Thursday, July 02, 2009

Pirate bay has a future? - sweet dreams

The Privatized BayI admit to being as shocked as anyone else by the sale this week of Pirate Bay To GGF (Global Gaming Factory). But it gets crazier. He want's to go legal which is driving away many former users. He wants to enter negotiations with the music industry. He also seemingly wants to sell user bandwidth to make money, I have even heard somewhere (?) that he may use users music tracks to resell, possibly paying users.

Sounds crazy and it is. I am totally going to forget his plans of making money off the network itself. I don't think that will succeed, but I don't understand Ryanair either. But one mistake he is already making is with the music industry. Yo can't negotiate with them. They will bust your ass so bad. Sure they should embrace selling online and they are failing miserably. Even with Geoff Taylor admitting that ‘we should have embraced Napster’. They should have been selling music online over eight years ago, they have destroyed their market. The only way things will ever change is if Artists join together and create their own sales organisations and sell to iTunes, Amazon and anyone willing to do a deal. But the artists must not be greedy and greed seems to be the flavour of the decade. Any price above 50 dollar cents a song is a customer ripoff. If you know anything about customer and distribution costs you'll know I'm right. Sure I might be lambasted… they love themselves when they do that, that's why we refer to them as wankers sometimes :p Seriously since digital, those costs have become a dream come true. But théy don't care about money. This is all about power, which is funny really because they have made themselves so weak. They want total control and nothing will ever change until their last pathetic gasp of breath.

Barcamp Webrichtlijnen & web 2.0 - the lowdown

Imke ArtsSteve and I just organised our first ever barcamp, and we organised it on behalf of the dutch Home office. It went incredibly well. Sixty signed up for the day and the majority turned up as well. This barcamp had a lot of civil servants and managers from various dutch government ministries attending. So it was not all developers. An important part of any barcamp is sharing, Usually each attendee will bring a presentation to present. At the start of the day it looked like that last aspect was being overlooked. We made some improvisations, helped by Bart Hilhorst. In fact Barts session was my favorite one of the day, but more about that later.

DSC08698After a small opening speech by Stephen Hay Chris Smissaert and Imke Arts led the first session outlining initiatives been undertaken by their ministrie. Straight away a lot of discussion was generated mainly about sticking to goals and some perceived problems. This presentation was followed up mainly by Chris again with some help from developer Alper Çuğun who had created a number of widgets for them, which were mostly not conforming to the dutch webguidelines!

Later Stephen Hay gave a short demonstration of progressive enhancement based on Chris Heilmann'sGenerating charts from accessible data tables and vice versa using the Google Charts API’ (demo) at which point Raph de Rooij got involved. One of the main points I took away from raph was that even though the webguidelines might be difficult and even expensive to implement, it is a political choice to include everyone in making the information accessible regardless of disability. And really it's funny that we live the letter of the webguidelines, but that is essentially why we do it and it's easy to forget when you are trying to debug test results :)

This was then followed by Alper's presentation ‘The spirit of the dutch webguidelines’ (All presentaions were in dutch). Alper was probably there to be an agent provocateur and he did wind some people up, lambasting what he calls esotheric standards xhtml, RDFa, WCAG and ARIA. Most of these arguements were pretty vague but it provided lively discussion and some of his points about widgets were an eye opener. While Alper is a fan about Google and OpenSocial, Netvibes was a bit of a broken platform in his opinion. He also mentioned Shindigs, which i had never heard of :p Shindigs is an openSocial container created by Apache to help you host OpenSocial apps.

We were joined in the audience in the afternoon session by Roel Van Houten en Anne van Kesteren. I was then going to present my findings on publishing documents in PDFA-1a and PDFA-1b but let Rob Vlug do the first session after lunch in the hope that Rob would touch on some of the issues that we had discussed personaaly erlier in the day. I'll be doing a blog post about this later as there are very big problems with accessibility and PDF's. Rob described how many documents, forms and file formats they have. Rob work for the dutch tax office (belastingdienst) and seemingly the site (15,000 plus pages) is essentially static and they have everything in Word 97 files as backup (really, I kid you not). Forms are very difficult to put online as there are very many and all the form mutations that take place each year make presenting them on the web under the current internal organisation difficult. They have some paper forms which are nearly 70 pages long, other forms are now ‘Life event driven’ resuilting in one case where 2 forms became 77!

The next session was from Bart Hilhorst. This was a very clever session which invited the audience to ask problematic questions which were then writtten down and then the developers had a minute a question to come up with a consice answer. The sessions were supossed to finish at 4pm, but we went on 20-30 minutes longer so that we could see Roek van Houten demonstrate the challenges of using internet with a braille device. The costs are incredible! A laptop might cost just 600 euros but but with software and the braill keyboard kosting 500 - 600 euro. I have seen similar demonstrations previously, they are still an eye opener and Roels wit is as well :)

So all in all we had a great day.I think everyone learnt something new. We will be adding Barts questions to the Lab web 2.0 site http://www.overheid20.nl/werkruimte/45/LabWeb2.0 (dutch language link) in the next few days and inviting those who attended to offer answers and practical examples to these questions.

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Friendfeed - I hate it and I love it

I have hated Friendfeed for most of this year. But now I'm getting to love it. So let's get the hate out of the way first ;) In terms of community and conversation I think it sucks. Scoble will not agree. But Scoble only has to break wind when he is on Friendfeed and everyone takes a look, gets involved and before you know it he has 50 comments. No one loves me on friendfeed. ;) I get an occasional comment, an occasional like and that's it.

And the love? I've gotten over the rejection :D and now I use it as a tool. So what works:

  1. Tracking people. Even if they are not on friendfeed I can make imaginary friends and follow their real activities
  2. Rooms are a great way to post on topics. But using search and RSS, or just RSS feeds from certain blogs and your room will run it's self.
  3. By combining lots of feeds you can create a new rss combi feed and subscribe to that instead, which is very hand when you have a handful of vanity searches running about yourself through yahoo, googles blogsearch, twitter replys and technorati for instance. Beats OPML imo. And why Yahoo instead of Google? Yahoo has rss results for search and Google does not. Massive FAIL Google.

It is functionality like this that will keep Friendfeed useful. But it's community does not rock. Lifestreams? I can do that in Facebook as well. Not only that, anyone can and they don't even have to understand the concept of lifestreams either! So maybe some strategists can weigh in here and say how friendfeed can move forward and gain ground, serious ground. Can they conquor? I don't think so, but this wouldn't be the first time I wrong, so let rip please.

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Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Dutch social network Hyves gets a great lick of paint


hyves, originally uploaded by dccrowley.

Hyves the largest dutch social network has a reputation for being an ugly motha! But no more... Very soon they will be rolling out the new look hyves. The Hyves team have simply busted their asses making this work. What is great about it is that they kept it clean and simple, but created a few beautiful basic themes (some with very cool transparencies) which you can modify yourself. But if your own Hyve is a fashion disaster and you can't help youself, then this won't help you either! Tip: Make sure EVERYTHING is readable, oh! sorry for shouting ;) Stick to 2 colours and maybe 2 tones. Keep it simple and we will all be very happy.

I have been asked to beta test - yup I'm a lucky whatever! Well done Hyves.

One other compliment to Hyves... it is fairly snappy on old computers/ poor connections even with the image rich theme I used.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Twitter meetups in Leeuwarden in June

We have two twitter meetups in Leeuwarden this month. The first one is taking place this thursday. Everyone is welcome. Hope to see you there :)
miniTwitterborrel
Thursday June 18, 2009 at 5:30pm
Paddy O'Ryan Irish Pub
Goveneursplein 37
Leeuwarden, Friesland
follow http://twitter.com/SN_fryslan for more info.

maxiTwitterborrel
Thursday June 25, 2009 at 5:30pm
Paddy O'Ryan Irish Pub
Goveneursplein 37
Leeuwarden, Friesland

Location:

Twitterborrel Leeuwarden weergeven op een grotere kaart

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Friday, June 12, 2009

The Wyclef Jean twitter concert

Wyclef Jean is one of the celebs to join twitter. But he is using it in a really cool way. He already has 1600+ tweets, but what is really cool is that every time he gets another 100,000 followers on twitter he does a mini tweet concert. Did I already say cool?

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Barcamp Webguidelines & Web 2.0 Amsterdam

overheid2.0-camp-N1

Please register for this event at the official website (in dutch)

Webguidelines & Web2.0camp brings government agencies and Web developers together to talk about problems, ideas and solutions on the use of web 2.0 technologies in combination with the webguidelines.

Where? Pakhuis de Zwijger Amsterdam

When? June 30, 2009 from 09:00 am to 4:00 pm

What? Webguidelines & Web 2.0

Two policies of the government seem in conflict with each other: the use of so-called "Web 2.0 technologies and applying the webguidelines. But do they really conflict with each other, or do we have misunderstandings and misconceptions about what webguideline compliant means? Are there solutions, but the lack of shared knowledge? Making diverse webapps conform to the webguidelines is possible, provided there is sufficient knowledge and the applications use is considered. This is an event for people who are willing to do this, the approach is that Webguideline conformity is always possible!

Webguidelines & Web2.0camp provides an opportunity for clients to share their problems and success stories and for developers to show that it is possible for the two policies to be compatible.

In short, an opportunity to share knowledge, mutual learning and issues from different points of view.

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Thursday, May 28, 2009

The music industry: This weeks 'digging deeper'


  • Ars Technica has a post ‘Landmark study: DRM truly does make pirates out of us all. My favorite quote ‘According to the first empirical study of its kind in the UK, by Cambridge law professor Patricia Akester, it's the former. DRM is so rage-inducing, even to ordinary, legal users of content, that it can even drive the blind to download illegal electronic Bibles.’

  • And then this very stupid story. The dutch copyright organization has according to Broadcast magazine (in dutch) ‘Buma/ Stemra has lost millions of euro's on share investments that went bad ’. Seemingly there is not enough money to pay copyright to all the artists on time!

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Saturday, May 23, 2009

New Assumptions for Designing for the Social Web


I saw Chris giving a similar presentation a week ago, but his thoughts have developed in the mean time. The tone of the message is changing. Don't let people sign up to your service with a custom account. Use Facebook, twitter, Google, Yahoo or OpenID to log in. People already have accounts there. You can use them as part of your login process. No need to reinvent the wheel. Good presentation.

I was really lucky to see Chris's presentation last week. Hearing it from the proverbial 'horse's mouth' brought the points over to me in a much clearer way. I saw Chris speaking at the Twiist.be (The way internet should be)conference in Leuven. I really enjoyed that conference and it was the first year these guys organized it.

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XDR TB

My mum had TB 60 years ago. It was a terrible time, being isolated from friends and family for nearly a year. There is still a faint feeling of shame and helplessness 60 years on.

But today TB has taken on a new form. It's now called XDR TB. XDR stands for extreme drug resistant TB. It can kill in weeks. While there is no cure, this film has a message that there is. We are the cure and we can only do it by being clever.

Legendary photojournalist James Nachtwey sees his TED Prize wish come true, as we share his powerful photographs of XDR-TB, a new, drug-resistant strain of tuberculosis that's touching off a global medical crisis.

Watch this video, share it with your friends, and learn 3 quick ways to take action to stop XDR-TB: http://www.xdrtb.org

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Tuesday, May 19, 2009

The new Android UI looks great!

Gizmodo has a post HTC's Android Interface Makes Us Temporarily Forget All About Palm Pre with this video on it! Take a look, it looks really promising :)

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Facebook totally opens to OpenID

Facebook has totally opened to OpenID. You can now log into Facebook with any OpenID account. This makes Facebooks implementation way better than any other of the big players. Try logging into Google with your Facebook username and password. It won't work! Google accepts only it's own OpenID. Something which totally defeats the purpose of having OpenID anyway.

Anyway You can't just log into Facebook straight away. First go to settings (in the menu on the top right) and select linked accounts. Fill in your OpenID details and you are ready for action.

Facebook has wide implementation to many blogs and webservices... but not all of them, not yet anyway. So it's a huge step in the right direction. It means you can now use Facebook/ OpenID to log into Brightkite for instance or to post a comment to RWW (Read Write Web) or Techcrunch.