This morning, I knew Yahoo acquired Del.icio.us. Since I am both MyWeb and Del.icio.us user, I am looking forward to how Del.icio.us will integrate with MyWeb.

Yahoo search blog said:

Finally, don’t be surprised if you see My Web and del.icio.us borrow a few ideas from each other in the future.

Joshua answered in the mail list:

[They will be] Separate. Obviously there will be some cross-pollination.

So let’s wait and see. Currently 50% of my links go into del.icio.us, and 50% go into MyWeb. Why I use two services in the same time? Let’s have a comparison:

  • Del.icio.us has good social feature. Links are easy to share. With the latest integration with firefox, it’s user friendly. And lots of early adopters make an exerllent user background. So what locks me in is not the system, but the users.
  • MyWeb has good search feature. With Yahoo’s resources, its service is more reliable. And it saves copy of the web page. (IMO, del.icio.us can never get such kind of resources if it keeps independent.) But it’s not very easy to share links with non-Yahoo users. There’s no way to use it as a public link blog.

So with these pros and cons of the two services, I have to split my links into two places. Here is how I use the two services: Dynamic and index pages go into del.icio.us. Static articles, especially expiring news stories go into MyWeb.

How much value does people powered search provide?

I would like to take personalization as an example. Findory and TailRank are two of my favorite personalized search engine. As to the big difference between them, TailRank is people powered, while Findory is not. TailRank goes a clever way to take both number of sharing and inbound links into account to determine how important a story is.

Currently, I cannot tell which service is better for me. I just use them both. In my experience, people powered does make sense, but not very big sense. We still have to wait at least several months to be benefit from this acquisition.

And don’t forget there are other players in the playground. As this Red Hering article pointed out:

Many so-called “web 2.0” companies, including Wink and Jookster, are also exploring improving search by compiling users’ recommendations. Blog search engine Technorati makes heavy use of tags to help connect users to what they’re looking for. Digg uses user input to point to interesting technology news and web sites in real time.

Update: Greg Yardley pointed out what actually Yahoo bought:

It’s the del.icio.us community that can’t be duplicated. Yahoo didn’t buy del.icio.us’ technology; it bought our bookmarks and tags - and for quite a price. Assume 300,000 people make use of del.icio.us in a meaningful, regular way (a wild-ass guess, but for the sake of argument) and assume the purchase price is around $30 million. That means my personal bookmarks just got sold for a hundred bucks. Which is considerably more [should be less] than I thought they were worth.

Thanks to Arnet for mentioning this on del.icio.us list.

Update: David Beisel talked about monetization of bookmark services. He said, “With the Yahoo Delicious acquisition, there is one less acquirer out there available to shop for a competitive service. This situation leaves the remainder of the field ‘validated’ by the acquisition, but challenged to truly build a business model around their offering.” see The Search for Delicious Bookmarking Revenue