Title: Implications of Push Technology for Information Management
1Implications of Push Technology for Information
Management
- Laura Larsson
- larsson_at_u.washington.edu
- Health Services
- University of Washington
- revised June 1998
2Objectives
- to learn what push technology is
- to look at who is pushing information at us
- to learn about the different methods of receiving
pushed information - to see if the advantages outweigh the
disadvantages - to learn what to do about pushGlut
3The Past and Present
- newspapers
- radio
- TV
- magazines
- comics
- newsletters
4Push Technology
- today we are in a new era of information
dissemination - personal considerations (the content user)
- business considerations (the content producer)
5Personal Considerations
- for those who have access to it, email is
generally considered by many to be their personal
favorite news delivery system - but it does not quite satisfy the need for
regularly updated (hourly) business or health
news - nor can it provide us with graphics with its
visual excitement
6Personal Considerations, continued...
- the Web is pretty passive - you go to it and
rummage around until you find something useful
amidst the irrelevant information - not always very efficient since you can get
thousands of hits - difficult to have the time to search AND to
evaluate the results
7Business Considerations
- having the consumer stumble across your site is
not good business - business needs a way of getting information to
you, the user, and to their employees - push is also known as "webcasting"
8What is Push Technology?
- the "push" technologies are new services, which
have created software tools, that learn what
information you want to receive via the Web and
bring it to your desktop - they push (via email or the Web) personalized
information to your desktop - webcasting was introduced by the PointCast
Network in May 1996
9What is?, continued...
- enables businesses to
- develop a consistent base of users
- target their content and advertisements more
effectively - offer end users the information they need
10Push Agents
- the software which grabs the information provided
by the content provider or push vendor for you is
known as an agent - you download or purchase the software from the
content provider through a server
11Channels
- the topic areas are called channels
- a channel is a mechanism for transmitting
Web-based content and applications - channels feature selected content from the Web
sites of services that have affiliated with the
respective providers
12Content Providers
- the people and companies which provide the push
vendors with information are called content
providers - content providers and push vendors can be the
same people - e.g., Reuters and AP are content providers for
news services - e.g., companies which write press releases or
advertising are also content providers
13Push Vendors
- provide different content/information because
they have contract with different content
providers - provide access to varying numbers of channels
(topics) - usually requires specific software (for
downloading or caching the content) - prices free through variable pricing through a
subscription
14Selected Push Vendors
- Air Media, AirMedia Live Internet Broadcast
Network - Alpha Microsystems, AlphaConnect StockVue
- BackWeb, BackWeb Technologies
- Berkeley Systems, AfterDark Online
- Caravelle, Transceive
15- DataChannel, DataChannel
- Diffusion, IntraExpress
- Firefly, Firefly
- InCommon, Downtown
- Intermind, Communicator
- Marimba, Castanet
16- Microsoft, IE 4.0
- NETdelivery, NETdelivery
- Netscape, Communicator
- PointCast, The PointCast Network
- Smartpartner, FirstFloor,
- Wayfarer, INCISA
- Source http//www.torso.com/webcasting.html
17AfterDark
- is a series of screen savers which brings news
and information direct to your desktop - Sports Illustrated Online, USA TODAY, The Wall
Street Journal Interactive Edition, and ZD Net
Computing Central, stock quotes and sports scores - you can customize the news you want, and
determine how often the news is updated. - download After Dark Online from
lthttp//www.afterdark.com/gt
18After Dark Image
19AirMedia
- content providers include CNN, Reuters,
Knight-Ridder, US Newswire, UPI - offers various service plans running from free,
PowerUp, to their Premier Plan for 5.95/month
(plus email notification is 9.95) - headline news and stories
- uses application software
- notification of updates via animated icons
- lthttp//www.airmedia.com/gt
20AirMedia Image
21BackWeb
- has 40 channels (games, online shopping,
software, etc) - download program
- gives user multimedia
- can create specialized channels for businesses
- hard disk drive hog (takes up lots of space)
- lthttp//www.backweb.com/gt
22BackWeb Image
23Downtown, InCommon
- uses a toolbar, called a channel bar, to deliver
information - green square indicates new content
- easy to add channels and to personalize content
- use buttons to enable you to do the personalizing
- lthttp//www.incommon.com/index.htmlgt
24FireFly Passport
- produces tools which enable content providers to
register and push information to users - innovative profile management tool (Passport
Office) - advanced collaborative filtering technology
(Catalog Navigator) - helps users find others who share their tastes
while enabling sites to learn about their users
interests (Community Navigator) - http//www.firefly.net/
25HeadLiner, Lanacom
- said to be a competitor of PointCast
- free software from http//www.lanacom.com/Pro/base
.html - features the ability to display headlines in the
conventional manner (news ticker, screen saver,
and web page articles) - also uses a unique and extremely nifty display
called the NewsTitle viewer - this is a ticker that scrolls news for you in the
title bar of your applications
26SmartPartner, FirstFloor
- supplier of web-based document delivery products
and technologies for application developers - agents, targeted notification, and off-line
viewing - program is called Smart Catalog and is available
from http//www.firstfloor.com/index.html
27Individuals HeadsUp
- Is a personalized, interactive news service (30
day free trial) - high-technology, business financial services,
and healthcare - lthttp//www.individual.com/services/headsup/headsu
p.htmgt - scan gt20,000 stories and 700 sources
- delivery by fax or email
28Intermind (Software)
- you select which topics you'd like to receive
from the Web sites you specify - maintains a database of information on a user's
hard drive from which it builds HTML pages that
are presented in their browser - employs a publish-and-subscribe system
- enables businesses and individuals to easily
publish customizable channels of multimedia
content and push it to customers or employees
29Intermind, continued...
- Communicator 2.0 is due in June or July
- is expected to include a "dynamic publisher"
option that allows providers with database
content to generate updates on the fly based on
users' interests - e.g., H.O.T. Coupons can provide coupons based
on your Zip code automatically - http//www.intermind.com/
30Individuals Newspage
- requires proprietary software (Headliner) to
manage the news from this site - headlines delivered in three formats Ticker Bar,
Screen Saver or News Title bar - create a profile of your interests after
registration - lthttp//www.newspage.com/gt
31Newspage Image
32Newspage Health Topics
33Marimba Castanet (Software)
- a software tool for content providers
- uses Java-based software and delivers Java-based
software - multimedia
- variety of channels of information including
games, databases, audio... - http//www.marimba.com/
34Marimba Image
35Microsoft's Webcasting
- Microsoft's Channel Definition Format is
primarily based on XML (eXtensible Markup
Language), a proposed standard which lies
somewhere between HTML and SGML in graphic
flexibility. The World Wide Web Consortium has a
draft of XML at the W3.ORG" - Source Vin Crosbie, Webcasting listserv, March
13, 1997 lthttp//www.pushconcepts.com/microsoft.h
tmgt - lthttp//www.microsoft.com/ie/ie40/content/cdfben.h
tmgt
36Microsoft Active Channel Image
37NETDelivery
- "Community Marketing" - link people with common
interests and shared affinities to organizations
that offer valuable information, products and
services - delivery of catalogs and information
- subscriber "Bill of Rights" that protects users
personal information - lthttp//www.netdelivery.com/gt
38Netscape Netcaster
- Netcaster is the new component of Netscape
Communicator that enables push delivery of
information and offline browsing - users can subscribe to the information they want
and have it delivered automatically - offline browsing of downloaded info
- background downloading and user-scheduled updates
- Marimba Castanet support
- lthttp//home.netscape.com/comprod/products/communi
cator/netcaster_frameset.htmlgt
39Netcaster Image
40PointCast Software
- is the most well-known push service
- was the first push service to broadcast
up-to-the-minute news directly to a viewers
computer - pioneered the concept of broadcasting
personalized news and other information tailored
to the interests of each viewer - download special software which streams
information across your computers screen from
lthttp//www.pointcast.com/products/20.htmlgt
41Pointcasts Success
- works with businesses to create extranets
- companies create business-to-business extranet
broadcasts by selecting webcasts from desired
partners and suppliers - PointCast is already pulling in an estimated 7
million per quarter just from ads - source lthttp//www5.zdnet.com/cshopper/content/97
05/cshp0048.htmlgt
42Wayfarer INCISA
- designed primarily for corporate users to push
information to their employees - delivers updated information within 15 minutes
- combines businesses content with content from
outside content vendors - delivers headlines using reusable Shockwave
animations combined with custom graphics and
sound - http//www.wayfarer.com/
43Really Personal
- create your own Web page on Excite or Crayon
- Lauras Channel (Excite)
- lthttp//home.excite.com/gt
- Larsson Times (Crayon)
- lthttp//crayon.net/gt
44Lauras Channel Image
45Larsson Times Image
46Larsson Times, continued...
47Summary of Push Methods
- stand alone programs (PointCast)
- streaming
- program goes out and comes back with headlines
and information - wallpaper/screen saver programs (AfterDark)
- Web page programs
48How Do You Know When New Information Has Been
Delivered?
- push clients notify users
- green lights on your computer
- through E-mail
- playing a sound
- displaying an icon on the desktop
- popping up an application
- displaying headlines on a screen saver,
wallpaper, or a scrolling ticker tape
49Who Uses Webcasting?
- religious organizations
- newspapers
- businesses
- universities
50Questions to Consider before Signing Up to Get
Content
- can you select the content you want and as much
of it as you want? - can you decide how you want to get the
information? - by downloading a program (agent)
- surfing to a content providers site to get the
information you need - do you want a screen saver, a banner, or ??
51Questions...
- do you know anything about the content providers,
i.e., are they well known providers? - how often is the content updated?
52Questions, continued...
- is the content free or worth it if I have to pay?
- how much time do I have to read the content?
- is the program I have to download easy to install
and use?
53Advantages of Push Technology
- designed to enhance the information processing
and collection abilities of knowledge workers - they allow us to determine (customize) what is
delivered to our desktops, and to choose when and
how we want to view it - we can schedule updates when we want them
54Advantages, continued...
- a time saver because you dont have to spend the
time looking for information it comes to you - because there are two different flavors of
"push" one for consumers (individual users) and
another for businesses you can tailor information
to your needs at home, and at work
55Advantages, continued...
- each information pusher makes different deals
with different partners which means you have
access to different newspapers and sources of
information - the next versions of Microsoft Internet Explorer
and Netscape Navigator will have channel changers
built in - will eventually enable offline browsing
56Advantages, continued...
- users dont have to fool around with Boolean
logic - You assign an electronic agent to seek out
information that falls under a predetermined
topic and return it to your desktop
57Problems with Push Technology
- may require a separate program
- lack of standards for channels
- Setting up a profile can be a problem
- With some push technologies, you can only have
one "must contain" word or phrase per topic. An
"OR" version would help a lot - Still too much dross in with the good
information i.e., push technology may never be
precise enough to be truly useful
58Problems with Push Technology
- You will likely never see the kind of valuable
information that only a manual search can uncover - Can we trust filters or profiles to provide the
most relevant information? - Users may require some help setting up a profile
- It can be a big drain on a users Windows system
resources
59Problems, continued...
- Push technologies don't always work the way youd
like them to work - e.g., a minor interest may assume major
importance through no fault of yours - When you click on a newspaper article from the
New York Times, you may be asked to pay to read
it (SURPRIZE!)
60Problems, continued...
- no overarching table of contents or search engine
- All the newspaper/magazine/newsfeeds need to band
together to produce a comprehensive searchable
current events database - if you subscribe to more than one service, you
may end up with duplicate articles
61Problems, continued...
- Users may have to register with a content
provider which then determines which content goes
to that viewer - The user may also be required to pay for segments
of the information on particular sites
62Problems, continued...
- Some of the vendors only archive information for
short periods of time (as little as 6 months) - links wont work after awhile which means you
cannot link to that information - The lines between technology providers and
content providers will become increasingly blurred
63Problems...
- Philosophical - and method of working - question
- Do people want tools to find information
themselves, or are they content to have it served
to them?
64How Do You Prevent PushGlut?
- dont sign up for more than two push services
- limit the number of channels you select
- watch how often you schedule updates
- dont forget about using email updates instead of
desktop push - reevaluate often since new players are coming
online all the time
65Preventing PushGlut...
- ask yourself ...
- if the data you see streaming across your desktop
is really valuable enough to use up your precious
time, i.e., is it valuable? - is it exactly what you want?
66Preventing PushGlut...
- how many clicks does it take to get to the
information? - do you have to drill down to get it or does the
whole story display - sometimes its easier to be your own filter and
go out after what you want through the search
engines
67The Future
- personalization of information
- channel-surfing may well replace Web-surfing as
the pastime of choice on the Internet - likely to be lots of opportunity to be informed
68The Future, continued...
- businesses will make money
- 36 percent of all advertising revenues on the
Internet will be generated by push
technologies--a 5.7 billion piece of a 19.1
billion Web market pie - source lthttp//www5.zdnet.com/cshopper/content/97
05/cshp0048.htmlgt
69Summary...
- weve defined push technology
- weve looked at a few examples of companies doing
Webcasting - weve seen how they push their information at us
- weve discussed some of the problems
- weve peeked at the future
70Appendix Definition of Push Model
- A data distribution model in which selected data
is automatically delivered into the user's
computer at prescribed intervals or based on some
event that occurs. Contrast with the pull model,
in which the user specifically asks for something
by performing a search or requesting an existing
report, video or other data type. - Browsing the Web is an example of the pull model,
while PointCast and Castanet
are push models. PointCast was the first Internet
service to become extremely popular due to
pushing selected news and stock quotes into a
user's machine at prescribed intervals. Marimba's
Castanet provides a push model delivery system
for updating applications as well as distributing
publishing content. - source lthttp//www.techweb.com/encyclopedia/defin
eterm.cgi?sstringPUSHMODELgt