Project Flickr Update

About 8 weeks ago I decided to try to drag my friends and family into the 21st century by sending them invitations to join Flickr and share photos. The friend group consisted of our close friends who we see several times a week. We do stuff together all the time, so the pictures I take of my kids generally include a few of their kids. The prospect of seeing and downloading my “friends and family” photos sounded like good incentive. The family group consisted of Raina, my sister and my cousin Janet. These are the only family members I know of that meet the requirements: (a) they have a computer and (b) I have their email address.

Part One (signing up): I sent out “friend” invitations to Arnie (I didn’t have his wife Christina’s separate email at the time), Greg, Yvette, Ray, Sharon, Kyle, Martha, Dave and Lenora and “family” invitations to Raina, Anne and cousin Janet. I figured all the moms would sign up and the other dads (except for Arnie, who is fairly tech-savy and always willing to try new things) would blow me off. I figured 2 out of the 3 family members would sign up.

The results were a little surprising. Arnie signed up right away, as predicted, but so did the rest of the friend group. Greg and Yvette (spouses), Ray and Sharon (spouses) and Kyle and Martha (spouses) each signed up separately and Dave and Lenora (spouses) signed up together. Raina signed up right away, but Anne and cousin Janet ignored multiple invitations. At last count, I had sent Anne 12 invitations. I suppose they are paying me back for many years as a poor correspondent family-wise.

Part Two (uploading photos): Here’s where the pack started to separate. In a big surprise, Ray was the first one to upload photos, uploading 5 shots from Russia right away. Ray travels on business a lot, so this is not all that surprising. Ray is also a guy, however, and my theory (perhaps now disproved) was that the moms would do the heavy lifting photo-wise. Arnie put a bunch of vacation photos up right away, and of course I have uploaded a lot of photos. So far the only mom to break into the scoring column is Yvette with 5 photos from the hottest (temperature wise) swim meet in recorded history. Nada for all of the other folks, demonstrating once again that you can lead a horse to water and all that.

Part Three (adding friends to your contacts): Because the invitations came from me, everyone who signed up became one of my contacts automatically, either as friend or family, as the case may be. One of the many wonderful features of Flickr is that you can upload photos that can only be seen by people in the category (family, friend, public, etc.) you select. So in order for our group to share photos, everyone else has to manually add the other group members as a contact (family for spouses; friend for everyone else). I sent out an email with instructions on how and why to do this. A few people tried. One or two succeeded, but based on the questions I got, most were either actually or conveniently confused about the process. These are 40 something year old professionals with graduate degrees. I can’t imagine how hard it would be with parents or grandparents (as an orphan, I am sadly exempt from that hair-pulling experience).

Part Four (where do I go from here): I would say that my Flickr experiment has been, at best, only a partial success. Raina and our friends can now view my photos (including many from our recent camping trip). Arnie and maybe a few others will explore and enjoy the wonder that is Flickr. But the fact is that most people my age and probably everyone older still think of photos as paper things- not digital things (more on our transition from paper to digital in a forthcoming post). You can teach grown-ups technology, but it’s not easy (watching the older lawyers in my office wage war with email attachments is further proof of this). My little group will probably use Flickr, at least a little, if I keep hounding them. But it won’t be easy for me or for them.

Technorati Tags:
,

Rancho Radio Cracks Top 20

In a little over 2 months since we relaunched Rancho Radio, it has moved steadily up the charts. Yesterday it cracked the Top 20, becoming the 20th most popular Americana station in the Live365 family.

Americana is a broad category, covering basic Americana, bluegrass, folk, alternative country and more. Since I wrote the script that selects the weekly playlist automatically out of our 26,000 song library, the number of listeners has grown significantly. My guess is that is because we are playing a lot of deep album cuts from our extensive alternative country catalog.

Give Rancho Radio a listen. If you like it, tell your friends about it. We’d love to see it move up the number 1!

Update:  Rancho Radio is now Newsome.fm.

Technorati Tags:

Happy Birthday Anne!

hbaa-713424

Tomorrow (August 14) is my sister Anne’s Birthday. She is a great sister and a wonderful aunt to Cassidy and Delaney. Everyone at Rancho DeNada wishes her a happy, happy birthday and we can’t wait until her next visit.

Come see us soon, Sis. We love you!

Another Nail

nailcoffinI’m getting tired of my self-imposed TIVO deathwatch, but I simply can’t help myself. PVR Wire confirms that DirecTV will soon stop marketing TIVO.

DirecTV says people who ask will still be able to get a TIVO. Of course it also says “if you don’t have a (digital video recorder) from us, you won’t be getting the DirecTV experience.” You can also still get an 8-Track tape player if you want.

The bottom line is that this is going to end up either:

Crappy: DirecTV pushes some lesser box on its subscribers, but at least switches out existing HDTV TIVOs at no cost to the customer. Then all we have to do is pay Weaknees to upgrade that box like we did for the TIVO.

Really Crappy: DirecTV pushes some lesser box on its subscribers and makes us pay for it. This would be really stupid because it would lead to the loss of a bunch of subscribers, myself included.

My prediction: They will switch out the boxes if you agree to a one or two year contract.

Technorati Tags:
,

Web Sites in an RSS World

Steve Rubel has written an interesting post about the future of web design in the face of the RSS movement and the resulting increase in the use of news aggregators. Steve’s point is that the news aggregators currently have a lot of control over how the packaging and presentation of the content they aggregate. Here’s my take, from a slightly different perspective.

rsslogoI resisted news aggregators because, for me, part of the appeal of both a web site and the content thereon is the web site’s look and feel, as well as the little extras (music lists, book lists, Flickr badges, etc.) that give the post its context. I often find new web sites I enjoy by looking at links on the web sites I read. News aggregators strip down and re-package the content of a particular article or post on a web site, but ignore the other stuff. They are functionally very efficient, but lack the pizazz of the web page in its native and intended form. All of this is fine for straight news (Google News, Yahoo News, etc.). All of this is not so fine for blog posts and other more specialized content. If the source of the content is important (beyond being merely a trusted name for headlines, etc.), the packaging of the material should also be important.

But notice that I say only that I resisted news aggregators. The fact is that I use one. Onfolio is such a wonderful program that I stated using its news aggregator functions and have continued to do so. But not as a complete substitute for visiting web sites. More as an alternative to use when I am in a hurry and want to quickly see if the sites I enjoy have any new content.

All of this design and content re-packaging business needs to be worked out. And I agree with Steve that the owners of the content will eventually demand to control the presentation of such content (I learned that lesson many times over when developing ACCBoards.Com). But an equally important issue is the stripped down, sterile nature of the content delivered by news aggregators. Yes, I can change the way the content of a blog post looks via an aggregator. But if I want to see Flickr photos and linkrolls along with that content, I need to visit the page.

News aggregators are like Greatest Hits albums. Great for the casual listener or the person who just wants a Cliffs Notes appreciation of an artist. But the true music lover wants to hear the entire record- just the way it was conceived and created by the artist.

Technorati Tags:
,

Technorati Blues

technorati-784323I am very excited about the potential of Technorati. Technorati indexes weblogs. Recall that weblogs are much more than just some dude‘s online diary. Weblogs (or blogs, for short) are a new publishing mechanism that allows a lot more people to publish content to the internet more easily. The point being that just because you have no desire to read someone’s diary, don’t write off blogs as a source for great, real-time information. Check out the blogs listed on the left hand side of The Home Place for blogs that I read daily.

First the good news: I use Technorati for two purposes right now. To search for content on topics that interest me. For example I use it to look for people who are writing articles about camping. Right now there are almost 200,000 posts about camping (alas, none of my articles are there- more on that below). I also use it to see what other authors are mentioning Newsome.Org in their articles. For example, here is a post on a German blog that mentions this site.

The problem that is driving me nuts is that I want to use it for a third purpose: to allow readers to find my articles and posts via a keyword search, just like I did above with camping. Unfortunately, my site is not being indexed by Technorati. Not because Technorati doesn’t want to, but because of some technical problem that I cannot seem to overcome. Technorati is run by smart people, but like any new service, its support staff is stretched thin. I wrote about the problem, which is shared by others, including Improbulus, as detailed in this post. I got a friendly response a few days later, suggesting that I try to fix a horde of XHTML errors on my page. Without going into a lot a technical detail, my page, while reasonably compliant with most standards, does not comply with the stricter syntax of this newer markup language. There is nothing wrong with that advice, at least as a first try. Here’s the rub: I can’t create compliance without dumping the new look and feel of this site, and there are lots of other sites with more compliance issues than this one (i.e., that have more XHTML errors than I do) that do get indexed by Technorati.

So I have a hobson’s choice: dump the new look and feel in favor of a simpler look that would be more compliant and might get indexed or leave things the way they are and run the risk of never getting indexed.

I have written back to Technorati to show them other (less compliant) pages that are getting indexed and asking if there is another way to solve the problem.

I hope so. Technorati is a great idea, but if I’m not getting indexed, you can be sure there are a lot of others who aren’t either. And that’s a lot of content to leave on the table (or out of the database, as the case may be).

Technorati Tags:
,

Another Fun Camping Trip

Big Fun-796367

We just got back from another fun camping trip. This time the Newsomes, the Clarks, the LeFevers and the Veldmans went to Concan, Texas and stayed at Frio Country. Frio Country in is the Texas Hill Country, surrounded by rolling hills, forests and the Frio River.

We spent a lot of time on the river, swimming and tubing. On Monday, we went on a 2.5 hour trip down the river. The kids had a blast, and the adults did too. It was a ton of fun.

We also fished on the river and caught quite a few fish. Cassidy caught her third fish all-time (a little perch), and her first one all by herself. She also caught 3 frogs and spotted a jackrabbit and a skunk near our cabin.

Delaney was the youngest one to go tubing and she was a champ. She had fun, was brave on the rapids and never fell out of her tube.

It was a great trip and the group has already made plans to go back next summer. In the meantime, we’ll look forward to our next trip this October. It will be cooler by then and we can begin our tent camping season. There’s nothing more fun than camping with your family and friends. We are blessed to be a part of such a fun group.

Technorati Tags:
,