February 27, 2008

LeapTag is a Webware 100 Finalist

This year, Webware selected 30 products in 10 categories as nominees for Webware 100 Awards. Selections are made from a group of nearly 5000 entries.

The Webware 100 Awards recognizes the best Web 2.0 sites, services, and applications that are leading the next wave of innovation. Voting will run until March 31. Winners will be announced on April 21, the day before the Web 2.0 Expo opens.

For the second time, LeapTag is selected as a finalist in 'Browsing' category. Thank you Rafe and Webware team for including us again this year.

Browsing category seems to include very different groups of products. Nominees for this category are:

OS/Web Desktop: EyeOS, G.ho.st, Jooce, YouOS, YourMinis, iPhone
Platform: Adobe AIR, AjaxWindows, Silverlight, Yahoo Widgets, Yahoo Mobile
Browsers: Firefox, Flock, IE, Maxthon, Opera, Safari
Portals: Clipmarks, iGoogle, My Yahoo, Netvibes, Pageflakes, Techmeme, Windows Live 
Readers: Bloglines, BlogRovR,  FeedHub, Google Reader, LeapTag

Given the diversity of the types of products for 'Browsing' category and large pool of entries, we consider ourselves one of very few (and best :) news reader and discovery tools nominated this year.

I think we can project one winner right now: iPhone :) But, please consider using one of your three votes in this category for LeapTag.

Vote for us!

Vote for LeapTag

November 30, 2007

People Like Us

It only has been a month since our Facebook release and we have been getting a great reception.  I really love Facebook as a distribution channel (more about that later). 

We started getting recognized by the press on our own as well. Couple days ago, Computer World selected us as one of the best blogging and news applications on Facebook.  Here is the link:

http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9049261&pageNumber=3

September 24, 2007

We Launched our Facebook Version

We just launched LeapTag for Facebook.  You select three categories to start with, and then personalize each of these categories by voting thumbs up or thumbs down in order to create your own newspaper.  You can then share the news you discover with your friends on Facebook. 

The Facebook version runs as a web application and gives you three interests and a simple interest set-up.  If you like more interests and flexibility, you can always download the LeapTag client application from our website. 

Please try our new Facebook release,  invite your friends, and share the news you discover with them. 

- Cuneyt

July 16, 2007

LeapTag free trial

We've launched something new: an online trial of LeapTag. This trial is designed to give you a taste of what it is like to discover news and blogs with LeapTag without first downloading the product.

The LeapTag trial is free (just like the product) and will be accessible online for at least the next two months. In addition to providing you with a risk-free way to try LeapTag, we will use the trial as a testing ground for new features. Over the next few weeks we will be trying out some new ideas here before deciding whether to include them in the application.

Please go to our web site and give it a whirl. At the end of your trial, LeapTag will automatically save your tags and import them into LeapTag - once you've installed the product.

- Karen

June 16, 2007

Commitment to our Users

Our users are very important to us, and we don't just say it, we really mean it.  As the CEO, I want to tell all our users that we are committed to responding to your feedback - positive and negative - and helping you to make the most out of LeapTag.  As an example, I would like to point you to Dan Morrill who initially was concerned that our application might pose a security risk.  He sent us an e-mail and he was so impressed with our prompt reply that he decided to talk about his experience with us in his blog.  I urge you to read it. 

We welcome your opinions, good or bad.  If you have a problem, we will work with you to address it as soon as we can.  If you request a feature, we will do our best to put it in our release schedule.  If you praise us, we may not respond to you right away, just because we are extremely busy building you a better application, but we may ask your permission to quote you on our website.  This is our commitment. 

So, please write to us at support@leaptag.com if you have a question, need help installing or using LeapTag, or just to tell us about your experience with our product. 

Thank you for your continued support. 

- Cuneyt

June 10, 2007

Discoveries from my LeapTag gadget tag

One of my passions is following and using gadgets.  So naturally, I have this gadget tag that I have set up in LeapTag and I have been using it for about a year now. I had an advanced copy of the application, you see :-).  Thanks to our new "publish" feature, I can now share some of these results with everyone.  Here is a recent sample:

  • Sony’s Odo line of environmentally friendly products
    I am so glad that Sony is bringing these new innovations to market.  We saw a preview of some of these at Etech this year. 
  • US Army's Joint Repair Facility acts as ER for injured robots
    Preparing for the brave new world.  If we are going to be surrounded by robots we certainly need ER facilities for them.  Asimov, where are you when we really need you?
  • MIT professor pulls plug on cables
    Kudos for my alma mater.  This is a problem I wished someone had solved for a long time.  The other advantage of this "wireless electricity" is that it removes the need for all different types of chargers and adapters.  It could lead to a standardization in charging  ALL my gadgets.  YAY!
  • Through the filter of a Victorian Aesthetic: And you thought James ...
    An intriguing 19th century gadget.  It reminded me of the trip we took to Florence (or Firenze) in Italy.  If you go to Florence make sure you visit the Museum of the History of Science.  You will see all the gadgets that the artists at the time used to assist their work.  I think they were the engineers and the entrepreneurs of their time. 

Discovered with LeapTag

- Cuneyt

LeapTag now offers publishing

On Friday we released an update to LeapTag that introduces a number of new features our users have been asking for. The focus of this release is on enabling the sharing of users' discoveries and we have approached this from a number of directions.

  • Publishing. Users can select individual LeapTag results, write comments about them and publish the items as HTML, which can be embedded into their blogs and web sites using cut and paste.
  • Sharing. Users can now send interesting articles to their friends with our built-in email tool. This feature also enables people to send entire tags via e-mail. Our users have built some great tags and now they can share them with their friends, giving others a leg-up on building their tag collection.

In addition to these sharing features, we added a couple of features to make it easier for people to manage their results with more control:

  • News and Blog Feed (RSS) Management. An advanced feature for most users, this feature enables users to select whether LeapTag should never, automatically or always monitor specific RSS feeds - tag by tag.
  • Sort-by options and turn off "discovery." We have added new sorting options to the header of every tag results page that will allow users to sort their results by relevance (default), date and source. In addition users can turn off the "discovery" feature for those times when they only want to see results generated by the keywords they selected and the RSS feeds they imported.

These last two features were requested by people who are using LeapTag to filter their RSS feeds and who want the option to to be able to view their results without the benefit of LeapTag discovery.

We hope you will give this new version a try, and look forward to hearing your feedback.

-Karen

May 23, 2007

LeapTag and the Webware 100

We received this fantastic message the other day and I want to share it with you:

LeapTag has been selected as a finalist in the Browsing category by the editors of CNET Webware.com for the Webware 100 Awards!

This is such an honor, not only because the award is from CNET, but because we were selected by editors from over 2,000 qualifying Web 2.0 services nominate3d by Webware readers and company representatives to become one of only 250 finalists.

We need your support: the final list of the top 100 will be decided by the people (that means you). Please cast your vote for LeapTag on Webware.com today.

From CNET:

Webware100_160x145 User voting for the Webware 100 will be open from Wednesday may 23 at Noon pacific Time until 9:00 AM June 11. Users will be able to vote for your product at www.webware.com/100.

On June 18, we'll announce the winners of the Webware 100 -- the top 10 products in our 10 categories. Winning entries will be featured on Webware.com, CNET.com, CNET TV, and other CNET properties.

We are honored to have been chosen for this award and hope you will help us make the final cut by getting out to vote. Help us tell the world about LeapTag!

- Karen

April 11, 2007

Our first real revenue!

Last week was the first time that someone (other than us) bought a book using LeapTag.  This is very exciting for us, not only because we made our first buck, but also because it is a sign that our CPA approach is working. 

By the way, we were going to send that user a T-shirt but due to our privacy policy we don’t know who bought the book!

- Cuneyt

April 06, 2007

A peek under the hood

LeapTag is a desktop application that must be downloaded and installed on your computer.  (You can view a LeapTag demo on the web to see the concept, or download your personal copy from our web site.) LeapTag is not a server-hosted web application. There is a lot of discussion happening right now about web vs. desktop and which is better and although I explain some of our thinking on that subject in this post, my main purpose is to answer the question, what exactly are you looking at when you open LeapTag in your browser?

After LeapTag installs, it starts running in the background (and it will start automatically every time you boot your computer). There is a tiny web server embedded in the application to expose a web-based UI, similar to Google Desktop or the popular email filtering application POPFile. When your browser opens to LeapTag, you are looking at a page served by this background application running on your machine. All the data you see is stored in and served from your hard disk.

There are several reasons we built the UI this way. First, LeapTag is about finding you results on the web. Therefore, having LeapTag run in your browser seemed natural. In addition, we think that in the future, interesting applications will come out of mixing data on the web and data on your computer, kind of a web-desktop mashup. We wanted our architecture to work with that vision. In fact Adobe just launched a product supporting that concept. Last but not least, there is a more operational, pedestrian reason for a web-based UI: for a pragmatically-minded startup it is quicker and more efficient to develop and maintain a web-based UI than a desktop UI, especially since we support both PCs (both IE and Firefox) and Macs (Firefox).

So, if LeapTag runs on the desktop, where do the results come from?

LeapTag pulls content from the web by considering your user-defined interests. Then, it uses your feedback (votes and tagged websites) and the content of these web pages, to extract a list of results ranked by relevance. While it does this, your interests and votes are never transmitted outside your computer. Instead, LeapTag, working from your computer, protects your privacy while proactively figuring out which results to bring back to you.

Why couldn't we just make a server-based web application like the rest of the pack?

I wish we could. As the proliferation of web applications -- built on the cheap -- attest, it is easier to create and popularize a web application than a desktop application. We wouldn't need to worry about an installed base of users, upgrades, supporting different platforms, compatibility problems, and so on and so forth. And of course the barrier to customer adoption would be much lower, making Karen's (our VP of Marketing) job easier. But there are some good reasons we chose not to do it that way.

First, we believe that personalization is headed on a collision course with privacy and security. Cuneyt has talked about this at length in previous posts. Since LeapTag keeps your interests, your votes and your results strictly on your computer, your privacy is protected much better than if LeapTag were a server-based application.

Second, providing you with relevant results based on your votes is no mean feat. While we were building LeapTag, we realized that only the most sophisticated algorithms give great results without a lot of voting. To put the challenge in perspective, consider that LeapTag needs to provide interesting and relevant results among millions of news articles and blog posts by looking at just a dozen or so user votes.

The downside is that what works best also takes a good amount of CPU time. Our analysis showed that running our application on a server farm would require too many servers to be feasible. On the other hand, we certainly did not want to compromise on the quality of LeapTag's results. Neither did we want to charge people for using LeapTag. Fortunately, these days most desktop computers and laptops have powerful CPUs of their own, which are idle much of the time. Moreover, dual/quad core CPUs, which are even more friendly to background applications, have become the focus of processor companies.  There are other established applications that use this untapped CPU power, for example a Stanford project that studies protein folding (more of them here). We thought that using this idle CPU time on your computer to discover interesting news articles, blog posts and books might be a great use of your investment.

In short, by making LeapTag a desktop application, we hit two birds with one stone: we eliminate privacy as a potential concern for personalization and we are able to give you the most relevant results while keeping LeapTag free.

- Ulas