Technology
The Demise of Delicious and The Growth of Other Knowledge Collaboration Sites
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 01/04/2011 - 21:33Well, everyone has been talking about Yahoo’s decision to pull the plug on Delicious and about where they will share bookmarks next. It seems like a lot of different sites have been going under, and I’ve been moving my data from one site to the next.
I recently saved my delicious bookmarks and loaded them into a few different sites. One was Diigo. I’ve played with it a little, including loading a Chrome extension, but it hasn’t really grabbed my attention. I also loaded them into another site, but I forget which one.
Meanwhile, I’ve started playing with Pearltrees. It is a fun graphical way of bookmarking sites and linking the bookmarks together. It has been more interesting to me than some of the other sites, but I haven’t loaded a lot into it yet. It has some nice collaborative functions, and I’ll probably keep playing with it for a while.
I’ve also been using Rockmelt which has a nice share box on the top, as well as some nice side panels for social media. I’ve found I’m actually using it a bit to keep up on different sites. In a similar way, I’ve been playing with OneTrueFan which also has some nice sharing functionality. Now if only I could get OneTrueFan to share to Pearltrees and Diigo.
Besides organizing links, there is another set of sites that has caught my attention recently. Quora is a well done site for people to ask questions and share answers. Many of the early questions I’ve been reading are around technology startups. However, it seems to be broadening out a bit. Some of that may also be, because I’ve been adding a lot of friends and topics.
Then, there is Fluther. Fluther feels a bit like a me too Q&A site and just isn’t doing it for me. They were acquired by Twitter, which might give them a little staying power, but they remind me a lot of Plurk, another cute Me Too site, that I played with for a while and mostly forgot.
Slightly more interesting is Healthysparx. It is a health oriented Q&A system. However, I always worry about systems like this. How many people are getting inaccurate health information and perhaps making poor health choices as a result based on a system like this?
So, knowledge gathering and sharing systems continue to evolve. While others are focusing on mobile or location aware websites, and mourning Yahoo’s plans for Delicious, it may be that this is a good time to be looking more closely and knowledge collaboration.
Google Friend Connect and Facebook Connect
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 01/02/2011 - 13:35Back in August, I took a look at Google Friend Connect, Newsletters, Drupal, and other stuff. At the time I decided not to use the Drupal module and to simply hard code some Drupal blocks. Since then, I’ve played a little more with newsletters and Google Friend Connect, and talked about it over on the Adgitize Forum, including sending out a Google Friend Connect newsletter targeted to my readers who have said that they use Adgitize.
Then, I stumbled across a question on Quora, What is better: Google Friend Connect or Facebook Connect? An anonymous person commented
Facebook Connect is about a million miles ahead.
Google Friend Connect is pretty much a failed product that has been abandoned.
Well, I seem to see a lot of blogs that have various Google Friend Connect gadgets on them and I seem to get more people ‘liking’ my blog with Facebook Connect. So, I thought I’d take a closer look at some of the data.
As I write this, I have 3191 followers on Twitter. TwitterCounter shows 47 Twitter users. However, only 12 of these are people that actually follow me on Twitter.
On Facebook, I have 1863 friends. 231 people have followed my blog via Networked blogs. 11 have connected with Facebook Connect and three have liked the Orient Lodge Facebook page I’ve set up.
With Google, there are currently 292 people that have connected. It seems to be better at making connections than Facebook or Twitter. MyBlogLog is another site where I’ve gotten a lot of connections. Currently, the number stands at 700. We shall see what happens if MyBlogLog goes away. There are also 80 people reading Orient Lodge listed via BlogCatalog and a handful on BlogFrog. What is not explored is the overlap of these communities.
I installed the Facebook Connect Drupal Module and you can see a few new link and share options. So far, I haven’t seen a lot of interest with Facebook Connect, other than that it seems to connect a little more nicely with Drupal than Google Friend Connect. I have left on the Facebook Connect Comment feature, so now people can leave comments in Facebook, Disqus or Drupal.
Bottom line? It sure doesn’t look like Google Friend Connect is a failed product that has been abandoned. There are plenty of social network graph recent reader and everything else widgets and gadgets around. Each of them has their own advantages and disadvantages. I’ll keep exploring many of them. So which tools do you like and why?
Year End Review
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 12/31/2010 - 11:58Stace has a blog post up about her top ten blog posts of 2010. So, I thought I’d take a moment and review my blogging.
This blog post will be my 494th blog post of the year. If you include the seventeen posts I wrote for the around the towns column on Bethwood Patch, and a few posts that I wrote for on my new internal blog at Community Health Center, Inc. I am well over 500 posts for the year.
The blog posts on Orient Lodge that have gotten the most traffic are
My New Nokia #N900 #Android Phone
Running Java on an #N900
My Update Adventure #N900 PR 1.3, NitDroid, Titan, and MeeGo
Configuring the Nokia #N900 Chameleon for Mer, MeeGo and Fedora
MeeGo 1.1, Partitions, Bootmenu, Kernel Power, Flasher, and All That Stuff on the #N900
Hmm... I think I see a trend. In fact, the top twenty blog posts, in terms of traffic, are all about the Nokia N900. Coming in at 21 was EC Analytics. This was a program I wrote for people using both EntreCard and Google Analytics to find which sites on EntreCard have sent the most traffic to a blog according to Google Analytics as opposed to Entrecard’s own analytics.
I used this program fairly extensively from time to time which is part of the reason it is high on the list.
By the way, these are the EntreCard users that have been most engaged in Orient Lodge over the past year according to my calculations using Google Analytics:
First Door on the Left
Fatherly Yours
Small Town Mommy
Parent Times
The Sewing Mom
With the exception of The Sewing Mom, all of them had over 200 pageviews on Orient Lodge over the past year. Sewing Mom is one click away. Thank you to all my regular readers.
It seems like there are at least two very different audiences, one for blog posts about the Nokia N900 and one from regular readers from sites like EntreCard.
Coming in 23rd was Google Maps and Drupal Location; not about the Nokia N900, but geeky nonetheless. At 24 was The Death of Jeter and Jezzebelle. Stories about dogs, while not as popular online as geeky blog posts often get a lot of traffic. At 25 was yet another Nokia N900 story.
There are probably a few other year end topics I should explore. We’ll see if I get another post or two up by the end of the year.
Random Notes - Quora, Rockmelt, OneTrueFan
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 12/28/2010 - 20:02Well, I have some serious blog posts in the queue, but I’m pretty beat right now, so I’ll write a quicker blog post. Between the funeral, Christmas, the blizzard, and congestion that just isn’t going away, I don’t have a lot of energy right now.
Recently, I’ve started participating in Quora. It is a site where people ask questions and post answers about just about anything. Right now, it feels pretty geeky, but that may in part be because of the people who I am connected with there. If you’re on Quora, look me up.
I’ve also started playing a little bit with Rockmelt. It is a new Chrome based browser with a strong social media angle. Initially, I didn’t do much with it because it doesn’t run on Linux. However, my machine at work is Microsoft based and I’ve used Rockmelt a bit there. It is starting to grow on me. At work, I use Internet Explorer, Chrome and now Rockmelt.
I continue to play with OneTrueFan. I’ve been so busy, my blog surfing has fallen off and people are ousting me as the one true fan of various blogs. They also have a new interface that has been a bit flaky for me. Oh well. I’ll keep it for the time being.
There are lots of other things to write about, but they will have to wait for now.
Geeky Christmas Notes
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 12/25/2010 - 22:30There were several technology gifts at the Hynes household this Christmas, and being the old guard geek that I am, I was interested in seeing what I could do with them.
I received an HP 7 inch digital picture frame. No great hacking things there. Simply load some sort of memory device with pictures on it and let the frame show the pictures. I pulled the SD card out of my Canon SD 1000 stuck it in the digital picture frame and there were the whales from last summer’s trip to Cape Cod. I tried hooking up the Canon SD 1000 directly, but the frame wouldn’t read it. I tried my Nokia N900 with the same results. However, the old Motorola Razr that my wife uses worked nicely as a source of pictures.
I was thinking that I would need to go out and get an SD card to use for the frame, but it also supports USB memory sticks, and I have a bunch of them kicking around from various tradeshows. So, I’ve done a quick load of some of the pictures that I had on my hard drive onto a memory stick and that is nicely configured.
The older girls got Nooks for their big presents. I helped them do a little configuration. One site I found that was really interesting is NookFeed. This sites allows you to take your Google Reader feeds and download them as books you can read on your Nook. Very nice. Mairead was happy to see some of her favorite web comics show up in her Nook. She also stuck a MicroSD card she had with music on it in the Nook. All of her music showed up. Unfortunately, it was in one very long list without any easy navigation. We also loaded an audio book for here.
The Nook is an Android based machine, and I kicked around ‘rooting’ them. The idea would be to see if a better audio file interface for the nooks could be found, as well as other tools to make them more usable.
There is an interesting approach, described in this post which utilizes hacking your local DNS to point to a site with a rooted update for the Nook. Much of the description about how to do this is based people using Windows machines with limited capabilities. In my case, I’m running an Ubuntu server in my home network, so I can hack DNS pretty easily. This page goes into how to reconfigure DNS. I’ve been meaning to clean up DNS and set up an internal zone for a while, so I kicked this around a little bit, but haven’t gone all the way to setting things up to be able to root the Nook. Maybe later.
My youngest daughter got a Nintendo DSi. I’ve kicked around getting DSLinux available for it, but read about problems people had with DSLinux and the DSi. I figure I’ll save that. My daughter probably isn’t as interested in DSLinux on her DSi.
What she is more interested in is playing with the camera and the music. The DSi has a slot for an SD card, so I took my SD card out of my Canon SD 1000 and put it in the DSi. The Canon shoots at a much higher resolution. The DSi only seems to support 640x480. However, with the SD card in the DSi, Fiona could take some pictures which were stored on the SD card. With that, I can load the pictures up to sites like Facebook or Flickr.
I looked around for ways to upload directly from the DSi to an online site, since it has Wifi. There was a reference to some Facebook connectivity, but that isn’t really a good option. So, we’ll juggle SD cards for uploading for the time being.
The other thing that I explored a little bit was loading music onto the DSi. Unfortunately, I don’t have a nice way of mounting the SD card on my computer. I do have a little device somewhere around for doing it, but I can’t find it right now. The Canon SD 1000 uses PTP as its USB connectivity, so I can load the gphotofs package on Ubuntu to access the photos, but I can’t write back to the device.
However, I can write to a microSD card in my wife’s Razr, and I have an adapter to fit the microSD card into a full SD card. So, I tried copying files from my computer to the microSD card and from there onto the DSi. The microSD card had a few files in M4A format. The DSi played these nicely. However, it doesn’t play MP3 files nicely. I was told that it will play aac files as well, but I didn’t have any luck.
I did check around a little see if I could find a nice way to convert an MP3 file to an AAC file. This article provided a good simple way to do it, assuming you have ffmpeg running on your linux box in a way that supports AAC. Unfortunately, the standard configuration of ffmpeg doesn’t do that. So, I tried some of the options in this article. Unfortunately, I could not get any of the prepackaged versions of ffmpeg to convert to aac. So, I went about and followed these instructions to get the latest version of ffmpeg running. Once this was done, it was easy to convert from mp3 to aac.
Essentially, I ran this command
ffmpeg -i input.mp3 -acodec libfaac -ab 128k output.aac
This produced an aac file that I could play with ffplay, but I couldn’t get it to play on the Razr or the DSi. I tried putting it in an M4A envelope with this command
ffmpeg -i output.aac -vn -acodec copy output2.m4a
Like the aac file, the m4a file plays with ffplay, but not on the DSi.
With that, I’ve played enough with the technology on Christmas day. I’m going to post this as is and head off to bed soon. Merry Christmas everyone.