Hilarious copyright infringement

Filed under: Offshore outsourcing, News @ Indus, Reviews — Abhishek Rungta at 1:53 pm on Wednesday, March 12, 2008

There are hundreds of companies who are copying us - our business model, our web site design, our style of doing business, etc. Though we do not like it, we consider it as a form of appreciation and ignore most of the times.

However this one stumps everyone else! This hilarious copyright infringement was done by a “reputed” Kolkata based company. They went to the limit of copying our D&B number which is a unique number assigned to a company by Duns & Bradstreet.

The DUNS number 91-848-3439 belongs to Indus Net Technologies and it can be independently verified with D&B (which of course is a reputed agency).

While copying (or let us say ripping off) our website, they even copied our DUNS number and are openly publishing it on their website. The funniest part is that they continue to do this even after getting a legal notice! I salute their arrogance. I hope they do not pass on the blame to their designer. They have given full support to this illegal activity by ignoring the legal notices sent to them. So I  wish that the ignorant designer is not fired who did what he was asked to do - i.e. to copy our website content and use.

Best of luck to them! This won’t help in growing the company for long.

 

Search engines adopting Web2.0

Filed under: Usability, Internet Marketing, Emerging technologies, Reviews, Technology — Abhishek Rungta at 1:15 pm on Monday, March 3, 2008

Yahoo announced that they are opening up their search results for third party data integration. This will allow third party to contribute to Yahoo search experience and make it more useful for their users. It will be interesting to see how other webmasters use this open search platform to gain popularity by sharing data with Yahoo, while still retaining their competitive edge, by virtue of their database, in their respective area. We can expect to experience a long-tail of innovation in days to come. This will help webmasters, visitors and Yahoo! A perfect win-win-win situation.

On the other hand, Google already have a open platform called Google Co-op, where anyone can create custom search engine. As per Google Co-op,

“Google Co-op is a platform that enables you to customize the web search experience for users of both Google and your own website.”

Google also offer Google Subscribed Links which in their own language they define as:

“Subscribed Links let you create custom search results that users can add to their Google search pages. You can display links to your services for your customers, provide news and status information updated in near-real-time, answer questions, calculate useful quantities, and more”

The challenge

However, both the services that Google offers, has a great deal of focus on promoting Google, Google Search & Google Subscribed Links. Again, they are not directly making any change in the Google Search (at least it has not be publicly explained how it will effect user experience of a normal search).

Therefore, Google Search or Yahoo Search cannot be termed as true “user contributed” or “Web2.0″ as described by Tom O’Reilly. People won’t contribute unless they see that their contribution is making a positive impact in the search pattern and it is visible. In the current state both Subscribed Link and Yahoo Open Search will only help if a user wants to use the enhanced engine. Most Internet users will never switch these engines. Even if they are told the benefit of the plug-ins, how are they supposed to select the ones which will help them from a collection of thousands of user contributed plug-in channels? And what happens when new plug-ins come out?

Suggested solution

If search engines want to go the Web2.0 way with user contribution enhancing the overall experience and defining the way search engines display results, they need to bring user contributions to the mainstream. I feel that themed searches are the way to go. Google / Yahoo shall classify a particular user contributed plug-in into a theme. When a visitor wants to search for a business, he may choose a “Finding a business” theme. On a contrary when a visitor wants to learn about the subject he may chose the “Tutorial” theme.

Let us see an example.

We search for a very competitive keyword - “web design”. This is the result we get.

If you see, there are three different intents that the search result satisfies. A person might be searching “web design” because he:

  • Want to find a web design company (blue marker)
  • Want to learn web design (red marker)
  • Get web design resources (green marker)

All three intents are very different. Most people do not type-in their intent in the search box to make it a specific search, because they are not specialists in using search engines. Therefore, a search engine should suggest a possible intent and display results only related to the given theme. The theme model can best work when they are formed based on a collection of user generated plug-ins. Thus user generated content can find its way to the end user in an organized way.

It goes without saying that pulling in the user generated content directly into the main search result has its challenge of weeding out spam. But this seems to be the most logical way as of now. 

 

ArtzMania features Design2Please.com

Filed under: News @ Indus, Web design, Reviews, Portfolio — Anindya at 10:15 pm on Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Few months back, one of our ventures Design2Please.com had been covered by ArtzMania.com, a popular e-magazine amongst designers and design lovers across the globe. We are honored that ArtzMania has featured our portfolio in their e-mag. Thank you! It can be downloaded here (Magz issue > Issue 6, 34MB, .exe)>>

Notes:
Design2Please.com is the affordable web design services venture of Indus Net Technologies. A team of 90+ full-time web designers are working for this venture and  serving more than 1500+ clients spread over 35+ countries. We are serving in 2 modes: fixed cost web design packages and full-time or part-time dedicated hiring.

CSS Mania features Hire-a-Designer.com

Filed under: News @ Indus, Web design, Reviews, Portfolio — Anindya at 6:25 pm on Monday, February 4, 2008

One of our ventures, Hire-a-Designer.com, recently got covered by CSSMania.com. CSS Mania is a very popular website which lists great website designs. We are thankful to CSS Mania guys for considering our website and featuring it on their site. You can see it listed here >>

Notes:
Hire-a-Designer.com allows you to hire designers on full-time, part-time or hourly basis. This model is can save you atleast 22.5% of cost against any fixed price quotes calculated even at $12/hr.

Unlike the freelancing project portals, we are accountable for the results and ensure that only qualified designers work for you. The designers that you hire will be our full-time employees and they will work exclusively on your assignments for the duration of the contract.

Online project management tools

Filed under: Usability, Reviews, Technology — Abhishek Rungta at 12:42 pm on Friday, January 25, 2008

Proper project management is key to a successful project. To manage multiple projects and teams which are geographically spread across the globe, you need a quality project management tool.

As a web development company, we looked around for some quality software which serves the purpose and does not burn a hole in the pocket. Here is our pick!

Basecamp HQ:- A nice, minimalist simple to use software true to the philosophy of 37signals, the company which built it. This software is only available in a SaS (software as service) model. IMO this software best suits small projects which are communication centric. It lacks version control, task management, project tracking along with cost-benefit analysis.

Overall, very easy to easy and adapt, but reporting is not up to the mark. If you are a small business and you do most of your project management yourself, this can be a good choice for you.

Intervals:- It seems to have picked up the baton where Basecamp HQ has left. It also works on a SaS (software as service) model. It has more features (specially in terms of reporting and role management) than Basecamp HQ, thus making it suitable to manage complex projects across a large organization.

Overall, it is a good attempt to overcome the shortcomings of Basecamp HQ. However it needs to improve on its usability. It also needs to provide staged progression in terms of features and complexity so that small businesses can adapt the system. I am sure that this software will become popular as they keep improving and become old. For a SaS model company, time-tested reliability is more important than anything else.

Ace Project:- A comprehensive project management software with user friendly interface and short learning curve. It has different licensing policies and therefore you can rent or buy off (with our without source code) the software to suit your organizational needs. This software is around for quite some time and therefore seems to be reliable.

It has decent reporting capabilities, but not as good as what Intervals claim to have!

Dot Project:- The best free open source project management software that I have come across. This software looks flexible and extendable. You can plug in various modules, including Mantis (for bug tracking). The usability and reporting leaves much to be desired. So if you are looking at free project management software with access to source code, Dot Project is a good choice.

Conclusion:

There is nothing called a perfect project management software. The usage, the users and the desired result determines the one which suits best for a given organization. So take your pick from the above mentioned toolset.

 

Basic limitations of using open-source products

Filed under: Usability, Reviews, Technology — Abhishek Rungta at 1:45 pm on Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Apart from doing software / web development on Open-source platform, Indus Net Technologies also customize and implement open-source products for clients on demand. Some popular (and free) open-source products are SugarCRM, Drupal, osCommerce for CRM, content management and e-commerce respectively.

IMHO, these are some limitations that I have observed. It is important to know them before initiating a project. These are not very serious in nature and using free open-source products remains a good option for many small and medium sized enterprises around the world.

1. Like any product, it is very important to align the product with your workflow and/or requirements. You must fit the product into the organization by making necessary changes. Therefore a gap analysis should be done and the effort must be estimated for aligning the product as per the current work-flow and/or requirements.

2. Most free open-source products lacks in usability. Therefore if you are doing a major implementation which will be used by thousands of people and you are going to pay for their time, you must consider a major overhaul of interface by involving a usability consultant from your vendor. Otherwise you will end up spending a lot of money.

3. Most free open-source products have very poor reporting system. These reports are not good enough to run a business as they fail to provide any insight into the business function that you are tracking. They should be re-done as per your company requirement aligned with your key measurement matrix for the given business function.

4. The programmers who can change the software as per your needs are the code-hackers types, who love to dive into an existing system architecture and make small changes to achieve the desired results. Therefore you must identify and hook up with the right programmer / programming company (like Indus Net Technologies - a bit of shameless self promotion) to get it right.

5. It is a myth, that implementing open-source software is free. Software code is free, not the hard work of programmers and analysts which goes behind implementing it. And you need the later to successfully implement it in your scenario and reap the benefits of the solution. Yes, it considerably reduces the cost, improves reliability and gives you a head start from where you can take informed decision about your IT needs.

Do not get me wrong. I am only listing the limitations. The benefits are well-known and they out-live the limitations any day. However it is very important that these limitations are known before proceeding.

Feel free to discuss / debate!

 

Photoshop gets a new logo!

Filed under: Web design, Reviews — Anindya at 10:15 pm on Thursday, September 20, 2007

Adobe has revamped the Photoshop logo with a new tagline (”See What’s Possible”) to match the feel of the software. It will be released soon with their new product set. It’s nice, bit web 2.0ish, but not sure how they will manage it in b/w!

Adobe press announcement says:
“To represent this rich family of products, Adobe is introducing the Photoshop visual logo. This logo will soon appear in all Photoshop-related marketing, so keep an eye out for it. The Photoshop logo on a product, service, or technology, represents the rich legacy, technical quality, and attention to detail that has made Photoshop the gold standard in digital imaging.”

CSS turns 10!

Filed under: Web design, Reviews — Anindya at 11:18 am on Thursday, August 30, 2007

CSS is 10 years old now! As far as web design is concerned, CSS might be most powerful invention of the lot. It’s very fast developing too. Today CSS has become the backbone of the UI of a website. You can’t imagine an effective website without a good CSS. But do we all know how it all started, what was the format that time, how it reached here? And also where are we heading towards? To know them all please read CSS @ Ten: The Next Big Thing in A List Apart emag.

Long live CSS!

Random Reads

Filed under: Reviews — Anindya at 12:50 am on Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Design wont save the world. Read why.

Blogsolid: Ideas for better blogging.

Better SEO for Wordpress.

Beautiful book cover designs by Ryohei Yanagihara.

There is a subtle difference between amateur and pro. Read what.

Why you should keep your landing pages simple.

Messed up and noisy design made business successful for a retailer.

Complete pattern library -  a lovely collection.

All fonts are not for all seasons. Here are the fonts of summer.

Kevin Cornell shares his idea about staying motivated.

Random Reads

Filed under: Reviews — Anindya at 10:02 pm on Tuesday, August 7, 2007

100 Websites You Should Know and Use

The Web is constantly turning out new and extraordinary services many of us are unfamiliar with. During TED University at this spring’s TED2007 in Monterey, Julius Wiedemann, editor in charge at Taschen GmbH, offered an ultra-fast-moving ride through sites in many different areas, from art, design and illustration, to daily news, blogs and curiosity.

Beautiful Illustrations from Sara Torres

Aged Aesthetic
This article was posted long back but still very fresh and helpful for those who love retro/aged/old styled designs.

Swap Meat
Great business idea of playing with creative stuffs, get promoted and of course making money without too much of production effort!

Off The Grid
Rethinking about structured design process.

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