Evening Reading: 12/8/08

Here’s someone’s list of 5 steps to a successful corporate Twitter presence.  Unless your corporate purpose involves marketing or goofing off, the best step for Twitter in the corporate arena is to step away.  Twitter is semi-interesting, but like everything else in the social networking space, people are desperately and futilely trying to convince each other that it has a legitimate business purpose.  There are exceptions, but in general it has about as much of a business purpose as a Wii.  Take your Wii to work and play it for an hour or two a day and see how that works out for you.

If you need empirical evidence that Twitter ain’t all it’s cracked up to be: here you go.  As my buddy Mike says, when you hear the words “Semantic Web,” your bullshit meter should go to 11.  And he is a believer.  No offense to Nick Bilton- he just happened to use Twitter and the “Semantic Web” in the same blog post.  I will say, however, that I’m not interested in anything that will serve me ads.  And there are no ads that I want to see.  None.

Meanwhile, Mashable says the way to clean up your Twitter space is to stop listening to the little people.  Don’t de-friend them, that would be rude.  Just filter them out. 

Staying on topic, Robert Scoble mounts a defense of FriendFeed.  I finally updated my FriendFeed today to include my blog posts.  There’s something about FriendFeed that appeals to me, but wasn’t Yahoo Pipes already aggregating this stuff?  At least for now, FriendFeed is on my radar.

I think it comes down to the concept of sharing.  Ease of sharing lowers the threshold for putting something in front of me, much more so than a regular blog post.  I don’t think people would be interested in tracing my route across the Interwebs, and I’m certain that I don’t have the time to trace the routes of others.  Other than “because we can,” why do we need all this redundant connectivity?  Why can’t blog posts and RSS centralize this for us and, at the same time, create a bit of an editorial threshold?

Louis Gray Mike Fruchter has some advice for generating blog traffic.  Louis Gray’s blog is a great example of how to build a blog via excellent content.  It may depend on why you read blogs (as far as readership goes, why someone writes a blog is irrelevant), but I really like it when people combine professional (whatever than means for those of us who don’t blog as a business) and personal.  There are teens of techie-bloggers out there; I like bloggers who draw me in by showing me who they are.  OmegaMom is the best example of this.  Louis rocks though.  If you don’t already read his blog, you should (RSS feed).

C|Net has a list of the top 5 music-streaming sites.  Here’s my micro-review of each:

Grooveshark: I’ve never used it, but Steve Spalding told me about it, and if he likes it it must be good.

Last.fm: I can’t explain it, but I really dislike the interface.  So so user experience.

MySpace Music: The pages at MySpace are ugly and I’m a grown man.  Never used it, never will.

Pandora: Rocks.  Excellent.  Love it.

Rhapsody: I used it until a few years ago.  I liked it OK, but I couldn’t get past the fact that it was a cousin of that bloat ware, the Real Player.

Here’s one of those brilliant ideas you can’t believe you didn’t think of.  The private lives of toys.

And, finally, some Christmas music:

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App a Day Blog

Undoubtedly in honor of my recent switch to an iPhone, Dwight Silverman and friends at the Houston Chronicle have started the App a Day Blog, covering smartphone applications.

I think this will be a great blog, until the writers, one by one, install Bejeweled 2 (iTunes link) on their phones and become strung out Bejeweled junkies, unable to post or work.  Like me.

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Evening Reading: 12/2/08

Mashable has 100 ways to organize your life.  After reading the list, I set up a Zefty account to manage my kids’ allowances.  I also recently capitulated to the inevitability of Evernote.  I think the web interface is crappy, but the iPhone app and integration is excellent.

Mashable also has a comparison of Pandora and Last.fm.  Pandora is hands down the better service.  Mashable seems to agree.  Want to hear some good music?  Here’s my Pandora station.

Apple released a list of the most popular iPhone apps.  Here’s the list via iTunes.

Everybody wants to stream movies.  The problem is that is doesn’t always work.  Hacking Netflix reports on problems with the Roku Player.  Louis Gray’s report on Amazon via Tivo is the scariest thing I’ve been exposed to since The Strangers.

We don’t have standard def streaming working yet, but here comes HD streaming.

Speaking of The Strangers, some numbskull at work tried to tell me that Funny Games was scarier and better than The Strangers.  Wrong.  The Strangers is a darn good, and very scary, movie (here’s the Netflix link).  Be sure to get the unrated version.

Block Posters makes cool wall posters from photos.

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Preowned Semantic Web Cars for Bigfoot

Unsurprisingly, I find this “Semantic Web” business very irritating. I have said for years (literally) that if you want a new concept or idea to gain widespread acceptance, you must make it easy for people to understand both the concept and the benefits thereof. As far as I can tell, no one promoting the “Semantic Web” has even tried to do that.

stupidGenerally, there are three reasons why concepts remain shrouded in mystery and jargon. The first is that the concept can’t be explained because it isn’t real. There’s a reason why I don’t have a Snipe mounted on my wall, notwithstanding all the late night hunts I have been the victim or proprietor of. The second reason is because no one wants to actually execute on the concept. The insiders merely toss jabberwocky back and forth in navel gazing ecstasy. This tendency was one of the major contributors to the death of the citizen journalism movement. The third reason, of course, is because it is a secret. Like the Masons or Elvis Presley’s whereabouts. Since teens of bloggers are all trying, in vain, but trying, to spread the word about the “Semantic Web,” I have to assume this is not the reason.

So today I come across a list of the Top 10 Semantic Web Products for 2008. I’m into lists, so I go looking for enlightenment. Surely by reading the list I can figure out what “Semantic Web” means.

Nope.

So I try Wikipedia. Just like a song, you can tell a lot about a topic from the first line: “The Semantic Web is an evolving extension of the World Wide Web in which the semantics of information and services on the web is defined, making it possible for the web to understand and satisfy the requests of people and machines to use the web content.” Say what?

Later, there’s this sentence, which I actually understand: “Some elements of the semantic web are expressed as prospective future possibilities that are yet to be implemented or realized.” No shit Sherlock. The linked definition of semantic publishing is only slightly less indecipherable, with this helpful discussion appearing just before an academically stunning reference to “killer applications”: “In order to make the semantic web work and realize its potentials, information must be presented (i.e. published) in semantic format on the web. Thus, as the semantic web is further developed and adopted, semantic publishing will become a main form of web publishing.” Uh, OK.

When all else fails, I turn to the dictionary (I know what the web is, so I’ll skip that word): It looks like the second definition of semantic is the applicable one: “Of, relating to, or according to the science of semantics.” On to semantics: “The study or science of meaning in language.”

My head is spinning.

I’m a naturally curious guy, but if a half hour of research leads to more questions than answers, I’m out. Too busy for that.

Here’s the thing. If this guy can explain black holes as clearly as he does, then, why can’t someone explain what in the heck the “Semantic Web” is?

Is it that they can’t or won’t. Does it matter?

The Home Place – Mobile Edition

I created The Home Place several years ago, as my customized internet starting page.  Over the years, many of my friends and family began using it as their starting page too.  Tonight I created Version 1.0 of the THP-Mobile Edition.

It was designed specifically for iPhones, but should work reasonably well on other phones.  Take a look and let me know what you think.

Credits: the template is a modified version of a template by Joe Hewitt.

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So Long Pownce, We Hardly Knew Ye

pownceI just read that Pownce, the (more feature rich) iPhone of micro-blogging, is shutting down, thereby ceding the micro-blogging space to Twitter, the (more popular) Blackberry of the space.

I think this was inevitable, as there probably isn’t enough juice in the micro-blogging arena to support two separate platforms. But it’s still a shame. Pownce is/was the more elegant of the two, and facilitated media sharing in a very fun and effective way. I discovered some good music via Pownce, and I shared some good music (and purchase links) with my Pownce “friends.” For me, the media sharing element made the Pownce experience seem more conversational. I always felt like there were useful things to be found via my Pownce page. Twitter just feels like a shared grafitti board- there’s something to be said for that, but it lacks depth.

I’ve never been much of a IM user or micro-blogger, but of all the applications I tried, I found Pownce to be the most compelling.

The Pownce team is moving to blog software company SixApart. Here’s founder Leah Culver’s announcement. I hope they will eventually relaunch Pownce or something like it.

So long, Pownce.

Making the iPhone Engine Run Smoothly

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One of the other reasons I waited so long to get an iPhone is the fact that it cannot, yet, serve as a tethered wireless broadband modem for my laptop.  For an extra $15 a month, my recent Blackberries could link up via Bluetooth with my laptop or Samsung UMPC and serve as a broadband modem.  This was handy in airports and in hotels that offered no or ridiculously expensive internet access.  In fact, as long as my phone was in the room or car, my other devices would link up automatically and have instant reasonably fast access.  For two weeks after Hurricane Ike, I ran my home network off of my Blackberry.  It was slow, but the jump from none to slow is more significant than the one from slow to fast.

The iPhone doesn’t tether, yet.  Apparently, there was a third party app that allowed tethering, but Apple squashed it.  Sure, I could jailbreak my phone and find a way to tether.  But the iPhone is about seamless convenience and constant jailbreaking would be seamful and inconvenient.

But I think it’s OK.

The reality is that there is very little I need to do in airports and on the road generally that I can’t do directly via the iPhone.  Sure, I can’t easily create or materially edit documents, but I don’t do that in airports and in transit anyway.  I do that in my hotel room or between speeches at a conference- in places that almost always have internet access.  Plus, while I haven’t tried it yet, iPhone users can access ATT’s wi-fi hotspots at no additional charge.

And there may be other issues at work here.  I suspect that Apple’s agreement with ATT prohibits tethering.  Both as a way to conserve bandwidth and to force customers to buy ATT’s existing wireless cards or the rumored account add-on that may add the ability to tether- at an additional cost.  Add free tethering without a bigger pipe (or additional money to build one) and the demand on the bandwidth will increase materially, likely lessening the experience for existing- and future- iPhoners.  Keeping the bandwidth-hogging geeks from linking up all their gear to their iPhones is, at least for the moment, the governor that makes the iPhone engine run smoothly.

I’d rather do it this way than end up throttled or charged more for someone’s idea of excessive bandwidth use.  The iPhone has clearly crossed the mainstream into the non-geek population.  Many iPhone users are happy to make calls, text their friends and check the weather every now and then, none of which is bandwidth intensive.  If I can ride along with the herd and do what I need directly via the iPhone, with no limits or additional charges, that’s great.  If it turns out I can’t live without tethering and I have the opportunity to add (and pay for) that feature, that’s good too.

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Dr. iPhone or: How I Learned to Stop Blackberring and Love the App Store

As one of the rats in the great corporate email race dominated by Microsoft Exchange Servers and Blackberry Enterprise Servers, I have used a Blackberry for many years.  From the first little pager-looking 850 to the Pearl 8130, and several points in between.  While thumb-typing away on my Blackberry, I have suffered from recurring bouts of iPhone lust, having seen my wife and many of our friends fall in love with their iPhones.  For a long time, however, my concerns over the handling of corporate email kept me glued to the Blackberry alter.

Until last week.  Here’s how Verizon tried to hose me and led me to the most eloquent device I have ever used.

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I am sold on the touch screen concept, and was eagerly awaiting the arrival of the great iPhone slayer- the Blackberry Storm.  I stopped by the local Verizon store just before 9:00 a.m. on November 21- the day the Storm was released.  The store wasn’t open yet, but there were a dozen or so people inside.  A Verizon employee quickly unlocked the door for me.  She asked if I had an appointment, noting that the other people in the store had booked an appointment in advance.  When I told her I didn’t have an appointment, but was a Verizon customer who wanted to upgrade to a Storm, she happily exclaimed that “we can get you in and out of here in no time,” and directed me to the customer service window.  There were two Verizon employees helping customers at the window, and I was second in line.  30 minutes later I was still second in line.  One of the employees at the window told me Verizon’s computers were overwhelmed and it was taking a long time to process the upgrades.  No problem- that was to be expected on the morning of the release.  The first problem occurred a few minutes later when another line dweller told me Verizon was sold out of Storm handsets and that I was waiting in line to order one that would be mailed to me.  A Verizon employee confirmed that and told me I could order the phone faster over the internet.  So I left the store, went to the office and logged into my Verizon account.

Here’s where things started to fall into place.

iphoneMuch to my surprise, my quoted price was not $200, as widely advertised, but $500.  I called customer service and was told that my contract was too recent to permit an upgrade and that I would, in fact, have to pay $500 if I wanted a Storm.  I didn’t like this, but contracts are contracts, so I asked how much it would cost to terminate my contract early (by about a year and a half).  $125 was the answer.  So, I asked, “you’ll sell this phone to a stranger for $200, but an existing customer has to pay $500?”  I was told that was the case.  Again, not good news, but I understand the math so far.  I had one more question: “But if I wanted to, I could pay $125 to terminate my contract today, come back tomorrow and pay $200, thereby achieving an actual price of $325?” I could tell the phone rep was uncomfortable, but ultimately she agreed that I could do that.  “But you won’t sell me the phone for $325 without having to go through all of that?”  She said she couldn’t.  The cost was understandable, even if a little frustrating, but the unnecessary hoops were more than I could handle.  So a wonderful thing happened.

I canceled my Verizon account, drove to the local ATT store, bought a 16G 3G iPhone and had my number ported over.  At the end of the day, I have a much better phone at a lower cost.  $125 is a lot of money, but amortized over the remaining 18 or so months of my Verizon contract, I’m more than happy to pay an extra $7 a month for the iPhone experience.

I am a technophile and somewhat of a gadget freak.  I have used lots of gadgets.  The iPhone is quite simply the most well-designed and useful device I have ever used.  Plus, it’s a load of fun!

The phone comes with just about everything you need, right out of the box.  But the real fun begins when you explore the App Store.  So far, I have added the following apps, which give me a device that does just about anything I might ever need it to do.

AOL Radio: an amazing selection of great sounding music stations.
Pandora Radio: the best music on the net.
AroundMe: uses GPS to find local restaurants and other points of interest.
Mobile Fotos: my favorite app- a must for Flickr users.
Camera Bag: auto-edits iPhone photos
Google Mobile Apps: brings all of Google’s apps to an iPhone interface.
iTalk Recorder: record voice notes.
Note2Self: record voice notes and email them.
Remember the Milk: the best to-do list and reminder service.
Sportacular: quick sports schedules and scores.

(You can search for these great apps and others from within the iTunes store.  Many of them are free and all of them are cheap.)

Those of you who are on corporate email platforms will wonder how I feel about the iPhone/Microsoft Exchange implementation.  I think it works perfectly.  The emails are much easier to read and flicking is much easier than scrolling with that irritating wheel (which was very hard to do with my Pearl).  When I delete an email on my computer or my iPhone, it is automatically deleted on the other device.  I didn’t have my Blackberry configured that way, but after a few days, this approach seems more logical to me.

When I experimented with my wife’s iPhone, I found typing to be difficult, often hitting the wrong letter (particularly P when I was aiming for O).  But after a little practice, you find that your typing improves and you rarely hit the wrong letter.  My friend Marvin says it’s a confidence thing- I think that’s a good description.  I find myself typing faster on the iPhone than I did on the Blackberry.

I wish the camera had a flash, and you do have to recharge the iPhone more often than the Blackberry- because the iPhone is so fun to use, you use it more (and there are solutions to that problem).  But those are minor issues that are more than outweighed by the many additional benefits of the iPhone.

I’m sold.  Thanks Verizon!

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The (Evolving) State of Houston News Feeds

news Now that I have fallen under the spell of Google Reader, I’ve been spending some time organizing my news feeds and other reading.  As a part of that process, I have set up my local news, which I used to access via My Yahoo, in a dedicated Google Reader folder.  I suspect I am but one of many who are migrating our news from yesterday’s paper to today’s web site to tomorrow’s news reader.  In fact, I believe with the growing use of feed readers and mobile content, the news-related web sites we visit today will eventually become primarily billboards for the various RSS feeds available there.  The biggest reason this hasn’t already happened is that content producers and advertisers haven’t figured out how to sell and serve advertising in feeds.  When that happens, and it is inevitable, we’ll see an accelerated migration towards RSS distribution- both paid and ad-supported.

As a part of my migration to RSS, I have looked at a lot of local news feeds.  Some are good.  Some are horrible.  And many are somewhere in between.

Here’s the current state and status of Houston English language news feeds.  As they change, so will this page.  Maybe we can generate some discussion here that will be helpful to readers and content producers alike.  Discussion that will hopefully lead to better feeds.

This survey is limited solely to English language news feeds offered by local news providers.  If there is a feed I haven’t covered, let me know in the Comments and I’ll add it.

Newspapers

Let’s start with the best.  The Houston Chronicle currently offers 170 RSS feeds, covering categories from news to business to sports to neighborhood sports.  I subscribe to the following Chronicle feeds: Top Headlines, Houston & Texas, Business, Bellaire/West U/River Oaks (I wish they wouldn’t lump us working folks in Bellaire with the yuppies and rich people, but at least a neighborhood news feed is available), Sports and Entertainment.  I also subscribe to Dwight Silverman‘s and Jeff Balke‘s Chronicle blogs, but not as a part of my news folder.  Like almost all papers, the Chronicle does not use full feeds, undoubtedly because it wants to draw readers back to its site where the ads reside.  It does give you enough of a summary to allow you to make a reasonably informed decision about reading more (via a click-through to the Chronicle site) or moving on.  While it would be a lot better if the Chronicle provided full feeds, even with ads, the summaries are pretty good.  Plus the feeds allow you to click past the Chronicle’s online front page, which leaves much to be desired.

Speaking of horrible web design, there’s the Houston Press.  I used to read the Press online every week until they destroyed their web site with a redesign a few years ago.  Sadly, their RSS feeds don’t really help (I had to dissect an RSS feed just to find that page, and all of those feeds are outdated).   The Press web site promotes individual feeds for a lot of the collateral (at least to me) content and a default feed which seems to lump all the content into one feed, with marginally helpful summaries consisting of the first 50 or so words of the article.  The combined feed contains way too much stuff I am not interested in.  By reverse engineering the default feed URL I was able to decipher the feed URL for the featured stories, again with a first 50 words or so partial feed.  The Press’s featured stories are generally interesting, but they are wrapped up in bad web design and served in unsatisfactory feeds.  The Press should either use full feeds (the best answer) or at least specially written summaries (the least that I’d find acceptable).  Until today, I didn’t subscribe to any Press feeds because I couldn’t find them.  I have now subscribed to the featured news feed, but the short feeds and non-summaries are not likely to draw me to the site very often.

The Houston Business Journal has a feed that, like the Chronicle feeds, is a partial feed with short but reasonably descriptive summaries.  You can also find feeds to its sister publications in other cities as well as regional feeds and industry-specific national feeds.  I subscribe to the HBJ feed and to the commercial real estate industry feed.  Again, I look forward to the day full feeds are the rule and not the rare exception for news-related feeds, but as things go today, the HBJ’s feeds are reasonably good.  (Disclaimer:  I have written articles for the HBJ and some of its sister publications in the past and will probably do so in the future).

TV Stations

Channel 2 (NBC) offers 11 feeds.  No full feeds, of course, but the feeds do contain generally descriptive summaries.  Even this one sentence summary- “A party boat slams into the Kemah Boardwalk, KPRC Local 2 reports,” is more useful that merely stuffing the first few words of an article into a partial feed.  On the other hand, you have to look closely (left hand column under “Site Tools”) to find the RSS feed on Channel 2’s less than stellar web site.  Unlike blogs, where the RSS feed should always be obvious and near the top of the page, many TV stations aren’t sure what they really think about feeds, so they are displayed with less gusto.  I subscribe to the main Channel 2 feed, but none of the others.

Channel 11 (CBS) has a web site that makes Channel 2’s look like Earl’s page (the best blog template I’ve ever seen), but at least it has its RSS feed icon above the fold and somewhat prominently displayed.  Channel 11 offers 23 feeds.  Like Channel 2, there are no full feeds, but there are generally descriptive summaries.  Unfortunately, some of those 23 feeds are stale.  The latest post in the movies feed, for example, is from August 27, 2007.  Same for the music feed.  I subscribe to the Channel 11 Top Stories feed, but none of the others.  Channel 13 (ABC) has its feeds link at the bottom of its web page, where you find 32 available feeds.  A few of the feeds have either older content or none at all.  A lot of the TV stations’ sub-feeds seem thrown together.  They could all do with less quantity and more quality.  Like its competitors, Channel 13 uses partial feeds with summaries.  Channel 13’s summaries seem shorter than the others, but maybe that’s because they don’t have periods at the end.  I subscribe to the Channel 13 Top Stories feed, but none of the others.

If Channel 26 (FOX) has RSS feeds, it’s not very proud of them.  No mention of them at all on the front web page.  A search for RSS leads to something called myFOXhouston news which promises, but does not seem to deliver, RSS feeds.  The first rule of anything is that if you make it hard, people won’t do it.  They did, and so I didn’t.  I don’t subscribe to any Channel 26 feeds, in part because I couldn’t find any.

Channel 39 (CW) has no RSS feeds.

Channel 51 committed the unpardonable sin of auto-starting a video (with loud audio and no pause or mute button) when you visit its web site, so I was tempted to click away and leave it at that, but a desire for completeness led me to a brief but unsuccessful search for RSS feeds.  I thought Channel 51 was a news station, but it’s not- at least not anymore.

Radio Stations

I couldn’t find any RSS news feeds by any of the Houston radio stations.  Some of them have podcasts.  Here’s the rundown, though I don’t subscribe to any of these at the moment.

610 KILT has no RSS news feeds, but it does have RSS feeds for some podcasts.  I couldn’t find a page with a list of the RSS feeds, but through the magic of Google, here are some of them.

KIKK 650 has no RSS feeds and no local podcasts.  It does have links to some CBS podcasts.

700 KSEV has no RSS feeds and no podcasts.

740 KTRH has no RSS feeds, but a lot of podcasts.

790 KMBE has no RSS news feeds, but it does have some podcasts.

950 KPRC has no RSS news feeds, but it does have some podcasts.

1070 KNTH has no RSS news feeds, but it does have some podcasts.

1430 KCOH has no RSS news feeds and no podcasts.  They should podcast Ralph Cooper’s show.  He’s the best sports guy in Houston, and has been for a long time.

1590 KMIC (Radio Disney) has a podcast (my kids would call me an even bigger nerd if I didn’t mention their favorite station).

Conclusion (1/28/08)

Thanks to the Chronicle, Houston is in pretty good shape RSS-wise.  We need full feeds and better summaries for the partial feeds.  The TV stations are behind the newspaper, as you would expect, and ahead of the radio stations, as you would also expect.

What do you think of the local new feeds?

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