Social Networks

Entries related to social networks, group psychology, anthropology, and really any of the social sciences.

Unpacking from Falcon Ridge

It can be a lot of work to unpack from camping for five days at a folk music festival in the rain. It can be even more work if you are a social media consultant who has photographed, videotaped, recorded and microblogged a fair amount of the festival.

Today, I’m spending my time unloading the car and setting things out to dry and catching up on what is going on online. While I was at Falcon Ridge I sent seventeen videos from my cellphone up to various video sites. I need to spend time titling, describing, tagging, and in come cases geotagging what I’ve uploaded. I’ve spent a little time doing this with some of my videos on blip.tv.

The videos from my cellphone are low quality. Poor resolution and limited to 17 seconds. However, the montage provides a great glimpse into the experience. One of the emerging artists that performed Friday had a great song about having a brother go off to war. I think it was Amy Speace, but I’m not sure. The clip I captured has these lyrics:

There was Homecoming and football games
And picking out our dresses for the prom
With my brother in some desert dodging bullets
When he wasn’t dodging bombs.

I haven’t been able to find a copy of the song. If anyone knows where I can find it, let me know.

I also got a chance to upload pictures from my camera and put them in a Falcon Ridge Photoset on Flickr.

I have a couple great videos, one is of Lowen and Navarro and their friends and family performing Learning to Fall, and another is of Dar Williams with friends and family performing Iowa. These are special videos that I don’t want to post without speaking with the artists to make sure it is okay with them and done in a way that will be most beneficial to them and what matters to them.

Meanwhile, I’m going to tag a bunch of posts here on Orient Lodge into the Music category and take them off of the front page so people interested in other topics that I like to write about can find those posts easily as well.

There are other sites that I need update titles, tags and descriptions, and for that matter, I should really put a load of muddy clothes in the washing machine.

#frff Online Publicity Toolkit for Art

Yesterday I ended up on the Online Publicity Toolkit for Artists panel with two of ny favorite musicians, Maura Kennedy and Dan Navarro. More later. This sunny morning I woke up early, did some chores, and joined the running of the tarps.

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Upgrading to Laconica 0.4.4

Today, I’m upgrading micro.orient-lodge.com to the latest version of Laconica. Given the frequent updates to the core, I figured I needed to come up with a better way of doing these upgrades, so I’ve split my tarball into two different pieces. laconicadepends.tar.gz and laconica044.tar.gz.

The laconicadepends tarball are all of those little files, that you would normally install using PEAR or by hunting around that laconica depends on. The second tarball is a straight tarball of the current darcs repository. In theory, you should be able to combine the depends tarball with just about any standard repository to have a version that runs on many shared hosts. If you do set up a site using this, let me know how it goes.

Setting up Darcs for Laconi.ca Development

Before I went on vacation, I was writing a bit about laconi.ca and about my efforts to make it easier for developers to start contributing. One of the first hurdles to face is getting used to the version control system.

Many people I’ve spoken with are used to using CVS or SVN to get and submit code from a version control repository. I don’t know as many people that are up to speed with darcs. In my case, my hosting service already has CVS and SVN installed, but darcs is not an option. So, I spent a little time playing around to see what I could do.

Comments

EntreCard and SezWho

While I was off on vacation, EntreCard announced a partnership with SezWho. EntreCard is a site where bloggers can drop cards on one another as part of an advertising scheme to drive traffic to their sites. The folks at EntreCard note that adding comments is another key part of how to drive traffic to a site. So, they’ve partnered with SezWho, which is a site aimed at driving traffic through comments.

SezWho has gotten some mixed reviews early on. Apparently, early on, they had some distributed denial of service attacks which slowed down everyone who has using SezWho. In my case, I’m using Drupal for my blog, and their support for Drupal is in beta. So far, my experiences it that it is probably better to think of it as Alpha code.

When you install SezWho for Drupal, you need to go through the regular steps of a Drupal install. Then, you need to edit a configuration file, go in and tweak your theme files and hope things work.

In my case, they did not seem to work at all. The blocks showed up, but that was about it. After digging into the code, I found that it actually had synchronized some of my content, but a very limited amount. The posts that it synchronized didn’t have comments, so I couldn’t see what was going on. To complicate things even further, it seemed to have my content attributed to my old Optonline email address, while my comments were being attributed to my Orient Lodge email address, as was my registration and my EnterCard connection. This remains an outstanding issue which I hope will get addressed when their Drupal person gets back.

As I explored further, I found that their synchronize software only synchronizes content for non-blog nodes for the website as a whole. Since Drupal can have multiple blogs, SezWho has separate synchronization for each individual blogger, and that separate synchronization applies only to blog posts. In my case, I’m the only person using this Drupal site as a blog, so I didn’t set up a separate account for the site as a whole as well as for my individual blog here. So, it didn’t find any of my blog posts, just a few random other pages. I changed the synchronization program to synchronize blog posts for the main account, and now it shows all my posts as being synchronized. That is, at least, in the database. I had to tweak a few other places to force the blogid to zero to get other content to show up, and even with that it is spotty, either lagging or failing, and not managing to handle comments at all.

Later, I tried tweaking parameters another way, adding my Optonline email address to my SezWho profile and setting up a separate blog on the SezWho profile for my blog entries. Convoluted. Also, it hasn’t made any apparent difference.

Oh well.

General discussion

So, now I’m tied into three different comment systems. If you follow me on FriendFeed you can add comments there. I’ve tweaked Drupal to pull in those comments. There is a little bit of a lag. I like the way FriendFeed integrates with all the other life streams. I just don’t like the lag, or the difficulty of finding a place to add a comment initially.

You can also use Disqus. It seems to work pretty well, but for some reason, it is flagging some very old content as new. I’m not sure why that is happening. However, the comments can be added from the Drupal site and it seems to work pretty well. A nice plus is that if you use Seesmic, you can add video comments. The downside is that comments are stored on their server, and my access and control of the content is limited.

Then, there is SezWho. What is nice about SezWho is that they are supposed to integrate with the Drupal comment system, so comments stay part of Drupal. I can control them however I wish. The downside is that SezWho just doesn’t seem ready for beta testing.

So, for the time being, you’ll have different options for adding comments. None of them are perfect. All of them, hopefully, will be evolving to be better systems in the future.

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