Dead trees for a good cause

I just printed 400 pages for a sur­vey I get to do tomor­row after­noon. I was think­ing about tak­ing it to church and get­ting opin­ions from the same kinds of peo­ple there (it’s a sur­vey for CYIADA for youth lead­ers), but then realised it was pretty much use­less with them because I already knew every­thing they had to say. So it’s more of a sur­vey for really basic aggre­gate num­ber stuff, not in-depth things I couldn’t fig­ure out on my own.

Which, I’ve decided, is fine, because I’ve got a web and email address on the piece of paper, and for the num­ber of con­tacts this so-called “sur­vey” seeds I’m pray­ing it’ll be com­pletely worth it, even if no-one both­ers fill­ing in the sur­vey prop­erly. Really, $40 (or how­ever much actual cost per page is here) is pretty good if I only get 10 qual­ity leads on peo­ple who are desparately keen to use some­thing like this… and can wait a few months.

I men­tion that as trou­ble appears to be brew­ing on the home front re: the wait­ing part… :| Peo­ple are enthu­si­as­tic but in a “let’s grab a generic CMS and mix it up with Blog­ger and Google Groups and it’ll rock” kind of way. Which is fine for all of about six months, then you’ve gotta do it all over again because 1 of 3 stops work­ing for what­ever rea­son. And scal­a­bil­ity issues. Grr… any­way. I thought we’d been through all this already with our abortive Yahoo! Cal­en­dar attempts of 18 months ago. Appar­ently not.

So… please be pray­ing for wis­dom and patience around that par­tic­u­lar issue. And espe­cially that I’d be lov­ing, because right now I’m in a posi­tion where I could clob­ber peo­ple with tech­ni­cal ram­blings until they agree with me (read: relent), or sim­ply go and change it as I think it should be… but doing either of those things is obvi­ously unpro­duc­tive. Again, prayer for wis­dom is very welcome!

Prayer is also sought for tomor­row — for the Youth for Christ pro­gramme run­ning at St Andrews all day, and then for me at the Con­nect­ing in a world of change con­fer­ence as I present in my lit­tle 2.20 to 2.30 times­lot. Which is plenty of time for a geek like me — I actu­ally do enjoy pub­lic speak­ing, but that doesn’t mean I’m much good at it!

I’ve also got to get a site up for CYIADA, because I decided that if I stuck it on print mate­ri­als and did 130 copies of it, then the poten­tial for embar­ras­ment should be suf­fi­cient moti­va­tor to make me move quickly! Hehe. Really must get one of the IT guys here to setup host­ing first thing tomor­row… I fig­ure it’s okay if it’s not work­ing straight away, because I can say it’s just been put up and there’ll be some­thing there in the next cou­ple of days.

In other domain-related news I also picked up josh.st. So you should be able to get to this site via that funky URL in a few hours once DNS pushes through (the name­servers have switched, finally — .st’s NIC took for­ever with that — but obvi­ously it’s still got to prop­a­gate). I know I’m always say­ing this but there’s a new design on its way. I’ve got three sites in the works at the minute, so if it doesn’t come in a hurry don’t be too sur­prised. I doubt any­one is any­more, though!

# by Josh on December 3rd, 2006 Tags: , ,
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People versus search engines

It seems that search engines are an immutable fact of early-twenty-first cen­tury exis­tence. We can’t escape them in any imme­di­ate sense, and can­not believe they could ever dis­ap­pear (I recall one instance on Whirlpool forums where a user thought his/her ISP’s inter­a­tional link must be down because he couldn’t access Google. This was one of the very few times Google had actu­ally dropped off the face of the planet for about twenty min­utes. It was sim­ply out­side the realm of possibility.)

Yet, increas­ingly, our surf­ing habits are defined by this bizarre social con­cept that seems to be shap­ing cer­tainly acqui­si­tions and web-two-point-oh-bubblism, wherein web­sites serve users by con­nect­ing them with one another, not on the basis of them know­ing what they wanted, but rather in a bizarre a pri­ori man­ner whereby degrees-of-separation (MySpace) or user-supplied-already-knowns (Live­Jour­nal, Xanga, etc.) define con­nect­ed­ness and dis­played content.

Search is no longer the macro-inter killer app, but an intra-site facil­ity applied to micro­cosm — often based on “trans­par­ent” tech­nol­ogy that has, on the basis of known knowns (in the words of a cer­tain Rums­feld), already done some of the hard work for users (I should say peo­ple, but don’t out of habit: it is an indus­try haz­ard) with­out actu­ally ask­ing them any­thing. This is where loca­tion– and organisation-based match­ing (cf. MySpace, Face­book, etc.) come in.

But none of this data is intel­li­gently search­able by generic engines.

None of this data (in the case of Myspace espe­cially, hor­ri­bly marked-up doing-everything-wrong-with-the-web tech­ni­cally entity that it is) is avail­able for index­ing by search engines because it’s not abid­ing by any defined seman­tics. There is not, for exam­ple, any over­whelm­ing use of micro­for­mats — hCard, etc. — for defin­ing con­tact details in any com­mon sense. Yet these things are search­able within a given website.

And, what’s more, these things are search­able with great pre­ci­sion within (social net­work­ing) sites. This is because of a very well defined inter­nal seman­tic (not the “seman­tic web”, but inter­nal data struc­tures) and an enforced obe­di­ence to these struc­tures that was never a part of pre-SocNet sites.

Soc­Net plat­forms are rad­i­cally dif­fer­ent from web 1.0 sys­tems in that they are (iron­i­cally) vastly more con­strict­ing. As “web 1.0″ I would cite Geoc­i­ties and free web host­ing ser­vices, por­tals, and all-things-to-all-people con­tent net­works. Now, we’ve got blogs (pre­cisely defined web­sites), MySpace (chiefly Soc­Net pro­files with bits on the fringes com­mon to the users, and now with enough impe­tus to appear unstop­pable), Flickr (free — and fee-for-service that peo­ple actu­ally pay for — web host­ing, pre­cisely defined as photo host­ing), and, strangely, a por­tal (Yahoo!) still on top of Alexa 500 rank­ings. A por­tal that owns both Flickr and Geoc­i­ties, but has changed the model of the lat­ter to place greater empha­sis on fee-for-service host­ing. But I digress into strat­egy — the point is not that, but rather in the way social data is stored.

Flickr is meta-data rich. It uses a well defined sys­tem based on EXIF, intrin­sic seman­tics (title, descrip­tion, tags — tags that get used prop­erly, unlike Face­book which doesn’t bother to make such things clear — I want Face­book to flop, by the way, because it annoys me, so don’t expect nice things to be said about it. It’s a poor closed-system imi­ta­tor, albeit with a stu­pidly effec­tive adver­tis­ing model every­one else should be wish­ing they came up with first but haven’t seen in order to copy… because it’s a closed sys­tem (or used to be) exclu­sive in scope. Which makes it very effec­tive SocNet/Web 2.0, by my own def­i­n­i­tion, so I don’t really have a basis for com­plaint.) and extrin­sic seman­tics (groups, pools, etc.).

Pro­files, unlike ‘pure’ Soc­Net (Myspace, Face­book), per­mit anonymity, but allow dis­clo­sure of as much as is desired: at any rate, that is not the pur­pose of the site. Myspace/Facebook’s rai­son d’etre is pro­files. (Well, and that and cash-cow-marketing-tool of the *R**IA’s of the world) Accord­ingly, its pro­files have very def­i­nite seman­tics even whilst the rest of the site may not (I speak of Myspace more, here). Myspace gives core “Details” pro­file info indi­vid­ual fields, whilst allow­ing a diverse “Inter­ests & Per­son­al­ity” infor­ma­tion in freeform textar­eas that are designed to entice users into par­tic­i­pa­tion (and, pos­si­bly, aid­ing more fuzzy searches — but mostly I think it’s just com­pelling con­tent, as there is no imme­di­ately obvi­ous way to search that data).

“Inter­ests & Per­son­al­ity”, along with blog con­tent, seems to be the only freeform con­tributed mate­r­ial avail­able on the site. Want music or a video with your pro­file? You’ve got to browse to the band’s site, load the player (no go in Opera with Flash at the minute, it seems), and then select “Add” on the track. They (yeah, it’s kinda big-brotherish) know exactly what song you chose, what band it’s from, what genre, etc. — that is to say, unam­bigu­ously and cer­tainly beyond a probably-common song title. This isn’t an upload-yourself-and-we’ll-manage-rights kind of thing. The offi­cial­ity gives that inter­nal data struc­ture that much more depth: but, again, the point is that the data is inter­nal and not open.

This, it seems, is the defin­ing qual­ity of Soc­Net. That’s what makes the ideas of open fed­er­a­tion advo­cated by Google Talk ear­lier this year so bizarre for the rest of us. We don’t par­tic­u­larly care, because closed sys­tems mean inno­va­tion (because we can define new data for our­selves to work with) and/or exten­si­bil­ity that isn’t pos­si­ble in an open plat­form (if, for exam­ple, not all fed­er­ated part­ners agree to a spec exten­sion — take, for exam­ple, Google Talk’s own Jab­ber base and pro­pri­etary VoIP on top of that). Open­ness is in Google’s inter­ests, because it’s so depen­dent on things being open for its core busi­ness (search). But real peo­ple want ser­vices that work, not ser­vices that push them to another site. I’ve never trusted sites that bounce me off to Google for their site’s search, even if it’s one of those crappy co-branded things. It doesn’t make sense. Why would you make some­one inspect your web­site from an infe­rior per­spec­tive when all the infor­ma­tion is stored in a data­base, with the pos­si­bil­ity of more seman­ti­cally mean­ing­ful search open inter­nally only?

Google won’t deal with your inter­nal search needs. It’s not designed to. It does a great job of deal­ing with pub­licly indexed mate­ri­als com­pletely aside from Soc­Net ser­vices. Soc­Net sites thrive on and are empow­ered by strong intrin­sic seman­tics that make clever profile-based (or UGC–based) search pos­si­ble, which builds loy­alty etcetera in a way for­eign to infor­ma­tional web­sites. Soc­Net is expe­ri­en­tial and (sur­prise sur­prise) social — it doesn’t have to be about anything.

Con­tent was deposed as king some­time in the mid­dle of the first decade of the twenty first cen­tury, and with that regime change his deputy, Search, was also shuf­fled to a some­what less promi­nent posi­tion. Some­where out of sight, Search’s iden­ti­cal twin, Query, is the real power behind the throne: it uses unin­dexed data and makes clever links to bring peo­ple closer together in a way that tra­di­tional search engines had never even envisaged.

Flickr Gamma photoset view

A screenshot of view discussed Flickr’s pho­to­set view irri­tates me. There’s always so much white­space it’s not funny, the columns are divided but the “cells” (appar­ently, for they’re not in a table I don’t think — can’t be both­ered check­ing) are stacked with­out space, and the page goes on for­ever result­ingly. The screen­shot with this post (right) isn’t even the entire page. That’s about two thirds of the con­tent right there. I cut the image for visual brevity, etc.

Point is, they should be doing this lots bet­ter but aren’t. All it’d take is a floated div or two, and it’s not like their web­site isn’t com­plex enough with JS/CSS/whatever already… the cur­rent design is utterly illog­i­cal and can only be jus­ti­fied as an effort (made con­sciously) to make peo­ple make shorter photo sets (financial/bandwidth incen­tive, per­haps?). Pfft. I didn’t pay my (how­ever much per year) to Flickr, Inc. Yahoo!‘s acqui­si­tions team (it passes for inno­va­tion, per­haps? ;-) Okay I’ve had my lit­tle jab now.) to put up measly num­bers of pho­tos. You give me 2GB/month uploads and at the minute I’m using up to nearly half of that — and, yeah, it’s some­thing I’ll pay for, because 90% of the time it’s mind-numbingly easy and pain­less. 10% is lit­tle UI stu­pid­ity issues such as this one. Sigh.

# by Josh on July 9th, 2006 Tags: ,
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“What colors should I use in my bedroom to help me relax and sleep?”

The ques­tion is stolen from this Ask Yahoo! post, which gives a phe­nom­e­nally long (and moronic) post.

My recipe for sleep: What colours should you use in your bed­room to help you relax and sleep? None, duh. Lights off, dark, eyes shut. Yahoo! are way off.

Of course, the best way to get an answer would be to go ask an expert. Every­one knows Yahoo!‘s Ask team are insom­niac geeks ;-)

# by Josh on June 6th, 2006 Tags:
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Local galleries fixed

As if this server wasn’t push­ing enough traf­fic per day already (this site is gen­er­ally 100MB/day of what you’ll see on that graph, plus spi­der traf­fic), I finally got around to sit­ting down and fix­ing the bro­ken stuff about the gallery here. Well, okay, Ben did most of the fix­ing. I changed some URI structures/added some rules so that old perma­links start work­ing again. Any­way, point is, all the old stuff is work­ing again now. Not that this prob­a­bly affects many/any of you who read blog stuff, unless you’re feel­ing nos­tal­gic. Shrug :)

I’m now of mixed mind as to where to upload more pho­tos. Flickr is fun + makes edit­ing meta­data eas­ily + I’ve paid for it for a year. But here is sta­ble + I have com­plete con­trol and… blah blah blah… it’s not owned by Yahoo! (yet ;-) err I mean… *cough*)

Ah well. Flickr API’s make it easy to pull data out quick + eas­ily. So con­ceiv­ably it’d be not too hard to write some­thing to “export” to cat-scan. Maybe by this time next year…

# by Josh on May 8th, 2006 Tags: , ,
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Why MSM and open paradigms don’t mix

Microsoft are now play­ing ball. They’re “get­ting” this whole clue­train gig, even for­mal­is­ing their enact­ment of it into a con­fer­ence billed as a 72-hour con­ver­sa­tion. They’re doing blogs. They’re lightly, if at all, mod­er­at­ing those blogs. And they’re respond­ing to con­tent on those blogs as appro­pri­ate (that is, ignor­ing the absolute rub­bish and closed-mind-open-source-supporting-nerds).

In every way what they’re doing and what they’re chang­ing is absolutely awe­some. As an IT com­pany maybe it’d be fair to say they’ve got a head­start on the rest of the world. They’re cer­tainly doing bet­ter than MSM are.

Say, for exam­ple, there was a social networking/photo site to be inte­grated into a TV programme’s com­mu­nity site: one that’s meant to actu­ally con­nect with view­ers, and falls under “Com­mu­nity” in the network’s struc­ture — not the one that mind­lessly pushes top-down con­tent. And that because of con­cerns about mod­er­a­tion — chiefly stem­ming from the notion that pub­lic iden­ti­ties are untouch­able and sacred in the net­work eye, and the arro­gance that comes as a part of that –, the only advan­tages (pol­i­tics and free band­width because of deep-linked pho­tos aside) of inte­grat­ing an exter­nal photo ser­vice are negated, and users have absolutely no incen­tive to sign up for a wider Yahoo! sign-on (which would allow them to com­ment on pho­tos at Flickr, amongst other things).

So MSM struc­tures are still win­ning. I expected this would be the case. I think it’s going to take another five years before peo­ple can get over them­selves enough to realise that allow­ing peo­ple to com­ment (not anony­mously — that was never on the cards!) isn’t an intrin­si­cally dan­ger­ous thing. The idea that the greater fool is the one stop­ping to make flip­pant dis­parag­ing (even just seem­ingly so!) remarks about peo­ple they’ve never met is, in fact, turned on its head by the recog­ni­tion of such remarks. To acknowl­edge a fool’s power surely isn’t the most intel­li­gent thing one could do in response.

I digress. The point is, for as long as they’re think­ing they have any chance of con­trol­ling what’s going on, this isn’t going to work. Wanna stop peo­ple com­ment­ing on a photo you stuck up on Flickr? Sure thing, feel free to dis­able it. If the com­ment is of con­se­quence they’ll blog it any­way and the dam­age is out there and you’ve got a hell of a lot more work to do if you want to purge that blight on your carefully-constructed-cult-of-celebrity-image from the web… and if it’s not of con­se­quence they won’t bother to pub­lish it any­where else, and, in all prob­a­bil­i­tiy, it wouldn’t have done a great deal of harm were it to be pub­lished in the photo’s com­ments any­way. In many ways, inline com­ment­ing is actu­ally a more restric­tive form of social inter­ac­tion in the online sphere because it’s cen­tralised. I’m advo­cat­ing it here because the audi­ence has appalling elec­tronic lit­er­acy (which is, I take it, typ­i­cal of the bulk of the Aus­tralian pop­u­la­tion still: even if the SMH writes about blogs, only peo­ple who blog will bother to read an arti­cle that has “blog” in the head­line… and then they’ll go and blog about it), so the blog thing is still, prob­a­bly, 5 or so years off hit­ting “main­stream” audi­ences. (Inci­den­tally, any­one pro­claim­ing the death of radio/rise of pod­cast­ing should sim­i­larly antic­i­pate no-one is even know­ing what they are talk­ing about for a sim­i­lar period of time — and no, the fact that iTunes has an obscure fea­ture doesn’t help matters).

Must fin­ish with this price­less grab from a weekly newslet­ter, regard­ing viewer-directed con­tent cho­sen via an online sur­vey: “We always say our show is your show, so I think this seg­ment makes a lot of sense.” And yet they’d rather not give view­ers a voice at all. This isn’t giv­ing view­ers a say, it’s allow­ing them to effec­tively switch meta-channels (almost, pre­sum­ing they’re vot­ing with the major­ity). The seg­ment makes sense from a MSM per­spec­tive, but the far­ci­cal nature of this “open­ness” comes to light pretty quickly as soon as any tru­ely multi-directional com­mu­ni­ca­tions chan­nels come into play.

I think it’s going to be great fun watch­ing “them” (MSM gen­er­ally) slowly come to terms with this idea over the next cou­ple of years. MSM isn’t going away, but I think any of these “social” shows are going to flop unless they rad­i­cally re-think strate­gies (hybrid broadcast/Internet model, any­one?) or stop pretending…

A quick note: I haven’t men­tioned any­thing by name here because, well, no-one else is both­er­ing to blog about the site in ques­tion (an ear­lier blog post is on the first page of results for a par­tic­u­lar key­word, I’d rather not do that again!) Actu­ally it’s kind of funny because my site + seman­tic markup, etc., is blitz­ing the network’s core site (i.e. not our ancil­lary com­mu­nity site) in search engine rank­ings (well, Google at least, heh), but I digress! Not that I’ve writ­ten about any­thing sen­si­tive… every­thing here is digested pub­lic infor­ma­tion (or will be by the time this pub­lishes tomor­row) and is con­sis­tent with my usual rant­i­ngs and opin­ions about social media, IT, etcetera, and my usual cyn­i­cism and dis­dain for com­mer­cial (pri­mar­ily broad­cast — print is (paint­ing broad strokes) gen­er­ally less obvi­ously tainted) media! Good fun.

Cricket, assorted illness, Harry Potter and about work

This is one of those “blan­ket” posts that attempts to cover every­thing that hap­pened (or didn’t) over the last few days. As you may have picked from the thor­oughly dis­con­nected title.

Cricket

Sun­day saw a trip to the day/night cricket semi-final between Aus­tralia and Sri Lanka (I say that like I know what’s going on, but I had to ask Dad who was play­ing that morn­ing. ’twas purely a social thing for me!) with var­i­ous friends from church.

Photo: (From left) Side of Jess' head, Erin, Jordan (background), Selo, Mark

It was pretty good times, but I man­aged to get burnt despite putting sun­screen on every hour (it was 4hr SPF30+ cream!). I think I missed part of my arms (the under­side!) in the first hour, and by the sec­ond hour they’d already been suf­fi­ciently dam­aged to start turn­ing bright red (it was about 2pm… yeah, easy to burn here in Oz). The Sri Lankans (spelling?) lost, but looked like they were hav­ing the most fun of any­one in the ground regardless!

Sri Lankans waving flags

So yeah, it’d rock to be Sri Lankan!

Any­way, I ate some horrendously-overpriced-sport-venue food, prob­a­bly didn’t QUITE drink enough water (prob­a­bly drank about 3L at the cricket alone, but was sit­ting in full sun, so…), and hadn’t been sleep­ing ter­ri­bly well for the past week (or two). I’d been stick­ing my hand up for a few too many things some weeks back and it all finally started to come unrav­elled last week, I guess. Hope­fully things will get bet­ter from here, we’ll see. So yeah, var­i­ous fac­tors… I got home and inside okay (albeit with a mas­sive mas­sive headache), went upstairs, and lost nearly every­thing I’d eaten that day. I got to bed but only for fourty min­utes or so before I woke up again… found I appar­ently had more food left in my stom­ach! Doh.

I didn’t go to work yes­ter­day, and spent most of the day in bed… read­ing Harry Pot­ter (because I still hadn’t read book 5 and a whole day is time enough to fin­ish pretty much any book). The headache had mostly sub­sided and stom­ach was fine by the end of the day, but I’ve got a cold now… shrug. Tis very odd. I was at work today but felt kind of lethar­gic + not that pro­duc­tive… but it was bet­ter get­ting some stuff done than spend­ing another day in bed doing noth­ing (mind you, it would have been back to Great Expec­ta­tions fol­lowed by North and South if I’d stayed home… hmm…). We’ve got a whole bunch of excit­ing stuff lined up for the Sun­rise Fam­ily web­site which is get­ting rolled out soon, but obvi­ously don’t waste your time look­ing if you don’t watch the show (I know I wouldn’t! Once var­i­ous fea­tures launch I’ll prob­a­bly post geeky details here… we’re look­ing at social media stuff espe­cially (which shouldn’t come as a sur­prise to those who know Yahoo!‘s acqui­si­tion pat­terns, but see­ing as 7 is very much MSM it’s pretty excit­ing), inte­gra­tion with prod­ucts from Yahoo!‘s sta­ble, etc.

So yeah, that’s what’s been hap­pen­ing. Con­sider blog­ging un-slipped.