The Blog




For some time I've been thinking about a book version of Last.FM to try and answer the question "what should I read next" better than Amazon can. It's a source of some irritation to me that Amazon don't this themselves based on what you're reading and have read rather than what you've bought from them. There's something missing in their recommendation system to do with finding people like you as well as books like the ones you've bought. I find their sstem tends to narrow down the niche rather than expanding your reading horizons.

So I've come across Reader2 and I quite like it. It needs work and there's some holes but it's close and close enough to encourage people to use it. So here's my page and my biggest tag, Cyberpunk.

The problem with this is the data entry. Last.fm can tell what you're listening to and it changes all the time. Books can't easily tell a website that their being read and by who. So can someone write a couple of bookmarklets that scrape an Amazon page and fill in the data entry form on Reader2?

Skype could pose security problems News - PC Advisor : Also, as with other P2P applications such as KaaZaa, the connection sharing permitted by Skype makes the the host computer and the network available to others as well, said Robin Bloor, an analyst at Hurwitz & Associates in Waltham. Mass. As a result, "Skype can use a lot of network bandwidth, which may interfere with business applications and services," said Andrea Wuchner-Bruhl, head of global IT security at Novartis Pharma AG, in Basel, Switzerland.

More Skype scare stories with no factual basis. Enough of the FUD already, m'kay?

Supr.c.ilio.us: The Blog : When you invite the whole world to your party, inevitably someone pees in the beer."Free as in beer doesn't sound all that interesting anymore.

Classic. You know Web2.0 has made it when there's a blog devoted to debunking it.

'I will refuse to register for an ID card and will donate £10 to a legal defence fund' - PledgeBank
I've signed the first one so don't to sign again. But if you haven't please do this now. [from: del.icio.us]




blummy - The bookmarklet management bookmarklet
We could do with a metaweb2 control to post to all the services we're using. I'm not sure this it. [from: del.icio.us]

BTW. I claim ownership of the name MetaWeb 2.0 happy




Last weekend we had a re-union dinner for the Cambridge University Motorcycle Club Dinner. A fine drunken time was had by all and we even managed a run on Sunday. Photos here.

But I thought I'd share this device with you.



It's a kit made from riveted ally sheet and 2CV running gear. It's got a massive 25hp but it's very light with soft suspension on 2CV narrow tyres. As it's front wheel drive it's pretty hard to get it to do anything scary. I drove (rode!) it round a field and it was hilarious.

This one will make you laugh as well.


Built in a garden shed. It's Difazio hub centre front suspension, Talbot 1000cc engine (basically a Hillman Imp), Guzzi gearbox.

Here's some blog spam that I'm fighting.

http://lovelyboxing.blogspot.com/2005/10/how-to-make-money-from-people-who-type.html Lovely Boxing: How to Make Money from People Who Type the Wrong Web Address. Vitamin Supplements, Do We Need Them?.

They've played a nasty trick on me. The top right has one of those "Make Poverty History" images. It conveniently overlaps with the blogspot header so you can't flag the blog as bad.




Microsoft Office

Full page colour ad in the The Times today. Middle manager, shirt sleeves, tie, family photo on desk, dying pot plant, IBM flat screen. Strap line "The era of OOPS, I HIT REPLY-ALL" is over". Except that it's part of Microsoft's "Evolve" campaign so the middle manager is a lizard.

So what is MS trying to tell it's core Office customers?

You're a dinosaur!

Yup, that'll help.

Inside Google Sitemaps
More reading needed [from: del.icio.us]




Technorati Search: ecademy

The blog spam problem is spreading. I'm now getting wordpress sites as well as blogspot/blogger sites containing the meta description from Ecademy. And my gut feel is that the rate of new sites appearing is speeding up.

Breaking the Web Wide Open! (complete story) :: AO : But new open standards and protocols are in use, under construction, or being proposed every day, pushing the envelope of where we are right now. Many of these standards are coming from startup companies and small groups of developers, not from the giants. Together with the Open APIs, those new standards will contribute to a new, open infrastructure. Tens of thousands of developers will use and improve this open infrastructure to create new kinds of web-based applications and services, to offer web users a highly personalized online experience.

Marc, this is a tremendous piece of work. If only all white papers were as thorough and so chock full of link love.




Breaking the Web Wide Open! (complete story) :: AO
Excellent summary of the state of the internet as of Summer '05 [from: del.icio.us]

NY Times Meet the lifehacker. Read it quick before it disappears behind the pay wall.

When Mark crunched the data, a picture of 21st-century office work emerged that was, she says, "far worse than I could ever have imagined." Each employee spent only 11 minutes on any given project before being interrupted and whisked off to do something else. What's more, each 11-minute project was itself fragmented into even shorter three-minute tasks, like answering e-mail messages, reading a Web page or working on a spreadsheet. And each time a worker was distracted from a task, it would take, on average, 25 minutes to return to that task. To perform an office job today, it seems, your attention must skip like a stone across water all day long, touching down only periodically.

So clear some time in your day. Put Skype on DND and turn off all notifications in Skype and any other IM programs. Turn off your email reader or at least turn down the notifications. You don't need to read your email *now*. Turn off your Blackberry and mobile phone. Take the phone off the hook or divert it to voice mail. Put on the noise cancelling headphones. Close that browser with 76 tabs open. Resist the urge to just open your RSS news reader one last time.

It now takes about 15 minutes to get in the zone where you're totally focussed on the job in hand. Don't let anything distract you for the next 1 hour and 45 minutes.

Now go for a short walk round the garden to decompress, make another coffee, turn it all back on again and step back into the firehose. [from: JB Ecademy]

To anyone who thinks Blog Spam isn't a problem take a look at this.

Google Blog Search: ecademy -site:*.ecademy.com

I take an RSS feed from this page to spot anyone who mentions Ecademy in a blog with anything from the ecademy.com domain removed. It's now completely unuseable because somebody has built a robot which is signing up Blogger accounts and using the same text that just happens to include "Ecademy". They're building at least 10 new blog sites per day.

Given that Google own both Google BlogSearch and Blogger this is undeniably their problem. It may also be weblogs.com and the other ping service's problem.

Google Blog search is amazingly fast at indexing new blog pages. It's also now completely useless.




ProgrammableWeb.com : Perhaps the most notable part of the story is towards the end when discussing how Trulia, a for-profit business and not just a hobbyist site, is beginning to run into one of the core mashup issues: data ownership, royalties, and how to share revenue. As their business grows, Google has expressed an interest in sharing.

There's an issue here that is raising it's ugly head.

When an API is provided by a commercial company, to what extent should they be entitled to share in profits generated by a commercial company using it?

My gut feel is "None, No way". If they want to share in the profits they can buy me. And/Or they should share *their* profits with me because I've made their service more valuable.




I'm deeply hacked off with UK politics, in fact I'm f**king pissed off.

On Tuesday night there was a critical ID card vote before the bill goes off to the House of Lords. It seems to have been a fairly free vote with no major whip activity. There were a number of Labour rebels and with the Tories and Lib-Dems voting solidly against, the government majority was reduced to 25. But and it's a huge But, 41 Tories didn't vote including all the leadership candidates. They had an opportunity to inflict a major, embarrassing and humiliating defeat on the government and they blew it. WHAT IS WRONG WITH THESE PEOPLE? The opposition is unbelievably ineffective and they keep on being ineffective. I've no doubt that the major reason they didn't bother to vote is that they are so wrapped up and self absorbed in imploding around their leadership race. Well, hello, guys. Wake up. The business of politics has to continue even if you're distracted by what Cameron did 20 years ago.

Parliamentary democracy is fairly flawed but it's the best system we've got. But when you voted for an elected politician and they then don't bother to exercise *their* vote, what's the f*cking point? Which made the article next to the report in The Times particularly apt. "Britain is witnessing the emergence of 'Generation No-X' - Young people who never acquire the habit of voting."

Interesting problem we hit on Ecademy. We have private clubs where the discussion is supposed not to be world viewable. Normally club discussions are available via RSS. So inevitably there are people (like me) who would rather keep up with new posts via RSS and wanted RSS of the private club posts as well. The first attempt added parameters for ID+password: if it validated you got the posts. Not terribly secure but it worked. But then somebody posted the URL to Newsgator web and they started spidering the feed so that all the posts were now turning up in their public search. Oooops! I switched to HTTP AUTH, but had real problems getting PHP to accept it in a form where I could validate it. All the different news readers seemed to have subtly different ways of passing the auth data and I frequently never got the data in PHP.

Now although most of the news readers support AUTH and do the right thing by not making the data public, I have no control over this. Once that data gets out via another route from the plain old HTML, and is read by somebody else's code, it's effectively public. The only reason we can rely on browsers to respect HTTP AUTH is that once accepted we can be reasonably sure that it is only displayed on the screen of the person entering the password. But even that is questionable when things like CURL and wget can be used.

So the end result is that I'd advise people to back away from private feeds and just not provide them. Which is something of a problem as there is a definite need for private RSS.

Why is the weblog calandar control so prevalent in weblog UI design? It's a particularly useless way of navigating somebody else's blog.

It's OK to have it there because I can just about imagine a need. But it shouldn't be the primary way of walking though people's posts. We need to focus on VCR or Page number navigation first backed up with tag browsing and good search.

Interesting page on 43 Folders

Ah, the Digital Lifestyle Aggregator page.

The major blogging packages have really not addressed the "About Me" page to any great extent. Picture what might be:-
- Structured CV and Profile data in human and machine readable format. (vcard, hCard, FOAF, whatever)
- Personal Identity Server using one of the low end SSO systems like SXIP, OpenID, LID, TypeKey.
- Aggregated RSS for your activity on the web. Flickr, del.icio.us, plazes, last.fm, Amazon wishlist, other blogs, blogrolling.com, RSS subscription lists, etc etc. Custom services to things like IM status.
- Aggregating in arbitrary plain text lists as described above or with a real database and web UI
- Arms length contact me form that lets people leave a private message without exposing your email address

At the moment, weblogs are still just focussed on the personal publishing angle. We need to beef up the periphery and take them to the next stage. People are doing this ad hoc with sidebar applets, so it clearly should get baked into the core distributions. It's also a natural for the big hosted systems like MSN Spaces.

One other similar need is the ability to automatically generate blog posts from blogs posted elsewhere on other systems. So if I post a blog on Ecademy or Tribe it should automatically appear in my home blog.

Lots of potential code here. Somebody pick it up!

ps. Here's the start of what I'm doing at Ecademy to support this.




Weblog Usability: The Top Ten Design Mistakes (Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox)
I need to write about how useless the calendar is in weblog UI [from: del.icio.us]

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