to track usage within your gadget ad. Detailed reporting of interactions is available in the Reports Center. Gadget ads can also provide click tracking reports in addition to measuring interactions.

Interaction tracking reports include events (such as interactions), but do not include values (such as time spent), though Google hope to include these in the near future.

All gadget ad campaigns that utilize interaction tracking must display a visible link to Google's FAQ's on load. This link should be visible as "Disclaimer"

Development
You can develop the creative with full support in either Flash or HTML. Standard development tools work with gadget ads. They claim developers can build gadget ads in less than one hour using their tutorial. An online tool, the Google Gadget Ad Editor can be used to preview, edit and validate your gadget ad in real time. Dedicated engineering and customer support are available to answer your questions free of charge on the Google Gadget Ads Google Group. There is also a nascent Developer Directory listing people who can build Google Gadget Ads. Open platform Gadget ads work with any web API or code library, including products from Amazon, eBay and Microsoft.

Full Google Maps API support is available for your gadget ad with multiple views and directions. Live traffic overlays are available for specific geographies. There is full support for product feeds including real-time inventory search engines.

Checkout merchants can integrate portions of the purchase process within the gadget ad itself.

Google links
Hosting and Caching
Pricing
Video and Feeds
Development
Maps
Commerce
Tracking and Reporting


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Google Gadget Ad Network goes live

[I've had a proper look at the subject here]

Andy Beal at Marketing Pilgrim gets the scoop on Google Gadget Ads, where Google Gadgets get to go play in the wider world and pay to be there. This is the start of an widget ad network, something new in the world.

Here’s his rundown on Google Gadget Ads:

  • The ads are interactive
  • Google Gadget Ads can incorporate real-time data feeds
  • Different targeting options - contextual, site, geographic, and demographic
  • Built on an open platform - open to anyone
  • They can be placed on any web page, including iGoogle
  • Detailed interaction reports - track dozens of actions within each ad unit

Andy points out that very few accounts have access at this stage:

You may not be able to create gadget ads in your own AdWords account just yet. Gadget ads require a high level of technical resources to create, and generally also require a high level of support from the AdWords support team. To avoid confusion for users, and to make sure we have appropriate levels of support, gadget ads are currently enabled for a limited number of AdWords advertisers who have created content-rich ads in the past.

Yahoo desktop widgets badged



At the 'Create badges for your favourite Widgets' page you can create a badge from any Yahoo (Konfabulator) widget and get embed code for your site. Visitors can then download Yahoo desktop widgets direct from your site. Just to be clear - these are not web widgets, they are promotional badges for Yahoo widgets.
 

The widgetest Widgetnest

WidgetNest Logo

New widget shop opens with a raft of US presidential election widgets. Nice widgets, shame about the distribution platform (cut and paste code again).

WidgetNest

Widgetnest is a widget shoppe. We are widget designers and developer. We understand the power of modularity and the strength of information aggregation. We want to provide powerful, easy to use tools for internet users.

Widgets come of age


One of the markers that a new technology or terminology has come of age is the appearance in the national press. I can remember very well when websites started to be referenced in the press, around the beginning of 1995. Looking at newspapers and magazines from before this point is a strange experience - no web site or email addresses.
Today in my newspaper, the Guardian, on page 15, a three-quarter page colour advert for ups - with a picture of a small critter, presumably an anthropomorphised 'widget'.

 
Widget gives you loads of shipping options
For UPS services direct from your PC desktop, download your UPS Widget
www.ups.com/widget
Unfortunately, the desktop widget they are offering is for Windows only, so I'll not be testing it today.

reCAPTCHA widget digitizes books


reCAPTCHA gives you a way of protecting your email address from screen-scraping spammers. You convert your address to a widget that forces anyone wanting to email you to prove they are not a machine. This is done by giving them two words to type in. The neat trick is - the captchas are using your labour to digitize books. Howat? Want to email me? Click the dots.  ivan...@gmail.com

What is reCAPTCHA?

A CAPTCHA is a program that can tell whether its user is a human or a computer. You've probably seen them — colorful images with distorted text at the bottom of Web registration forms. CAPTCHAs are used by many websites to prevent abuse from "bots," or automated programs usually written to generate spam. No computer program can read distorted text as well as humans can, so bots cannot navigate sites protected by CAPTCHAs. About 60 million CAPTCHAs are solved by humans around the world every day. In each case, roughly ten seconds of human time are being spent. Individually, that's not a lot of time, but in aggregate these little puzzles consume more than 150,000 hours of work each day. What if we could make positive use of this human effort? reCAPTCHA does exactly that by channeling the effort spent solving CAPTCHAs online into "reading" books.


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yourminis Major Platform Update

learn how our platform can help partners to build, syndicate, and analyze widgets
The yourminis widget platform API (wAPI), an Actionscript 3.0 Library, allows flash content owners to quickly and easily create engaging widgets that run on both the web and desktop. yourminis developed the wAPI from the ground up with information collected from the development community to improve the development and overall widget experience. 

Some of the most interesting benefits of the changes are: 

  • Automatic Copying
    - of your widget to the top startpages, blogging platforms, social
    networks, and desktop widget platforms, along with inline email sharing
  • Tracking
    - of views, time spent, users, geolocation, interactions, URL clicks,
    copies, and custom actions for your widget with detailed reporting.
  • HTTP/RSS -
    Proxying, caching, authorization, conversion of RSS 0.9, RSS 1.0, ATOM 0.3, and
    ATOM 1.0 to RSS 2.0 of 3rd party data feeds (without the need for
    crossdomain.xml)
  • Management Dashboard - for updating content, widget configurations, blacklisting, syndication destinations, and 3rd party gallery publishing
  • Global caching network  - for faster widget downloads...

Additional benefits include: 

  • Simple Widget Publishing
    – The latest API allows content owners to publish their existing Actionscript 3.0 widgets/apps and take advantage of a majority of the syndication and reporting features with absolutely no code changes.
    Our previous release required that users download our SDK and make code changes before publishing to yourminis.
  • Online API Reference
    – Our latest wAPI Reference is now available online from our developer at http://www.yourminis.com/developers/docs/as3/index.html .  The wAPI Reference docs outline all the packages, classes, methods, events, and properties of the object-oriented, actionscript 3.0 widget API library.  The docs are generated from our wAPI source and include sample code snippets throughtout.  Additionally, the online tutorials reference the docs with links directly to the API being referenced
    making learning the yourminis widget API that much easier.
  • Dynamic API Binding
    All widgets developed using the yourminis wAPI Actionscript 3.0 library no longer statically link to the API classes.  This provides the ability to develop on the wAPI without any downloads, using any text/actionscript editor, on any platform.  We do encourage users to download our SDK which includes an .mxp Flash CSE Extension specifically built to make the widget development process easier.
  • Event Listeners
    The wAPI leverages Actionscript 3.0 EventListener class to dispatchEvents to listening objects.  This allows developers to write more advanced widgets that may have multiple listeners and a complex
    object hierarchy than was previously possible with the previous yourminis Actionscript 2 widget API.
  • Object-Oriented Improvements
    – We have further broken the main widget functions into separate classes.  This helps make the code easier to understand and to write.  As well, classes such as the HTTPLoader and RSSLoader extend and
    incorporate existing flash classes and methods making it easier to transition from existing code.  For example, calling widget.navigateToURL instead of flash’s navigateToURL will add both URL
    click tracking to your widget and myspace click support.  If you have code that handles RSSParsing based on a URLLoader, you can use the same
    code while utilizing the RSSLoader in place of the URLLoader (RSSLoader extends URLLoader)

In addition to the aforementioned widget benefits, developers get all of the innate advantages of using Actionscript 3.0 including (for an overview, check out http://www.adobe.com/devnet/actionscript/articles/actionscript3_overview.html)

  • Faster processing
    - “ActionScript 3.0 introduces a new highly optimized ActionScript Virtual Machine, AVM2, which dramatically exceeds the performance possible with AVM1. As a result, ActionScript 3.0 code executes up to 10 times faster than legacy ActionScript code.”
  • ECMAScript for XML (E4X)
    – “E4X offers a natural, fluent set of language constructs for manipulating XML. Unlike traditional XML parsing APIs, E4X makes XML feel like a native data type of the language. E4X streamlines the
    development of applications that manipulate XML by drastically reducing the amount of code needed.”
  • Regular Expressions
    – “ActionScript 3.0 includes native support for regular expressions so you can quickly search for and manipulate strings. ActionScript 3.0 implements the regular expressions defined in the ECMAScript Language Specification (ECMA-262).”
  • Type safety
    – “In ActionScript 2.0, type annotations were primarily an aid for developers; at runtime, all values were dynamically typed.  In ActionScript 3.0, type information is preserved at runtime and utilized
    for a number of purposes. Flash Player performs runtime type checking, improving the system's type safety. Type information is also used to represent variables in native machine representations, improving
    performance and reducing memory usage.”
  • Run-time exceptions
    “In ActionScript 2.0, many runtime errors would fail in a graceful but silent fashion. This ensured that Flash Player would not display some inexplicable dialog box, which JavaScript did in early web browsers. On the other hand, this lack of error reporting made it more challenging to debug ActionScript programs.   ActionScript 3.0 introduces a variety of runtime exceptions for common error conditions, improving the
    debugging experience and enabling applications that handle errors robustly. Runtime errors can provide stack traces annotated with source file and line number information, helping to pinpoint errors quickly.”

New Widget Publishing System launches in beta

A new Widget Publishing System, WidgetAvenue,  has been launched in beta by French entrepreneur Emmanuel Prat. Although it's early days for this platform, it's good to see more competition and ideas come into the space. I heard about this rollout just as I was finishing an overview of existing widget publishing platforms. This space is booming alongside the growth and mutation of social networks.

- Flash, HTML, or image contents can be widgetized using a free online tool that we call the Shaker (still in beta version).
- The shaker creates widgets that can be installed on startpages, blogs, social network sites, but also on the desktop (Dashboard or Vista).
- When supported by the host platform, Flash and inline HTML widgets are resized according to space available
- Preferences can be stored and retrieved on host platforms (when available)
- Basic analytics are included and can be viewed from the widget by clicking on the “analytics” link. More sophisticated analytics will be available later, in an upcoming premium version.

Emmanuel sets out the reasons for Widgetavenue rolling out another widget platform. He'll be at Widget Summit, hopefully we can all get together and brainstorm the future of this part of the business.

The first reason is that the Widget Industry is still burgeoning: there is still a lot to explore, to discover, and this is what WidgetAvenue is about. Our ambition is to create new services, new business opportunities for content publishers and advertisers. Sunrise is a first step.
The second reason is that on our side of the Atlantic and of the English Channel, the space is not the same. We believe that the European market needs to be addressed differently, especially the French one (French always consider themselves as different, you know?!). For example, we have discovered that desktop widgets are really important here, so we have made our system compatible with desktop widgets.
And the third reason is that we are passionate about widgets. We are having a great time building this new product, and evangelizing the market.

OMG! Cut and paste this Yahoo widget.

The strange thing about this widget from Yahoo is that it's only available as a 'cutnpaste' code widget. Considering how many different ways there now are to automate the process of adding widgets to platforms, I would have though Yahoo could come up with something better than widget distribution circa 2005.

Get more celebrity news, photos, and videos at omg.yahoo.com »



OMG!: Yahoo Celebrity Widget Badge
OMG! is the name of Yahoo Celebrity Start Up romp that aggregates news about celebrities from a lot of sources. One of the Yahoo Social Niche sites, and considering the popularity of Celebrity blogs and even widgets as well, the recent celebrity related craze that we had here at Widgets Lab is any indication of how big these kind of news have become, having a Celebrity only start up is something that Yahoo was in need of in order to filter all that news into one place.

The widget is a Badge that pretty much recreates the site look and feel while serving the newest entries in their news, photos and video categories just like in the site. this badge has not a problem to be shared around considering it provides with a pretty standard piece of code and a custom Myspace code to grab. so if you like celebrity news, you do celebrity related posts in your blog or just like celebrity news, then this is for you.
(Thanks to Widgetslab)

Sexywidget on Google Gadgets Presentation

Great widget reporting. What I'm waiting for is some news on putting Google Gadgets into AdSense. But Lawrence is right - we should keep an eye on Google Gadgets and iGoogle - it's massive!

Sexy Widget: Sep Kamvar's Google Gadgets Presentation

I'm at e.day in Rotterdam, and just got finished watching Sep Kamvar present on Google Gadgets / iGoogle. Here are a couple of bullets that I found interesting:



* There are 10K gadgets in the Google Gadgets directory

* Sep talked about it as a virtuous cirlce - more gadgets attract more users, and more users attract more gadgets.

* He profiled three independent gadget develoers with respectively, 250K, 2.8M, and 6.5M pageviews per week

* He talked about the evolution as being: 1) hobbyists developing gadgets for their friends; 2) businesses developing gadgets for commercial reasons; 3) an economy rising around the development and consumption of gadgets complete with acquisitions and companies whose sole focus is Google Gadgets (Lab Pixies)

* The "magic tabs" feature which allows users to name a tab on iGoogle after one of their interests (e.g. "surfing"), and Google Gadgets populate the tab based on that tab. (how are those gadgets ranked / prioritized I wonder?)

* Adding "recommendations" to a magic tab results in Google populating the tab with Gadgets based on your personalized searching history.

Cool but a little invasive?

It sounds like Google is working on more ways to put Gadgets in front of people... with all the Facebook buzz, it's easy to forget about Google Gadgets. Maybe we shouldn't.

Taming the Wild World 'O Widgets and Everything Else

My old friend Hooman from Clearspring is prone to wax philosophical. What's set  him off this time is the expansion of the widgetsphere. In honor of this, he's expanded his tagline:

Given that the distributed web is moving into the next phase of it’s evolution, I thought it was time to upgrade this old blog. So I have changed my tagline from:

Taming the Wild World ‘O Widgets

To the following shiny new tagline:

Taming the Wild World O’ Widgets, Social Applications, and the Distributed Web.


After that, he sets off on a ramble on 'The Facebook Effect' that is well worth a read:
Although the Facebook community is swiftly approaching the 100M user mark, the community outside of Facebook is much larger. MySpace may not be the prettiest girl at the dance, but their registered user base dwarfs that of the rising star by 2-3X. So, the natural question is what will the other Social Aggregators do? Ultimately, the moves taken by each of these networks will help drive the resulting ecosystem.
so
As the social networks participate in the Cold War started by FB, “Build your own” social network services like Ning and PeepAgg continue to gain traction with the long tail. Much like Geocities during Web 1.0, these services enable the long tail of developers get kick started building their own versions of MySpace. As these services evolve, they will continue to push key standards that enable them to import/export data across major social networks to better serve their audience.

New widgets


Lots of widgets show up on my radar and I always think I'll blog them - and then for some reason, it doesn't happen and I forget all about them. Here's a small selection, just for the hell of it. Most of these are new entries in the Snipperoo Widget Directory












Widgets, mashups, APIs, remixing: break down the walled garden

Richard Macmanus on form as usual at Read/WriteWeb on the Future Web Trends. Call it what you will - what we're looking at here is the ability of content and service to break out of static walled sites and fly free!




Future Web Trends

Web Sites as Web Services Alex Iskold wrote in March that as more and more of the Web is becoming remixable, the entire system is turning into both a platform and the database. Major web sites are going to be transformed into web services - and will effectively expose their information to the world. Such transformations are never smooth - e.g. scalability is a big issue and legal aspects are never simple. But, said Alex, it is not a question of if web sites become web services, but when and how.

The transformation will happen in one of two ways. Some web sites will follow the example of Amazon, del.icio.us and Flickr and will offer their information via a REST API. Others will try to keep their information proprietary, but it will be opened via mashups created using services like Dapper, Teqlo and Yahoo! Pipes. The net effect will be that unstructured information will give way to structured information - paving the road to more intelligent computing.

Note that we can also see this trend play out currently with widgets and especially Facebook in 2007. Perhaps in 10 years time the web services landscape will be much more open, because the 'walled garden' problem is still with us in 2007.

No Group should have sixteen thousand members


If there is one thing that scares the daylights out of me, it's the 16,541 members of the Facebook Web 2.0 (Entrepreneurs) group. Maybe there are sixteen thousand entrepreneurs all working on Web 2.0 projects (maybe a lot more) - but they should never be allowed to congregate in one group.

This group is for Individuals interested in being part of the next web business boom. Anyone can join, we especially encourage those technically gifted individuals: programmers, hackers, developers, designers, etc. who are interested in joining up with new startups.

What this really shows is just how useless Facebook groups are. Even groups with a hundred or so members disintegrate fast. There's only the endlessly updating 'Wall' to read. The Entrepreneurs group gets old even before you've read through the endless self-satisfying introduction and the list of 'Officers'. Can't one of you write a Facebook application to make a group with tools?