Decided something – Independence

Grandad finally gets the deck chair sorted

I’ve spent the last few posts trying to work out how I balance my posts between the technologies which I am interested in. How do I give each of them a fair crack of the whip so that people know I’m independent? Been around it a few times and come to a conclusion:

I’m no longer going to try to be perceived as independent, I’m going to write about what I think and see. If that means there is a perceived bias at a particular point in time then so be it.

Each post sits at a point in time and can be misconstrued however hard I try; it’s easier not to try.

Change to Comment Security

Jimmy and Grandad do the dishes

I have changed the comment security on this blog so that it requires authentication.

The reason for this is SPAM, but not the usual blog comment SPAM. Nik posted a comment and put in his email address because it was required, but he didn’t put in a web address. In this circumstance it turns out that TypePad displays the commenter’s details with a link to their email address. After this Nik noticed a significant increase in the SPAM he received, not surprisingly.

So I’ve changed the security so this won’t happen in the future and to protect you all. it means you need a TypeKey account but they are free it’s just a bit more hassle. I’ve also removed Nik’s comment so that the email link isn’t there – and not because I was offended by his comment .

I could have gone the other way and not required an email address but that wouldn’t have actually fixed the problem and I didn’t figure that reducing the security was the right way to go .

Six Apart are supposed to be changing things in this arena so it may all change again in the future.

Do comments drive interest?

Jimmy and Grandad still don't understand the end to 'Lost'

I have been running a bit of an experiment recently. I’ve decided that I need to be less of a viewer and do more interacting. So I’ve been adding comments to posts a lot more. There are a couple of reasons for this. The first is that I would like more comments on my post and you can’t expect what you don’t do yourself. the second is that I was intrigued to see whether my interactions would drive any traffic back to my site. I suppose I was seeing it as a bit of a mutual response and respect thing.

In normal conversation it’s polite to respond when someone makes a comment and I wondered whether we had naturally built the same etiquette in blogs.

The results have been quite mixed to be honest, but mostly people don’t check back. They certainly don’t leave any comments on my site, some respond on their own site but that’s really difficult to know if they have a long comment list.

The real question, though, is whether I care. Well on one level I don’t, because I have no massive aspirations to be a super-blogger or anything like that. On another level I do care because I want to know I am noticed, but that just some deep seated insecurity complex that most of us experience every day.  Does it puzzle me why some people get noticed and others don’t – definitely; but that isn’t limited to blogging it’s always been a mystery to me.

Blackberry Accessory

There are so many people I know who need this blackberry accessory that I think I might buy some of them one.

Perhaps I should get Granddad and Jimmy fixed up?

via jkOnTheRun.

Microsoft Monitor does some Pondering too

Yesterday I did some pondering about what would happen if Apple had a monopoly. Today Microsoft Monitor talks to some of the issues I raised.

Related, I also would like to point out that Apple presses its advantages just as hard as Microsoft. I’ve heard lots of gripes (some justified) for many years about Microsoft’s bundling strategy and how it hurts competitors. Apple does the same. Yesterday, I tried to get product information at Apple’s Website, but Internet Explorer 7 would crash. I used Firefox with the same result. With Tuesday’s new product announcements, Apple retooled its Website with lots more QuickTime (Doesn’t everyone else use Flash?). So I decided to update my QuickTime version from 7.03 to 7.04. But when I tried to download QuickTime, Apple’s Website directed me to iTunes. Apple wouldn’t offer QuickTime download separate from iTunes. I did search Apple’s download site for QuickTime 7.04, but got directed to 7.03 instead.

Ron Jacobs asks for feedback on TechED principles

Ron Jacobs is  asking for feedback on a new set of principles for TechED sessions.

Microsoft Vista Site – with Feeling

Lounge chic

Microsoft have picked up a some stick recently for not appealing to the ‘Windows Experience’ and I would have to agree with that point of view.

The new Windows Vista Site is something different though – now that has feeling.

The ‘Experience’ comes first and then the ‘Features’ – great.

ZDNet Looking for Bloggers – Is that me?

Jimmy and Grandad wonder where the food is

ZDNet are looking for bloggers I here. Am I interested? Not sure. What are the requirements?

Do you have a passion for technology? Want to share your from-the-trenches perspective with ZDNet’s readers? ZDNet is expanding its coverage with a series of new blogs on a variety of business and technology topics. We’re also seeking lT execs to contribute to blogs covering the government, education and healthcare fields.

What’s your area of expertise?

If you’ve got great credentials, good writing ability, and passionate authenticity, we’d like to hear from you. Please send an e-mail–with your full name, preferred daytime contact information, and a relevant writing sample–to David Grober. And yes, we’ll pay for steady, high-quality blogging.

Well I have a lot of this experience, but could I ever live down the description “passionate authenticity” – I’m British . If this is you, please feel free to apply.

Using Blogs as Conversations

Jimmy and Grandad contemplate going for a hair-cut

Much of the blog content produced is conversational in its nature – it’s one blogger linking to and making comment on the content provided by another blogger.

But are we providing the tools to enable a true conversation? Is it possible to see all of the elements of a conversation? Who else is involved in the conversation? Who has left the conversation and gone off to speak to someone more interesting?

I think that’s the point Scoble was getting at when he wrote:

I would love it if my blog tool could tell me more about the things I link to. For instance, how much traffic did it send to that person? How many people linked to it after my link (that would tell me the viralness of an idea)? How many times have I linked to Graham? How does that compare to the number of times I’ve linked to Dori Smith or Dave Winer? What’s the reciprocity of a link? (Did Graham link back and continue the conversation?)

What else would you like to see your blog tool tell you?

So here I am continuing the conversation and telling Scoble what I would like from my blog tools, but how does he know I’ve continued the conversation? Well he knows that I have continued the conversation because of the link above; but he would find it difficult to know that Drew has also added to the conversation because Drew’s link comes in the form of a comment on my original post. Unless Scoble visits my site he can’t see the comments and because he uses an aggregator, like I do, he isn’t likely to do that. Likewise, I find it difficult to see the people who have continued the conversation with Scoble. I have to go and visit his site to know that there are comments there; I would have to do some searching to find out who else has linked to his article; and then I would have to do the same thing again at the next tier of the conversation.

Getting all of this information together to see the whole conversation is not impossible today but it’s way too much like hard work. Because it’s too much like hard-work we don’t actually get the value from the conversation that we should and current search engines don’t actually help here. Search engines don’t rank information on the basis of it’s real true value (because that’s different for each individual), they rank it on the basis of how popular it is. Popularity can mean that something is good, but it’s only one dimension. Most artists that we now regard as masters even geniuses weren’t popular in their own time. We need to have tools that allow us to see the whole conversation so that we can find those pearls of wisdom that come from the person who’s brain has just put together a thought that would amaze us all, if only we knew it existed.

It’s as if all of the links are there, but that we haven’t quite the tools that help us to see it. Perhaps it’s time I got into coding again, it’s been a very long time and I’m not sure how transferable my Cobol skills are. Perhaps I should stick to being an ideas man.

The Scoble Effect

Jimmy plays it cool

The other day I wrote an article which referenced Scoble and his lack of appearance on Encarta. Robert noticed this  and duly posted.

The basic premise of my post was that while many of us blog-type-folk may think that people like himself are popular, they haven’t really generated true fame and that this blog thing is still really a bit niche. So I wondered what the impact of a popular blog would be on my humble blog.

I try to avoid being to much of a statistics head because I don’t actually write to be noticed, I write for the few people that I know read. I do, however, run statcounter on my site because I do like to look every now and again, and because I like to know which articles people keep going back to.

The last couple of days have been a little busier but only a little. On most days I get 20 to 30 visitors, yesterday 80, the day before 64. OK, in percentage terms it’s a big increase, but that would just be messing about with statistics.

There are clearly a number of possible reasons for this:

  • It’s the Christmas season and everyone has already switched off – some effect.
  • What I wrote wasn’t very interesting anyway – almost inevitable.
  • Scoble isn’t that interesting – too polite to say .
  • MSN integration with Encarta isn’t that interesting – not my place to say.
  • The problems with typepad meant that I missed all of the visitors – the post was missing for a while waiting to be restored .

It was only a bit of fun anyway, but I do find the whole social engineering, social networking, human behaviour effect fascinating – pity I know so little about it.

Intuitive Software

North Berwick at Sunset

Is software intuitive ?

I used to have a manager who disliked any software change, he hated GUI software for at least 10 years after they were commonly used. His way of branding the problems was to state that the software wasn’t intuitive. By this he meant that when he wanted to do something that involved stringing a set of actions together it wasn’t clear to him what the next step was that would enable him to achieve the desired effect. Another way of saying this would be to ask if the software uses common sense.

Common sense seems to be a good way of describing the issue but actually there doesn’t seem to be much agreements on what common sense is:

“Common sense in an uncommon degree is what the world calls wisdom.” – Samuel Taylor Coleridge

“Common Sense is that which judges the things given to it by other senses.” – Leonardo da Vinci

“Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age eighteen.” – Albert Einstein

“The three great essentials to achieve anything worth while are, first, hard work; second, stick-to-itiveness; third, common sense.” – Thomas Alva Edison

“Everybody gets so much information all day long that they lose their common sense.” – Gertrude Stein 

One thing is sure though common sense must make sense to at least one set of people.

The problem with common sense is that there is so much of it around. It’s common sense that you drive on the left in the UK, but it was clearly common sense to most of the rest of the world to drive on the right. It’s common sense in the UK that you write the day before the month and then the year; but in other countries (USA) it seems to be common sense to put the month first. It’s common sense to me to turn the light off when you leave the bathroom, but clearly no-one has told my children. The file system is the most common sense way of looking at the data stored on my hard disk but clearly not to Sue and not to others too. It’s common sense to a Nokia user like me to press the down key to get to the address book, but not to Jonathan who uses some other thing.

Some people talk about the browser being more intuitive, but I’m sure that it is. It may well be that it’s just presenting a simpler set of option and hence easier to understand. On most sites there are only a limited number of things that you can do after all and there is often only one thing to be looking out for – a hyper-link to somewhere else. As web pages become more interactive and bi-directional the issue of intuition comes back again.

Over the last few days I have been ranting a bit about the lack of process that accompanies many collaborative infrastructure implementation, but the other issue is that the software doesn’t follow my own personal common sense. I’m not going to get into details here, but it drives me nuts, but I’m not sure this is a common sense issue or simply a me issue. It doesn’t make sense to me, but it would need more people than that for it not to be common sense.

Perhaps I was talking more about common sense the other week when I was talking about respect. Not sure though, I think they are different issues.

If the Internet is going to get more interactive and the number of functions is going to increase it needs to build a global common sense which we all understand.  People are already doing it in their own space but that is requiring them to define common working process and agreement at quite a detailed level. This is a huge undertaking though, probably bigger than any other definition of common sense that we have ever done. This definition of common sense needs to cover every culture, every language, every device type and huge variety of functions. Personally I think that this is ultimately an impossible task and not because it is too hard, but because we humans don’t actually have a single common sense; that’s what makes us human.

We humans use our difference in common sense to innovate, to derive a new common sense. Imagine that we did agree a global common common sense – how would we ever change it .

Perhaps a global common sense is completely the wrong answer and a demonstration of what is wrong with the browser experience we offer today. Traditional browser applications inextricably link the data and the function. If you want to deal with this data you have to do it via the built in function for that individual page. Client/desktop based applications don’t do that. Take the issue if dictionaries and spell checking. On my client almost every application uses the same dictionary function and settings, this function knows which words are in my personal dictionary. When I use spell checkers online every one of them uses a different dictionary, some of them won’t let me use a real English one (only American). It’s a basic function but I don’t get any joy because there isn’t (and never will be) a global common sense for it. The saddest part of all of this is that there is a whole industry out there trying to sell people portals so that they can bind their staff into a corporate common sense that will stifle innovation and eventually bleed the organisation of any vitality. I’m not arguing here to go back to client/desktop applications, I’m arguing that we need to get on with splitting the functions from the data and delivering initiatives such as service oriented architectures (SOA) that allow people to derive their own common sense, which might be a browser based application, but might be a piece of client code, it might also be an automated engine that does something without being asked. The great thing about common sense is that there is so much of it.

Still no process

Fraisethorpe

I decided that maybe I was being a bit harsh yesterday when I said:

Today I am involved in a project where they have decide to create a collaboration space without any agreed process or even purpose. This collaboration space is delivering absolutely no value and is unlikely to get used until we give it a purpose; a process; a practice. What makes this one even worse is that the lack of process has lead to a choice of technology configuration which is sub-optimal at best, and in some instances is non-existent .

I have to admit at the point I wrote that comment I hadn’t actually read any of the supporting documentation for the collaboration space. I don’t often read this type of documentation because it is normally solely focussed on the technical steps involved in doing the things that you could do in the collaboration space, with little or no effort placed into defining how the collaboration space should be used.

In order to be completely fair I have, today, read the documentation.

I’d love to be able to say that the documentation defined a whole process and working practice that I thought was brilliant and inspired me to use the collaboration space but alas no . The documentation told me which things to lick to perform what function.

Ah well, I’ve repeated the rant above – nothing to add, nothing to take away .