Author: GigaOM

  • Sponsored post: Big data drives high performance for Cars.com

    Cars.com is an award-winning online destination for car shoppers visited by approximately 12 million unique visitors each month. In addition to millions of listings, the website also offers a variety of comparison resources, pricing tools, expert automotive content and dealership reviews.

    To support its high volume of site traffic, Cars.com must maintain optimal website performance and loading speed — especially given the expectations of today’s online consumers.

    Uptime and site performance is a priority for the Cars.com application management team, which maintains a highly distributed, technical environment. As part of their duties, members of the team are responsible for application data collection, monitoring and analysis. According to the application management team, up to eight man-hours per week were spent on manual data acquisition, diverting staff from their core focus.

    Splunk Enterprise was implemented to automate and standardize the collection, monitoring and analysis of application log files and make this machine-generated big data available across the organization. As a result, real-time Splunk dashboards have provided increased visibility into site traffic and usage patterns at Cars.com supporting both technical and business-driven analysis and decision making.

    Read more about how Splunk is helping Cars.com drive revenue generation and cost savings.
    Read the full analyst report: http://www.splunk.com/view/splunk-at-cars/SP-CAAAHF4?ac=exec_gigaom_cars_post
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  • Sponsored post: A brand of me: how the online environment is making things more person

    As technological innovation changes the way we work, skill sets and career paths follow suit. For many of us, a job for life is no longer an option, and the disruption of entire industries is making us multidisciplinarians by necessity.

    In the media and content industries, where disruption is threatening artist incomes, many have responded by attempting to diversify their revenue streams. Essentially, they are building a brand around themselves rather than relying on a single competency.

    Services like Bandcamp and Kindle Direct Publishing are helping to enable this process by reducing the barriers to distribution, allowing artists and authors to harness the relationship they have with their fans.

    It’s a model spreading to other industries. TeacherPayTeachers is a platform for educators to sell lesson plans to one another directly, and here too building a personal brand is important (the first teacher to pass $1 million in sales amassed 17,000 followers).

    We’re also branding our professional selves by accident. As the boundary between work and personal life continues to blur, social networking accounts are increasingly becoming expressions of our interests and opinions. In response, services like Trustcloud and Klout are trying to add transparency and legitimacy to our online presence.

    Ultimately, with the employer-employee relationship becoming more flexible and our online presence becoming more fully formed, 2013 is the time to start managing our personal brands a little more proactively.

    You can download a free copy of GfK’s Tech Trends 2013 here.

  • How Facebook comments affect trolling for news websites

    Whether news sites should or shouldn’t use the Facebook comment plug-in or Facebook identity seems to have been a recurring theme in the last few days.

    The Nieman Journalism Lab called it a “movement”, which seems quite a grand term for two sites announcing similar but different things on the same day, but both Politico and TechCrunch are opting to move their commenting systems away from Facebook. At the very same time, waves were being created in the UK as the newly-relaunched Manchester Evening News shifted to a commenting system that required users to have a Facebook account. At the heart of all this is the old canard — would forcing users to comment with something closer to their real identity reduce instances of trolling?

    It seems to me that what Politico and TechCrunch have in common is a stubborn belief that the quality of debate underneath their articles would improve if only they could find the right commenting platform.

    At Politico, Dylan Byers is putting his faith in technology:

    “Disqus gives you the ability to up-vote and down-vote comments and thread responses. By default, high quality comments will filter to the top, and poor quality ones will not show up on the page.”

    A view immediately debunked in the first comment left on the piece, where Adrian Lowe pointed out:

    “That’s if people actually vote for them. And if people are trolling in voting, then low quality comments will be seen at the top. So, ‘by default’ high quality comments will not necessarily rise to the top.”

    You only have to look at the green and red arrows on the MailOnline site to see how sometimes it is the scum that rises, not the cream.

    TechCrunch’s attitude to their below-the-line contributors was made clear by the image they chose to accompany their announcement: “I miss you asshole

    They seem to be ascribing the behavior of their users to the platform they employ, not to the way they are goaded into commenting by the articles they write. As my ex-colleague Meg Pickard says:

    “If you write a provocative article, you can expect people to be provoked.”

    The Manchester Evening News move is in the opposite direction, hoping that a shift to using Facebook identity will improve the commenting experience on the site. There’s no doubt that restricting people to only using Facebook identities will exclude some users, but David Higgerson wrote an eloquent personal blog post about the shift: “Much ado about Facebook”.

    “Most of the people who have complained…seem to come from a starting point that news websites should allow free-for-all comments on all stories, and that the ‘community’ can say what it likes under any name it likes. I don’t see it like that.”

    My own experience with using the Facebook comments plug-in under news content was within the Guardian Facebook app.

    Guardian Facebook appI had rather hoped that by opening two commenting threads underneath each article — one on Facebook, and one on the Guardian site — we’d be able to prove once and for all whether one or other led to better interaction. In the end, it appeared that actually the tone set early on in a comment thread looked like it influenced comments much more than anything intrinsic about the format or identity system used.

    There’s no doubt that software design and features do influence community behaviors, but not as much as decent community management and personal engagement from journalists does. In 2011 my friend Mary Hamilton wrote a very thorough blog post looking at the responsibility of news organizations to not just provide a commenting space, but to also participate and join in that space:

    “If you don’t set examples of good behavior, or reward [commenters], or empower the regular visitors to police their community by telling them the rules, your community will make its own rules, and chances are you won’t like them.”

    She described switching tech platforms in search of an answer to bad community problems as akin to “laying Astroturf over an unkempt, unmaintained garden because you don’t like the color of the wildflowers.”

    She also said:

    “The news industry can’t simply automate away its duty to respond to users. Small publishers and bloggers for the most part understand this, and — more crucially — so do our users. These are human beings at the other end of the internet, talking in our spaces, and we need to start treating them that way.”

    Still, the golden rule of newspaper website comment systems is “Don’t be a dick” — and no technology choice can enforce that.

    This was first posted at Martin’s personal blog, Currybet.

    Martin is principal consultant at Emblem, which provides user experience design and training services. He was previously UX Lead at The Guardian, which included working directly with Facebook on the news organization’s Facebook app. Martin also currently provides some design and consultancy services to Trinity Mirror, publisher of the Manchester Evening News.

    Guardian News and Media Ltd., the parent company of the Guardian newspaper, is an investor in the parent company of this blog, Giga Omni Media

  • How to make big data work in the cloud

    Moving to Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) should be a step up and not a step down, particularly for big data workloads. Achieving your goals means paying attention to some important criteria. First, there’s the real elasticity of the IaaS solution. Then you need to consider perfect provisioning for the exact resource amounts, that is, the unbundled RAM, CPU and storage needed for a specific workload. How do you store that data securely? And then you must consider data centers and data-protection jurisdictions.

    In this analyst roundtable webinar, here are some key points we’ll be discussing:

    • Key criteria when choosing an IaaS provider
    • Service versus architecture
    • Data versus big data
    • How much customer control equals “full control”
    • Trends: control, experience and understanding

    Our panel of experts includes:

    For a detailed discussion that answers these questions, join GigaOM Research and our sponsor CloudSigma for “How to make big data work in the cloud — and protect it without going broke,” a free analyst roundtable webinar on Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2013, at 8 a.m. PT.

    Register here.

  • 6 technologies that could shape the future of energy

    Whether it’s the energy used to light up and warm our homes, or the energy consumed in our gas tanks as we drive down the highway, the vast majority of the world’s energy sources come from fossil fuels. But a new generation of technologies is looking to replace coal and oil with cleaner and more efficient sources, like algae fuel, geothermal power and solar panels. New technology is also making it easier to store energy in next-gen battery technologies, and easier to move around on a better power grid. Here’s a round up of stories we covered this month that demonstrate 6 technologies that could shape the future of energy:

  • UPDATED: By the Numbers: Facebook vs. Zynga

    Facebook and Zynga, two of the largest social web companies, have been at odds recently. Zynga is one of the biggest buyers of advertising on Facebook, and without Facebook, Zynga would struggle to grow.

    In other words, the two can’t live without each other. But cooler heads have prevailed and they’ve now settled their differences and inked a 5-year truce. We’ve put together a graphic that lays out the details of their codependency.

    Update: Please note that this corrects an earlier version in which the use of Facebook Credits for games was described as “exclusive;” it was not.

    Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):

    Will Zynga’s Growth Make It a Facebook Frienemy?

    Infographic by Column Five Media



    Alcatel-Lucent NextGen Communications Spotlight — Learn More »

  • Unboxed: The iPad