Google’s apparently releasing base.google.com. While some see it as a Craigslist play, it’s a lot more than that: Google has seen the future, and the future is one big mashup of microcontent. “A” microcontent is a small chunk of information, typically with its own URL, but not actually a web page. It’s not a web page because it’s raw content, without being wrapped in navigation, disclaimers, etc. As some of the Ajax portals show, there’s a confluence here: Ajax allows for easy manipulation of microcontent. Tiddlywiki is based around the idea of microcontent, and allows you to conjure up some microcontent by clicking on a Microlink.
Classified advertising is the most obvious path to revenue, so the screenshot emphasises commercial applications. But a classified ads is just one special case of Microcontent. As they say: “Google Base is Google’s database into which you can add all types of content”. Sounds a lot like a repository of general-purpose microcontent.
Ladies and Gentlemen, get your mashup on! I’m betting on a Maps-Base mashup about 90 seconds after Base goes live. Google probably won’t bother integrating Maps themselves - they may as well sit back and see what works before buying one or developing their own solution.
In other Google-Ajax news, Jonathan Boutelle points out that Google’s foray into mobile is full-on motivated by Ajax: being offline is a big objection to migrating desktop apps, so Google wants to render that a non-issue.

4 responses so far ↓
1 Software As She’s Developed - Google Base = Flickr + Odeo + Typepad + … // Oct 26, 2005 at 11:35 am
[…] iew today seems to be that Google Base is all about classifieds, but as mentioned earlier, it’s much more than that. (Incidentally, still smarting I missed the “All Your […]
2 Richard Rodger // Oct 27, 2005 at 10:28 am
Exactly right. All this talk offGoogle Base being an EBay/Craigslist competitor is totally missing the point.
3 Zeev Barkan // Nov 1, 2005 at 3:55 pm
If you want to see a real microcontent engine that works right now on the Web and remixes text go to http://qtsaver.dynalias.com/
Youll see how QTSaver extracts multiple large chunks of microcontent from search engines like Google and puts them on one results page.
4 Zeev Barkan // Nov 3, 2005 at 6:23 am
I quoted you on my today’s posting.
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