- massless.org: Four Firsts for Feeds
Good stuff in here from one of the original Google Reader guys. Two things: a) Attention data changes attention and b) the Reader Trends stuff was done by someone in their spare time.
(categories: googlereader feeds rss social attentionstream attention atom feed )
All posts by ajohnson
My Delicio.us Links As Rendered By Wordle.net
Links: 6-12-2008
- scottberkun.com » Innovation by firing people
Quote: "Pure democracy is not the political system that will create the most change – it’s a system geared for stability, not for innovation." Great article on innovation.
(categories: business creativity innovation management democracy ) - J.K. Rowling Speaks at Harvard Commencement : Harvard Magazine
Seneca: "As is a tale, so is life: not how long it is, but how good it is, is what matters."
(categories: inspiration speech harvard commencement speeches failure imagination empathy ) - Did Darwin Skip Over Email? – Foundry Group
Thoughtful blog post on the opportunities that exist for companies to make email more useful.
(categories: email social communication socialnetworks socialsoftware smtp ) - Datawocky: How Google Measures Search Quality
Google "… employs armies of ‘raters’ who rate search results for randomly selected ‘panels’ of queries using different ranking algorithms."
(categories: google machinelearning quality search ) - MSFTextrememakeover: Eight Years of Wrongness
A *long* blog post about Microsoft underperforming. Props to Writer at the end.
(categories: business microsoft software strategy )
Pancake People
But today, I see within us all (myself included) the replacement of complex inner density with a new kind of self-evolving under the pressure of information overload and the technology of the “instantly available”. A new self that needs to contain less and less of an inner repertory of dense cultural inheritance—as we all become “pancake people”—spread wide and thin as we connect with that vast network of information accessed by the mere touch of a button.
via Richard Foreman via Nicholas Carr
which is interesting and everything but then I came across this quote by Steven Johnson:
But the truth is most of our information tools still have a fuzziness built into them that can, in Richard Foreman’s words, “often open doors to new worlds.” It really depends on how you choose to use the tool. Personally, I have two modes of using Google: one very directed and goal-oriented, the other more open-ended and exploratory. Sometimes I use Google to find a specific fact: an address, the spelling of a name, the number of neurons estimated to reside in the human brain, the dates of the little ice age. In those situations, I’m not looking for mistakes, and thankfully Google’s quite good at avoiding them. But I also use Google in a far more serendipitous way, when I’m exploring an idea or a theme or an author’s work: I’ll start with a general query and probe around a little and see what the oracle turns up; sometimes I’ll follow a trail of links out from the original search; sometimes I’ll return and tweak the terms and start again. Invariably, those explorations take me to places I wasn’t originally expecting to go—and that’s precisely why I cherish them. (I have a similar tool for exploring my own research notes—a program called DevonThink that lets me see semantic associations between the thousands of short notes and quotations that I’ve assembled on my hard drive.)
which I thought was relevant to Clearspace (the word serendipitous comes up more often than you’d think in product conversations) because it shows how search is more than just a directed, singular focus kind of activity that lots of people assume it to be. The first quote is telling too: all the iPhoning, Facebooking, Twittering, Flickring, Clearspacing and Emailing leaves us stretched thin: when was the last time you sat down to read something or write something longer than a single page?
Links: 6-10-2008
- Official Google Blog: Robots Exclusion Protocol: now with even more flexibility
HTTP headers that you can use to exclude / remove content from Google’s index.
(categories: google googlebot http robots.txt search ) - Epeus’ epigone: How not to be viral
Four patterns for developing viral (not canerous) software: scatter, nuture, fruiting, rhizomatic.
(categories: marketing social socialsoftware viral cancer ) - Ice Cream Cupcakes at Joy The Baker
Come on. Stuff like this shouldn’t happen. How am I supposed to get work done when somewhere, someone is enjoying an *ICE CREAM CUPCAKE*?
(categories: recipes icecream cupcakes istherereallyanythingbetterthanicecreamandcupcakes? )
Links: 6-7-2008
- Dare Obasanjo aka Carnage4Life – Velocity: A Distributed In-Memory Cache from Microsoft
Microsoft finally gets into the game. I’m assuming that it’ll be free / included with Windows Server.
(categories: architecture cache caching concurrency distributed memcached memory velocity microsoft ) - Reputation Parent – Yahoo! Design Pattern Library
Interesting stuff from Yahoo Developer Network on reputation. We’re missing ranking (where are you in relation to other users), collectible achievements and identifying labels.
(categories: patterns reputation social ux yahoo community )
Links: 6-6-2008
- What is a reflow? « DougT’s Blog
Stoopid cool videos that show how a browser layout engine works.
(categories: browser design firefox gui ) - LinkedIn – A Professional Network built with Java Technologies and Agile Practices
JavaOne presentation on LinkedIn, lots of the same stuff we use in Clearspace.
(categories: architecture design java programming scalability linkedin )
Links: 6-5-2008
- The Big Picture – Boston.com
Cool blog from Boston.com that shows high resolution imagery from news stories instead of the small crappy stuff that news orgs usually show.
(categories: news boston.com images photography photos photojournalism journalism media ) - Facebook | Engineering @ Facebook’s Notes
Facebook using Hadoop, their largest cluster is 2500 cpu cores w/ 1 PB of disk space. They can use a small subset of SQL in the mapreduce process.
(categories: hadoop facebook mapreduce datamining hive )
Links: 5-30-2008
- Entries – Confluence
Entries for Atlassian 2008 Codegeist. Lots of ’em, nothing eye-popping.
(categories: codegeist atlassian plugins 2008 confluence jira )
Links: 5-28-2008
- Mobile Portland Users Group
Who new? A user group for mobile stuff… right here in PDX.
(categories: pdx portland mobile web usergroup ) - Going Fast on the Mobile Web
Good stuff on iPhone / mobile performance.
(categories: iphone mobile optimization programming slideshare performance ) - Coding Horror: It’s Clay Shirky’s Internet, We Just Live In It
Quote by Clay Shirky: "We’re living through the largest increase in human expressive capability in history."
(categories: community blogs culture socialsoftware ) - Dare Obasanjo aka Carnage4Life – Some Thoughts on Single Instance Storage and Twitter
Interesting that Exchange effectively shards user data just like the big web two oh sites do.
(categories: exchange architecture database distributed messaging scalability storage twitter ) - Dare Obasanjo aka Carnage4Life – Having the Right Users is More Important than Having the Right Features
Quote: "… it is very important to figure out how to expose the pragmatists and conservative technology users to how much value early adopters are getting from your service. " Good point: how does Clearspace do that?
(categories: clearspace community development marketing network socialsoftware )