Yearly Archives: 2010

Google Wave to rise from the ashes in open source form?

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Ever since the announced demise of Google Wave, I think we’ve all been wondering what would be next and how much of the code Google would make available. Today, they’ve taken a step in that direction with this post:

Wave open source next steps: “Wave in a Box”

In the post, they say that they will make available as open source:

  • an application bundle including a server and web client supporting real-time collaboration using the same structured conversations as the Google Wave system
  • a fast and fully-featured wave panel in the web client with complete support for threaded conversations
  • a persistent wave store and search implementation for the server (building on contributed patches to implement a MongoDB store)
  • refinements to the client-server protocols
  • gadget, robot and data API support
  • support for importing wave data from wave.google.com
  • the ability to federate across other Wave in a Box instances, with some additional configuration

If they follow through on all this, it should be quite a good offering.  As they note:

This project will not have the full functionality of Google Wave as you know it today. However, we intend to give developers and enterprising users an opportunity to run wave servers and host waves on their own hardware.

After Google announced Wave back at that famous Google I/O presentation, I’ve been intrigued by it (and written about it) but what has most intrigued me is the possibility to move collaboration to a “distributed and decentralized” model in a way similar to email and web servers.  Distributed and decentralized is, after all, “The Internet Way”, as I wrote about at great length in the past.

Let’s see what happens… and I, for one, will definitely be watching http://www.waveprotocol.org/ to see what they make available.

What do you think?  Can Wave re-emerge as something useful?


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TypePad users: How to Re-Enable Twitter Sharing After the OAuth Change

As a TypePad user, I discovered today that any new posts I made on this blog or Disruptive Telephony were NOT being shared on Twitter after I published them.  It turns out to be that the connection to my Twitter account needed to be fixed… presumably related to Twitter’s OAuth authentication change.  I’m guessing that I set up the linkage to my Twitter account back when TypePad first provided the capability – and undoubtedly provided my Twitter account name and password.  That kind of authentication to Twitter was no longer allowed as of August 31st.

If you find yourself in this same situation, here’s what you need to do.  First, go into your overall TypePad account settings and go to the “Other Accounts” page.  If you have a problem, you’ll see some text in red that says something like “Action Required” (unfortunately I didn’t take a screenshot of it) in the area shown in this screenshot next to your Twitter account name:

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If you do not see any red text, and just see green checkmarks like are in the screenshot, you are all set – your Twitter sharing should be working perfectly fine.

If you do see the red text, it’s a click-able link that will take you to the Twitter OAuth authentication page where you can approve TypePad’s access to your Twitter account.

Next, you need to go to EACH of your blogs where you want to share your posts out to Twitter and check the box next to your Twitter account again.  It seems that when your Twitter account is disconnected, the connection is removed from each of your blogs.

To get to the Sharing screen shown in the screenshot below, you need to go into the Dashboard for each blog, click on the “Settings” tab on the top and then the “Sharing” tab on the left side. Then you can check off that you want to share posts on Twitter:

twittersharing.jpg

Unfortunately I found you do have to do it for every blog that you have on TypePad. Not a huge deal for me, since only 4 of my blogs are on TypePad, but it could be more of a pain for others.  In the end, though, all my blogs are now once again sharing blog posts out to Twitter.

Hope this helps some of you…


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Apple’s Ping to Connect with Facebook? (iTunes 10 screenshot…)

With the announcement of Apple’s Ping “social network for music” yesterday, I naturally had to download iTunes 10 and check it out.  Outside of finding that so far pretty much zero of the older artists I follow are on Ping, I was intrigued by this screen:

iTunes10-facebook.jpgOthers have noticed this, of course, and a Cult of Mac article about it has comments from folks who were able to link to Facebook to see if their FB friends are on Ping.

It’s just curious, given the lack of Facebook mention in Steve Jobs’ keynote yesterday and then Kara Swisher’s All Things D article:  ‘Steve Jobs on Why Facebook Is Not Part of Apple’s New Ping Music Social Network: “Onerous Terms”‘ (And I’m somehow not surprised that Facebook had “onerous terms”…)

It would be logical if they did allow that connection… it’s annoying to enter a new social network and have to, yet again, go through the process of connecting to people on the network.  This is why data portability matters, as I’ve written about over the years, and why we need projects like the DataPortability Project to succeed.  Upon entering a new network like Ping, I want to connect with my “tribe” very simply and easily…

Meanwhile, given that the bands I like, such as the Scorpions, AC/DC, Rush, etc., (or even Nickelback!) all don’t seem to be on Ping yet, I’ll just look at my blank page and wait for a few friends to show up on the service… perhaps I can find some newer music 😉


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Podcamp Boston 5 coming up Sept 25-26 – sign up now! #pcb5

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Do you want to learn more about social media, online content creation, marketing, PR and so much more?  Do you want to meet people who are changing the online world?

If so, registration is now open for Podcamp Boston 5 taking place at Microsoft’s New England R&D Center on the weekend of September 25-26, 2010.  It’s hard to believe that it’s been 5 years since Chris Brogan, Christopher Penn and company kicked off the Podcamp world in “Beantown”… but it has been that long… and in looking at the list of people already registered, this year’s event should be outstanding!  You can register directly at:

http://pcb5.eventbrite.com/

or learn more about what will be going on at:

http://podcampboston.org/

I’ve attended and spoken at Podcamp’s before, and they are well worth the time!  Great people, great information… it’s all good!

P.S. My own schedule won’t work for me to make the drive southwest due to some family and school events, but I’m looking forward to hearing all about it and seeing the news and posts coming out of the show.


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Does the Disqus blog comment system not work with the iPad?

Are any of you out there using the iPad running into problems with leaving comments on blogs using the Disqus blog comment system?

This morning I browsed to Scott Monty’s blog on my iPad and went to leave a comment on his “Picture This” post. (Great post, BTW!) I typed in my reply and then pressed the “Post as…” button… and… nothing:

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Now, when I press that same button on my laptop, I see this window popup on the page:

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allowing me to then choose the identity that I want to use to post the comment.

This popup does NOT appear for me when I’m using the iPad’s browser to view Scott’s blog.  I tried another blog that also used the Disqus system and had the same result.

Looking at the HTML source of the page, I’m guessing the issue may be the JavaScript script that Disqus is using to generate the comment form… but that’s just a guess at this point.  It may also not be an issue with the Disqus system, per se, but more in the specific way that Scott’s blog embeds the connection to Disqus. I don’t know.  All I know is that when I had a comment to leave this morning, I couldn’t do so.

Anyone else seeing this kind of issue using the iPad’s browser with Disqus-powered blogs?


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How to create an automated Twitter self-service “RSVP” app using Tropo.com

twitterlogo-shadow.jpgDo you want an application that lets your customers interact with you via Twitter – but to do so via “self-service”? i.e. without a person having to help them? What if you wanted to make it so that people could RSVP for an event via Twitter and receive an automated acknowledgement?

That’s exactly the type of app a colleague of mine wrote about in this recent post: Linking to Twitter using Javascript & Tropo Scripting. He shows how you can create an app like this using the Tropo.com cloud communications service and walks you through step-by-step what you need to do.

The appropriate automation and scaling of your Twitter usage is a topic near and dear to me… I’ve written about it myself over on the Tropo blog with topics like “creating a ‘night service’ for your Twitter account.” (And yes, I do want to continue the series, since it’s not really a “series” if I only wrote Part 1!) It’s a topic I know I’ll keep returning to.

Anyway, check out Justin’s article… and Tropo accounts are free, so you can try it out yourself!


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Mashable: Hilarious parody “Twitter Movie” trailer

Saw this article in Mashable and just did have to share it here… for those of us who have been involved with Twitter since its early days, it is fun to laugh at some of the more inane aspects of the service. Enjoy:

Kudos to the team who put this together!


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Where have all the bookstores gone? The move to e-books and the changing book distribution model

Do you still shop in a bookstore?  Or do you buy your books online at sites like Amazon.com? Or have you ditched print books altogether and now read “e-books” on a reader like an iPad or a Kindle?

As E-Books Gain, Barnes and Noble Tries to Stay Ahead - NYTimes.com.jpgThe New York Times is out today with a piece about the changes at Barnes & Noble and also about changing consumer trends in general that is worth a read.  Interesting stats on the changes in buying habits:

In the first five months of 2009, e-books made up 2.9 percent of trade book sales. In the same period in 2010, sales of e-books, which generally cost less than hardcover books, grew to 8.5 percent, according to the Association of American Publishers, spurred by sales of the Amazon Kindle and the new Apple iPad.

As an author, but also as simply a lover of reading and of books, I do wonder about where we re going. If I look at my own behavior, we have two large bookstores here in Keene, NH. One is a Borders branch and the other is a local Toadstool Bookshop. Both are great places to browse books… Borders has a coffee shop/cafe area and WiFi. Here’s the thing, though:

I almost NEVER go there!

Part of it is that I don’t find I have time in my daily life to just go and browse through books. Maybe I should make that time… but I don’t… and I don’t see it happening soon. The other reality is that as a cheap… er.. “frugal” Yankee, I just don’t want to pay the higher prices of a bookstore when I can get the exact same book for less online, particularly once you get sucked into Amazon Prime and can get a book delivered so fast.

I’ve also bought more e-books this year than ever before, largely because I now own an iPad. I had purchased a few before for my iPhone or desktop, but the reading form factor wasn’t that great. The iPad is great for reading… and again there’s a price factor. I bought a bunch of O’Reilly books I’d wanted not too long ago when the ebook versions were only $5.

An interesting aspect of e-books (or are they “ebooks” or “eBooks”?) is the ease of receiving updates. Just today I received an email from O’Reilly that there is an updated version of one of the books I bought that has a number of corrections and fixes. Pretty much impossible to do with a printed book, particularly because they wouldn’t know I had bought it. (More anonymity with print books… a subject for another blog post.)

Now, there are a host of reasons why I personally still like print books… “tree-ware”… I’m not yet cool with the idea of “cuddling up in bed” at the end of the night with my e-reader. And I just like the feel of a book in my hands. But I can see the day coming…

How about you? Do you go to bookstores anymore? Do you still buy books? Or have you shifted to e-books?


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When did YouTube move to allowing 15-minute uploads?

When uploading a video today to Voxeo’s YouTube channel, I noticed that videos can now be up to 15 minutes in length:

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When did this happen?  You used to be limited to 10 minutes. Not that I’m complaining, mind you.  With my Emerging Tech Talk video podcast, I try to keep each episode to down around 5-7 minutes, but sometimes I’ve been in a really good interview and it’s felt rushed at the end to keep it down under the 10-minute mark.

Also, with longer presentations from conferences and events, I’ve considered posting those to YouTube as segments, but with an hour-long talk that would have meant 6 ten-minute segments, which seemed too much for me. As a result, I’ve been posting those long videos to our voxeo.blip.tv channel. With a 15-minute limit, I could break those hour-long sessions into only 4 segments, which is much better to me.

Regardless of when that limit was changed, I’m just very happy that it was changed!


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The additional travel challenges for content creators (i.e. why my backpack is so heavy)

As I got ready for my travel down to New York City this week for the SpeechTEK conference where I spoke and also helped staff Voxeo’s booth, I reflected as I packed on all the extra steps I wind up going through when planning to be a “content creator” at the show.  I’m not there only to talk and show our new services… I’m also there to write blog posts, take and upload photos, record video interviews (and maybe audio interviews), to post tweets and respond to tweets, etc., etc.  For multimedia content creation, there’s a bit of extra work and gear.

THE GEAR

My travel pack of choice these days is a Lowepro Fastpack 250. It fits the gear I need, but also has this great feature where you can unzip the side pocket and pull your DSLR out very quickly.  As you can see by the picture, I travel these days with a Nikon D90 for photos and a small JVC Everio MG-330 hard drive video recorder.  In truth, the D90 can also do video… but it’s harder to hold for video than the JVC unit is.  Perhaps I’ll eventually do more with it… but for the moment I carry both.  Both have power cords (or battery chargers), naturally.

I also carry a Blue Eyeball (which I reviewed) in case I want to do two-shot video recordings (using my MacBook Pro’s camera and the Blue) for an interview.

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Add to this, of course, the laptop, and these days the iPad as well… and it’s a heavy pack.  I also naturally have my iPhone for photos and quick status updates and such as well.

THE ADDED STEPS

There are also a series of steps that all this gear adds to travel preparations:

1. Import and delete all the photos off the DSLR memory card (which in my case means importing them all into iPhoto on my Mac).

2. Import and delete all the movies off the video camera (import into iMovie for me).

3. Make sure the battery is fully charged on the DSLR.

4. Make sure the battery is fully charged on the video camera.

5. Make sure that I have all relevant cables needed to copy content off of the cameras and onto my laptop.

It’s not a huge number of steps, but it does add up, particularly if I have a lot of photos or movies on the cameras.  Yes, with memory cards being so cheap I certainly could leave the photos on the DSLR, but I’m also paranoid about losing photos… so I want to make sure they are off the camera before I go traveling.

If you are a “content creator” for your organization, what do you bring when you travel?  What steps do you wind up adding to your travel preparations?


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