web


19
May 07

link stalking with del.icio.us and Yahoo Pipes

I’ve always preferred del.icio.us over digg. Call me elitest, but I’m not really interested in what the throngs are “digging”. I do, however, like to dig thru the links of bloggers I like to read. It’s kind of like flipping thru the record collections of friends of friends: “Hey, this looks interesting….”.

del.icio.us has a neat networking feature which will aggregate the links across your network, in a cute little rss feed, even.

That’s fun, but what if you want to flip thru the link crates from your network’s network? Enter Yahoo Pipes, (the Access 95 of Web 2.0!). I created a pipe which pulls in my network feed plus selectednetwork feeds from other nerds I’ve been following. Dulicate links get filtered out and I’ve got one rich set of links to sift through.

I’m sure there are more elegant ways to filter and manipulate the feed contents, but this is working prettty swell so far.


5
May 07

hey, twits (those web two oh widgets can hurt)

It’s cool that there are so many web service widgets that make its so easy to add to your blog. Just add a little javascript code and you are in business. Except, for when that external server hosting the javascript goes awol.

In this case, jaiku’s downtime makes the pageload to twit.tv unbearable – a minute plus.

ouch!


21
Apr 07

chmod 777 web

well put:

IBM developerWorks : Blogs : chmod 777 web:

“There is something more fundamental going on right now. The web is becoming more hackable.. in the good sense. People are starting to realize that the web is more than just a publishing medium. It’s a place where you can (or should be able to) actually do stuff. Web sites that let you do stuff are more important than web sites that only let you read stuff.”


12
Mar 07

Twitterage

Calacanis sez…: “Soon Twitter will carry video, audio, and photos… when that happens Twitter replaces IM and email and flickr 50% of the time.”

I’m very interested in seeing how they can up the ante, maintain this madcap momentum, and how their business model will develop

Personally, it hasn’t proven too useful. I’m just seeing everyone’s SXSW updates now, which just makes me wish I was there!

But, it’s still brilliant if only as a free way to send mass SMS updates – struggling rock bands and advertising students who make their websites, take note


19
Feb 07

Rashomon is now in the public domain

Nice! Rashomon is now in the public domain and available for your viewing pleasure at the internet archive and google video.

I find myself watching less and less TV these days. The availability of more quality works in the public domain is a good thing. Too bad we won’t see many US movies in the public domain until 2019..

(Via we-make-money-not-art .)


12
Feb 07

my (feed)reading list

Last week I had the pleasure to speak to the students of ADVT498: A Hands-On Approach to Interactive Technology and Strategy about what I do at CNET as a product manager, and web/interactive media in general. Despite a couple technical hiccups, I think things went well, students asked some interesting questions, and an hour-plus of our web-based conference flew by. (Thanks, Sydney!)

I mentioned that I would share my reading list, which I have compiled into a handy OPML file which can be loaded into most feed readers. It’s somewhat organized and categorized by topic. At least it made sense at the time… your milage may vary.

Much of my reading is about online media, web development, web design, emerging trends and new technologies.
Hopefully this can serve as a good jumping off point for folks interested in these topics get started with a full RSS reading experience.

If you have any questions, feel free to drop a note in the comments.


13
Dec 06

Not an amateur at all…

If you’ve seen this already, I’m not sorry. I just saw it and had to share:


10
Dec 06

Hacking journalstar.com RSS

I’ve recently switched over my RSS subscriptions to Google Reader. Google Reader makes reading and managing a high volume of RSS feeds so effortless and intuitive, I was inspired to visit some of the sites I hoped to add to my feed reading list. As a recent expatriate of Lincoln, Nebraska, naturally I wanted to add the Journal Star, Lincoln’s local paper, to my read list, but it was apparent that the paper’s online division (or more likely, their tech-ignorant publishers) has not come around to embrace RSS. I wasn’t surprised, but still disappointed.

I found I wasn’t alone in my frustration.

So, I sat down to write a quick blog post complaining about their lack of feeds in the dawn of 2007 – but then I thought, “Who wants to read that?”. So I started looking for an alternative RSS-enabled news source for Lincoln, Nebraska.

Google news offers RSS feeds of searches on the site (RSS Feed for “lincoln nebraska”), but it isn’t comprehensive, and is mostly sports news anyway.

The UNL newspaper, the Daily Nebraskan, has a wide variety of feeds (DN RSS Feeds), but I really had enough of the DN in my years of attending classes at UNL. Thanks, but no thanks.

I SWEAR I had a feed of ‘most printed articles’ from the Lincoln CBS affiliate KOLN, but those ended up being mostly recipes, so I unsubscribed. Can’t find any mention of RSS there either.

I headed back to Google to see if anyone had set up a way to scrape Journal Star headlines and output them to RSS. No luck there either.

Lincoln, it seemed, wants to keep its news to itself.

As a last resort, I headed back to Google searching for all sorts of search combinations of RSS and Journal Star and I found this little gem: http://www.journalstar.com/?rss=huskerextra.

And after a bit more research, trial, and error, I found the format to their publishing system’s RSS output.

Here’s how it works. Their publishing system users a url structure like this: http://www.journalstar.com/articles/2006/12/10/news/local/doc457b548b7be44737957995.txt. The key to accessing the RSS is the directory structure between the date stamp (i.e. “2006/12/10″), and the ugly document name in the URL (i.e. “doc457b548b7be44737957995.txt”)

Just plug this directory structure in as the value for the RSS url parameter and you get: http://www.journalstar.com/?rss=news/local. Magic!

Here are some examples, with a handy link to add to Google Reader:

Even the police calls, bankruptcies and resurant inspections have RSS feeds. What fun!

Since the feeds exist, WHY wouldn’t they be promoted on the site? Clearly, they don’t realize that “RSS is the paperboy” (see question #4). An RSS subscriber is clearly more engaged and interested in the content. They are more likely to turn more pages, participate in comments, and post links on their blogs, in turn driving more traffic to the site. I don’t expect them to provide full content feeds, though some sites havehad encoraging results.

So, now that this cat is out of the bag let’s hope that the Journal Star doesn’t try to stuff the cat back in. It would be simple enough to disable access by a variety of ways (.htaccess etc.). If they do disable the feeds, it will be clear that the Journal Star doesn’t understand this powerful and simple method of content delivery, doesn’t respect it’s users, and doesn’t care to learn.

We’ll see.


16
Jun 06

Flock

When you use Flock to do something cool, you’re a Flockstar.

Flock — The web browser for you and your friends

I don’t know about this ‘flockstar’ stuff.  I think they should loose that angle immediately.  There are a lot of cool features to the Flock browser.  Testing out the blog posting feature now.


25
Mar 06

Feed Rinse Features and Pricing

Feed Rinse looks interesting, offering to “put the hurt on bad feeds”. Still haven’t figured out why you might want to go through the trouble to do this if you have a feature like NetNewsWire’s smart feeds though….