Posts with the tag 'YQL'

6 years at Yahoo!

July 3rd, 2009 2 comments

The other day I passed my six year anniversary of working for Yahoo! in Australia. During that time I have worked as a mobile engineer, a media engineer, a media engineering manager, and now as the technical director. I’ve experienced a huge amount of progress during my time so far here, and ever new day is a new and interesting challenge in this thing called the World Wide Web.

Being an anniversary of sorts, I was inspired me to look back as to how the company and indeed the internet has evolved during the past six years. Our Frontpage looked like this six years ago…

The Yahoo! Australia homepage 6 years ago!

These days, the creativity and beauty of what we find is somewhat advanced…

The Yahoo!7 homepage in 2009.

Beauty can be considered only skin deep, but the amount of content, personalisation and creativity that goes behind the presentation layer really sets the user-experience apart from the internet as it was those years ago. Web Search is so far advanced into delivering me answers (even when I’m not sure what questions I’m asking), communication has advanced beyond plain text emails into social networking, and pages don’t just show me flat content, they update themselves as I interact with them: more like an interactive application than a printed page. If I have an opinion on information I find, I can share my thoughts on the subject and see what others might have to say.

More and more, the internet is about allowing me to access the kind of information I want, when I want it, and it makes me wonder what more can change to my data more accessible and easier to consume. When it comes to having a ymax chip inside our heads with a head-up-display inside our retinas, I’ll probably be an early adopter, but I do have a couple of opinions in how the internet could be speeding up progress in the shorter term (comments welcomed btw).

  1. Pages should be fast! These days I expect instant response from interaction I engage in. It is so last century to click on something and put the kettle on before I get a response. Tools like YSlow, building pages with speed in mind, and generally simple rules like using CDNs, limiting HTTP requests per page and optimising the hell out of the delivery of pages are not just desirable, they are a must!
  2. Content should (where financially possible) be open. What I mean by this is that although there are some big internet companies out there with some pretty clever people working for them, this pales into insignificance compared with what the millions of developers worldwide can create using open APIs and open data that the large companies can provide. If a company opens its APIs, it gets feedback and innovation in what can happen with that content online. The internet is far better off for these innovations, and it inspires the big internet companies to improve.

So whilst people’s computers increase in performance and (wow, even Telstra in Australia) home/business internet access improves, in my mind the one thing that the internet can really improve on is global innovation through technology that companies like Yahoo! are sharing.  Try the Performance, Yahoo! User Interface library and Yahoo! Query Language for ways that performance, user experience and innovation through data can be achieved.

The internet is never going to stand still; neither should the innovation that fuels it.

Wilf
Yahoo!7 Technical Director

HSCNet Event

July 2nd, 2009 Add comment

Neil (Wilf) Wilkinson, our head tech guy will be part of an event at Macquarie Uni in Sydney later this month alongside folks from Google and QUT.

Wilf will be giving the Uni students, researchers and academics an intro to Yahoo!’s Open strategy, with focus on YQL (Yahoo! Query Language). He’ll also give an overview of YQL and will do demonstrations of building mashup’s on the spot.

No pressure Wilf!

More info on the day is below.

Macquarie University, 27-28 July
http://www.hcsnet.edu.au/workshops/mashups09

HCSNet, the ARC Research Network in Human Communication Science, is sponsoring a hands-on workshop on building mashups at Macquarie University on the 27th and 28th of July. This is a practical workshop with extensive tutorials on how to use the interfaces to the Google and Yahoo!  Mashup services.  Participants will gain first-hand knowledge on how to build mashup’s and put this to immediate use.

This is a unique opportunity to learn how to build high impact web applications at low cost.  Contact Diego Molla (Email: diego.molla-aliod@mq.edu.au; Tel: 02 9850 9531) or visit http://www.hcsnet.edu.au/workshops/mashups09.

Amanda Millar
Communications Manager, Yahoo!7

Geek Girls Dinner @ Yahoo!7

June 23rd, 2009 2 comments

gcd01Last week Yahoo!7 hosted Geek Girls Dinner in its Sydney office. With over a hundred geek girls and their guests coming from across different companies the event was a huge success!

It was yet another opportunity for we Yahoo!7 Engineers and the local geeks to mingle and to share the huge knowledge base.

The event started with a welcome speech by Neil Wilkinson, Technical Director, Yahoo!7. He welcomed the geeks and, I should say, inaugurated the ceremony officially.

Allan Shone and I, who are both engineers here at Yahoo!7, spoke about Yahoo Query Language (YQL). I did the presentation introducing YQL to the geeks, showing its awesomeness using examples. Allan showed a working demo of his mini project and got the wows from the crowd! :)

Here is the slidecast for this presentation.

The lightning talks were very cool with Georgi Knox talking about “Gaming”, Candace Wong about “Automated User Interface Testing”, Jenny Gordon about “Configuring a Cisco Router” and lastly Thomas Given-Wilson gave a very amusing talk about “Recovering from Linux”.

The evening went on in an exciting and geeky fashion. There was plenty of food, drinks and gaming on Guitar Hero and Foos. Yeah it’s not a Yahoo! event without Foos!

A big applause should be given to my fellow Yahoos, Karen Williams, Jay Buasri and last but not the least, Claudia Jayne Mikaelian, who organised the event and made sure all the strings pulled together on the night.

Looking forward to the YOS session on Build Your Own Search Service (BOSS) in July.

Pratibha Gannavarapu
Technical Yahoo!

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