03 Sep 2006 Cory has been talking about : Kim Cameron having trouble with missing tracks from Bob Dylan's CD "Modern Times"
There's another way to get Modern Times and burn it to a CD: you can buy it from AllOfMP3.com But go here and you'll find AllOfMp3 only have the 10 tracks off the Audio CD. Not the 4 tracks off the DVD. I think we're going to see more and more of this. A CD packaged with a DVD containing videos of additional tracks. Ripping the audio from the DVD's videos is considerably harder than ripping a CD to MP3. And it opens up an avenue for the record companies (and by implication iTMS) to change the rules. To a certain extent I admire this. It's a way of making the physical object worth more than the digital download. But it can also be seen as yet another example of DRM. In this case, the stronger DRM present on a DVD than the unprotected audio CD. The big downside of course is that the DVD is only playable on a DVD player. Which for many will mean no playing in the car, on a portable CD player or on the average stereo. That seems quite a strange idea. Music that can only be played on a television. 02 Sep 2006 What if there were a web service that provided a universal ID lookup. eg
- Give the API a Skype ID get back the Flickr ID for the same person. - Give the API a Digg ID get back the del.icio.us ID for the same person. - Give the API an MSN ID get back the last.fm ID for the same person. And so on in a big matrix of common and popular sites. Is this a Google sized problem? Clearly, it would have to be opt-in to avoid horrible privacy issues. It wouldn't find favour with people who want anonymity, but it would be great for those of us who want to be onymous. I can imagine this being like a huge account profile database as in all those YASNs. And knowing all the IDs would make it possible to build an aggregation page for each person with the latest entry's RSS feed from each service for their ID. ----- This was prompted in my deviant brain by looking at the Programmableweb website's matrix of mashups. I noticed that the Instant Messenger systems like Skype, MSN, YM, AIM had very few entries. Now an important part of these systems is that they are very large ID namespaces. But there's very little that relates those namespaces to other Id identification elsewhere. Which makes it very hard (say) to relate a Skype ID with a Flickr ID and mashup the related info. Is Opinity the beginnings of this? A reminder : Just because Abu Ghraib has been repurposed doesn't mean it's over.
the main factor is propaganda and its cumulative effect on the populace. We're not being beaten into submission here, folks - we're being smothered. And that smothering is dressed up as love. The Threat of Terrorism Is Real - The War on Terror Is a Lie "You must fear the terrorists. They want to hurt you. We will protect you. You must not question us, because this helps the terrorists. Who want to hurt you. We will protect you." But who are the terrorists? The line has already started to blur, and that beating I mentioned before is yours for the taking if you'd care to step outside of a Free Speech Zone. Yes folks, if you so much as raise your voice, you become a terrorist.... 01 Sep 2006 The Alex Barnett blog said : This is what Voidstar said Smart Mobs said The Register said that Sir TBL said: and it's all just Chinese whispers.
31 Aug 2006 Smart Mobs: Berners-Lee calls for Web 2.0 calm along with Dave's rant at O'Reilly and quite a few others are pointing out that Web 2.0 is just Web 1.0 with pastel colours and a style sheet.
You want to see something really revolutionary? Well how about Second life, P2P/Decentralisation and people running their own code on their own servers (especially when it's their own home machine). 50 million blogs is impressive but less so when the majority are hosted by one of 4 companies. Really, the number two a dot and the letter "Oh" is a crock of BS. But then you've got to admire people who've turned that mnemonic into a conference series, a book and a speaking tour. Now about P2P, Decentralisation and the end to end principle. Whatever happened to that? Was it too hard, or has it been deliberately buried? Will things like AllPeers bring it back again? Kim Cameron's Identity Weblog » Phil Becker on Identity's First Big War: a history lesson
How different would the history of the Identity wars been if Passport had used an open protocol and been implementable by service providers without asking Microsoft or using Microsoft technology? In other words, if Microsoft had gone all out to make it an Internet De Facto standard. I wonder if the data ownership issues around Hailstorm would have been seen to be less important if the whole package was easier to bolt into existing websites. As it was, only the very biggest non-Microsoft players even tried to implement Passport and they quickly found commercial reasons for why it was a bad idea. Things might have been very different if a few tens of thousands of sites had supported it. This was all happening at the same time as the growth of RSS from a handful of sites to thousands to millions. There are lessons to be learnt there. It's mildly irritating that I can't seem to leave this comment as acomment on the actual blog. Oh well. 30 Aug 2006 This script crashes Internet Explorer
<script>for (x in document.write) { document.write(x);}</script> 29 Aug 2006 I was looking at the white space in ProgrammableWeb: Web 2.0 Mashup Matrix and noticed that Skype has almost no entries. but then I looked at the other IM services and they don't ay entries either. So what is it about Instant Messaging that makes Mashups with other Web APIs difficult? Well IM is yet another Identity name space and is predominantly about people. And very, very few systems (with or without APIs) allow you to search for people or retrieve data based on their IM address. The limit seems to be just inserting IM links into people's profiles and maybe showing their presence information. And like IRC, developing bots that embed some external function into an IM chat conversation.
26 Aug 2006 Imagine you're looking at a blog post. There's a button on the page that says "Find more like this". It goes off to a search engine that returns articles like this one from all over the web.
How would you code this? Can you do it now? You could just take the title and do a google search on that but it clearly doesn't work. It really needs a service where you drop the whole text in and it does some lexical analysis on it to produce a search query. While we're at it, why is Google Blogsearch so bad? Compare a search for Ecademy in Google Blogsearch and Technorati. I've been thinking a lot about Marc Canter's latest rant about APIs in social networking sites. Where is the conversation happening about the design of these APIs? FOAFnet is dead. The individual bits like ID, Microformats and so on each have their own mailing lists and wikis. So where can I go to find out the latest state of the art thinking? And on RSS, Atom and Google. Google Base (remember that?) uses RSS and RSS extensions as one alternative to code up entries. But instead of just giving them a URL to a feed, you have to ftp a file to them which they then take up to a day to process. This is all bassackwards isn't it? 25 Aug 2006 What will happen to the recalled batteries? suggests that all those Sony/Apple/Dell batteries that are being recalled are really rather hazardous and will end up in some 3rd world landfill.
Well how about they give me a few thousand to use in my home brew electric vehicle? Mmm, cheap as chips high density LiOn batteries that probably won't explode. Lovely. In fact why don't they just sell them on eBay with no warranty? Thinking more about this, I bet a significant number end up in those slightly dodgy Tottenham Court road electrical shops that sell second hand computer bits. 22 Aug 2006 We had an outage of about an hour this morning from 7:15am to 8:15am. This was caused by our hosting provider, Globix, losing all connectivity in London. Needless to say this should never happen and affected a lot of other people besides Ecademy. [from: JB Ecademy]
21 Aug 2006 Free Business idea #23: A Skype White Pages site. Mashed in with Google Maps. As the basis for a generic "About Me" system. that (with the members help) correlates Skype IDs with collections of data from all the other sites (Flickr, del.icio.us, etc, etc).
Why? Because Skype Search isn't good enough yet. The Long Tail: What do people really want in music? :
# Airplay Charts: "Measure what people are being fed." # Sales Charts: "Measure what people are eating from what they're being fed." # Usage Charts: "Measure what, from the music people can listen to, they listen to the most." Here's another few questions. - What music are people creating? - What music are people listening to live? (at concerts, bars, live performances) - What music are people copying? - What background music is being played at people? (in bars, restaurants, hotel foyers, shops)? - What music is used as soundscapes in TV, film? I really wish we could get some of the same metrics for books. The problem is that a book can't tell a computer that it's being read the way a piece of music can tell that it's being played. And BTW. The whole "Music Genre" classification system is really screwed. It's ripe for tags. At which point see Last.FM. 19 Aug 2006 Early in the summer, my son had a Bus-Headbutting incident when a local country bus pulled out of a side road to cross a main road without seeing him. The worst sort of SMIDSY accident. The bus was so close that he hit it straight and level, and was pole vaulted off the bike. Amazingly he was pretty much ok, but the bike is a right off.
![]() The frame engine hangers shattered, the big frame weld on one side exploded and everything in front of the engine is destroyed. So the challenge was to get him back on the road cheaply. By chance we came across an old work colleague of mine who had the same model CBR400RR growing spiders, mould and rust in his garage. It hadn't moved in 7 years after a couple of small accidents and being knocked over while parked. So this summer we've been resurrecting it. ![]() Doesn't that matt black look good? Perhaps the biggest hassle in all this was cleaning the inside of the tank. The petrol remains were turning to varnish and took an awful lot of degreaser and washing out. The fork seals were quite a challenge. And of course there were loads of japanese fasteners that were turning to cheese. But in the end it's quite a result. With the good carbs from the old bike along with the fuel supply bits, it started straight up without even changing the plugs. And as far as I can tell it's not using much oil and revs out nicely (ahem!) once we added the Japanese derestrictor black box. Now, does anyone need some old CBR400RR bits? Marc points at l.m. orchard : Talking about the problems of creating the same profile data over and over again on social networking sites.
Here's the crucial part. But since then, I just haven't felt the need to replicate self-disclosure anywhere else but on my own site. We need both ends of this. We need the social networks to be able to import the data. But we also need the personal blog software to support an "About Me" page that maintains and publishes the master copy. There continue to be major challenges around this area. - Master "About Me" page, with export, in common personal software - Standards for either a schema to describe people or ways of building it on the fly - Standards for transferring that data - Implementation of account creation using profile data from elsewhere - Ways of keeping everything in sync. And this all raises questions of exactly where the data should reside. The sync problem suggests it should never move and stay on the master site. We'll just include it at run time. But that works against being able to generate added value from having lots of that data in one place. And there are commercial pressures pushing sites towards keeping their local copy. Now you may say "we have standards". But right now they're all flawed and there's too many of them. FOAF, VCard, HCard, XFN, SXIP. 18 Aug 2006 AllPeers is a BitTorrent based peer to peer file sharing app written as a Firefox extension. It's just hit limited Beta and I have invitations available. Drop me a line if you want one.
julian_bond at voidstar.com Hair gel and iPods terror alert.
Supreme court finds warrant-less wire tapping unconstitutional. Craig Murray seems to be off line. Or at least I can't get to the blog. Did it get Slashdotted/Dugg? UKPoliblog seems to still be picking up the RSS. 15 Aug 2006 |
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