We all kneel to Google search paradigm. The paradigm is based on the study of the relational structure between pages that is created by the complex network of links.
The idea came to Larry when he mapped (in his mind) hyperlinks to citations and web-pages to peer-reviewed papers. Basically, he adapted the ranking concept used within the scientific community (i.e. the number of citations a scientist has for his papers) to rank the internet pages (i.e. the number of links that directs to a given internet page). Thus was born the PageRank concept. At the time (1995) there was still no easy way to tell how many links an internet page had pointing at it. The merit of Larry (and Sergei) was to actually craft a working crawler that would collect and retrieve this information. Well... that and actually sorting and indexing all the gathered webpages according to the PageRank rule.

The Yahoo! guys however, at the time, had a more organic arrangement and sorting of web-pages. Kind of like a giant directory of web-pages, sorted by topics and keywords. They made no relevant use of the internet hyperlink structure.

Time prooved that the structural search paradigm took the best over organic search. The PageRank had won the battle. The Google guys coined the google verb "to google", and became the bleeding edge of what was going on in the Internet. Over a decade has passed since the outcome of this paradigm clash, and never was another paradigm to point its nose into the battlefield. Up until now...

As the web grew into a social place, peer-to-peer pandemia settled in, RSS feeds arrived, blogs emerged, wikis came, flickr flipped over the table, tagging and bookmarking truly flourished with del.icio.us and StumbleUpon, YouTube democratized video broadcasting, I-Pod mania tuned people's ears, a rush of new uses of the web surged. Eventually people labeled all that Web 2.0. A social, rich user-experience, information trading place. Economics will never be the same again. Sharing actually becomes (or will become) the economy driver for internet markets!
But that's not what I wanted to talk about today.

I intend to put forward StumbleUpon, or del.icio.us as an alternate, concurrent and complementary search engine: the organic 2.0 paradigm.
As people become more responsive in the internet and provide more feedback, tagging is the new thing. It actually sorts and indexes pages. Imagine millions and millions of internauts tagging each page they get interested upon, sharing their bookmarks, creating tagged-communities (united around a specific tag-subset). As of today. Reality or fiction? Will it prove really useful for searching issues? I know not. Time will tell.
What does organic 2.0 paradigm has that organic 1.0 didn't? The critical mass of active users, for once. And two, The social experience. As a collateral symptome of this new paradigm, the Time magazine personality of the year is "You", the average internet user. At the time, Time meant that the content of the internet was now provided by the average internet user in blogs, wikis and homemade videos and that this was something new in the internet short history. But what I mean today is, that the ranking of the internet will also be provided by the average user. We could call it the Democratic Rank.

Around a year before del.icio.us emerged, a bright friend of mine conceived the link-sharing community and started on its own web-based app. But college kept him from truly investing himself in it, and well, time passed, and del.icio.us rolled out the web. But that's another story. What I really mean is that... I'm going to spend some more time in giving a shot at using SumbleUpon and del.icio.us before actually googling. Call it gut feeling ...
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Below is a screenshot of the most interesting article of 2013, period. Written by one the most-influentials "good" guys of world, Julian Assange.

Back in 2005 I was really excited about the web2.0 concepts, the web-based APIs, mashups, and all the new publishing tools that was later to be known by 2008 as "social-media".

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Google, Apple, Microsoft, Facebook ... what is the REAL future of computing, as seen from 2010?

I don't know, exactly. In my last post I simply summed up Google to an advertisement company and Apple to a leisure-time company.

Somebody wrote a while ago:

Google is an advertising company that builds popular services that command large audiences.

To which I add:

Apple is a leisure company that builds popular media-platforms that command large audiences of media-consumers.

I just got accepted to the most awesome workshop in the whole world, organized right here in Lisbon, the Codebits 2010, promoted by sapo.pt,

I'll be staying three days, in a row, in a big room packed with free wifi and free cable net access, unlimited free pizza, free cokes, free chocolate bars and

One of the biggest pain in the butt after an exciting conference/workshop/meeting is inputing all your fresh new contacts business cards info into your digital mail/phonebook. This is a problem. An unsolved one too.

Android is for tasks, life-hacks, body-hacks, and Chrome is for organized data, information.

At some point in the foreseeable future I expect to see an elegant merger where a next-gen browser will be the sole platform.

Hello all, it's been a while since my last post. These last months were spent mostly dedicated to finish my unfinished thesis - Ever heard of PhD comics? No? Well, it works better than Dilbert for me. Here's a nice one ...

The ipad is probably more expensive than the Chrome OS... but the browser experience is better, much better. I'm bending towards buying an iPad for my mom, so that she'll start using a computer, finally! She bought a laptop because she wanted to get in touch with her kids and friends through gmail.

My mom sure could use one of those Google PCs.

She's a veteran school teacher. She doesn't like using computers and hates the fact that she has to configure them for the wifi connection.

I transcribe here, literally, the kick-off post of Webtop mania, to remind our (few but dearest) readers what this blog is all about, what's his purpose and why it exists in the first place.

Update: if you want to check out what is cloud-computing in a secured sandboxed environment please follow this link.

When I first started this blog, I wanted to make a statement about my vision regarding the future of computing. I called this new thing the webtop. That was back in 2006.

Yes, it's true: the iPhone actually needs spectacles to correct its vision on close-up shots. Otherwise they get blurry.

People don't realize this yet, but what they really want is a device that becomes a living extension of their body, while enhancing their own sensing limitations. It'll make them feel smarter, more powerful. And - that - is a very addictive feeling.

Hi, I'm testing a javascript based syntax highlighter for this blog.

Google just launched earlier this week the new google mobile app with voice search. Now, we always went extatic in this blog, whenever a new web-based app with text-to-voice or voice-to-text features would come around.

Last week I went to codebits, the 24/3 hackers contest organized by the portal sapo.pt. And it was awesome! I had loads of fun, learned tons of stuff, met a bunch of new and interesting people, worked on my tech social network, etc, etc...

Here are some location based tools that I use on the iPhone. Some are social canvas, some are useful tools.

Google Maps

I use it to:

Locate me.

Search places.

Bookmark places.

Find routes.

Navigate.

Unique features:

Built in iPhone.

Street view (coming to Europe, one country at a time).

Last week I went to Shift.pt, a conference about new technologies, society and the web, organized and sponsored by Sapo.pt. There I've acquainted a bit more with Pedro Custódio and his team/friends, as well as a whole new bunch of very interesting people.

Here's an excerpt of a mail (addressee anonymacy kept) I wrote today that tells a long way about what are my expectations on shift, the web2.0 and society conference happening in Lisbon the 15th, 16th and 17th October 2008.

Dear Mr.

Wordle is an instant, genuine, original, art creating engine that leverages on the single most creative content originator on the whole galaxy: YOU.

Wordle is BEAUTIFUL because YOU are BEAUTIFUL.

One of the interesting things about web-wired mobile devices, is the ability to quickly geolocate the user, either by GPS, either by cell-tower antenna id, either by networked wifi ip.

The people at thinkeyetracking have conducted a research on search behavior. They analyzed humans while googling by mapping their eyeball tracks.

Google just launched today their new open-source browser called Chrome. They're now adding a new element to the browser wars along with IE, Mozilla Firefox, Safari and Opera. This is a really smart move from Google towards building their Google OS.

The other day we were having this discussion promoted by @ppinheiro76 at Twittlis about this semantic tagging concept. The idea was that every tag we use in del.icio.us, blogger, or whatever web-data-harvesting tool we use, be unambiguously defined and linked with it's Wikipedia definition.

Evernote is an interesting web service that stores all your notes, audio-notes, and snapshots and archives them for you. It then allows you to perform text search on them, even inside images.

Ever worked with satellite engineering teams? I have. I had some experience in the AOCS (Attitude and Orbit Control Systems) subsystem team in the ESA-SSETI program, designing ESEO, a micro-satellite designed to take space pictures and do some simple science, while I was an undergrad student.

In this post I will show you how to subscribe to twitter to receive free sms alerts on your cell phone. You can receive live soccer goals, weather forecasts, traffic alerts, the IST canteen menu, you name it ...

UPDATE 2008-08-27: DISCLOSURE 1: SMS ALERTS AREN'T FREE IN THE U.S.

Nostalgia, originally uploaded by Guillaume!.

In memory of Jorge Luís Reis Martins, good friend and colleague.

Today was the WWDC, the famous Apple keynote by Steve Jobs at the Moscone center.

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