DrunkenBlog: RSS for Mac OS X Roundtable

Inter­est­ing inter­view, Drunk­en­Blog: RSS for Mac OS X Round­table:

Most of the hype comes from the press, but I’ve been shocked at the lack of shame some peo­ple have about exploit­ing it. RSS does noth­ing new, it’s just mar­gin­ally more con­ve­nient than brows­ing the web­sites man­u­ally. It’s like get­ting VC for browser bookmark.

This and other truths are all in there.

Syndication, Tech
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Extending the range of non-Apple APs using AirPort Express

Good news over at Zawodny’s: The “
Air­Port Express can extend the range only of an Air­Port Extreme or Air­Port Express wire­less net­work” part of Apple’s doc­u­men­ta­tion have both­ered every­one — Amazon.com’s user reviews to the rescue:

For apple users I imag­ine instal­la­tion is a breeze… Well, I use XP and I have got this puppy hooked up to a Linksys wrt54g 1.1 router. Instal­la­tion in this set­ting wasn’t such a nice expe­ri­ence. Since the Apple Express Assis­tant will only auto­mat­i­cally detect Apple wire­less net­works, you have to install the device ini­tially (using an Eth­er­net cable from your router) as its own net­work. Once you have done that you can step back in using the Apple Admin Util­ity to join your cur­rent net­work (you will need to type the name of the net­work in manually).

I don’t have the need, but I do own a cou­ple of Linksys routers so this is good news. On a side note, I just used my AX as a portable AP for the first time. Rocks!

Tech
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iMeat

Quick idea: Con­doms with iSight–look. Com­mon decency keeps me from doing a Pho­to­shop mockup to illus­trate the concept.

Misc.
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Blog redesign, episode 9

A few minor improvements:

The cat­e­gory ‘Bla bla’ is now called ‘Misc.’ — highly orig­i­nal, I know.

My lat­est del.icio.us book­marks have taken the place of the side­bar (which got included in the main post area). The thought behind this divide is that I’m pri­mar­ily using del.icio.us for ‘real’ book­marks; stuff I want to come back to, where I can look some­thing up, resource-type things, whereas the side­blog is more of a quick-post thing. So far I’m not really using del.icio.us that much, but at least the code is in there together with a link to the book­mark feed.

I’m using the Magie RSS PHP library and a code sam­ple snip­pet I found at Mov­able­Blog.

Web Development
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Comments working again

Just a quick note: The com­ment issue wasn’t due to the install of the updated MT-Blacklist after­all. After a few more tries (thanks, Jonas) I dis­cov­ered that the sin­gle char­ac­ter ‘v’ had ended up on the black­list, caus­ing quite a lot of string matches to fuck up.

Pollas.dk
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[DK] Ladbrokes findes

Moblog5(068).jpg
Iflg. Berlingske Tidende er odds på at Inger Chris­tensen får Nobels fred­spris i lit­ter­atur 34 til 1. Ganske fikst; priser til gode for­fat­tere og penge i lom­men. Mere kunst og kul­tur hos Lad­brokes, tak.

Misc.
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TextMate: The Missing Editor for OS X

Text­Mate: The Miss­ing Edi­tor for OS X — it’s finally here. Today is offi­cial “try and see if you can test drive this thing even though you don’t really need to code today”-day.

Web Development
3 Comments

SubEthaEdit tips

Good tips on effi­cient SubEthaEdit use over at 43 fold­ers; SubEthaEdit for meet­ing notes and light project man­age­ment

43 fold­ers, by the way, is a mighty fine place full of good advice on how to get things done. So far I’m up to speed on the ‘feel guilty about not get­ting things done’-part…

Misc.
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Category feeds — and other feeds

Kalsey on cat­e­gory feeds:

If I were to pro­vide a feed for my Mov­able Type tips cat­e­gory, there would be thou­sands of peo­ple read­ing it but never see the other things I write about. In my mind that would be bad, because I’m a bit more well-rounded than my knowl­edge of Mov­able Type.

I thought a bit about my own feeds as I’m slowly mov­ing through the stages of the blog redesign. I’ve wanted to pro­vide more feeds for some time as I think it would be nice to be able to choose between full posts from one blog, all three blogs in one feed, with/without com­ments etc. — or maybe just a feed with con­tent from the ‘bla bla’ (blah blah? misc. per­haps is bet­ter?) and a feed with­out it. I might even gain a few read­ers on that account; peo­ple inter­ested in a cer­tain topic but defi­nately not in get­ting their aggre­ga­tor clut­tered with local Dan­ish nonsense.

On the other hand I’m pretty much with Kalsey on this one. One of the things mak­ing blogs the valu­able tools they are, is the way high-value, to-the-point con­tent get mixed up with the more easy-going, chit-chat’ish per­sonal stuff (per­sonal, not pri­vate). It makes fil­ter­ing weblogs so much eas­ier, just as your favourite librar­ian might not be the best — but the one you like the best. And there’s a good chance that once you tune in to a person’s inter­ests and writ­ing style, you just might end up catch­ing good hints, inter­est­ing reviews etc. from some of the ‘off-topic’ posts (there are no off-topic posts on a per­sonal weblog, I know).

But then again: Hope­fully one’s read­ers are clever enough to decide what’s best for them; I think I’ll go for the ‘more feeds’-approach.

Blogging, Pollas.dk
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First picture taken

Do a Google Search for DSC00001.jpg and see the first pic­tures that peo­ple took on their dig­i­tal cam­eras.

[via
Dig­i­tal Media Minute]

Misc.
1 Comment

Blog redesign, episode 8

More changes. I’ve put in the Word­Count plu­gin to dis­play a word count on the date based archive pages. Upload the plu­gin, use the new tag. That’s it.

The com­ments got an over­haul as well. Using an updated ver­sion of Sim­pleCom­ments I’m now dis­play­ing the com­ment num­ber for eas­ier ref­er­ence (<MTSimpleCommentNumber>) and put in code to estab­lish whether a com­ment is odd or even (<MTSim­pleCom­men­tOdd> returns 1 or 0 respec­tively) — maybe I’ll need that later when I get to the design part.

Added live pre­view too; found the lit­tle scripts at Cyn­ics dot Info — I plan on tak­ing a look at cre­ati­ma­tion later in order to get Tex­tile to work in the live preview.

The look of the blog is slowly get­ting more and more clut­tered with var­i­ous fea­ture place­hold­ers scat­tered all over. Hope to clean up soon. For now, a lot of the fea­tures only get imple­mented on the main blog, leav­ing the side­blog and the cam­blog work­ing — and unclut­tered. Once I get going on the markup and the graphic design, I bet I’ll change stuff anyway.

But while on the sub­ject on com­ments: I haven’t got­ten around to play­ing with Type­Key yet and I’m not even sure I’ll use it. But MT-Blacklist seems to be a bit on the aggres­sive side; so far Jonas and Jes­per have had to email com­ments get­ting blocked with a “ques­tion­able con­tent” error message…which isn’t that great. I have no prob­lems post­ing com­ments, but if you have a minute, please try and leave a com­ment. I need com­ments and track­backs with and with­out html, links etc. I’ve already looked into the con­fig­u­ra­tion setup but haven’t found the bit mess­ing with my comments.

As the dufus I am, of course I didn’t really think about what to do if you can’t post com­ments at all… “If your phone doesn’t work, try call­ing the phone com­pany”. Duh. So: If you’re met by some stu­pid error mes­sage keep­ing you from post­ing, please mail me at anders (at) pollas.dk. Your help is greatly appreciated!

Pollas.dk, Web Development
1 Comment

ProfiMail

Pro­fil­Mail is an email client for your Series 60 device, quite a lot bet­ter than the built in Inbox mail client. Rus­sell Beat­tie has some good com­ments — so far my only com­plaint is that I can’t seem to find a way to not down­load all 2000+ head­ers from my IMAP account and GPRS rates in this coun­try aren’t cheap. The non-Nokia User Inter­face is kind of strange, but it also really works.

[via 3560 and a 12-inch]

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Blog redesign, episode 7

Yet another use­ful plu­gin: Com­pare. It allows you to do those sim­ple lit­tle com­par­isons; did you make the com­ment, is the cat­e­gory ‘Tech’ etc.

So I’ve pre­pared my Stuff cat­e­gory for some addi­tional styling and the com­ments for dis­play­ing whether I par­tic­i­pated or not. For now I’ve just put in placeholders.

After upload­ing the sin­gle file, all you need to do is slap the tags around what­ever you want dis­played and putting in the val­ues of your check.

For instance, to dis­play a sin­gle line of text on top of every com­ment made by you:

<MTIfEqual a="[MTCommentAuthor]" b="yourname">
 <p>This comment was posted by yours truly...</p>
</MTIfEqual>

Pollas.dk, Web Development
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Blog redesign, episode 6

More fun. I’ve installed the Acronym plu­gin which takes care of under­lin­ing and explain­ing and started list­ing the plu­g­ins I use at the bot­tom of the Colophon page.

And I’ve merged my side­blog into the main index so the lit­tle link blurps just show up in their own slightly dif­fer­ent design (to be opti­mized shortly) in between the reg­u­lar posts. So it’s really not a side­blog any­more, but think­ing of all the trou­ble I had renam­ing my moblog into cam­blog, I just might leave that bit for now. I guees it could have been done using a cat­e­gory as well, but I already have links in the side­blog and I kind of like it to be seper­ated that way.

I used Multi­Blog to do it. Really easy to install and set up — and really easy to use. It gives you a replace­ment con­tainer tag for <MTEntries>, <MTMultiBlogEntries>, which lets you spec­ify which addi­tional blogs to include as well as sev­eral extra tags; <MTMultiBlogIfNotLocalBlog>..</MTMultiBlogIfNotLocalBlog> and <MTMultiBlogIfLocalBlog>...</MTMultiBlogIfLocalBlog> allows you to wrap the lay­out markup for the dif­fer­ent blogs. It plugs into MT so all you have to do to make it work, is to spec­ify which blog(s) get­ting posted to should make which other blog(s)‘s index page to rebuild. Easy peasy… I found a nice intro at Mova­log.

Pollas.dk, Web Development
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Blog redesign, episode 5

I’ve just fin­ished imple­ment­ing nice urls. No more data­base IDs fol­lowed by .php — now it’s date based using yyyy/mm/dd/post_title_based_on_title.

And it wasn’t that hard. In MT 3.11 you just go to your Weblog Con­fig and untick “Use Old-Style Archive Links” under Pref­er­ences to get your archives into date mode. Under Archive files you can put < $MTArchiveDate format="%Y/%m/%d"$>/< $MTEntryTitle dirify="1"$> in your indi­vid­ual entry archive file tem­plate (with­out .php) to strip your archive pages for the file exten­sion. Only prob­lem is, that if you rely on your pages to be parsed as php (as I do, I’m includ­ing some side­bar stuff) you need to get .htac­cess to parse your extension-less pages as php…which proved a bit more dif­fi­cult than I’d expected. Dalager helped me out (again), point­ing me to ForceType application/x-httpd-php which — as you might have guessed — sim­ply forces every­thing to be parsed as php. That did the trick; an .htac­cess file with just that line is now dumped into my archives folders.

Pre­vi­ously I didn’t have archive pages for the cam­blog and the side­blog or rather, they were there but weren’t linked any­where. I’ve now made an archives link at the top lead­ing to a monthly overview of the three blogs. I’ve used Kalsey’s Archive Date Header Plu­gin to sort the months by year. I had some trou­ble get­ting a sin­gle page, resid­ing in my blog direc­tory to dis­play links to all of the blogs but finally came up with — what is pretty hack’ish but works — my new archives page: The dif­fer­ent mas­ter archive tem­plates just con­sist of the code to show the links:


<MTArchiveList archive_type="Monthly">
<MTArchiveDateHeader>
<p><b><MTArchiveDate format="%Y"></b></p>
</MTArchiveDateHeader>
<a href="<$MTArchiveLink$>"><MTArchiveDate format="%B"></a> 

</MTArchiveList>

An indi­vid­ual tem­plate then includes these three files using php and dis­plays the cat­e­gories of the main blog. Not very ele­gant but it’ll have to to for now. The links to the monthly pages still include the not-needed-anymore index.php so I still need to get rid of that. And despite not being any good at .htac­cess files, I guess I need to do some magic so links to old archive pages don’t break. On the other hand, the world will prob­a­bly still con­tinue to exist if I don’t.

Oh, and by the way: All pages look like crap. I’m still insist­ing on styling at the very end of this silly project.

Pollas.dk, Web Development
1 Comment

Blog redesign, episode 4

Think I man­aged to install the updated MT-Blacklist. I’ve just been through all com­ments to remove some of the spam that slipped through while the plu­gin was down (we have the same host) and a few oth­ers that some­how found their way to the site.

At first I was a bit con­fused, cause while every­thing is much pret­tier now, I missed the de-spam but­ton. The plu­gin auto-updates, cool, but how do I remove spam already in there? Sur­prise, sur­prise: MT-Blacklist plugs directly into Mov­able Type’s com­ments list­ing, so you just tick your spam off and get MT-Blacklist to do the rest. I can think of a few inter­face improve­ments as you need to go through a few extra steps if your com­ments include too many links, and while I’m sure that’s a good idee, I was left won­der­ing whether the many com­ments I had just care­fully marked were actu­ally being deleted or not. Maybe I’m just tired…

I started off by mark­ing every­thing, plan­ning to just remove the few real com­ments from the list, but it turned out, quite a few good, gen­uine dis­cus­sions had been going on in the com­ments, so I had to reverse my plan. Thanks to every­one for com­ment­ing over the years — and to Dalager for sort­ing out an auto-updater for the pre­vi­ous ver­sion of the Blacklist.

And: If I some­how got you black­listed, please let me know. Apolo­gies in advance! I’ll take a look at Type­key etc. soon — every­thing can happen.

Web Development
1 Comment

Blog redesign, episode 3

Yet another ‘episode’. I’ve renamed the moblog to ‘cam­blog’ (thoughts on that here), changed tem­plates accord­ingly and put a redi­rect line in my .htac­cess file which will hope­fully keep the thou­sands of sub­scribers to my very impor­tant image feed.

Redirect /mblog http://pollas.dk/camblog

So far, my aggre­ga­tor of choice (Shrook) has updated my feed with no com­plaints. Again, let me know if some­thing doesn’t work for you.

As far as “remov­ing design” goes, I’ve had to real­ize that when you don’t really have a design but more of a ‘lay­out with a bit of styling’, that’s kind of hard, so for now that part of the process is put aside. How­ever, I did remove some stuff from the side­bar; var­i­ous links not updated for ages, my blogroll (weblogs from my old Bloglines-account) and searches and ref­er­ers (sic!) which pri­mar­ily were spam and porn bots.

Update: I’m hav­ing prob­lems with image paths, espe­cially as I for some rea­son don’t have the same paths across all my posts. So for now I’ve for­got about redi­rect­ing image fold­ers and will do a proper cleanup later. Feeds should still be fine. Expect the worst.

Pollas.dk, Web Development
1 Comment

Blog redesign, episode 2

If you can see this, I’ve suc­cess­fully upgraded to Mov­able Type 3.11. Upgrad­ing was easy as always, although I — as always — for­got to run the upgrade scripts so the sys­tem wouldn’t rec­og­nize my user, I quickly went through the dif­fer­ent “some­things wrong with my upgrade” stages; hor­ror, think­ing, relief, feel­ing stu­pid — everything’s back to normal.

So now I’ll just play with my new install, check and see what can be done, how cat­e­gories work, exper­i­ment with the dynamic php stuff etc. After that, I’ll see if I can remove some design stuff so I can start imple­ment­ing and rearranging.

If you find any­thing bro­ken, please let me know.

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Blog redesign, episode 1

As expected this took some time, but here we go; a blog redesign wish list / to do list. Listed in no par­tic­u­lar order, here are some of the things I miss and some of the things I would just really like to do better…and var­i­uos tech-ish stuff I just wanna play with.

  • Under­lined acronyms
  • Valid XHTML served as XML, mean­ing run­ning a live validator
  • UTF-8
  • Nice urls
  • Rebuild at ping (com­ments on the indi­vid­ual archive page cur­rently means no auto-rebuild)
  • Search terms highlight
  • Cus­tom fields; cat­e­gory based layouts
  • Sim­ple shar­ing”; side­blog / del.icio.us bet­ter integrated
  • Comment-layout (live pre­view / com­ment count)
  • More feeds (all con­tent, blogs, com­ments etc.)
  • Colophon (list plu­g­ins etc.)
  • Bet­ter archive pages (includ­ing moblog / sideblog)
  • Change front­page layout

And a lot more… But this is a start. I think I’ll start by upgrad­ing to MT 3.11 and see how that works, then I’ll strip the site for most of the design, only keep­ing lay­out styles and start imple­ment­ing fea­tures, repo­si­tion­ing con­tent etc., post­ing as I go along. Hope­fully at the end I will have a fin­ished design to slap onto the pretty markup.

Any feature/layout sug­ges­tions are more than welcome.

Blogging, Pollas.dk, Web Development
4 Comments

Wiki / community sites

The Daily Stan­dards on Build­ing a com­mu­nity site:

Quick sum­mary of this entry for those in a hurry: ALL WIKI SOFTWARE PACKAGES SUCK!

And while a bit bold, the state­ment pretty much sums up my expe­ri­ence with the few wikis I’ve had a look at.

Instiki isn’t that bad, though. I’ve suc­ces­fully installed it on my Power­book in just two steps and besides being easy to install and use, it looks fine.

That said, a small group of us, talk­ing at the Blo­gra­dio end-of-season-party about wikis, all had sim­i­lar expe­ri­ences; most wiki pack­ages are pretty hor­ri­ble design-wise and as the pur­pose of wikis really are to just get going a lit­tle pret­ty­fi­ca­tion defi­nately wouldn’t hurt. So we thought about pick­ing one of them and do a lit­tle design work on it. Not a bad idea, really…

Tech
1 Comment

Does IT matter conference

Here goes (more cov­er­age at it.fdih.net, dalager.com, akav.dk):

Wel­come by Claus Hjort­ing, FDIH. Carr him­self is late and will be arriv­ing in 10 min­utes. “It is fair to say we don’t fully agree that IT doesn’t matter”.

First speaker, Thomas Honoré. Intro about IBM’s busi­ness. Ini­tial state­ment: IT itself might not be strate­gic, what we want to accom­plish, how­ever, is. Is the bridge to Swe­den strate­gic? Is IT-strategies non­sense? Don’t look at IT iso­lated, always keep focus on the end goal.

Thomas Hon­ore is now ques­tion­ing the audi­ence about the use of IT in their com­pa­nies. Point being, noone find them­selves say­ing they don’t use and value IT heav­ily. Then goes on to list top ten CEO trends of 2004, all based on IT, sim­ply mak­ing IT nesse­cary. (thomashonore.mov)

Pow­er­point goes black. Makes bad joke on the impor­tance of IT.

Good advice: Being con­ser­v­a­tive can be ok — but stay­ing pas­sive is death; there’s still an inter­net rev­o­lu­tion going on out there. (touchy sub­ject, I guess, the ‘rev­o­lu­tion’ part indi­rectly sug­gests that money are to be made just by stay­ing ahead…).

Next speaker is Mogens Kühn Ped­er­sen, ques­tion­ing some of Carr’s key points. Are the infra­struc­ture metaphor meaningful?

(Side­note: If you’re lucky enough to under­stand Dan­ish, read the other live-bloggers’ more thor­ough cov­er­age — I’ll just keep mum­bling in English…)

IT.…or IS. Infor­ma­tion sys­tems mat­ter. (mogenskpedersen.mov)

(Until this point, dif­fer­ent — but obvi­ous — responses to Carr’s orig­i­nal claim have been pre­sented. I can’t imag­ine any­one dis­agree with IT at least being more of a com­mod­ity; whether the exact ini­tial catchy phrase “IT doesn’t mat­ter” is true or not isn’t all that inter­est­ing — but what does all this mean for soft­ware devel­op­ment, for the strate­gies them­selves etc. Hope­fully this will be answered later dur­ing the discussion…)

Carr is on. Jokes about, that — after lis­ten­ing to Kühn — he didn’t real­ize his argu­ments were so com­plex. First slide: “IT is essen­tial to business…but is it essen­tial to busi­ness strategy.

Shows dia­gram with cross­ing ubiq­uity / advan­tage lines. Wide­spread tech­nol­ogy equals less advan­tage potiential.

(Live-blogging isn’t com­pletely live nor thor­ough; the new ecto crashes once in a while and con­vert­ing lit­tle movies with bad sound into huge mon­sters of Quicktime-movies take time as well.…)

Carr goes through some exam­ples, adding details, not exactly clam­ing that “IT doesn’t matter”.

So what:

  • Spend less (not get less, do less — just have bias towards spend­ing less on IT). Google and other indus­try lead­ers already buy more com­mod­ity products.
  • More should fol­low, not lead. It’s cheaper — you can’t be sure that the sys­tem you buy will end up as the stan­dard. Exam­ple, bank­ing: Pro­pri­etary bank-owned online bank­ing sys­tems with no com­pet­i­tive advan­tage as online bank­ing quickly became a must-have ser­vice offered by sev­eral vendors.
  • Inno­vate when risks are low. Wal­mart man­aged to use their mar­ket posi­tion to get RFID tech­nol­ogy implemented.
  • Focus more on vul­nara­bil­i­ties than oppor­tu­ni­ties. Don’t be cre­ative, be good.

Carr is done. Before dis­cus­sion, Myg­dal will intro­duce our lit­tle micro media thingie.

All speak­ers are on the floor for debate, Mogens Kühn starts off by ques­tion­ing Carr’s ter­mi­nol­ogy. Dis­cus­sion is mostly about pro­duc­tiv­ity; increase in pro­duc­tiv­ity due to IT invest­ments will be shared, increas­ing pro­duc­tiv­ity of the whole indus­try — not being an advan­tage of a sin­gle com­pany. (nicholascarr.mov)

Thomas Honoré is asked what he feels about Carr’s advice to invest less in IT. He, not sur­pris­ingly, doesn’t like that at all. He insists on being part of an indus­try, a com­mu­nity — pro­vid­ing advice to his customers.

Carr answers another ques­tion from Kühn (which states that Easy­jet and other mod­ern air­lines get their advan­tage by com­bin­ing IT with new busi­ness strate­gies — which to me seems to be Carr’s point exactly) by com­par­ing two bak­ers with a pound of flour each. One makes a good loaf of bread, the other a bad one — that doesn’t make flour a strate­gic input, it doens’t mean that we should invest more money in flour or be on the cut­ting edge of flour tech­nol­ogy. Carrs laughs, stat­ing that to him Kühn and him seems to agree — Kühn just won’t admit it. (some­one does the flour power joke.…)

Tim­ing ques­tion from the audi­ence: Com­pa­nies can’t wait for­ever, isn’t it just as risky sit­ting back wait­ing? Carr answers that of course you shouldn’t wait for­ever, but you shouldn’t be cut­ting edge either — it doens’t pay off. Kühn adds that some com­pa­nies might still want the pos­si­ble strate­gic advan­tage of a cus­tom solu­tion. IBM (Honoré) is asked if they help their cus­tomers to fol­low or to lead. Honoré answers that most of their cus­tomers see them­selves as lead­ing, but when asked if he thinks they are actu­ally lead­ing or not, he slides off, say­ing he can’t see the rel­e­vance of the ques­tion, that he shouldn’t decide that on behalf of his cus­tomers. Laugh­ter from the room…

Ques­tion from the audi­ence on align­ing strate­gies with sys­tem. Carr replies, that hope­fully that shouldn’t be too rel­e­vant as all sys­tems should be aligned with the strat­egy of a com­pany. But that doesn’t mean that all invest­ments are strategic.

Blogging
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Moblogging

Good dis­cus­sion over at Dave Winer’s on the term ‘moblog­ging’. I’ve wrote about the same thing about a year ago and now it comes back to haunt me as I try and find the time to fol­low up on my ini­tial thoughts on a lit­tle brushup of this site. More on that later; I’ll do a seper­ate post includ­ing a to do-ish wish­list with fea­tures etc.

Back to the moblogging-discussion: I agree that the ‘mo(bile)’ in ‘moblog­ging’ should be taken seri­ously; you can moblog every­thing (audio, video, images etc.) and not only from mobile phones — I would say that every mobile device counts. And while I don’t exactly mind when and how the post gets trans­ferred to the server, I would say that the post in some way should gain by being made and/or actu­ally live trans­ferred for it to be truly moblog­ging. Which makes the url of my low-threshold image blog even more stu­pid; some of it is — some of it isn’t. It’s an image blog main­tained from a mobile phone but should prob­a­bly be renamed to ‘images on the go’ or some­thing sim­i­lar, allow­ing for a proper photo log (decent pic­tures taken with a real cam­era) and text-only mobile posts to the main blog. So that I will do — renam­ing ahead.

In related news, I’m attend­ing the “Does IT mat­ter” con­fer­ence tomor­row, fea­tur­ing Nicholas G. Carr, and will try and put my lit­tle tools to good use at the accom­pa­ny­ing site. As my phone doesn’t have wifi and the key­board isn’t really a key­board any­way, I’ll be sport­ing a lap­top as well. So it’ll prob­a­bly be a moblog/liveblog/regular blog but from a lap­top away from home-combo.

Now all we can do is wait for this moblogging-thing to become irrel­e­vant term-wise: Bet­ter on-the-go inter­faces for read­ing and writ­ing online con­tent ahead, I hope…

Update: Didn’t see Adam Green­field nail­ing it before post­ing. Appa­rantly his com­ment got deleted from Winer’s weblog which shouldn’t sur­prise any­one — but that’s not the point here.

Blogging
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New toy, Nokia 7610

Or rather, I got a Nokia 7610 as a much needed replace­ment for my old Nokia 3650. I should prob­a­bly have went for some­thing more pow­er­ful (I could defi­nately do with wifi etc.) but I really felt like own­ing a phone again and as I’m car­ry­ing my Power­book pretty much always, I guess I’ll give this combo a try.

Thor­ough reviews can be found at Rus­sell Beattie’s and at Mobile­Burn, so I’ll just chip in with the few thoughts I have so far:

Form fac­tor! Oh yes. It’s not that much larger than the iPod mini (which I also recently got my hands on, but that’s another and really unin­ter­est­ing story) so I now own a real phone; one of those things you can hold in one hand, have in your pocket while rid­ing a bike and take out with­out being stared at as if you either have no sense of taste (which might, hov­ever, be true) or are really geeky since you’re car­ry­ing what has to be a feature-rich gad­get — who would oth­er­wise bring along some­thing so ugly (which is true). It isn’t really that small but when you com­pare to the old 3650 it feels half the size…

Feature-wise it isn’t that much of an upgrade though. The 3650, while huge and not pretty, had quite a lot of nice fea­tures. Apart from the megapixel cam­era and the pos­si­bil­ity of shoot­ing video up to 10 min­utes, not much has changed. It does come with more appli­ca­tions, but apart from the included Opera (nice one) I haven’t had a chance to play with it yet. It’s much faster and the UI has improved quite a bit. It basi­cally just seems more solid.

Sync’ing: I’ve pre­vi­oulsy writ­ten about the lack of iSync’ing, which unfor­tu­nately still is true. And the accom­pa­ny­ing PC soft­ware sucks ass as always, although the USB cable prob­a­bly is a good thing. Don’t know, haven’t tried is — Blue­tooth is all sta­ble now, not like my old phone, so so far I’m quite happy trans­fer­ring stuff that way.

What’s new is the video options. You can shoot up to 10 min­utes of video which is quite a lot once you actu­ally do it. The qual­ity is noth­ing spe­cial as you might expect, but it works and might prove to be good for lit­tle exper­i­ments. The phone is almost square allow­ing it to stand by itself which is a neat lit­tle detail. I did a lit­tle test­ing — “View from inside TjiliPop on a rainy day” (tjilipop.mov) — prob­a­bly the most bor­ing piece of footage since Die schönsten Bahn­strecken Europas, but it’s 10 min­utes long. My Quick­time Pro skills might have caused the .mov file con­verted from the orig­i­nal .3gp to end up larger than it should have, but hey ho…

I might update this post if and when I dis­cover good and bad stuff about my new friend. So far I’m just really pleased to have a func­tion­ing phone — that’s nowhere near the sad plas­ticy feel­ing I’ve bitched about before…

Misc.
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Trackback collabs

We need more blogs. Or eas­ier ways to col­lect some of the good stuff that’s already being produced.

At the Blog’N’Rundbold out­ing we briefly dis­cussed to allow for track­backs on Blog­ger­sCopen­hagen so peo­ple could just ping the col­lab blog from their own sys­tem — hope­fully more posts would find their way to this fine site. And I hear they got a new server

But I’m think­ing that maybe we need a brand new weblog. Inspired by Dalager’s post, which — to many’s sur­prise — wasn’t exactly true (some peo­ple even deleted images and mod­i­fied posts), I’m sug­gest­ing that we build a new site. For­ban­det­Lyv or Blood­yLiar could be an appro­pri­ate name; this should also func­tion Lazy­Web style — ping the site with your lie and watch as the fan­tas­tic sto­ries build up.

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[DK] Din blog lugter

napnapper.jpg

Inter­es­sant diskus­sion ovre hos emme; hvad er det lige de hed­der? Flash-folk, hvad ven­ter I pÃ¥?

Og nu: Tilbage til arbejdet…

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