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FriendFeed comments…

November 6, 2007

You’d think that WordPress blogs (at least ones hosted at wordpress.com) would be one of the built-in services on FriendFeed, but not only is that not the case, but it’s pretty obvious that their feed parser is looking for the second link in the post and not using the actual post title to say what it is I posted. The link to the post is correct, just not the title of the post.

E.g., the last two posts here have shown up as “endub” and “see_through_bikinis.jpg” on FriendFeed. And while, yes, I did technically post “see_through_bikinis.jpg”, that wasn’t really the point of the post.

So, as a test, the 2nd link in this post is the one that goes to FriendFeed. Let’s see if I posted “FriendFeed” on Nels Wadycki…

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Birthday 2.0

November 6, 2007

This is what my inbox looked like on the recent anniversary of my birth:

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(You can click it to see the whole thing)

Related only by the fact that it’s Gmail… I found this to be an interesting advertisement:

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So you conspiracy nuts who think that Google is reading all your mail… um, yeah. See Thru Bikinis.

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OpenSocial evens the playing field

November 4, 2007

This is a very good post on ReadWrite Web. I was waiting for some analysis of what OpenSocial really means for the world of social networking, and I think that post sums it up well. To put it into my own words: OpenSocial basically means that application developers now can developer for 2 platforms instead of potenitally tens or hundreds.

Developers have been writing and/or porting software for more than one platform for as long as they’ve been writing code. So really, this is nothing new; it simply means that OpenSocial and Facebook are (probably) the 2 platforms you’ll have to learn when developing applications for social networks.

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Potential Items for the Google Activity Stream

October 30, 2007

Google properties:

  • Google Talk status updates
  • Google Reader shared items
  • Google Calendar events (added, invited, updated?)
  • Google Documents (recent changes, new, updated)
  • Picasa (new photos from friends)
  • Google Video / YouTube (new videos from friends)
  • Blogger posts
  • Orkut updates (whatever those consist of)
  • Gadgets added to home page, aka “iGoogle”
  • Google Shared Stuff (or whatever it’s called) added

External properties:

  • Anything with an RSS feed basically… including stuff like…
  • Twitter/Pownce/Jaiku, Tumblr
  • Blogs not on Blogger (like: Facebook Notes, LiveJournal, VOX, Xanga, Windows Live Spaces, WordPress)
  • Photos not on Picasa (aka Flickr, Webshots, Smugmug)
  • Bookmarked items not on Google Shared Stuff (aka del.icio.us, ma.gnol.ia, etc.)
  • Last.fm, Pandora (any other social music with RSS feeds?)
  • Digg posts, votes feeds
  • Upcoming (Yahoo Events)
  • Apps built on social APIs (think Werewolves and Vampires), though these may come in the form of Gadgets

What I’m wondering - well there’s several things, but I think the highest on my list of wondering - is where the Activity Stream will be displayed. An answer to that may solve the second thing on my list, which is, how is Google going to decide who my friends are and which updates I want to see on the Activity Stream?

They have the new contact manager that they’re rolling out with the update to Gmail, but I have 220 Gmail contacts, and I certainly don’t want to see all their updates from all their Google (and other) activities… And I’m guessing most of them don’t want me to see all that stuff either. So… Google will have to do two things (most likely): 1) Have some way of determining who is allowed to see what (privacy level settings), and 2) create an algorithm like Facebook to decide what is most important to show.

I don’t like Facebook’s algorithm, but I feel like Google could come up with a much better one. I also think, though, that Google could create an interface (like the one on Socialstream) that would allow for a much larger number of items to be displayed and still make it fairly easy for users to understand.

I’m waiting for the November 8th (or so) announcement, but I’m pretty sure it will be a release of the API glue, which will seem underwhelming until Google (or developers) starting using the glue to stick things together.

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I am a typical Amazon customer

October 24, 2007

This was on my Amazon home page today:

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This has been the top of my Music Wishlist for close to a month now (you’d know that as well as I if the WordPress template didn’t cut off the “added” dates):

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So (without a lot of statistical analysis), I am an 88% typical Amazon customer. Or maybe, I’m in the 88th Percentile of typical Amazon customers. Or maybe, I fit Amazon’s data model to 88% accuracy.

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Reading Between the Battle Lines

October 18, 2007

Acquired via BookMooch: a trio of books about Halo including The Fall of Reach, The Flood, and First Strike.

Tell Me A Fable

I was trying to read the triology before the arrival of Halo 3, but only made it a little over a third of the way there (i.e., a little bit into the second book). I’m now nearing the end of the second book, but I got Halo 3 a week ago, and am over half way though the campaign. The second book is basically a recounting of the campaign from the first Halo game with some side stories about the marines and Covenant thrown in. I use the words thrown in, but really, these side stories add a lot of depth to the story of the game. And speaking of depth, the first book tells the (nearly) entire backstory of the Master Chief (aka the big green guy); something that probably would have made a very boring game, but which works very well as a novel.

Speaking of boring games, though: In playing Halo 3, I have been made aware once more of what a poor job the games do of telling the story. The main characters in Halo 3 - the Master Chief and the Arbiter - are actually very deep (the latter actually more so than the former), but the campaign still feels like just another run through a bunch of levels, shooting/grenading/smacking everything in your way. That’s not to imply it lacks the fun factor that makes for a good game, but since I’d read the first book before playing any of Halo 3, I was really hoping that the power of the 360 would allow the story to be told in much more depth and with a greater level of emotion than the first Halo. The second Halo game did a somewhat decent job of weaving the story in, and actually making the game more than just a shooting gallery.

Unfortunately, Halo 3 feels like like a step backwards from Halo 2 with respect to the realization and illustration of the storyline. The levels are more varied and incorporate the use of strategy better than the previous two games (though Halo 2 did a good job of trying to make you think strategically), but the game so far hasn’t told the story of the Master Chief or the Arbiter (or Cortana or Gravemind) nearly as well as I’d hoped. And with only three and a half levels left, I’m worried (and relatively sure) it’s going to stay that way. I mean, Darth Revan reveals himself only halfway through KOTOR (warning: following the link may spoil that game if you haven’t played it).

Playing By The Book

What the book(s) did well in addition to expanding the story from the game was teach me how to play the game. No joke. Reading the descriptions of how Master Chief deals with the Covenant and the Flood in the book made me realize that each part of the game(s) is set up to try to get you to deal with a situation in a certain way. Of course, you don’t have to, but by recognizing strategic points in missions, I feel like my experience with Halo 3 has been enriched. I did notice this in some sections in the earlier games, but I’m not exactly Mr. Final Boss Owner, so I tended to just brute force my through a lot of parts in the first two Halo games, but in the third one, I feel like I’m playing with a lot more finesse and actually playing the game the way the designers intended it. And I know it’s not because of the improved storytelling (see above if you skipped over that part). And I know it’s not because of the improved graphics.

… The graphics are improved, and it does make the game better. That’s kind of a given and an expectation. But when the grunt’s methane tanks sputter and hiss when you hit them (something they didn’t do in the previous games), I notice the improvement because I read the books and know that they breathe methane and have those canisters strapped to their backs to survive.

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Working From Home

October 16, 2007

I’ve noticed that the elation (probably too strong of a word) of coming home and not having to go in to the office for the rest of the week is almost the same exact feeling I got in MBA school when I’d come home from classes and know that I didn’t have to leave my apartment again for the rest of the day.

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