Rescues



Rescues, originally uploaded by Aldon.

Help these three dogs find homes.

Contact Sherry at pizon67 yahoo.com

These boys are very friendly and playful. They are good with other dogs and affectionate. They walk great on the leash and are eager to please.

Rotti/Shep Male 2yrs
Rotti/Labx Male 11 mos
Dalm/Pointerx Male(N) 2 yrs

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How Many Journalists Does it Take …

A few days ago, Joe Cascio wrote a blog piece about his take on bloggers and journalists. He talks about Dan Schorr’s segment on Weekend Edition on NPR last weekend and “how it’s disturbing to him [Mr. Schorr] that anyone can ‘publish’ things on the internet and no editor or staff fact-checks it or holds it to any journalistic standard.”

The role of editors for bloggers is an old discussion. Many of my professional journalism friends often talk about the importance of editors. The standard response amongst bloggers is that all of the readers of the blog are the editors and fact-checkers. I know I’ve gotten my share of recommended edits sent to me by my readers.

Joe goes on to say, “I think journalists are unnerved and defensive because one of the mediums that they’re published on now is open to anyone to publish.” This may be true of some journalists, but it seems like there is something else that is much more unnerving. Joe says, “anyone with sufficient money can print their own newspaper,” but judging by all the bankruptcies, layoffs, and newspapers shutting down, I’m not sure there are that many people with sufficient money to print their own newspaper.

I think this gets to the part that is really unnerving. Some of the best journalists in our state are getting laid off. Ken Doctor has an interesting article that really puts it into perspective. In Online-Only PI: 22.....and the Rest, Skidoo, he argues that as newspapers move online, they only need, or can only support between 10 and 15% of the newsroom staff that they had when they were a print publication. He brings the point home thus:

Let's figure there are 44,000 journalists left in US newsrooms, an up-to-date tally hard to come up with. So, if the industry magically flipped that switch tomorrow, we've got an estimate of how many online-only published could pay: 6600 journalists, and that's at the optimistic 15% number.

That’s 37,400 journalists looking for new jobs. I’d be unnerved too, but not about Joe being able to publish his own blog.

Of course, this is based on the idea of everything going online. Ken Doctor points out that even thought newspaper revenues have declined by around $11 billion dollars over the past few years, they are still bring in $36 billion+ in revenues. It also assumes that new sources of revenues don’t arise, or that a new demand for news doesn’t come along.

But there are changes coming. Everyone is looking towards hyperlocal journalism. Kirk Petersen writes about his hometown now having five competing local websites. It isn’t surprising that GateHouse and the New York Times tangled over hyperlocal portals in the Boston area.

Yet perhaps it isn’t the format that matters; newsprint or websites. At a recent discussion about newspapers and the new media in New Haven, one guest got up and said that the reason no one buys newspapers anymore is that they stopped having any real news. Journalists haven’t been asking the hard questions. Perhaps if newspapers really asked the hard questions, and told readers something they needed to know, more people would pay for the newspapers on the newsstands and more people would visit news portals online.

To address this, a website in San Francisco was set up, spot.us. The idea of Spot.Us is to fund independent investigative reporting. They are off to a great start. Meanwhile, in Boston, The New England News Forum, the Boston University College of Communication and the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute will sponsor NewsOut, asking the question, “What to do when the newsroom lights go out?”

Personally, I’m optimistic about the future of the news industry. I hope and believe that we will find funding for real investigative reporting and that will bring back interest in the news, and the good reporters will find the tips and tidbits that can be found in blogs useful as they start asking hard questions again.

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#FollowFriday - @JoeCascio @sara6633 @wkossen @SHHHE

A popular meme on Twitter is to post a list of interesting people that you are following on Twitter on Fridays. Since my blog posts are fed into Twitter, I thought I’d post it here and get some double coverage as well as use this as an opportunity to talk more about my ideas for a Social Network Contact Management System.

The idea is to have a system where you can keep track of all your friends on various social networks, as well as the contacts you’ve made with them. #FollowFriday is a great example. Currently, I’m following nearly 1500 people on Twitter. As I pick out people for #FollowFriday, it would be nice to pick out people that I’ve been talking a bit with recently, but haven’t posted on #FollowFriday before, or at least for a long time.

I chose these four people because they have helped shape, either directly or indirectly, some of my thoughts about a Social Network Contact Management System. Joe and Willem have both spoken with me about the programming issues. Sara is co-founder of DandyID which is a great source for keeping track of your social networks. Priscilla is a key person behind PeopleBrowsr, which does some interesting cross social network stuff.

The thing that I’ve always liked best about PeopleBrowsr is the ability to group people by tags. With that, I can look at various streams, such as the stream of people in Connecticut, people in a Tweetup group in Connecticut, Newspapers from Connecticut, bloggers that are on EntreCard, bloggers that are on CMF, and so on. I’m not sure how people can follow more than a couple hundred people on Twitter without a tool like PeopleBrowsr. I used FriendFeed in a similar manner before PeopleBrowsr came along, and I’ve heard you can do some really nice similar stuff in TweetDeck, but I haven’t tried it.

Also, I’ve just started playing with another feature on PeopleBrowsr. You can bring up a stream or grid of Facebook, LinkedIn, or Plaxo friends on Twitter. Unfortunately, it seems to try to do a match based on name, instead of their actual userids, so since one of my friends is named Tim O’Brien, it is bringing up lots of different Tim O’Briens on Twitter. Not quite what I want.

Beyond that, I would like to be able to extract the information in PeopleBrowsr concerning the services I’ve subscribed to as well as the services my friends have subscribed to, much like I can with DandyID, MyBlogLog, FriendFeed and others. Even more importantly, I would love to be able to extract the tag information.

Using my first very early pass of SNCM, I’ve found about 140 people that I follow on other social networks that I don’t follow on Twitter. I need to start following some of them. I need to explore the tool in PeopleBrowsr to see whom else I ought to be following, and then, there is always Mr.Tweet as another source of good people to follow.

So, if I’ve recently added you on Twitter, that could be the reason. I may do similar adds for other networks as well, once Twitter is under better control. Hopefully, I’ll even come up with a better way of tracking how I contact people.

Marrow Donor Drive In Meriden CT



Marrow Donor Drive In Meriden CT, originally uploaded by Aldon.

It is hard to believe, but it’s been over a month since I learned that my friend Carol has Leukemia. Over the past month, I’ve read her story on Caring Bridge. In her recent entries, she talked about being in the beginning steps of beginning to look for a bone marrow donor in case she needs a transplant.

I’ve long known that I need to go register to be a potential bone marrow donor. It’s much different than being a blood donor. There are few variations in blood types and if you donate blood, it will get used. However, the chances of matching someone else for a bone marrow donation is about 1 in 20,000. There are six Human Leukocyte Antigens (HLA). I don’t know the details on what is needed to match.

So, I went to the National Marrow Donor Program website. Doing a search for places to register, I found that there is a donor drive in Meriden today, Thursday March 5th. It will be continuing until 7:00 PM at the Ben Franklin School at 426 West Main St.

Before I headed over there, I thought I would do a quick search to get more information about the drive. It turns out that there is a Facebook page for the drive. I was the 100th person to sign up. Since then, a few more people have signed up and over 200 people have responded ‘Maybe’. Over 600 people have not yet responded.

I realize that my chances of being a match for my friend in St. Louis is much greater than my chances of being a match for Manny, the person for who the Meriden drive is for. However, the odds are probably greater that if I end up being a match for somebody, it will probably be neither Manny nor Carol. However, I hope that someone will sign up for a drive somewhere to be a possible donor for Manny or Carol.

In terms of what is involved, it is pretty simple. I showed up. Filled in a form, and took what was pretty much like four q-tips which I rubbed on different parts of my cheek. I stuck the swabs in an envelope and they will get them processed.

So, there is still a little time left, so try to get over to the donor drive in Meriden. If you can’t make that, check out the National Marrow Donor Program and see where else you might be able to register.

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Social Network Contact Management System, Gathering People Details

The other day, I wrote a blog post talking about my desire for a Social Network Contact Management System. Essentially, I would like a system where I could easily see which services my friends are on, and track my contacts with these friends.

I’ve received some great comments on the idea and want to expand a bit on this. Joe Cascio spoke about some of his efforts in this area, which were based upon people self identifying and suggested it probably wasn’t likely to take good shape until OpenID became more ubiquitous. Willem Kossen asked if we couldn’t get a bunch of programmers together to build something closer to what I was envisioning.

Meanwhile, I’ve done a little bit of programming and my ideas are starting to take better shape. Already, there are many sites where people can self identify the networks they are on. Some of these sites provide a programmatic interface.

The first one that I worked with was MyBlogLog. MyBlogLog provides a FOAF file listing all of the services you are on, all of your friends on MyBlogLog and all of the services they have listed for themselves.

I wrote a program that analyzed my FOAF file. I found that I have 369 contacts showing up there. 176 of them, or 48% have identified their Twitter accounts. 72 have identified Friendfeed accounts, and on an average they have about 8 accounts each.

I mention Friendfeed, because they are another service where people can self identify. They have a nice interface that returns all of the friends and all of the services for a given user. They do not combine all of this in a single file, so I would need to write a program that would iterate through my 250 friends on Friendfeed.

DandyID provides a great list of services that users can self identify and has APIs to extract the information. However, on a first pass, I didn’t get the API to work. However, I did get their Portable Contacts feed to work very nicely. DandyID is still a fairly new service, so I only have twenty friends there. 19 of them are on Twitter, and my average friend on DandyID has 35 services.

Twitter has a decent API and I can retrieve my followers and whom I am following. Identi.ca returns a FOAF file of connections as well, but like Twitter doesn’t track other services. By combining the data from these services, I should be able to get a fairly good view of my contacts.

There are a bunch of other services I would like to add to this list. BlogCatalog allows users to self identify their other services, and I can find my friends and neighbors on BlogCatalog programmatically, but I haven’t found a way to extract services via the BlogCatalog API. It does provide a way to retrieve which BlogCatalog users have recently visited your blog, which could be helpful in the second part of the project, tracking contacts.

EntreCard gathers user’s services but doesn’t provide an obvious mechanism to retrieve that information. They do provide an RSS feed where you can extract people who have recently dropped a card on your site as well as who has dropped the most cards on you.

Disqus, Lijit, and Retaggr also gather information about services but don’t provide any obvious method to programmatically access this information. I haven’t even started looking at Facebook or FriendConnect.

With this, I just need to come up with a good data schema, normalize the data and I’m on my way. In a later post, I’ll probably get more geeky and talk about the data schema and normalization and then talk about how to track what has gone on with contacts on the various services.

Any thoughts about other services that I could use to build up a better view of my social network contacts, as well as thoughts about the data schema or normalizing the data would be appreciated.

As to where I go with this, my current thinking is to make all of this available as an open source project. If you are interested in looking at my code, let me know. However, at this point it is still a bunch of small disconnected pieces of code, more like a developers notebook then something like alpha version 0.001

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