1. Tumbling along, bytesized.labnotes.org

    April 2nd, 2007

    bytesized.png

    Every blog has its own rhythm. I believe there’s some common wisdom about defining your target audience, content guidelines and writing style. In my case I just started posting and the rest happened. But every once in a while you need a change of pace.

    As a regular reader, you would expect opinionated posts about the REST/WS War of Attrition, the dynamics of meta-programming, and my aversion to Interchangeable Developer Encapsulation and “tooling”.

    Recently, I tried adding some flavor to the blog, with a handful of short tech-less posts on whatever I felt like talking about, and … well it didn’t stick. It felt off, different, conflicting.

    So I stopped and went back to the mythical drawing board. I tossed a few ideas in my head, but eventually all roads lead back to Tumblr. So I decided to give it a try. I’ve seen a few tumblelogs before and liked the format, but never seriously considered them. Well, add that one to the list of eye opening experiences.

    I won’t try to define a tumblelog, just tell you what I like about it. The format is short posts. No archives, categories, sidebar, not even a way to leave comments on individual posts. Lightweight. These are not conversation starters, they’re pointers to interesting things that happen around us. Links to other sites, cool photos, memorable quotes, snippets of consciousness.

    We rarely consider how much software design influences the way we operate. It promotes that which it makes easy and accessible. And I’m not above being influenced. I like the editing facility of WordPress with its WYSIWYG editor, but that which makes it infinitely flexible and capable, also renders it an obstacle. It’s too slow.

    It takes me too long to format quotes, hyperlink text, position images and double-check that paragraphs don’t run into each other. That’s a filter. And a lot of short posts get filtered into oblivion.

    Enter Tumblr.

    Tumblr is a lesser known service that deserves much more attention. In two wrods: it rocks!

    Tumblr has six types of posts: links, quotes, photos, video, conversation snippets, and anything-goes HTML. It’s that distinction of content types that makes posting so damn easy. Click the bookmarklet and pop comes a window for linking to the current page, just hit submit and you’re done.

    Worth quoting? Select the text and click the bookmarklet for an insta-quote. Interesting photo? Hit the bookmarklet and you’ve made a post. Did I mention damn easy?

    The pop-up window lets you tab between different post types, so you can go from quote back to link, or from link to photo (it even lets you pick an image without hunting & gathering the URL). Switch between the tabs and you’ll understand that there are nuances for each of these post types. Treating each type differently, and the single-minded focus on quick/short posts is the secret that will turn you into a speed-blogger.

    So there.

    Give a warm welcome to bytesized.labnotes.org, the lighter side of Labnotes. Just enough daily posts to help you procrastinate, or keep you company while you’re waiting for Eclipse to load up.

    As for me, apparently I’ve been relegated into a machine for moving interesting posts from my feed reader to yours.

    Update: The brains behind Tumblr are planning new features, which earned them a favorable writeup on TechCrunch earlier today.

  2. New theme, and some hAtom appreciation

    August 8th, 2006

    Out goes one theme and in comes another. I like changing themes once in a while, give the blog a fresh look. And besides, I almost forgot to mention but Labnotes is just past its 1st birthday (hurray!), so consider it a birthday present.

    This time, the theme is based on the excellent Simpla theme by Phu. It’s clean, simple and elegant.

    Not only does it look good, but the code itself is simple and elegant, a pleasure to work with. Since I can’t just use a theme without tweaking it.

    So, I went and added hAtom support. Didn’t take long, hAtom is much easier than writing RSS/Atom feeds. Just change a few class names, add a couple of spans and abbr tags. No XMLs to worry about, no namespaces, no content encoding (good luck with that). Your blog is your feed, there’s only one file to worry about.

    I’m still on the fence about hAtom. I realize most people are too lazy to do their styling right, so getting the code to produce a correct feed seems easier. But it could change if there were some other obvious benefits to getting your HTML semantically rich and well structured.

    Like, for example, using the wonderful WordPress Widgets. If your sidebar is a proper list instead of a kludge, you can add these Widgets with one line of code, or mix them with your own. It literally took one line of code.

    And I also added MicroID. A lot of semantics in just a few hours. The beauty of Microformats.

  3. co.mments’ new home

    February 25th, 2006

    co.mments has just settled in it’s new home. A beautiful, spacious server with lots of room and a scenic view. Minus the scenic view.

    Besides that, it now has its very own co.mments blog. So if you want to check out what’s new with co.mments, what features are coming, make your own suggestions, voice your opinion, etc, head over to the new blog.

    This blog will now resume its normal scheduled programming. Ruby, Ajax, microformats, WordPress and my personal raves and rants. And some behind the scene discussions on the making of co.mments.

    new-home.png

  4. New server, maintenance Friday 11pm Pacific

    February 23rd, 2006

    The co.mments server is maxed out. A lot of users, and I thank you all, but the poor server just can’t take the load. It’s barely managing to pull through.

    So bear with me one more day. Because tomorrow, Friday night at 11pm Pacific co.mments is going down for maintenance for a few hours. And when it comes back, it will be running on a new server. And the new server is FAST.

  5. Going down for maintenance: 12am pacific

    February 15th, 2006

    When we come back:

    1. Multilingual support. This was a sore point and will be fixed in the new release.
    2. Support for a few more blogs, MetaFilter and Upcoming.org.
    3. Feeds will show number of unread comments in title and longer titles.
    4. A few performance improvements.
  6. Stay on top of the conversation - co.mments.com

    February 13th, 2006

    I got tired of how hard it is to follow all the interesting conversations happening in the comments. It’s just tedious to go back and check for updates. So I decided to do something about it.

    Let me introduce you to co.mments.com.

    It’s a simple idea. Bookmark a conversation you want to follow from your browser, and get all the new comments delivered to your feed reader. The co.mments server takes care of finding out new comments, grouping them by conversation and keeping track of the ones you’ve read.

    Right now it will work with most WordPress and MovableType blogs, Blogger, Flickr and Digg. More coming up.

    Bookmark a conversation

    It’s the first release, so be patient. It’s rough around the edges, not all the features are there yet, and it’s not the fastest server in the world. But it’s functional and you can try it out today. And if there’s a feature you want, or an improvement you can think of, just let me know.

    Update: I’m getting a lot of traffic from MetaFilter, so I went and added it. Now you can also bookmark MetaFilter discussions.

  7. Lost e-mails

    November 17th, 2005

    Something, or someone, has been eating my e-mails. Which includes e-mails notifying me of comments to this blog. Anyway, that should be fixed now (I hope), and I’ve just replied to some of the comments, and deleted the spam.

  8. New theme for this blog

    November 1st, 2005

    ‘Cause the old one kind of sucked, and anyway after 4 months it’s time to refresh. So for your viewing pleasure, I’m pleased to announced the new Labnotes blog theme. Theme based on [Twilight](http://themes.star-shaped.org/) by Aubrey Brown, picture by [ satellite360](http://www.flickr.com/photos/66959900@N00/24435685/).

    Update: We know have our very own official Tag Cloud(tm). I’m sure Limbo will be excited, now that the metadata is all meta.

    I’ve also added daily links for stuff that’s just too short to post.

    And while we’re still serving RSS with fries and a soft drink, it’s now officially buttoned ’subscribe’, thanks to 9mmfilm.com.

  9. Announcement 2.0

    October 29th, 2005

    You must be reading supr.c.ilio.us, and if not, what’s wrong with you?

    Limbo and Ryan found out how to monetize on eyeballs by creating a new service that combines the best in Web 2.0 technologies, all with only $30 of VC funding. Best yet, their tagged, aggregated, syndicated user created content is funny and snarky. I bet it gets them laid.

    Anyway, now that I boosted their PageRank and propelled them to the Technorati top 100, time for some self promotion. Yours truely has been promoted to guest blogger on supr.c.ilio.us. I’m still waiting for the business cards and company credit card to arrive, but I’m loving my new desk here at supr.c.ilio.us HQ. From there I will be reporting on the ever evolving English 2.0 language, and be ever so[self referencial.

  10. TagsLinks 0.6

    September 19th, 2005

    Version 0.6 of [TagsLinks](http://trac.labnotes.org/cgi-bin/trac.cgi/wiki/TagsLinks) is a cosmetic update that uses the new TransOverlay library.

    Earlier versions used OverLIB, a nifty library with a million and one options for managing tooltips, pop ups, etc. It made it possible to hack TagsLinks in a weekend. Now it’s time to move on. The new version uses TransOverlay, itself a weekend hack. I did some tests with FireFox and IE, and it works well enough to put it out there.

    Read the rest of this entry »