Archive for the 'Blog' Category

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Superb time lapse photo shoot

I just came across this photo set of the same view using a time lapse intervelometer device. I was lead to it from a remixed version over on flickr : by ‘narphorium‘ (he explains how he did it in the comments with Photoshop)

Do check the original and the remix, both are really good pieces of work.

On the original page if you go down to the second picture, you’ll see that you get all 6 pictures used in both cases by hovering over the image either from right to left or left to right !

Zeo’s profile on Technorati

By pure coincidence while I was trying to find a link to Zeo’s hack for the wp-admin page, I tried Google after Technorati (as you can see from the tabs) but just before closing the Technorati page I recognized the photo of the member at the bottom left. A quick mouseover confirmed it was Zeo. So Zeo is now officially famous ;)

Zeo profile on Technorati

And take a look at the name of the post below to the right !

zeo zoom

PS : Zeo here’s the link to the full image.
PS 2 : Zeo I was using Opera as you can see :)
PS 3 : Zeo is one of the developers working on the K2 WordPress theme from Michael Heilemann.

FireFox Crop Circle Celebration

firefox_crop_circle.jpgFor the cool guys and girls from the Oregon State Linux Users Group, celebrating the 200 million download milestone, the decision was made to better the previous events with a really memorable one. What better than a crop circle of over 45,000 square feet.
So August 2006, only one year and nine months after the launch of FireFox 1.0, the Mozilla Corporation has distributed over 200 million copies. Some die-hard FireFox fans admit they may have downloaded it over 50 times each but hey that’s no much of a dent on 200 million now is it ??
This is obviously recounted at the Fox Tales web site, a pure FireFox fanatics blog about all things FireFox of course…

For a closer look at how the crop circle came to life check out the story here, including a full photo gallery, and even videos !

As per Red Herring :

Meanwhile, the 200-million downloads mark could also bring Firefox closer to 15 percent of the total browser market share.

May FireFox continue with a long and happy life !

Evangelism does work

It is quite interesting to figure out what type of information gets through to people who are thinking about buying especially when it’s businesses, that will spend a fair amount of money.

In an article at ‘Chief Marketer’ called Reasons to Get Evangelical About Evangelism Marketing (link via Mediapost’s Marketing Daily), there may be some light shed on this. The article discusses a study from MarketingSherpa partnering with CNET.

Over and above the main results that explain how Word of Mouth, Conferences and Print Magazines came in respectively first second and third (48.3%, 41.9% and print magazines at 40.6%), the article discusses how blogs from ‘other technology professionals’ came in higher than all other blogs at 19.6%. The stats also have podcasts coming in at 2.7% of answers.

I think that sounds right to me, blogs from companies are not really high for me on a reliability scale, or blogs from traditional magazines and media companies. What I would call independent blogs from professionals are more than likely to get my attention. Why ? Well I consider that all the others have something to gain from evangelising a product or company in the same way that the well known evangelists like Vincent Cerf and Guy Kawasaki do/did don’t score high. Even if they start pleading and saying honest this product is really great, it’s just too much like selling your soul for my liking.

Why contribute online ?

From a link on boing boing I came across an article on citimedia’s blog. The post covers a recent study from Harvard University called “The Hype vs. Reality vs. What People Value: Emerging Collaborative News Models and the Future of News“. Even though the study itself is not a short blog post it is really interesting and worth reading if you have the time.

Some interesting trends that are documented about participants :
  • The will to share, is a big motivator, few wish to become journalists
  • A community to plug into, where trying things as a group means things can be tried and tested far quicker
  • More women than men vocalised the desire to find people with similar interests
  • A feel good factor and giving back factor is often cited
These five elements are cited in Citimedia’s blog by particpants as reasons why they do not participate in online communities :
  • Busy, haven’t got the time
  • Not perfect communities with low value exchanges
  • Often confronted with technical issues
  • User interfaces are hard to understand/use
  • Lurkers that only want to ‘listen’ that don’t feel they can contribute

There are some interesting Technorati graphs used in the survey that illustrate the evolution of the blog phenomenon. Other graphs illustrate the impact of world events on the quantity of posts/articles at these specific dates.

Is a blogger a journalist ?

In an article on out-law.com the appeal from bloggers being sued by Apple is discussed. This case relates to a product called asteroid that was leaked on powerage.org and other blogs two years ago. It will be interesting to see the outcome of this case in view of how it will affect bloggers in general when they disclose information. Are bloggers considered to have the same rights as journalists or does having a newspaper behind you grant you with different constitutional rights ? Is a blogger writing for a newspaper a journalist ?
It would be interesting to see if bloggers need to ask for a type of press card to be covered in this type of case ! The main issue does seem to be whether bloggers are covered in the same way a ‘journalist’ would be.

Coincidence, unlucky or linkbait ?

In an article posted on Oilman’s blog there is a story about a guy looking for a girl he met in an airport, I posted a note about it yesterday. I also came across a comment by IrishWonder on the same post :

Am I being too cynical or is it a cool case of linkbait?

This was the first time I had heard about linkbait and so looked it up and found out that it is basically a technique for creating a story/content to wheel in links from interesting sites. Getting interesting sites to willingly do so would depend upon the content being special/interesting. Some people seem to think the term linkbait is not a good term since it isn’t always about tricking people into linking to your site.

Anyway, curious as I am, I did a few searches on the name “Kevin Amoros”, initially I thought that it wasn’t a very French first or last name. Also having done some English teaching, I was surprised at how the structure of the sentences were pretty complex with some simple English mistakes as if they were added afterwards. First of all some school photos come up on a French site called trombi.com. Then I came across an interesting thread on a forum and this part of the thread is why it came up in Google :

domain: pleinphare.com
created: 04-Oct-2002
last-changed: 17-Dec-2003
registration-expiration: 04-Oct-2004
nserver: ns19.schlund.de
nserver: ns20.schlund.de
registrant-firstname: Kevin
registrant-lastname: Amoros
registrant-street1: 112 rue Felix Faure
registrant-pcode: 92700
registrant-city: Colombes
registrant-ccode: FR
registrant-phone: +33.662703455
registrant-email: kevinamoros@wanadoo.fr
admin-c-firstname: Kevin
admin-c-lastname: Amoros
admin-c-street1: 112 rue Felix Faure
admin-c-pcode: 92700
admin-c-city: Colombes
admin-c-ccode: FR
admin-c-phone: +33.662703455
admin-c-email: kevinamoros@wanadoo.fr

It refers to a domain name used in a scam with a special phone number you would call and get charged extra. The idea from this thread and another of the site labelled as “400 Euros in three clicks” in this post was that each time you brought a friend to sign up you would get 1 Euro. They would guarantee you for 20 friends who in turn would bring 20 friends so 20 x 20 = 400 Euros. The small type : you have to ring 3 telephone ‘AlloPass’ numbers that have a high charge rate… The second thread above explains how the site stopped responding after a few weeks with no way to follow up after having being billed on the numbers…

So far no way of knowing whether this guy is the same one !? Well yes, because the email is the same one used on the guys ad page, which I’m not going to link to (kevinamoros@wanadoo.fr) and a ‘whois’ query on the domain name that was used for the scam (404 error on pleinphare.com) reveals that the registrar company (schlund) is the same as the one for the current web site. Kevin seems to have his habits. This doesn’t actually indicate whether he actively participated in this scam though.

So could it be he heard the song by James Blunt called ‘You’re Beautiful’ and thought that’s a nice story I know how I could use that, replace subway with airport, same sad ending…

IrishWonder may well be correct in his first idea that this is a linkbait scam (not as bad a scam as the one described above). Has Kevin just been pretty unlucky and got mixed up with the wrong people ! On face value you wouldn’t think the sub domain which is pretty long is interesting from a search engine perspective and I doubt the aim was to have an impact on the main domain !?

PS : I’ve just been going through my email and today’s Robert Clough searchengine.com newsletter is talking about this, obviously Clough talks about it from a Search Engine Advertising perspective !

A new blog every second !

A new article at emarketer, based on the latest Technorati report illustrates how the blogosphere is now at over 35 million blogs. The average rate at which new blogs are created each day means that a new blog is created nearly every second of the day ! In August 2003 there were 0.5 million blogs being tracked by Technorati and now there are 35.3 million.
Another interesting fact is that Technorati statistics indicate that nearly 4 million bloggers update their blogs weekly, if not more, at the moment…

Guys love the biological clock question

While I was in Paris I came across so many women of my age and slightly older that were, to put it mildly getting uptight about having babies. I recently had a girlfriend after two weeks asking me if I had thought about kids ! OK, we had been out before, but, wow, two weeks. Suffice to say the whole “I think there should be love before talking about babies” didn’t go down to well as a response because as close friends pointed out that kinda meant love wasn’t there. Well I must say I’d prefer a situation where love takes the time it takes to sprout but that the “Oh darling I’m pregnant” comes after…

I came across a very interesting web site yesterday called “Dr Diana” a feminist blogger. Val (I call my parents by their first name) is such a feminist, that I now warn my friends in advance just in case. But hey, I can talk about it, so I haven’t been that traumatised by the whole thing.
Anyway, Dr Diana answers the biological clock question:

Is there really such a thing as a biological clock?

The answer is short and interesting; obviously Dr Diana is clued in with the attention deficit prone society that surrounds her ;)
Take a look at her answer rather than me trying to paraphrase and do a far worse job than her (trust me it would be so easy)…

On the feminist front I’m pretty sure that the Dr Diana has used a pretty macho icon from our recent past, known as Indiana Jones, in her site’s logo and I thought that was “forbidden” for feminists.
Each time I hear the word forbidden at the moment I remember the Harold Pinter play Lee (my dad) recently produced were the officer shouts “Language is forbidden”. Not that using an ‘Indiana Jones’ type typography in a logo is forbidden…

So anyway do take a look at Dr Diana’s site you’ll like it, unless you are not really as open minded as you try to kid yourself into thinking you are ! Yes she uses words like boobs and talks about strip clubs, ooooh, yes naughty things and all…

Searching a definition for blogs

I have only started blogging recently, even though I have been building web sites for nearly twelve years.

What I find interesting about blogs is how people define them.
I have tried to define blogs in two distinctive ways :
A (1 to 13) : from a functional and technical perspective
B (1 to 7) : from a conceptual and more emotional perspective

Main characteristics :
A1 Title, each article/post/note has a title
A2 Date (optionally time), each article/post/note has an indication of when it was created.
A3 Content/Body, each article/post/note has content that is the main body, however it is possible that title and content be the same length in certain cases.
A4 Comments, each article/post/note allows users to post comments. Some systems have central user authentication systems that will recognize users and authenticate them so they can post as a recognized user.
A5 Permalink, each article/post/note has a specific URL/address that will display the article/post/note in full and generally followed by the comments

Common Options :
A5 Author, articles/posts/notes will have an indication of the name of the author or a nickname/handle of the author
A7 Categories/Tags, when each article/post/note is created, the creator usually can indicate which categories/tags it is associated with.
A8 Trackback, blogs are precursors in this area, the trackback is basically an automated communication system that will inform another blog/system that a message has been posted about an article/post/note. When an article/post/note is written on blog A about something on blog B, blog A automatically pings blog B to inform it.
A9 Archives, blogs usually have links to archives and or previous articles/posts/notes sorted by months
A10 Order, blog comments are usually displayed after the article/post/note, in reverse chronological order (the most recent is displayed first)

Back-end Functions :
A11 Users or groups of users will be authenticated and thus gain access to a type of dashboard that will allow them to create and often preview before publishing the article/post/note.
A12 Categories/Tags and Pages and of course the articles/posts/notes can be managed using a WYSIWIG or form based system like the articles/posts/notes
A13 Themes and Plugins, Blog systems allow bloggers to heavily customize/personalize the look and feel of their blogs as well as adding specific functions like contact pages, photo galleries etc.

Conceptual and Emotional Perspectives :
B1 Opinions, blogs are often defined as being personal accounts/diaries/journals
B2 Theme, blogs and the content often have a central underlying theme
B3 Types, blogs are often professional or personal and sometimes group based
B4 Discussion, blogging is closely associated with the idea of discussion via the concept of posting comments about the article/post/note
B5 Personal, blogs often present themselves as the work of a person or a group of people and do so with an about page and more often than not with a photo. This instantly gives personality and creates a link/bond with the writer that is often lacking in many online newspapers/magazines.
B6 Free, on a par with the founding spirit of the Internet, blogs are so far, in the vast majority, free to create and use. This is one of the nice sides of blogging in that it resembles a large freedom of speech movement. Specific and extra user needs like having your own domain name are obviously available at a price…
B7 Easy to use, blogs do not really require knowledge of any programming language and each new version of the most well known systems makes things easier and bring new interesting functions to the blogging world. A lot of networking functions like trackback to inform others of what you have posted are automatically handled without any user intervention required.

What Blogs are not :
Forums are not usually like blogs. In a forum multiple users can post articles/content and multiple users can post comments. When following a thread of posts in a forum it is often difficult to differentiate between the first post and the following posts. It would be possible to set-up a forum whereby the initial message in a thread could only be posted by a specific user or group of users and only then could others respond, however this is not how forums are traditionally set-up. Unlike blogs where discussions evolve from one point, forums allow multiple starting points for discussion. Blogs also seem to link more between each other and between posts/notes than forums do.

Newsgroups are pretty different to blogs. Newsgroups are not only different in form but also technically in the way they work. Groups on newsgroups are replicated over multiple servers all over the world which rarely happens with blogs in fact I don’t know of an example. Newsgroups are just messages posted to a specific group and depending on the software used to read the messages links and/or associations between messages can be hard to figure out unlike in forums. There is no real structure in commenting on an initial post in newsgroups since links between posts are not that easy to establish. Newsgroups are also well known for multi-part binary posts of images, video and all sorts of other file formats on top of text messages.

CMS, I’ve worked on creating web sites using Content Management Systems (CMS) like Vignette StoryServer and recently Gossamer Threads Links (can be considered a CMS). With this experience in mind I tend to disagree with most blog fanatics in their will to differentiate themselves with CMS systems. There is no real need to debate here, professional CMS software is capable, when properly configured, to provide everything blogs provide, and more (hence the extra cost involved).
Most CMS can be set-up to look and work exactly like blogs. From this point onwards blog fanatics tend to turn to the quoted conceptual and more emotional definition of a blog to argue differences between a CMS and blogs which can obviously also be replicated…

Blog Trivia :
One of the first bloggers Justin Hall started with a site called links.net
Web log was first used in 1997 by Jorn Barger and was first shortened to blog in 1999 by Peter Merholz
Open Diary first started the article with comments system in 1998