- Rolling Thunder vs. Scoble Style (The Post Money Value)
- Shhhh, don’t tell anyone (Robert Scoble)
- Blog Search = Opportunity (The Post Money Value)
- The Cult that is Human Service Alliance and the Center for Purposeful Living ( Chris Short via Patrick Eakes)
- Standards and Practices (John Robinson, Editor Greensboro News & Record) –Editorial note–This is a list of 16 standards that the Greensboro News & Record has set out for its staff bloggers.
- Levitt Replies to the Critical Letter Published in NY Times (Freakonomics)
- Using Blog Search for Business (BlogMaverick) –Editorial Note–This is Mark Cuban’s blog and I personally found this the most useful of his posts to date.
- Marc Canter’s Clue (Moore’s Lore) –Editorial Note– I consider Dana Blankenhorn my digital canary in the mine. If he thinks something is important I pay attention to it, so I’m going to do a little research on AlwaysOn and GoingOn.
Category Archives: Web/Tech
Today’s Reads: July 21, 2005
- Word’s Straight from a Mother’s Heart – (Winston-Salem Journal)
- What Happened to Unconditional Surrender (Cal Thomas) –Editorial comment–This guy’s a nut-job.
- Run a Conference Then Invite Bloggers (MicroPersuasion)
- 10 for 10 (MicroPersuasion)
- Merck: Another shot in the foot…(PharmaEdge)
- Online Screw Ups Affecting the Workplace (Daniel Drezner)
- Only 9% of Americans Have a Good Idea of What an RSS Feed Is (Dana VanDen Heuvel)
- On the Ground War Coverage via Blog ** (Michael Yon) –Editorial comment–This is a personal blog from someone on the ground with US Troops. I haven’t had the time to find out who he is, but I think he’s a journalist.
- Over the Top Police Blotter Write-ups (Boing Boing)
Google Maps + Craigs List = Cool Site
Was reading Joe Write (a good blogger from Winston-Salem and frequent commenter on this site) and found a reference to this site:
http://www.housingmaps.com/
They took the real estate listings from craigslist, combined it with Google Maps and out came this very cool little app.
By the way, Google Maps is fast becoming my default site for all geo-related stuff.
Turn Your Backpack into a Solar Powered WiFi Hotspot
From Popular Science comes this nifty little article on how to turn your backpack into a solar powered Wi-Fi hotspot.
This takes computer-geekdome to a new extreme.
Wi-Fi Crime
A man in Florida has been charged with stealing a Wi-Fi signal in Florida (where else). It ends up that using someone else’s signal without permission, which is classified as "unauthorized access to a computer network," is a third degree felony. From the article:
Police say Smith admitted using the Wi-Fi signal from the home of Richard Dinon, who had noticed Smith sitting in an SUV outside Dinon’s house using a laptop computer.
The practice is so new that the Florida Department of Law Enforcement doesn’t even keep statistics, according to the St. Petersburg Times, which reported Smith’s arrest this week.
Two things here: the guy can’t be too bright considering how he got caught, and the practice isn’t that new…now someone getting charged, that’s new.
Only in Florida.
DIY Way to Increase Range of Your WIFI Antenna
Popular Science has an article that details a do-it-yourself solution for boosting your WIFI antenna’s range. It also can be used to make your antenna uni-directional vs. multi-directional, which is cool if you want to keep the signal from reaching a particular neighbor.
Link to article found via Ben Hwang’s blog, LUX.ET.UMBRA.
How Cool is This Baby Name Game
Here’s a nifty little name game you can play:
http://www.babynamewizard.com/namevoyager/lnv0105.html
Just go to the site and plug in any name, then watch as it shows you how popular that name is in any given decade. It’s really just a graph, but the colors are spectacular and it is really addictive.
By the way my name (Jon, no h) peaked in popularity in the 60’s when I was born (ranked 82) before plummeting to 413 today.
For New Members of the Blog Reading Universe
This is a post I’m creating for the sole purpose of having something I can point my friends, family members and associates to when they ask about any of the "new" web based technologies and services. Basically it’s an overview of things like blogs, RSS (real simple syndication), RSS readers, podcasts, wikis and some p2p (peer-to-peer) applications. I plan on updating this post regularly.
Blogs
Definition: A weblog (usually shortened to blog, but occasionally spelled web log) is a web-based publication
consisting primarily of periodic articles (normally in reverse chronological order). Although most early weblogs were manually
updated, tools to automate the maintenance of such sites made them accessible to a much larger population, and the use of some
sort of browser-based software is now a typical aspect of "blogging". (source: wikipedia)
RSS
Definition: RSS is an abbreviation for:
- RSS, a group of XML
based web-content distribution and republication (Web syndication)
formats primarily used by news sites and weblogs (blogs).- the Rich Site Summary is also known as RSS 0.9x (although
many weblog feeds are full-text, not summaries) - the RDF Site Summary is based on Netscape‘s short-lived RSS 0.90,
which used the W3C Resource Description Framework Standard; this is also known as RSS 1.x - the Really Simple Syndication is also known
as RSS 2.x - sometimes, by casual (though incorrect) use, alternative syndication protocols, such as Atom.
(Source: wikipedia)
- the Rich Site Summary is also known as RSS 0.9x (although
Here’s a good article to read from Business 2.0. The author explains RSS this way:
RSS, or real simple syndication, is a way to subscribe to a website’s
regularly updated content without actually visiting that site. It
allows you to look at headlines and stories from as many blogs or news
sites as you like, all in one place. As simple as this sounds (indeed,
because of its simplicity), it is going to change the way you consume
information on the Web.
Robert Scoble, a famous blogger that works at Microsoft, provided a nice four step overview of the software you can use to subscribe to RSS feeds:
There are three basic types of RSS News Aggregators:
1) Server-based aggregators. Some, like Newsgator cross the lines
since Newsgator has a server-side service too. Other server-side
aggregators are Feeds.scripting.com, MyYahoo, Bloglines, and MyMSN.
2) Standalone client-side aggregators. RSS Bandit. FeedDemon. SharpReader. Radio UserLand. Among these, my favorites are RSS Bandit and FeedDemon (REX NOTE: FeedDemon has Nashville connections – use it).
You’ll need to download and install these. They don’t depend on any
other application being loaded, and are browser-independent too (for
the most part). On the Mac, NetNewsWire is the one most of my friends like. (REX NOTE: I use NetNewsWire.)
3) Built in the browser. OnFolio 2.0 adds onto IE or Firefox. Optimal Access adds onto IE. The Mozilla team offers Sage for Firefox users. Pluck adds onto any browser. My favorite here is OnFolio. Pluck is pretty good too.
4) Dependent on Outlook. NewsGator is my favorite here (it’s still the aggregator I use most), but there’s also IntraVnews.
Podcasts
Definition: Podcasting, a portmanteau of Apple’s "iPod" and "broadcasting", is a method of publishing files to the Internet, allowing users to subscribe to a feed and
receive new files automatically. It first became popular in late 2004, used largely for audio files.
Podcasting is distinct from other types of audio content delivery because of its subscription model, which uses the RSS 2.0 file format. This technique has enabled independent producers
to create self-published, syndicated "radio shows", and has given broadcast radio programs a new distribution channel.
Users subscribe to podcasts using "podcatching" software (also called "aggregator" software) which periodically checks for and
downloads new content. It can then sync the content to the user’s portable music player. Podcasting does not require an iPod or
iTunes; any digital audio player or computer with the appropriate software can play podcasts. The same technique can deliver
video files, and by 2005 some aggregators could play video as well as audio.
(Source: wikipedia)
Here’s a list of Podcasting directories from Loosewire (added to this post 6/25/05):
- iPodder
- Podcast Alley
- iPodderX
- PodNova
- Podcast.net
- Podcast Central
- Potkast
- The Podcast Network
- PodcastHost Directory
- PodTower.com
- PublicRadioFan.com
- Podcast Directory
- Podcast Pickle
- Podcasting News directory
- PodCasterWorld
- Podfeed.net
- PodFeeder
- BritCaster
- AllPodcasts
- podCast411
- Experience Podcasting
- PenguinRadio
Wikis
Definition: A wiki (pronounced
[wɪkiː],
[wiːkiː] or
[viːkiː]; see Pronunciation below) is a web application that allows users to add content, as on an Internet forum, but also allows anyone to edit the content. Wiki
also refers to the collaborative software used to
create such a website (see Wiki software).
Wiki (with an upper case ‘W’) and WikiWikiWeb are both used to refer specifically to the Portland Pattern Repository, the first wiki ever
created. A lower-case ‘w’ for ‘wiki’ is generally used by savvy wiki proponents. The name was based on the Hawaiian term wiki wiki, meaning "quick" or "informal." It is used
commonly in Hawaii as part of its rich "pidgin English"— the native language of the
islands.
(Source: wikipedia)
The first wiki I’ve been a part of is for the ConvergeSouth conference planning.
P2P Applications
Definition: A peer-to-peer (or P2P) computer network is a network that relies on
computing power at the edges (ends) of a connection rather than in the network itself. P2P networks are used for sharing content
like audio, video, data or anything in digital format. P2P network can also mean grid computing.
A pure peer-to-peer file transfer network does not have the notion of clients or servers, but only equal peer nodes that simultaneously function as both "clients" and "servers" to
the other nodes on the network. This model of network arrangement differs from the client-server model where communication is usually to and from a central server. A typical example for a non
peer-to-peer file transfer is an FTP server. One user uploads a file to the FTP server, then many others download it, with no need for the uploader and downloader to be
connected at the same time.
Some networks and channels, such as Napster, OpenNap, or IRC @find, use a
client-server structure for some tasks (e.g. searching) and a peer-to-peer structure for others. Networks such as Gnutella or Freenet, use a peer-to-peer
structure for all purposes and are sometimes referred to as true peer-to-peer networks, though Gnutella at least is greatly
facilitated by directory servers which inform peers of the network addresses of other peers.
(source: wikipedia)
I Didn’t Get Your Message
In case you needed more proof that email isn’t always the most reliable form of communication, especially for urgent messages, here’s a story from Florida (where else) about how AOL is treating the Indian River County emergency manager’s address as a SPAM source.
That follow up phone call seems more important every day.
Back to 1999
A new service called Insider Pages takes the concept of a referral network, i.e. asking your friends for the number of the contractor they used for their addition last year, and then lets you add your own recommendations.
Basically it’s just a referral network that you can build for yourself, invite your friends to contribute, and then add your own ratings, comments, etc. In other words it is highly dependant on its users building it up to what some call "critical mass." I tried searching for a plumber in my area (North Carolina) and it came up with two sponsored listings in CA, along with this note: "
We are working on getting reviews
for Plumbing Contractors.
Please add a recommendation to help get us started."
Feels like 1999 all of the sudden. I’m pulling every dime I can out of NASDAQ…well I would if I had any dimes in it.