Feed of the Day

Cool, I’m Feed of the Day at Feedster! btw regular readers may’ve noticed I’m posting more frequently now. Shorter, pithier posts. But I plan to continue the long-form entries too (like last nights). I’ll see how this experiment goes… Originally published on ReadWriteWeb (archived copy)

I want to promote NZ music on WebJay

Lucas Gonze, creator of WebJay, said today: “Policing unauthorized music on Webjay is turning into a huge drag. The problem is that I have to impose my puritanism on others, which is absurd.” By “puritanism” I presume he means being morally pure and obeying the law of music copyright. Now, I like WebJay and admire … Read more

Funk

Don’t worry I still like blogs 😉 I was thinking it would be amusing to change my name to The Artist Formally Known as Read/Write Web and write a post entitled ‘Slave to RSS’. But that would be a bit silly. Besides, I don’t have enough graphical ability to design a symbol! I do need … Read more

The Bore-osphere

In answer to all the blogs I’ve read today: 1. No I don’t want a friggin’ Gmail account. 2. I don’t want to read your opinion on Dave Winer closing down 3000 weblogs.com blogs. 3. I don’t even care about Firefox 0.9 being released. Maybe I’m just in a bad mood today. Sigh, I think … Read more

Limits of the Web in 2004

When I was a very young child, perhaps 5 or 6, I wrote a poem that got published in The Timaru Herald newspaper. My first published writing. I think I may’ve dreamed recently that I’d found a copy of it on the Web. I can’t recall (I’m not good at remembering dreams). Or maybe I … Read more

Knowledge Management in the Real World

Knowledge Management is a term that many people dislike, myself included. Firstly it’s a misnomer – you can’t “manage”, at an organization or corporate level, something as subjective and contextual as knowledge. It’s even debatable whether you can manage knowledge at a personal level – because we don’t always know what we know. Secondly, the … Read more

A Theory of Synchronicity for the Web

In my previous post, Stasis and Synchronicity, I scratched the surface of something that’s been bothering me recently. I’ve been sensing a degree of stasis in the blogging world, not to mention in my own life (and given what I wrote 12 days ago about weblogs being avatars, perhaps the two are intermingled). I finished … Read more

Stasis and Synchronicity

Jeffrey Zeldman wrote today about Glassdog’s transformation from an “experimental narrative powerhouse” to a mere blog. Under the provocative title The saddest music in the world, Zeldman’s piece was a reflection on how The Web has not lived up to its original promise: “Oh, little child. Long ago, before you were born, some of us … Read more

Govt takes up publishing standard

That’s the title of my second NZ Computerworld article, which is in this week’s edition (pg 16). Here’s a PDF copy of it. It’s also available in HTML format on Read/Write Web. Since it is an article that attempts to bring RSS into a mainstream light, some people who arrive here may not know how … Read more

Checking out the IRC world

I recently downloaded the mIRC client and have been checking out the Freenode IRC network. The few times I’ve logged in there haven’t been many people about – mainly because I live in New Zealand and so my time zone is out of whack with the northern hemisphere. But tonight (Saturday night my time) I … Read more

Fixed a couple of CSS bugs

This is a boring post about fixing a couple of tedious Internet Explorer CSS bugs. But I want to record it for my own records and for future Google searchers. 1) The IE Italics bug – in the past I used italics whenever I quoted somebody. However on certain CSS designs, italics breaks the width … Read more

Weblogs as Avatars: some thoughts

I’m in a stage right now where there are lots of details that I’m juggling in my life, both in the real world and my weblog world. My job is busy, with quite a few relatively exciting projects on the go at the same time. My home life is busy, looking after a highly energetic … Read more

Auto-pinging Topic Exchange

Now you tell me! There is in fact a way to automatically ping Topic Exchange from within Movable Type. Thanks to an old Ben Hammersley post, I found out that the category attributes page has a box to enter TrackBack URIs to automatically ping. So after all my work over the last week, I’ve managed … Read more

Topic Navigation Live

Topic navigation is up and running on Read/Write Web, including cross-posting to both K-Collector and Topic Exchange. You’ll notice on the main menu, it now lists internal topics (or categories if you prefer – you say tom-ah-to, I say tom-ay-to). And in my RSS file, I’ve added references to both KC and TE. Here’s basically … Read more

Topics: Automatic for the People

Matt Mower’s written a great explanation of how the K-Collector aggregation process works. KC is a very clever system and I’m pleased to hear it doesn’t actually require the KC client app on Radio or MT in order for people to participate in the KC community. What I will do is continue with my own … Read more