28 Jan 2005 Some thoughts:-
- What's the difference between a Technorati keyword search and a tag:search. And would it be helpful to have the keyword search on the tag display? - I'm really close to having Ecademy profiles "50 words" displayed with a Flickr style tag UI. So how can I get Ecademy profiles into their corresponding Technorati tags. And would it make any sense? This is relatively static data, where Technorati is all about dynamic changes. - I've had tags on blog entries here for a while now. I've got Technorati links on each page and in the RSS. I'm successfully pinging Technorati on new posts. But the results never seem to turn up in Technorati. I wonder why? - The Technorati developers forum has a sign up form. Just one catch, first name, last name and email address are required fields but have no input elements. Is this a challenge? Here it is. Now does it do what I want? And why document encoding? [from: del.icio.us]
Must read piece. Burningbird » Cheap Eats at the Semantic Web Café
It's a great summary of the state of tags, folksonomies, semantic categories, identity systems. And Oh, Lazyweb, somebody please port LID to perl, python, C# and others. It’s the first identity system I’ve seen that I really feel I can get behind. 26 Jan 2005 p2pnet.net - the original daily p2p and digital media news site : Consumers, "find a charge of around NT$8.5 (about 27 cents) per download to be acceptable, while the current market price is around NT$30 (slightly less than 99 cents) or more".
Interesting that price comes up as an issue again. And that there's a wide disparity between what consumers think they should pay and what they are charged. I'm still convinced that there's a price point where it becomes easier to buy music for download than to get it from friends or from file sharing systems. The problem for the industry is that the price point is probably around 10c to 25c per track. Let's just imagine for a moment that iTunes sold tracks with no DRM for 5c each. Does anyone think they wouldn't sell like crazy? So what's the price point where that would drop off? Interestingly, my favourite AllOfMp3.com put their prices up this year from 1c per MB to 2c per MB. A typical track encoded with LAME 192K VBR is now about 10c. After spending $75 with them, this is making me begin to slow down. Just Say No To DRM Glenn's got a great description of How to Record a Podcast on a Mac. And he's solved exactly the problem we've been having on the PC which is to record both mic and Skype out while only playing Skype out into your headphones. The key is the wide range of audio software available on the Mac and the eway the mac keeps the audio streams of individual devices separate instead of routing them all into a single mixer.
25 Jan 2005 So you're a big music fan. You've ripped all your CDs with LAME 192K VBR. You've collected (ahem) 5000 tracks and have maybe 30Gb of music on your hard drive. So back it up to DVD+R DL and it fits on 4 DVDs. By the end of this year it will all fit on one HD-DVD.
So hand that one to your friend and cut another. Just another brick in the wall surrounding the Music Distribution business. If DVDs are too awkward, you can get a 3.5" USB enclosure for £30, and a 160Gb drive for £50 or a 300Gb for £100. Just keep all your music and your favourite videos on that and walk it round to your mate's house. Plug it into her PC and dump the contents. And both routes have zero chance of resulting in unpleasant lawsuits from the RIAA or BPI. Is Sneakernet going to be the new P2P. Bloggerheads (UK) - So this is what freedom and liberty tastes like...
Lest we forget. Especially with a General Election coming up. Just read it. OK? Unfortunately a lot of the suggestions are really hard to code. Sigh... [from: del.icio.us]
[ 25-Jan-05 9:10am ] Just Say No To DRM
A good enough slogan to get some press? 22 Jan 2005 Mapping the Culture of an Online Community - Common Archetypal member types [from: del.icio.us]
21 Jan 2005 Ken Kutaragi, President of Sony Computer Entertainment, admitted that Sony made strategic misjudgments when it let its Media division's DRM zealousness reduce innovation and product flexibility in its consumer electronics divisions. via Techdirt.
Note that we've yet to see Sony really learn this lesson. Maybe they didn't really fall far enough to be a perfect example, but it would be good if Sony could represent an example to all those other companies that Open trumps Proprietary. I've wondered at times if there's a constant stream of MBAs that come into business focussed on the short term gains to be had from closed proprietary systems. The individuals in this stream each has to relearn the lesson that openness results in a much larger market and much bigger long term gains But unfortunately by the time they work this out another batch of short temr focussed MBAs has arrived. Time for Sony to go back and re-read Cory's speech to Microsoft? And time for Sony to take the fight to Apple, since Creative (for all their noise) don't seem to be able to do it. And time for all of us to "Just Say No to DRM" 20 Jan 2005 remembering rebecca :: january 2005 : I've noticed another little problem with Technorati tags. When I updated my site on Monday, I created tags for all the posts, and pinged Technorati. On Tuesday, I pinged Technorati two more times when I updated here. It is now Wednesday evening, and I have yet to see any of my tags catalogued on their site.
Me too. Technorati is clearly collecting some tagging information, but at the same time it's clearly not working right yet. And the Tag pages keep changing layout. And there's some weirdness about the layout according to whether they have got any data for the tag or not. kind of odd that tags aren't integrated into the keyword system as well. Surely, a keyword search should be on the combined page as well. Then today furl tags started showing up as well as del.icio.us. I think what we're seeing is a work in progess where development is being done in public. Let's hope it all settles down soon. In other news, I'm every bit as uncomfortable with the Rebecca Blood piece as Burningbird. We seem to be playing out the same old, same old pattern once more that's been done a million times before in online communities. The Politically Correct Police (PCP) are making lots of noise about how "This isn't right and SOMETHING SHOULD BE DONE". The Anti-PCP come along, who love a good flame war, and are finding ways to wind them up. The poor developers get backed into a corner and end up coming up with a series of nasty hacks to sanitise what was once a nicely elegant, simple and minimalist solution. What makes me laugh in all this are the ludicrous solutions put forward by the PCP who clearly have never been anywhere code. # Technorati could design their system not to publish any photo Flickr users have tagged "Might be offensive".. So just like the major search engines, Technorati will need an advanced search option "filter adult content". That's seriously hard and will never work 100%. And BTW, I don't think the photo in question is actually tagged on Flickr as "may offend". # Technorati could create their own tagging system, and not publish any photo Technorati users tagged "Might be offensive". It's not just photos. It'll have to apply to every one of the millions of entries in Technorati. # Technorati could provide an email address so that users could alert staff if a photo was offensive or inappropriate, and then the staff could go in and tag the inappropriate photo so that it would not appear on Technorati's site--or hand-select an appropriate one. Ah, the Fintstones approach. Just throw manual effort at it until you've got 250 outsourced support staff in Mumbai. I don't think so. The whole point of Technorati is that it's dynamic and timely. Which means a very high throughput of items. Which means automation of everything. And which means if you're offended by what you see, look away for 5 minutes. And a prize to the first hacker to get goatse to appear on the MLK page. Which then brings me to the core element Rebecca weas complaining about. Now, that photo is perfectly appropriate on Flickr as part of an individual's collection, and as documentation of Sunday's rally. It's perfectly appropriate as an illustration for 'protests', or even 'Israel' and 'Palestine', even though it surely will offend some people wherever it appears. But it is not appropriate to illustrate a category tagged 'MLK'. I personally was offended--these sentiments reflect the polar opposite to those espoused by Dr. King. More to the point, such an illustration is inappropriate--that poster has as much to do with Dr. King as would a picture of a banana peel. How is this Technorati's problem? The photo was tagged on Flickr with MLK. Technorati is correctly pointing this out. Don't you want to see conflicting views? And who gives a damn if you're offended? I called Technorati to register a protest. You wasted their support team's time with your petty complaint by telephone? Damn. That's exactly why I have the phone off the hook, and IM turned to DND. What's wrong with email? Goddess preserve us from people who say "SOMETHING MUST BE DONE". 19 Jan 2005 Journalist Mike Butcher ( profile: http://www.ecademy.com/account.php?id=18161 ) is writing an article for a European print magazine which has a wide circulation across Europe. The article is a fairly light-hearted one about what communications gadgets European business-people use - you know, 3G, blackberries, etc... that sort of thing.
He has have a set of questions to send to any European business execs - the more well-known they are the better - willing to take part and be featured in the magazine. Its an opportunity for someone to be exposed to a wide audience and in print, for a change. He'll also need a photo. Please contact him on mike@mbites.com for more information. ps. I don't post blogs for just any old Basic member. 18 Jan 2005 I'm building a Tagging system into VoidStar as a way of prototyping what I'll do on Ecademy. It's truning out nicely. Here's what I write about in terms of popular Tags.
Ecademy suffered terrible performance yesterday. It was largely caused by a single bad robot from become.com. So I've now put in long, long robots.txt file and today we're only using half the bandwidth. I've still got some more database tidy ups to do, specifically around avoiding a UNION query. [from: del.icio.us]
17 Jan 2005 10 days ago I threw up another Drupal site for the Feet Forward Motorcycle Community. It's been quite interesting watching some totally non-tech users getting to grips with it. They're coping pretty well.
I wanted to bolt the simple html editor into it an hit a small problem. As usual Drupal has got suitable hooks to bolt in, but it wanted to put the toolbar above the title of the field. I also had to hack common.inc a bit to get the required hooks into the <textarea> tag. Following a post on Buzzmachine.
For a long time now, Ecademy.com has had a field on user records that we call "50 words". This is exactly personal tagging. And we export this in our FOAF. Given the sudden explosion of tagging in the blog world, I've been trying to grok how to make this more explicit and get those tags out of Ecademy and into the outside world to places like Technorati. But here we're talking about relatively static data about users rather than the dynamic data of blog entries and the various blog aggregators and search engines aren't very interested. Something that would kick this up a gear would be MT, Blogger, Wordpress plugins that made it easy to build an "About Me" page. Over time this could morph into a personal identity server a la LID. It should provide lots of API hooks (like FOAF) in the same way that Blog entries provide RSS/Atom. If this happened, then a "50 words" tag field in the plug in would make good sense. |
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