1. Down for the weekend

    August 27th, 2005

    TextDrive is migrating this server to a different location, so posting will be light this weekend.

    When it’s back up, I’m going to see if I can get some Ruby code running on it.

  2. BuzzWatch

    August 25th, 2005

    | Long tail | Top tag |
    |:————|:———–|
    | Foo Camp | Bar Camp |
    | Trackback | Distributed conversation |
    | Spam | Splog |
    | YIM | GIM |
    | Comments | Mudpit |
    | Sykpe | Gizmo |

  3. Freedom languages

    August 25th, 2005

    Kevin Barnes brilliantly sums up the two language camps:

    > The advocates of freedom languages tend to talk first about the speed and efficiency of the individual programmer. They discuss the expressive power of different constructs and focus on all the powerful features that the safety languages lack. They point out complex patterns and show off twenty-line systems that do the same thing. They talk more about the ease or purity of things than the safety of things. They are dismissive of static-type-safety and compile-time validation in general.

    link: http://www.journalhome.com/codecraft/9003/

    Meanwhile, Peter Yared, now with ActiveGrid, has a few choice words of his own:

    > Peter Yared, former CTO for Sun J2EE app server unit says Java/J2EE may lose out to Open Source technologies in the future, as IT managers are architects get tired of the time and cost of building in Java.

    link: http://idevnews.com/CaseStudies.asp?ID=170

  4. Switching

    August 25th, 2005

    Jeremy Zawodny asks, ["what have you switched recently?"](http://jeremy.zawodny.com/blog/archives/005065.html)

    Here’s my recent switch list:

    * _YIM to GIM_ — I want to have just one IM client on my desktop. I won’t be using the GIM client, but finally I can move all my non-geeky friends over to Jabber and use any client I want.

    * _Social networks to blogs_ — I’m getting tired of the walled gardens in social networking, and loving the endless possibilities of the blogsphere.

    * _Skype to Gizmo_ — I don’t believe in closed networks that decide who can reach you and on what terms.

    * _CDs to DVDs_ — The CDs I bought years ago are now nothing more than hardcopies for MP3’s. Backing up that music on DVD takes up less space.

    * _Listener to Producer_ — Turns out that creating podcasts is really simple, even for the audio challanged.

  5. Getting Rid of Splogs

    August 25th, 2005

    [What Doc said](http://doc.weblogs.com/2005/08/25#howToSaveTheWebFromSplogonoma).

    The other day I was looking at my Feedster search queries. Some of them are just spam/ad/spam/ad/spam/ad. There’s no actual content for weeks. The lack of real content is not surprising, I’m keeping track of some niche keywords. But is still wasted my time having to weed out the crap.

    Maybe I shouldn’t be using Feedster, but I’m not seeing much better results from the other RSS search engines. All of them collect spam..

    Over at BarCamp I brought up the topic of an open spam filtering network twice. Everyone recognizes the problem, everyone understands the solution, but no one cares to do anything about it. I sensed the search engines view it as a competitive advantage.

    I understand. Each service wants better search results for themselves to drive more eyeballs to their site. I don’t care. I’m the consumer, and I want a better service. Better service means better filtering, and better filtering only happens when you collaborate. No matter how good you can filter spam, you’re never as good as a network of filters.

    Spam filtering is the last place that needs more walled gardens.

    Spam will only exist as long as spammers have an incentive, and every service that keeps that information to itself is helping create that incentive. You’re either sharing the info, or you’re helping spammers. Pick a side.

    tags: splog spam

  6. Google Talk

    August 24th, 2005

    Well, it’s here. And it’s somewhat exciting. The client application is simple, small, and really disappointing. I expected more. But it’s Jabber, so I can use my favorite Jabber client.

    So what’s the big todo? In three word: bye bye YIM. YIM is annoying, YIM eats memory but only talks one protocol, and every so often Yahoo “upgrades” it and breaks Trillian. I’ve been wanting to dump it forever. GIM will make it easy to convience my non-techie friends to switch over. They all use GMail anyway.

    If there’s a lesson here, its very simple: don’t put ads between you service and your user base. You’re just asking them to switch.

    link: http://mail.google.com/mail/talk/download

    tags: google im

  7. JetEye Launched!

    August 23rd, 2005

    From [Limbo](http://hellonline.com/blog/?p=34):

    > [JetPaks](http://www.jeteye.com/jetpak/7962835,,,1124819773,,search,,view.html) are collections of resources that offer more flexibility than a single bookmark but are more structured than a Web page. A JetPak can contain many related resources of different types, expanding the bookmark concept, but can still be quickly scanned and digested unlike a blog post or a Web page.
    And in English:

    > JetPaks allow you to do just that - as you search, collect the links in a JetPak, annotate them or add select quotes and images. Attach this JetPak to your research notes when you’re done so that, sometime in the future, you or anyone else can recreate the trail of thought you followed on the way to a your final conclusion.

    > Every JetPak is a statement by a person, saying these items are all related to each other, they are interesting and they are even more interesting when viewed together in a single context.

    Now, this is seriously cool. I’ve been looking for a OneNote/EverNote that lives on the Web and works from the Web. I think I just found it.

    link: http://jeteye.com/

    tags: jeteye jetpak tagging bookmarks

  8. The Future of Radio is Radio 2.0

    August 23rd, 2005

    Everybody around me is hyping [podcasts](http://podshow.com/) as the next best thing to take over radio. Terrestial radio is bleeding audience, and sattelite radio is just another Iridium.

    I’m an enthusiastic podcast listener, and for a while I bought into the hype. Then something happened to make me realize podcast is disruptive technology, but the killer app is yet to come. And the killer app is radio. Of a different kind.

    Last week I recorded my first two podcasts, crossing the line form listener to producer. WOW moment. I plugged the mic, clicked record, did a bit of editing afterwards, and uploaded. The sound is so so, I’m still learning that part. It may be crappy, but at least it’s interesting. You see, quality is not about expensive audio setup and sound engineering, quality is about something I want to listen to.

    Turns out that if you have something interesting to say, creating quality content is easy. And it’s only going to get easier. Not everything will be quality, far from it. But it will be an explosion of content, where I can easily find 24 hours of quality programming each and every day. And you can find 24 hours of quality programming — different from mine — each and every day.

    Which brings me to my second moment of WOW. I logged in to [Pandora](http://www.pandora.com). I picked one of my favorite artists, and it created a channel with similar music, most of which I never heard before, most of which I’d love to hear again. I’m hooked. Pandora knows what I like, and it can play that 24/7. Did I mention quality programming?

    I also learned this week that I’m starting to dislike my iPod.

    For all its slick interface and sexy form factor, the iPod is a clunky device. It really belongs [here](http://www.engadget.com/entry/1234000430055334/). You need to line up content and synchronize it in advance, you can’t listen to anything that streams, it can’t do news. Not to mention, my iPod is anywhere I remember taking it with me. Which is not a lot of places.

    Fire the iPod, hire a cell phone.

    Cell phones do more, cost less, are always around, always connected, sans the wires. But it won’t be [this](http://blogs.siliconvalley.com/gmsv/2005/08/looks_like_moto.html). The future is not overpriced, DRM-laden music that you buy from cell phone carriers. What does Verizon know about music? Do you care for Cingular DJs?

    The future of radio is radio. A two-way radio that allows you to listen and record, download and upload. It does GSM or maybe CDMA, WiFi or mabye WiMax, Bluetooth but probably all of the above. It has the download capability for streaming music, the storage space to keep it there, and an open architecture that lets you search for content on [Odeo](http://blogs.siliconvalley.com/gmsv/2005/08/looks_like_moto.html), let Pandora pick it for you, or use some future Web service I can’t imagine yet.

    Think Web 2.0. Add an antenna. That’s Radio 2.0.

    tags: radio podcast web2.0 ipod pandora radio2.0

  9. Amazon switching to USPS

    August 23rd, 2005

    The Gotham Gal has some [choice words](http://gothamgal.blogs.com/gotham_gal/2005/08/amazon.html) for Amazon about the switch from UPS to USPS. I echo the sentiments.

    I’ll give credit to USPS for recruiting Armstrong to [win the Tour](http://www.trekbikes.com/tour_de_france/team/lance.jsp), but package delivery is not one of their strong points. Buying online is not just about the price, but the convenience, and UPS is part of that package (no pun intended).

  10. Podcast: Ryan King on Microformats @ BarCamp ‘05

    August 22nd, 2005

    From [BarCamp '05](http://barcamp.org/), [Ryan King](http://theryanking.com/blog/archives/2005/08/13/barcamp/) talks about [Microformats](http://microformats.org/).

    link: http://content.labnotes.org/podcast/barcamp05-microformats.mp3
    tags: microformats barcamp05 podcast