CSS is not hard to learn

Wise words: CSS is not hard to learn — if you recog­nise it for what it is! .

I’m still amazed that we’re still hav­ing these dis­cus­sions, try­ing to per­suade poor coders to get their act together and the adver­tis­ing peo­ple (who should’ve stuck to print ads instead of mess­ing with a biz they appa­rantly don’t under­stand) that going for ‘pixel-perfect’ doesn’t make us think they’re really cool as they demand good quality…

Cross-Browser means “functioning in dif­fer­ent browsers” not “looking the same”

I still get the “I have a back­ground in graphic design so of course I want it to look per­fect — just as the print­outs I gave you”. News­flash: You can’t have it that way. And your job’s in danger.

Web Development ,
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[DK] Familie og medier

Stig Hjar­vard i sid­ste uges Men­nesker og Medier pÃ¥ P1:

¥r fam­i­lien tager i El-Giganten og han­dler ind af elek­tro­n­isk grej i week­enden, sÃ¥ er det ikke fordi de har forpligtet sig pÃ¥ livs­lang læring der­hjemme inden de tog afsted, vel.

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[DK] Netdagbøger

¥, sÃ¥ lad os fÃ¥ lukket den een gang for alle. “Weblogs er dagbøger pÃ¥ net­tet” er en klas­sisk ind­vend­ing (underforstÃ¥et, dagbøger er ikke inter­es­sante for en bredere gruppe). Nu skriver B.T.‘s Kun for kvin­der en artikel, der ud over at være nogen­lunde hæderlig og nævner d’herrer Winther og Bal­slev, har denne her:

Skriver du dag­bog pÃ¥ net­tet?

¥ vil Kun for Kvin­der meget gerne høre fra dig.

Send en mail til kunforkvinder@bt.dk

¥ alle der ikke skriver ind skriver noget andet. Lad os sam­men­ligne tal bagefter.

Med B.T.‘s fak­tabokse kan alle føle sig A-list. Tak B.T.

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Rebecca Blood

Two min­utes late, I’m at the Rebecca Blood event on cor­po­rate blog­ging. It’s tight and to the point.

No live­blog­ging from me. Did that yes­ter­day — today is my day off. Kim Elmose is blog­ging live and links to fel­low livebloggers.

At time of writ­ing (shit, now I’m live­blog­ging) Rebecca is talk­ing about blog­ging poli­cies which links to a dis­cus­sion we had yes­ter­day at CMF2005 where we man­aged to setup our own blog­ging round­table session.

More on that in a seper­ate post, but over­all it’s fair to say the non-bloggers were caught in a fear par­a­digm. Yeah, yeah, so blogging’s good — but how about [insert stan­dard cor­por­ta­tion fear].

Blood is attack­ing the (impor­tant, I agree) sub­ject by turn­ing it around: Blog­ging poli­cies are meant to be a help to employ­ees blog­ging so every­one knows who’s in charge, what they can and can’t do etc. Which is a much more pleas­ant and vision­ary way of look­ing at it…

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CMS vendors

Seen it before… Quick tip for any­one demo­ing any­thing: Don’t demo core func­tion­al­ity that every­one else has. Show off what you do dif­fer­ently and tell us how. Demo­ing access per­mis­sions as pretty much the only fea­ture in a 7 minute pre­sen­ta­tion seems weird to me…

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Understanding the online customer’s behavior

Jacob Hancke is giv­ing exam­ples of what not to do: He’s bash­ing the web­site of the loca­tion we’re at. Bigtime.

On to num­bers: Improve your web­site, make it pay off over time instead of putting money into the black hole that is mar­ket­ing. Good points through the pre­sen­ta­tion, hint­ing the many para­me­ters that make up the final outcome.

As a whole, all web projects must include proper work on usabil­ity, strat­egy etc. For the sake of argu­ment though, one could ask how this is directly rel­e­vant on a CMS-oriented con­fer­ence. Impor­tant for every­one in the work around the (con­tent man­aged) web­site? Sure. But so is a lot of other things, and they’re — as I see it — more part of an over­all ‘web­site’ context.

To be fair, the “test, damnit”-point is spot on as con­tent man­age­ment ulti­mately is (among other things) about let­ting non-coders cre­ate. Depend­ing on the setup, con­tent cre­ators can get quite cre­ative. That’s cool — remem­ber to test.

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Participants?

There are prob­a­bly a few decent rea­sons to keep the list of par­tic­i­pants closed. It does cause sev­eral prob­lems, though. The net­work aspect suf­fers and it’s hard to tell if the dif­fer­ent tracks are suit­able for the vari­ety of attendees.

Jacob Hancke made an even more impor­tant point: As we entered the room, he shook hands with every­one, ask­ing them what they did and where (I tried to keep it real). He wasn’t pro­vided with attendee-information, so it’d been a bit hard prepar­ing his talk.

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Content Management Organisation

Next ses­sion: How to ensure that con­tent is man­aged con­tin­u­ally.

How to lay out the man­age­ment struc­ture, what to present to con­tent edi­tors, con­tent cre­ators etc.

Not a hi-tech sub­ject. Which is inter­est­ing. CMS suc­cess rarely has to do with the sys­tem you’re using. Fail­ure might have, but at its core, con­tent man­age­ment is a prac­tice (as Byrne noted) — and that process should be managed.

Stan­dards for con­tent cre­ation. Don’t let it slide. Com­mon sense. What’s inter­est­ing is how CMS ven­dors can facil­i­tate best prac­tises. Con­text sen­si­tive help/link to guides? Dif­fer­ent imple­men­ta­tion processes, div­ing more into usabil­ity, writ­ing, ‘whole process’? Defi­nately worth a think.

Les­son: “The sys­tem will never do any­thing for you”

Advice: Set peo­ple up in con­fer­ence calls, meet­ings what­ever. Let them brag, get the com­pe­ti­tion and shar­ing of knowl­edge going. Can’t help to think about Flickr. It’s tan­gi­ble, play­ful, net­worked. What if con­tent edi­tors felt the same way about a site they man­age that they feel about keep­ing the inter­ac­tion and feed­back flow­ing on Flickr?

Aside: This (small) ses­sion has more women than men. And the men blog or rep­re­sent a ven­dor. Go figure.

Sec­ond in set:

Case study: DSB, Jenny Anneberg Ole­sen.

Web­site pur­pose (Dan­ish peo­ple, now you know): Ticket sale, prod­uct infor­ma­tion, traf­fic infor­ma­tion, press.

The usual big cor­po­ra­tion defend­ing: “We made lots of com­pro­mises, every­one wants to go on the front­page, the design i five years old but got imple­mented last year etc.” Not directly CMS-related, but it’s a shame to see all the big guys doing it — in some respects — the wrong way. At least, stop apol­o­giz­ing. If that’s how it will be fine. If not, fix it — and open up; let us know you’re work­ing on it.

On centralization/decentralization:

Only few peo­ple can add images etc. Super users have power. Pro-decentralization: Encour­age users by giv­ing them respon­si­bil­ity. For those of us not forced to work in larger organ­i­sa­tions, this is obvi­ous. Funny, how more peo­ple usu­ally means more hand­hold­ing… Inter­est­ingly, DSB doesn’t really use work­flow, rather they email back and forth from the cen­tral con­tent man­agers to the con­tent cre­ators in need of images, graph­ics etc.

Final advice: Build a strong organ­i­sa­tion around your CMS. Have sup­port at hand.

The case unfor­tu­nately turned out quite light. No real insights…

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Complexity

Just a quick com­bined CMF2005-disclaimer and per­sonal opin­ion on complexity.

I missed yesterday’s pro­gram because I was demo­ing an umbraco web­site I made. That’s the dis­claimer part (as in “I hang with the umbraco crew”) — and an excel­lent oppur­tu­nity to sec­ond Hartvig’s take on the com­plex­ity as the new black notion.

I basi­cally did the “Write, Pre­view, Pub­lish” walk­through, pointed to spe­cial mod­i­fi­ca­tions made to their imple­men­ta­tion. And that was it. They wanted to use their web­site as a com­mu­ni­ca­tion plat­form and liked the sim­ple inter­face where some­one already had made a deci­sion not to bloat every­thing with but­tons and funky func­tion­al­ity noone’s using (or should be using). They didn’t have a list of prob­lems that needed solv­ing, func­tion­al­ity that could be “nice to have”, ambi­tious plans to take over the world by push­ing but­tons. Their focus was on writ­ing and select­ing con­tent. Which is why I think they’ll walk away with their task com­pleted and their mind clear.

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CMF2005

I’m here, sit­ting with the usual sus­pects (Hartvig, ¸tter, Winther) which is always nice.

Of course I didn’t man­age to get to the right address (went for the footer infor­ma­tion) so I started the day off with a lit­tle walk. Which wasn’t too bad.

What I couldn’t have found on the web­site however…is the sched­ule. I’m on a Mac with Safari and spent a cou­ple of days being grumpy that I couldn’t get an overview of the three days (that I knew was the dura­tion of the con­fer­ence). Finally com­plained to a friend that informed me that he didn’t have any trou­ble. So basi­cally, the site doesn’t just ren­der dif­fer­ently in dif­fer­ent browsers — it selects con­tent dif­fer­ently in dif­fer­ent browsers.

Maybe someone’s CMS won’t let them use the markup and css they want?

Today’s first keynote is Tony Byrne of CMS Watch. Winther var opmærksom fra starten.

We are here.

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5 Comments

GPRS loves AJAX

It’s true — they’re mak­ing out in the bus I’m rid­ing this very minute.

30 minute bus ride + lap­top + gprs-enable cell­phone + Flickr.…could mean nasty, nasty load times and a hefty traf­fic fine. With Ajax: Hit Esc, for­get the images, tag away — quick response, no irrel­e­vant traf­fic. Sweat.

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We want your soul

TUAW reports that Pod­star will release demonic cases for the iPod nano. As irony will have it, some of my great loves are iPods…and vinyl. Which reminded me:

Check out the fast-paced DNB-track from Adam Free­land; We want your soul. And the hilar­i­ous mashup-video using one hour of VHS from day­time tv. The con­nec­tion? I have that track on a beau­ti­ful lit­tle piece of 7″ blood red vinyl. Spooooky.

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Co-creating with ¸ger?

Tomorrow’s ques­tion time over at Politiken.dk (click now — that page won’t last forever).

Seems like ask­ing for trou­ble

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Wake Up Call to Mainstream Media

Get It?: Wake Up Call to Main­stream Media:

Wake up call to Main­stream Media: Hello, you’re look­ing at your audi­ence of the not to dis­tant future! They wont be sat­is­fied by web pages that read like a book. And for­get about try­ing to tell them what to think. They want to form and com­mu­ni­cate their own opin­ion. In short: They’re not tak­ing any non-interactive cr.. So get your act together and com­mu­ni­cate in a fash­ion that appeals to this web savvy audience.

So very well put.

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Email tics

Mer­lin Mann; Five email tics I’d love for you to lose. A good 5ive on how some­one should get evolv­ing. Soon. My favourite:

The 18-line sig about all the Bad Things that will hap­pen to me if I ever reveal the con­tents of your priv­i­leged, con­fi­den­tial (and unen­crypted) message.

Some­times I won­der if most peo­ple wouldn’t be quite impressed with the state of the dig­i­tal age and all the things that would work more than well if they just got into the habit of behav­ing well online. Most prob­lems are cul­tural — how do we train peo­ple with­out flam­ing them, help­ing them off the hin­ter­web [pdf]?

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2 Comments

23 Photo Sharing

Was actu­ally try­ing to per­suade the 23team to imple­ment a few fea­tures before mak­ing the real move from Flickr to 23, but screw that — I’m going 23 right now!.

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CMF2005

I’ll be at CMF2005 this Wednes­day, try­ing to do some live cov­er­age. I’ll bring my gear and see what happens.

Give me a shout if you’re gonna be there.

We’re think­ing about doing a small blog­ger meetup. Stay tuned for details.

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Farewell, David

On behalf of the Dan­ish peo­ple, a hand­ful of Copenhagen-based blog­gers are wish­ing David a nice trip.

Beers and good peo­ple on Mon­day: More info over at Lars’.

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Fixing

Apolo­gies for mess­ing with your aggre­ga­tors; I’m try­ing to fix some details around the site, play with some nice plu­g­ins etc. I’ll let you know when I’m back to my non-communicative self again…

Update: Done play­ing for now. Didn’t do much, but tag­ging is work­ing and the redesign process of the com­ment lay­out on posts has begun…

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New Media Days goes bad and German

Didn’t make it to New Media Days, wanted to see the videos. So my browser crashed. Upon a sec­ond visit, it turns out I don’t have the right Win­dows Media Player. Check­ing the source code gives you, among other things,

Ihr Browser unter­stützt die Ele­mente, die zur kor­rek­ten Ansicht dieser Seite nötig sind, nicht AM besten ver­wen­den Sie Inter­net Explorer 5.5 oder neuer

in an iframe sec­tion — and some spacer gifs — and here’s the good part — link­ing to www.fitnessmaster.de.

Some­one might have gained more by learn­ing about them old media first.…

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[DK] Jeg, Anders Pollas…

…erk­ender igen at Steven Sned­ker altid ved mere end — og ved det før — mig. Bl.a. her pÃ¥ video.

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Blokken — citizen video journalism

Almost for­got to post this. A few weeks back I stum­bled upon a new 15-minute show on Dan­ish national tv DR, Blokken.

Blokken er dit pro­gram. Det er dig der lev­erer og Chris & Lea, der præsenterer.
Udgangspunk­tet er dine oplevelser, fortællinger og tanker og pro­gram­met bestÃ¥r først og fremmest af dine optagelser.

View­ers can send in their own record­ings of any­thing they feel pas­sion­ate about or sim­ply want to share with oth­ers. The mate­r­ial is selected by the editors/presenters and showed with infor­ma­tion on the record­ing device; DV cam, cam­phone etc. Viral clips are shown as well, found by the viewers.

It’s teen-tv, but nev­er­the­less high­lights the change in roles tak­ing place when evey­one can grab a cheap cam­era off the shelves or got it built in to their phones.

I recently blogged about DIY show ˜RD — these guys are on to something…

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[DK] Weblogs skyder frem

Iflg. B.T.:Weblogs sky­der frem.

Fint nok, B.T. anerk­ender fænomenet…tænker man.

Men ak. His­to­rien er bare hen­tet fra Ritzau, der ikke besværer sig med at tænke over, hvor den ender henne. Det hed­der sÃ¥ledes:

Selvom blogs af de tra­di­tionelle medier anses for at være amatøragtige, sÃ¥ siger eksperter, at offent­lighe­den i sti­gende grad kig­ger efter blogs for at fÃ¥ et anderledes billede af nyhedsstrømmen.

Bragt i et ‘tra­di­tionelt medium’ stÃ¥r det under­ligt selv­mod­si­gende tilbage…pÃ¥ en side der — nÃ¥r vi kom­mer tilbage om nogle mÃ¥neder — er forsvun­det. En ellers fin artikel. Den sti­gende kvalitet, den vigtige dia­log og Google og Yahoos vægtning nævnes.

SelvmÃ¥l for avisen igen. Under­gravende his­to­rie, hvis ind­hold man ikke vil tage ved lære af — bragt pÃ¥ automat­pi­lot, hvilket hiver tæppet væk under de klas­siske argu­menter mod bloggen: “Avisen som dagsordensættende, velun­der­bygget, med egne jour­nal­is­ter, bla bla, bla bla”.

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[DK] Podcastdommerne

Vlog-koncept: Smags­dom­merne møder den danske blogosfære, der møder nogle podcasts.

Fire blog­gere i en bil, kam­era i for­ru­den. I højttalerne en frisk pod­cast eller to. Der køres, lyttes og kommenteres.

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Car vlogging notes

Yes­ter­day I did a vlog test. The post was in dan­ish as I laid out a local vlog con­cept and vis­ited the local air­port. Future posts (if I decide to do more — it was mostly a proof of con­cept) might be in eng­lish although I found it a lot more com­fort­able to do it in danish.

I got some nice com­ments for which I’m grate­ful. How­ever, I shouldn’t be made a poster­boy for any­thing else than poor hair groom­ing and bad ligt­ning. Kick­start­ing dan­ish vlog­ging were done by — among oth­ers — these guys: Andreas Haugstrup of solitude.dk and Krist­jans­son of kristjansson.dk. Andreas has done some inter­est­ing research and I was lucky enough to catch a lec­ture he gave a few weeks back intro­duc­ing the world of video blog­gin to a bunch of peo­ple that didn’t know much about blogs. Krist­jans­son has removed a lot of good stuff from his site, but posted some really con­vinc­ing videos some months back.

Notes:

Ozlak found a good link describ­ing the burger joint I vis­ited (in dan­ish): http://www.highways.dk/danmark/kobenhavn/flyvergrillen.php.

The video was made using a (recently phased out) Sony DCR-PC350E which cost me about DKR 8000 incl. VAT. It makes some pretty decent video for its size which I’ve prob­a­bly messed up good with com­pres­sion. (If any­one knows how to com­press for vlog­ging, please let me know).

A related con­cept I thought about is being done over at Drive Time [via Steve Garfield]; on his daily com­mute, Ravi offers to pick up fel­low trav­ellers who then make a vlog post with him. I don’t have my own car and walk to work, so that ended there for me…

Update: Andreas com­ments on my post lead­ing us to nor­dark and a list of dan­ish video blog­gers (Vlogmap). Accord­ing to Andreas I’m the first one doing it in dan­ish. Which I find strange. Rumor has it Andreas is going to post some advice on com­pres­sion etc. Yay! Oh, and Andreas hints that I make shorter posts. He’s soooo right about that.

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