- Rebecca Blood interviews Heather Armstrong as part of her series getting webloggers to talk about weblogging Interesting, rewarding stuff that all new webloggers should be reading, but very few will…
- While I was talking at Our Social World yesterday, Ross Mayfield added me to Wikipedia I kind of dread linking to this – I’m bound to get lynched for it one way or the other – but since it’s there I thought maybe people could do an No Point Of View on it?
- Ed Dumbill interviews David Heinemeier Hansson about Ruby on Rails “Rails is opinionated software. It eschews placing the old ideals of software in a primary position. One of those ideals is flexibilitythat we shouldn’t pass judgement on one form of development over another. Well, Rails does, and I believe that’s why
- The playlist from the Last Night of the Proms 2005 Watching it now, with Webb on IM, and thoroughly enjoying it…
Category: Random
Links for 2005-09-09
- Mint: A fascinating and kind of beautiful web stats package that’s getting a bit of buzz It certainly looks great – but I’m certainly not paying $30 to see if it’s any good. Anyone else?
- ProgrammableWeb: Web 2.0 API Reference Dozens of good APIs. I can already see some interesting ones we’ve been playing with are missing, but it’s a really really good start for some stuff I want to do at work…
- So now this is interesting – Christian Lindholm runs off from Nokia and straight into the arms of Yahoo! Been noticing a fair amount of this recently, what with Flickr and all and a couple of friends in the States. All very interesting.
Links for 2005-09-08
- exbiblio – a company doing interesting things with paper I met these guys at FooCamp and wait to see what they’re up to with great curiosity
- “Germans hail Berners-Lee ‘second-greatest’ scientist” – not because of the science, interestingly, but because of the open product / platform / concept he developed… “Arguably even more importantly, he made the protocols freely available to the world shortly after his invention, and his solution became the world wide web.”
- Challenge-response authentication (from Wikipedia) I’m really interested – particularly after the recent delicious visualisations tool revealed some of the problems of passwords in the open – in ways of ‘pairing’ IDs on parallel sites without transferring sensitive information… More later…
- The Vatican’s (frankly positive) official view of evolution is that it’s real and true and compatible with the Bible Just to remind people – this whole thing is not a debate between religious people and scientists, as there are many many religious people who accept the legitimacy of evolution, including religious scientists and most major world churches…
- Finding Billie Piper: (Part One) – Possibly the most terrifying and yet most awesomely creative use of the internet to stalk someone I’ve yet seen… Only problem – there are lots of pubs in Belsize Park although I think I agree that England’s Lane is a good bet for the butchers and hardware store…
- “Quality of Life in Olfactory Dysfunction” Interesting article about what effects not having a sense of smell has on your state of mind. I get the impression that it’s mostly the people who lose their sense of smell who complain about it most. Wimps.
- Philips produce a prototype of a ‘smart-paper’-based appliance ‘earlier than expected’ No idea what the particular value of this one is yet, be fascinating to see what particular affordances this kind of display has…
- The first pictures I’ve seen of the iPod Nano Fucking hell. Thinner than a pencil. It’ll be on the Apple store before this delicious post gets anywhere near my site, of course…
- Dear God, the iPod nano looks extraordinarily beautiful Must. Not. Buy. One. Have. To. Save. Up. For. Other. Apple. Products. Like. New. Powerbook. Cos. Current. One. Not. Fast. Enough. Nngh.
Links for 2005-09-07
- Antony and the Johnsons have won the Mercury Music Prize And frankly I’m well pleased about that. Some stunning and emotional music. Very bloody good – and familiar hopefully to the few on my Popcasting feed…
Links for 2005-09-06
- Our Social World – a conference in Cambridge at the end of this week on weblogs, wikis and social software I’ll be talking at this event along with lots of other UK and US experts, so register now if you haven’t already done so…
- The rumour is that Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely have designed the sleeve for the new Robbie Williams album I believe my brain just leapt out of my ear. That’s it on the floor over there. Looking freaked.
- Wikipedia’s article on falsifiability – a key concept in the philosophy of science particularly advocated by Karl Popper I think for me this is one of the core principles of science that Intelligent Design does not countenance or allow to be incorporated into their work. Which I find frustrating…
- As far as I can tell, this is the weblog of Paul Daniels, famous UK magician and millionaire husband of Debbie McGee I mean it could be a parody, but if so it’s so close to the truth that it’s almost impossible to tell…
- Sisters under the skin – the Economist reports on the sequencing of the chimpanzee genome “The genome of the chimpanzeemankind’s closest living relativehas been sequenced. Comparing it with Man’s should help people understand themselves”
- Baffling Cuteness – an old Paul Ford post in which he finds cute animal cards and ‘interprets’ them “The zombie is a panda. But it will not eat brains because he is too lazy. Get up, lazy panda, and eat brains! You are so lazy! But he is too lazy. All right, no brains today!”
- One side can be wrong – scientists articulate their problems with Intelligent Design (from The Guardian) “Accepting ‘intelligent design’ in science classrooms would have disastrous consequences, warn Richard Dawkins and Jerry Coyne “
- FeedBurner has redesigned and gone for a much simpler and more open, clean look… Ah, the new simplicity – this is the stuff. Beautiful bit of work and well worth ripping off wholesale. Makes the old design look incredibly dated and ostentatious…
- Blinksale – The easiest way to send invoices online I was sure I’d linked to this a while back – anyway, Blinksale is a beautiful, simple and clear Web 2.0 application designed to fulfil a really interesting little (and profitable) niche…
- It’s been everywhere, but it’s really good: Tiger Secrets “Secret shortcuts. Hidden helpers. Mysterious menus. You could spend months tracking down all the undocumented features tucked away in Mac OS X 10.4, Apple‚Äôs newest operating system”
- “iPod mini to move entirely to flash and color, shuffle and phone details emerge” An interesting, if predictable, move by Apple to replace the smaller hard-drive based iPods with the newer larger Flash memory units…
- Viewpoint: Has Katrina saved US media? Fascinating article which suggests that this particular crisis in the States has pushed the media into a position where it can be critical of government again, and interrogate it as it’s supposed to. Fascinating stuff. Hopefully won’t be an exception from
- “Dinosaurs may have been a fluffy lot” Apparently a new scientific consensus is emerging that many dinosaurs may have been covered with feathers!
Links for 2005-09-03
- The Onion Magazine – America’s Homeless: Still the best in the world? I’m sure that’s the same title face as the Sunday Telegraph Magazine that my parents read… Almost as funny too!
- Flickr fans have Yahoo fear eased That the controversy about Flickr and Yahoo’s merging has hit BBC News is incredibly startling to me. Yahoo clearly have some perception problems. Also interested in Clay’s comments.
- Matt Biddulph talks “Using Wikipedia and the Yahoo API to give structure to flat lists” We’ve been having enormous fun at work at the moment experimenting with semantic network effects at the level of services. Totally worth a read this. Tip of the ice-berg…
Links for 2005-09-02
- Get your Flickr books and posters printed out for you by QOOP (?) I saw some of these in the Flickr offices a while back and they looked really good, although I suspect they wouldn’t look so good for camphone shots…
- I said I wouldn’t link to them again, but goddam is the New York Times article on Pastafarianism entertaining… Be prepared to get irritable about logins though… “Is the super-intelligent, super-popular god known as the Flying Spaghetti Monster any match for the prophets of intelligent design?”
- “Evangelical Scientists Refute Gravity With New ‘Intelligent Falling’ Theory” Another stunning Onion article, and another satire of Intelligent Design. But is satire enough here?
Call for Participation: ETech 2006…
Ladies and Gentlemen, the Call for Participation for the O’Reilly Emerging Technology Conference 2006 has been posted, and I recommend you all go and read it, come up with good ideas and then submit them. I’ve been to the last three years of the conference, and presented at ETech 2003 and (twice) at ETech2005 and I can say without reservation that it’s a fascinating and inspiring conference, well worth attending, and even better to present at. If you have insight to share about future technologies or if you have projects that you’ve built that you think might be part of a foundation for the world to come, then you should be trying to talk at ETech. It’s by far the best way to expose yourselve to a community of creative peers and business people, to find new people to collaborate with and maybe even find some money or backing for your enterprise. It’s also bloody good fun.
This year, I’m delighted to report that I’m on the progamme committee for the event as well as attending. This means that I have a new responsibility and desire – to try and uncover new people and new work going on in the world and to try and persuade them to submit a proposal. So even if you’re not yourself thinking about submitting something, if you know someone who you think would be particularly good – either a famous technologist or a sole researcher working in their backroom on a fascinating problem, then point them in the direction of the Call for Participation and/or send me as much information as you can about them – including any URLs you think might be relevant or interesting. My e-mail address remains tom {at} the name of this website – or post your thoughts below in the comments.
You only have around three weeks to get your submissions in – the final date is September 19, 2005 – so get thinking. This year’s call is full of interesting starting places to do with handling and navigating vast amounts of information and media, exploiting or dealing with the unexpected affordances of new technologies, drawing data and systems together across the internet to generate a service-to-service network effect and the increasing ubiquity of what was previously hardcore and specialist technology. There’s an enormous amount to think about and react to in the Call for Participation alone, but feel free to go beyond it and find the stuff that we’re missing.
Links for 2005-09-01
- An awesomely useful web page that allows you to see how fast your current internet connection is… As of this moment this occupies spot #2 on my browser quick-links bar, next to my cache of things I have to work through. It’s neat. Yum.
- “1,2,3,4, I Declare IM War” – an interesting theory about MSN, AIM and Yahoo conspiring to keep Google out of the multi-platform IM game… If it’s true, it seems to me it’ll have the opposite effect – as a real boom happens with Jabber clients that are interoperable instead led by Google. This could be about the platformising of the IM space for other people to build upon…
Links for 2005-08-31
- Mark Thompson’s speech to the Edinburgh International Television Festival 2005 “But the idea that, in the age of the i-pod, the public would not welcome the opportunity to actually buy a download of a piece of music they have heard on a BBC site … seems to me ridiculous. “
- Bye bye blackboard museum A blackboard written on by Einstein is supplemented by a whole range of contemporary blackboards by prominent politicians, artists and scientists…
- How Much Does iTunes Like My Five-Star Songs? Exploring the algorithm that choose songs in the Party Shuffle mode…
- Is Your Boss a Psychopath? “Odds are you’ve run across one of these characters in your career. They’re glib, charming, manipulative, deceitful, ruthless — and very, very destructive. And there may be lots of them in America’s corner offices.”
- Malcolm X – gay black hero? An older piece from the Guardian – written by Peter Tatchell of course – talks about Malcolm X’s sexuality. I find it weirdly uninteresting and limited as a piece, despite my increasing sympathy for Tatchell as I get older.
- I find myself equally unimpressed by the response to the Peter Tatchell article. It attempts to cite strong gay black role-models and can only cite the most pathetic of examples, while in the meantime stating that referencing (not with a mind to discredit) aspects of someone’s acknowledged sexual history is tantamount to an insult.
- Bizarre South Park cartoon in which “Scoble goes to Google” Compelling. Scary. Intriguing. Aliens. Rimming.
- 18th Annual Reader Satisfaction Survey by PC Magazine finds Apple at the top again. The scores are so much better that their left to query whether Apple computer users are just completely barking. “For Apple, in both the desktop and notebook sections of the survey, every single score is significantly better than the industry average for Windows machines”
- The Constant Gardener is getting pretty exciting reviews – collected here on Metacritic… “Director Fernando Meirelles and screenwriter Jeffrey Caine put a human face on John le Carre’s novel of sex, lies and dirty politics in modern Africa. Prepare for a thrilling ride. “
- An IPod Cellphone Said to Be Imminent September 7th is the date that everyone is bandying around. Which franky is about time – they’ve been talking about this for months…
- Engadget reports that Apple have made a deal with Cingular around the iTunes phone Again September 7th is the date that everyone’s looking towards. I guess we’ll see then. I can’t imagine it make me switch to Motorola, and I wonder how long it will be before it’s available in the UK…
- File-sharers move from BitTorrent BBC News reports that people are moving towards using peer to peer software like eDonkey instead of BitTorrent, after trackers were shut down a few months ago…