Viewzi is set to launch our Public Beta starting Monday. This week’s been full of last minute cleanup, bug fixes, and features squeezed in at the last minute. But we’re nearing the finish line and at 7:00PM Monday night, we launch. What this means is anyone will be able to search using Viewzi without having (or creating) an account. We call that “taking the wall down.”
Mind you, we’ll still be in “beta”. We’ve still got lots to do, bugs to squash, features to complete and roll out, etc. Lots of stuff to make Viewzi an even better, more fun way to search.
It’s been quite a ride at this point, and I only expect it to speed up. As a team, we’re really starting to get our legs under us and start hitting on all cylinders. And the feedback we’ve been receiving is quite flattering; very positive and constructive. We didn’t expect as many people to “get it” as apparently have over the past 5 or 6 weeks, and it’s really great to hear. We’re very excited about where the product is headed, and anxious to show the world what we’ve been working so hard on.
Well, 71 hours to go (really less, more about that later). Back to work.
Viewzi. Changing the way you look at Search.
Well, Viewzi made the news tonight… the 10:00 CBS local evening news to be exact. My part even made the cut. It was about 45 seconds on the 7:30 sister-station news (channel 21), and then a full 2 minutes (with two “coming up” teasers!) on the 10:00 on the Dallas CBS affiliate, channel 11. It repeated at 12:30. Very cool.
And we got hammered.
Within 15 minutes of the story on the 10:00, we had received several hundred new user accounts, and the queue manager for the screen capture subsystem was smoking. Almost literally. It never crashed, but it bogged down quite a bit and is still working out from under the deluge.
I’m in the middle of rewriting the queue manager (the part of the code that delegates screen capture tasks to the many servers we have capturing website images), but I haven’t finished it yet and rolled it into production. So, we’re still running on the old code, which is having a hard time keeping up. I think the architectural changes I’ve made to the system will allow it to scale much more gracefully, but right now it’s kinda falling on it’s face.
The rest of the system has held up beautifully, though. For a little while there we were executing almost 35,000 SQL queries a minute, and the database server hardly broke a sweat. The rest of the architecture is sound. But screen capturing is a nasty business. Once we roll out the new code, we should be able to literally have hundreds of screen capture servers running to keep up with the load.
The feedback has been very good, overwhelmingly positive, and we’re still seeing new users sign up at a faster clip than we have since we went on the air about 5 weeks ago. It’s pretty exciting, and crazy at the same time. I just hope I have a little more time to work the kinks out before we hit the national news.
I love how the media just wants us to be in a recession… I mean, how else is ClintonObama going to get elected, but if the country is in shambles?
Even the report of news to the contrary, they can’t let go:
The bruised economy limped through the first quarter, growing at just a 0.6 percent pace as housing and credit problems forced people and businesses alike to hunker down.
(emphasis mine)
A “recession” is successive quarters of negative GDP. So we’re not in a recession. No where near one.
And we won’t be in one before the next election. Sorry, dems.
If you’re curious about what I’ve been up to for about the past 6 months, today is the day. We’ve just come out from flying under the radar, and my company, Viewzi, has launched our private beta!
What is Viewzi? We’re building the next generation of visual search. It’s hard to explain in text, so go take a look at our site and see:
http://www.viewzi.com
There’s even a little movie to explain the whole thing.
What’s a private beta? Well, we’re not quite ready to accept the deluge of traffic from the world just yet; we’re still building great functionality and ironing out all the kinks. But we wanted to get a bunch of people trying out the system, so we’ve created an invite program. If you’d like to try out Viewzi for yourself, click on the “Try Viewzi” ticket on the main site, and enter the referral code “steve” (no quotes). The system will send you an email confirmation and then let you into the system so you can try out Viewzi for yourself.
I’d really like to know what you think, so post feedback (either from within the site itself or here).
Guess it’ll be a while before a decently priced Blu-ray player hits the market now.
Looking forward to the clearance racks for HD-DVD, tho. Probably should pick up a (heavily) discounted second player as a backup.
Well, Netflix went Blu-ray only.
As did Wal-mart.
And Best Buy.
Now, it looks like Toshiba is throwing in the towel.
Cue the fat lady.
UPDATE: You knew it would happen.
well, if this turns out to be true, HD-DVD might soon be done. Apparently, Paramount may have a clause in it’s exclusive agreement with HD-DVD that will allow it to back out and switch teams again should Warner jump ship. And since Warner did, things don’t look good.
This is playing out like a soap opera. What’s next?
Well, I’m very dissapointed, to say the least, to learn today that Warner has announced that they’ll be leaving the HD-DVD format for Blu-ray exclusivity in May. Ouch. Unfortunately, this is an almost certainly fatal blow, long term, to the HD-DVD format.
Which means, unfortunately, that a less capable, more restrictive, more expensive format will win this time around. Remember, Beta(max) was/is Sony’s format. And while Beta was superior to VHS, it was VHS that got home video off the ground. That was achieved by breaking the perceived pricing limits that the consumer will endure. HD-DVD players were on the market this Christmas at sub $100 levels (I saw some as low as $84 at one point). Blu-ray is struggling to break $400 consistently. Their spec isn’t completely fleshed out and implemented, their product line-up is confusing (all players can’t play all content, and some can’t be upgraded to do so in the future). HD-DVD, on the other hand, is a single solid spec and all players have all features of the spec, meaning one HD-DVD disc will play in all HD-DVD players, something consumers will assume (incorrectly) with Blu-ray.
The numbers of titles released have been roughly the same (458 BR to 429 HD as of this writing). While more Blu-ray players have been sold in the form of the PlayStation 3, more computer-based drives for HD-DVD have been sold, and the stand-alone dedicated players are selling 3:1 in favor of HD-DVD, driving almost certainly by price point. Yet, current statistics show a flip from an almost 60%/40% HD-DVD advantage in software units sold to a 60%/40% Blu-ray titles sold between 2006 and 2007. So why are so many more units (titles) selling on the Blu-ray side of the fence? My guess, in a word: Disney.
Here’s the deal. On average (we’re not talking about the strange ones like me), the average consumer will RENT titles that are PG-13 or R-type fare, but they BUY titles for the kids. The concept is pretty simple: the average adult doesn’t watch the same movie over and over. But kids do. The fact that Disney landed exclusively in the Blu-ray camp a while back was what turned the tide. Many of the top 10 titles are the same on either side of the fence, thanks to studios that have produced content in both formats to this point (Warner, being the biggest). However, now that Warner has chosen a side, things are looking pretty grim for the HD-DVD camp. So much so, that in the wake of this announcement from Warner, the HD-DVD Promotional Group has cancelled its press conference scheduled for THIS SUNDAY at CES in Vegas. Ouch indeed.
I have an already significant investment in HD-DVD at this point (40+ titles so far). While the news has a certain degree of initial sting to it, in the long run it doesn’t bother me too much. I knew anyway at some point I’d get a Blu-ray player and hook it up as another device in my system.
It’s a bit disappointing, though, especially from a consumer’s point of view. The Blu-ray feature list has some serious problems. There have been production issues in both the media and the players. The price is too high. I’m sure Blu-ray will get over these problems eventually. But will the player I buy today be able to be upgraded to the format of tomorrow? I say that bet’s 50:50.
So, what’s the other shoe to drop? Look for that at Mac World at the end of the month. I have a sneaking suspicion that Apple’s going to announce not only a shipping Blu-ray burner in their machines, but an upgrade to DVD Studio Pro that will enable Blu-ray authoring. Do you think Disney going Blu-ray was coincidence? Who sits on Disney’s board and is their largest single shareholder? That’s right, Steve Jobs.
Now I just want an Apple TV that fixes all the problems I wrote about a few months ago, and has a Blu-ray drive in it. Is that so much to ask for?
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