Blinkx Smart Folders Get Smarter
Users can create customizable folders on their PC that will automatically be populated with Web content.Juan Carlos Perez, IDG News Service
Blinkx has improved its Web and PC search software's Smart Folders by turning them into an online content distribution tool and allowing users to share them, the company announced this week.
The Smart Folders functionality, introduced last November, automatically populates topic folders in users' PCs with documents the Blinkx tool collects from users' hard drives and from the Internet.
For example, a user who creates a Smart Folder devoted to a specific sports team will see it get continually populated with relevant documents and files that the Blinkx tool finds on the user's PC and out on the Web.
Now, Web site owners can create what Blinkx calls "customizable" Smart Folders for visitors to install on their own machines. Upon download, these Smart Folders will contain an initial set of the Web site's content and links, which thereafter are automatically updated and added to.
That way, users can receive new content from the Web site without having to visit it. Thus, a Smart Folder of this type becomes a tool for Web site owners to distribute their content.
"It's another kind of [content] subscription mechanism. It's an interesting one with interesting differences [from technologies such as RSS]," says David Schatsky, a Jupiter Research analyst.
Instructions Available
Step-by-step instructions on how to create a downloadable Smart Folder are available online. For Web site owners that want to create a particularly sophisticated Smart Folder, Blinkx also offers individual consulting and assistance.
A Smart Folder is being used by the producers of "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" to promote this upcoming film. The Smart Folder can be obtained on Blinkx.com or by going to the official movie Web site, clicking on the "downloads" button and selecting the "smart folder" option.
It was a coup for a small start-up company such as Blinkx to nab this deal for a major motion picture site, but now comes the hard part of enticing users to download the Smart Folder, a concept most people aren't yet familiar with, Schatsky says.
"It'll be interesting to see how many consumers take the offer, because it can be difficult to explain what this is. It may be a challenge to get consumers to accept the offer," Schatsky says.
Even for those who do install Smart Folders, the jury is still out on whether users will take to the concept of booting up their PCs and opening folders on their desktop to see what's new in them, Schatsky says. "It really boils down to how positive the experience is for users. It's too early to say," Schatsky says.
Learn How to Share
Meanwhile, Blinkx has also upgraded the general Smart Folders technology to let users share them. Thus, now users have the option of sharing a Smart Folder with colleagues, friends, and family members via e-mail. To have the ability to share Smart Folders, users must have Blinkx 3.0, which is the latest version of the Blinkx Internet and PC search product.
Users who don't have Blinkx get a version of the product when they download a "customizable" Smart Folder or accept the invitation to share a Smart Folder. The Blinkx version these users get is lighter in features than the regular one.
By fostering the adoption of the product, this new ability to share Smart Folders also will double as a viral marketing technique for Blinkx, Schatsky says. "Consumers like to share information that they find online with their friends, and this provides another mechanism for consumers to do that, and to the extent they adopt it, it will increase Blinkx's number of users," he says.
The Blinkx product can be downloaded for free from Blinkx.com.
