May 1

How I Use FriendFeed, and Why I Love It (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

This post came out of an email conversation I had with a friend, who was asking why I like FriendFeed so much. He’s an active social network user, so it wasn’t a newbie question. Rather, he was wondering how I integrate it with all the other forms of connectivity we have - Twitter, Google Reader, Facebook, etc. My reply to him got kind of long, so I thought I’d repost it here for everyone to share. :-)

(Update: In case you’re wondering about FriendFeed’s pedigree, Marshall Kirkpatrick has this fortuitously timed piece over on ReadWriteWeb about the guy that built FriendFeed - Paul Buchheit, former Google employee, the guy who built Gmail in a day, and then built AdSense in a day. FriendFeed is no rickety side project.)

In the beginning, I didn’t really “get” FriendFeed. I signed up for it, piped in all of my stuff (Twitter, blog, photos, etc.), but never really used it much. Why would I go to yet another social network to read the stuff I was already seeing elsewhere? What changed it for me is when I happened to pop in to FriendFeed, and noticed that stuff I was sharing was being discussed on FriendFeed, a LOT, and I was completely missing out on the conversation. That’s when I decided that I needed to make it part of my “regular” routine.

I keep FriendFeed open all the time in one of my “standard loadout” tabs (along with Gmail, Google Reader, Facebook, Twitter, etc.). I usually end up looking at it anywhere from once to a few times a day. One of the great things about it is that the order of stuff is not strictly chronological, like Twitter, but also weighted by activity/conversation - if something is getting a lot of comments and/or a lot of “likes”, it will bubble up to the top. This makes it REALLY easy to find what’s “hot” or interesting among the people I follow.

As far as the problem of duplicate posts from Twitter, “noise”, etc., one of the most brilliant features of FriendFeed is its filters, and ability to selectively hide stuff. For example, I still pay attention to Twitter, because I follow tons of people there that aren’t on FriendFeed (though I could create Imaginary friends for all of those, it’s not practical). To avoid seeing double tweets from the people who are on both FriendFeed and Twitter, I can tell FriendFeed to hide all tweets, UNLESS they’ve been liked or commented on. That way, I still see occasional tweets, but ONLY when there’s some extra value (likes or comments). Otherwise, I never see them. Hiding is VERY flexible. You can hide each type of message (tweets, photos, Facebook, whatever) from everyone, or just from specific people, and you can conditionally show them if they’re getting activity on FriendFeed, or just hide them altogether (I hide most last.fm updates from everybody - I just don’t care what you’re listening to. Sorry. :-) ). It’s easier to show you how this works in person than to explain it in words, but trust me, it’s dead simple to hide stuff you don’t care about in FriendFeed. Mine is very tightly customized to show only the stuff that my friends are doing that’s interesting to me, and nothing else.

I use FriendFeed a lot on my iPhone, too. They have a nice iPhone web interface at http://friendfeed.com/iphone/. You can do most anything you can on the desktop web version. There’s also http://fftogo.com if you have a BlackBerry, Windows Mobile, or other web-enabled phone. I haven’t found any good iPhone apps for it yet, though I’d love to see one come out. There are a couple (BuddyFeed, I think, is one of them) that are kind of awful. But in the mean time, the iPhone interface is quite good - it’s often my “home” page in Mobile Safari (along with Google Reader).

Another feature I love is the “best of” view. Say I haven’t been paying attention to FriendFeed all day, but I still want to see if there’s anything “hot” that my friends are sharing or discussion. You can click “best of” to see the most shared/discussed/liked items for the day, week or month. It’s a GREAT summary, and really helps with my “Fear Of Missing Out (FOMO)”. :-) Works on either the desktop or iPhone version.

You can also create lists of friends, to filter. So I have all of the people I know from work in one list, and I can view only their updates if I want. Same for people I know from the Portland geek world. And family. And developers. And “People I’ve Never Met In Real Life”. Friend lists are very powerful (and something I wish Twitter had!).

You can also create groups (these used to be called Rooms), which are good for discussion specific events/topics. I’m sure there’s going to be at least one good BarCampPortland3 room on FriendFeed somewhere.

Like Twitter, FriendFeed’s usefulness depends on having a clean, relevant list of people you’re following. If you’ve already built that carefully curated list of people on Twitter or elsewhere, you can take it with you to FriendFeed. Not too long ago, they released a Twitter importer that will look at who you follow on Twitter, and let you easily start following them if they’re on FriendFeed. Very handy. I wish they’d released it before I went and spent hours doing it completely by hand. :-)

You may find that you still don’t have any use for FriendFeed, and that’s totally cool. But for me, it’s become an extension of Twitter, Facebook, and Google Reader. My theory of “social gravity” (”go where your friends are”) applies here - a LOT of the people I am interested in following, and am already connected with in some manner, are on FriendFeed. It makes sense for me to be there, too. I suspect you might find that’s the case for you as well, but if not, there’s no real reason to force yourself to use it, or try to convert all of your friends to FriendFeed.

Anyway, I hope that helps you understand how I use FriendFeed, and why I love it. Have YOU tried FriendFeed? Are you still scratching your head, trying to figure out why you should keep using it? Or have you given up on it? Give it another chance. Try configuring it the way I’ve described (a good friends list, filter what you don’t care to see), and you just might find that the conversations and ability to easily see “what’s hot” are interesting enough to stick around. It took me a while, but now, I’d have a hard time living without it. :-) I’m jabancroft there - feel free to follow me, and leave a comment here, or there, and let me know what you think!


Posted in: advanced , blog , community , friendfeed , howto , protips , socialnetworks , twitter
April 1

Google on iPhone Gets New Tab Header (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Just noticed some new tabs and a dropdown for accessing other Google mobile pages on my Google Reader for iPhone page. Nice.

New Google Tabs on iPhone


I never used the old "blue button" ones because they acted like a frame, and wouldn’t let me bookmark my "tags" page in Reader directly, which is where I like to start. Now I can. Excellent! :-)


Posted in: blog , google , iphone , mobile , reader , screenshot

New Google Tabs on iPhone (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

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New Google Tabs on iPhone, originally uploaded by Josh Bancroft.

Just noticed some new tabs and a dropdown for accessing other Google mobile pages on my Google Reader for iPhone page. Nice.

I never used the old "blue button" ones because they acted like a frame, and wouldn’t let me bookmark my "tags" page in Reader directly, which is where I like to start. Now I can. Excellent! :-)

Posted in: blog

New Google Tabs on iPhone (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

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New Google Tabs on iPhone, originally uploaded by Josh Bancroft.

Just noticed some new tabs and a dropdown for accessing other Google mobile pages on my Google Reader for iPhone page. Nice.

I never used the old "blue button" ones because they acted like a frame, and wouldn’t let me bookmark my "tags" page in Reader directly, which is where I like to start. Now I can. Excellent! :-)

Posted in: blog

New Google Tabs on iPhone (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

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New Google Tabs on iPhone, originally uploaded by Josh Bancroft.

Just noticed some new tabs and a dropdown for accessing other Google mobile pages on my Google Reader for iPhone page. Nice.

I never used the old "blue button" ones because they acted like a frame, and wouldn’t let me bookmark my "tags" page in Reader directly, which is where I like to start. Now I can. Excellent! :-)

Posted in: blog
March 4

My Dreams Just Came True - Amazon Kindle App for iPhone (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

I’ve been waiting for this moment almost since I heard about the Amazon Kindle (affiliate link). I dreamed of a simple app they could write for the iPhone that would sync with my Amazon account, to let me download and read my Kindle books on my iPhone, sync my place between the two devices, so I could hop back and forth as much as I wanted, and basically turn my iPhone into a little “mini Kindle”. Even though I take my Kindle most places I go, there are times when I forget it, and want to read something. Since I’m never without my iPhone, I usually just read feeds or something, but now, I have my whole world of ebooks, at my fingertips across multiple devices, stored and synced on the cloud.

Tonight, my dream came true.

I noticed (on Twitter, or FriendFeed, I don’t remember) someone wondering how page turning should work on the iPhone Kindle app. “Is that out?” I asked myself. A quick Twitter search for iPhone and Kindle revealed that yes, in fact, it was available in the App Store. After one super excited tweet, I was off to download it.

I’ve taken screenshots of most of the interface, and tested logging in and downloading at least one of my books. Here are the screenshots, with descriptions. I’m sure I’ll post more thoughts after I’ve used it for a while, but so far, it works perfectly, just like I hoped and thought it would. Major kudos and thanks to everyone at Amazon and Apple who made this happen! You’ve made me one happy bibliovoracious geek! :-)
Kindle in the App Store:

iPhoneKindle1.jpg

Kindle App Splash Screen:

iPhoneKindle2.jpg

“Archived Items”, things in your Kindle account but not downloaded to your iPhone:

iPhoneKindle3.jpg

Downloaded books show on the “home” screen:

iPhoneKindle5.jpg

Reading a book - the main interface. Haven’t used this much yet, but I was super impressed that it knew exactly what page I left off reading this book on my Kindle, and too me right there:

iPhoneKindle4.jpg

How to Get Books. Basically, you have to browse and buy on a Mac or PC (or a Kindle, of course), though that link will take you to…

iPhoneKindle6.jpg

The desktop version of the Kindle Store web page in Mobile Safari. This works, but is obviously not optimized for the iPhone. Last time I tried, you couldn’t browse or buy Kindle books in the iPhone version of Amazon.com, or using the Amazon iPhone app. Maybe that will change.

iPhoneKindle7.jpg

The Options Screen. Pretty basic, only real option is to deauthorize your iPhone from your Kindle account (important to remember, since you have a 5 device limit).

iPhoneKindle8.jpg

In conclusion? This is awesome, long awaited news, and I can’t wait to play with it some more. Am I going to read less on my Kindle and more on my iPhone? Maybe, maybe not. I’ll likely end up reading more in general, now that I can access my Kindle books (and my saved place!) on my iPhone, and I can’t wait.

One interesting thing this opens up: now, people can download this free iPhone app, and spend money buying Kindle books from Amazon, without ever buying an actual Kindle.

What you do think about this news? Do you have a Kindle and an iPhone? Or no Kindle at all, but willing to try Kindle books on your iPhone? Post a comment and let me know! :-)


Posted in: amazon , blog , ebooks , iphone , kindle
March 3

What Would You Teach a Bunch of Lawyers About The Web? (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Later today, I have the pleasure of speaking to a group of tech and VC lawyers at a local law firm (not sure if they want me to say who they are) about why and how they should be using “social media” and the web. I’ve sent them some pre-reading ideas, and I have lots to talk about, but I thought I’d ask you what YOU would teach a group of lawyers about the web?

Here’s an outline of what I plan to talk about, but please add your ideas, links, and recommendations in the comments. I really appreciate it! :-)

Web Tools and Techniques

I think a web savvy lawyer (well, actually, I think this applies to everyone) should be versed in the following basic web and social tools. That’s not to say you have to be an expert, but you should at least understand what they are, and how they work in general terms.

  • Feeds and Readers/Aggregators - Know what an RSS feed is, and how to subscribe to one in a a feed reader. Example: Google Reader. Know how to organize your subscriptions into folders, unsubscribe from feeds you don’t want anymore, and share interesting items with others.
  • Social Network Sites - Under the skin, most of them are alike. Facebook is the most popular example. Know what it means to “friend” someone, what a status update is, how to share photos and video, and how to behave yourself well, so as not to annoy all of your friends. Know what a social network site is good for and what it’s not. See also: LinkedIn, MySpace, etc.
  • Sharing and Tagging - Know the popular sites to share photos, videos, and other stuff online. Be familiar with the way some sites allow people to organize and categorize stuff they’ve shared using tags (Example: Delicious for bookmarks and links, Flickr for photos, etc.). Know what a tag cloud is. Bonus points for being able to explain “folksonomy”. ;-)
  • Blogging - In general terms, know what a blog is, some features most blogs have (comments, feeds, categories, etc.), and be aware of the best (free!) places to start a blog, like WordPress.com, Google’s Blogger.com, etc. Be aware that it’s also relatively easy and cheap to set up and host your own blog, if you want more freedom that what you get with a free hosted blog.
  • Twitter - Know that it’s a “microblogging” service that lets people sign up and post short (140 character) messages that their friends/followers will see. Know what it’s good for (conversation, asking and answering questions, getting to know and keeping in touch with people) and what it’s not (pretty much anything that doesn’t work well in short 140 character messages).

People

There are a few people I consider to be very wise when it comes to understanding and explaining the intersection of law and the web. I highly recommend reading and digesting the things that they say.

  • Cory Doctorow - link goes to his blog, but he mostly writes elsewhere (Boing Boing, columns for other publications, etc.). Luckily he usually links to stuff he’s written, so his blog is the best place to start. He’s published several sci-fi books that, besides being completely and utterly excellent, are prefaced with Cory’s thoughts on why he releases all of his books for free under a Creative Commons license, and why giving his stuff away for free actually makes him more money.
  • Lawrence Lessig - Again, link goes to his blog. A lawyer, professor, and founder of the Creative Commons movement, Lessig is simply “The Man” when it comes to The Law and The Web. I HIGHLY recommend reading his books (which are available for free, thanks to Creative Commons). Start with Free Culture, and move on to, say, Code v2 and The Future of Ideas. Great, great stuff that will make you think hard about copyright and digital rights in general.
  • Bruce Schneier - Famous for his books on security and privacy, he posts great essays, thoughts, and examples of smart (or silly) security practices on his blog. I don’t know of anyone who explains more clearly the risks of giving up our privacy and making dumb, knee-jerk-reaction decisions about security. And privacy is a HUGE part of how the law and the web come together.

Foundations/Movements

  • Creative Commons - every web savvy lawyer should be versed in what Creative Commons is, and how it relates to the future of the web. Creative Commons has changed my life in many ways. It affects what I read, listen to, and watch, and how I share the things that I create.
  • Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) - Again, a web savvy lawyer should be familiar with what the EFF is, what it stands for, and cases it’s won (and lost). That’s not to say that you have to support the EFF. But you’d be foolish not to be informed about it.

Sites and Communities

There are a few online communities that do a great job of covering and providing lots of discussion around legal issues on the web.

  • Slashdot: Your Rights Online - The YRO category on Slashdot provides a regular stream of internet-related legal and privacy news, along with vigorous commentary.
  • Groklaw - Applies Open Source principles (interested volunteer experts) to not only provide journalistic coverages of legal issues in the tech field, but also to collaborate on cases, like SCO vs. IBM.
  • Reddit Law - members of the community submit links, vote, and comment on them. There are many, many Reddit communities (go ahead and look - there’s probably one for your favorite topic, and if there’s not, you can start one).

What Would YOU Teach a Lawyer?

Those are the things I plan to share, if I have time for them all. :-) What about you? What web site, book, expert, or community can you think of that a web savvy lawyer needs to know about? I’d love it if you leave your ideas in the comments. I plan to share this post when I give my presentation to the law firm, and it would be great if they could come back once in a while, and see it growing with your suggestions and ideas. Thanks! :-)


Posted in: blog , law , lawyers , legal , savvy , teaching
February 3

Windows 7 SKUs Revealed - Which One Will Land On Netbooks? (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Word came down today on the various retail forms Windows 7 will come in when it’s released (via jkontherun):

  • Windows 7 Starter (can only run 3 apps simultaneously)

  • Windows 7 Home Basic (for emerging markets)
  • Windows 7 Home Premium (Has Aero and all the eye candy)
  • Windows 7 Professional
  • Windows 7 Enterprise
  • Windows 7 Ultimate

That list look familiar? It should. It’s the same array of flavors that Windows Vista comes in. Check out the post at jkontherun for details on what each version does and does not have.

Normally, this would be a kind of ho-hum piece of information, except for one little fact - unlike Windows Vista, Windows 7 runs GREAT on netbooks. I’ve been running the public beta on my Eee PC 1000H, and it’s terrific. Just as fast and usable as XP (still my preferred OS for netbooks), with all the cool new stuff that Windows 7 brings. Last year, Microsoft had hinted at PDC that there might be a netbook-specific flavor of Windows 7. Looking at this lineup of SKUs, that doesn’t seem to be the case.

Why should you care what “flavor” of Windows 7 will be put on future netbooks? Two things: price and footprint.

Currently, when Microsoft sells a license of Windows XP on a netbook, they’re making very little money. They would have preferred to stop selling XP altogether a long time ago. But the low cost of an XP license adds very little to the overall cost of a netbook - important when you’re selling a device for $300-$500. No one but Microsoft knows how much it will charge for the various versions of Windows 7, but it’s safe to assume that it won’t be much (if at all) cheaper than Windows Vista. And adding, say, $100 to the cost of a $400 netbook just to pay for Windows 7 is going to be a tough proposition all around.

Secondly, the footprint that Windows 7 leaves on the hard disk where it’s installed matters on a netbook. On PCs and “normal” laptops, hard drives keep getting cheaper and bigger at an astonishing rate. So in that light, it would be understandable if Windows 7 required MORE hard drive space than Vista. Say, 6 GB (I’m making that number up, but it’s pretty close to that in Windows 7 beta). But some netbooks are equipped with SSDs that only offer a paltry 4, 8, or 16GB of space, total. And given the hints that were dropped at PDC, I think people were hoping for a slimmer, lighter, smaller netbook edition of Windows 7. So while hard drive equipped netbooks should have plenty of room, those running SSDs will be cramped or even unable to install Windows 7.

So what version of Windows 7 will we likely see on netbooks? Liliputing speculates that the cheapest version (Starter edition, with its insane limitation of only running 3 apps at a time) is the logical choice, given the price sensitivity of netbooks. Microsoft has put out a press release (again, via jkonthrun) encouraging you to think of Windows 7 Home Premium as the version you’ll want to see running on you netbooks, and based on the features, I completely agree. I wouldn’t want to run anything less than the Home Premium version.

But how much will Windows 7 Home Premium add to the cost of a netbook, and will people think it’s worth it? Microsoft has hinted that it’s recent poor financial performance could be at least partially blamed on selling so many copies of XP for so little money, rather than moving more copies of Vista. So it makes business sense to want to have a product that makes them a little more money going out on all those little netbooks. But how much price increase will the market stand? Will netbook sales and adoption taper off if the next generation of Windows 7-equiped devices are MORE expensive than their predecessors? Will people flock to Linux-based alternative operating systems, like Easy Peasy (formerly Ubuntu Eee, by Jon Ramvi)? Should Microsoft simply give Windows 7 away for free, to try to “wipe away the bad aftertaste” that Vista left with some people? What do YOU think?

Posted in: blog , microsoft , netbooks , vista , windows
February 2

Google Earth Adds Oceans; Tommy’s Games; Google Tasks on iPhone (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Time for your regularly scheduled list of stuff that I’ve found interesting in the last day or so…

Google Earth 5.0 Adds Oceans, More

Google Earth got updated to version 5.0 today, and gained a couple of nifty features: 3D imagery of ocean floors, historical imagery, which lets you see how an area has changed over time, and better ability to record audio and video “tours”.
Google Earth Gets Oceans
And of course, it’s still free. More on the Google Lat-Long Blog. I wonder how long before these features trickle down to the iPhone version of Google Earth?

iPhone and Wii Games Coming from Tommy Refenes

Over on the Intel Software Network blog (where I work), Tommy Refenes, developer of the award winning threaded game Goo! gave us an update on two new projects he’s working on. First, an iPhone game called Beat!, which looks like a cross between Tap Tap Revenge and the old Simon game. Second, that he’s working with Edmund McMillen on Super Meat Boy, an upcoming WiiWare game were you play, um, a meat guy trying to rescue his girlfriend. I’ve been hearing lots of buzz about SMB (at Offworld and elsewhere), and have been looking forward to it. Now I’m even more excited that I know Tommy’s involved. Should be a great game!

8-bit Guitar Hero - Be a Lo-Fi Rock Star

Speaking of cool games, have you seen the 8-bit NES remake of Guitar Hero? If that’s not retro enough for you, there’s a text adventure version, too (I’m still trying to get that one to run in Plotz! on my iPhone).

Google Tasks on iPhone

I was pleasantly surprised to see Google release an iPhone interface to their Tasks feature (currently available to Gmail Labs users willing to put up with experimental quirkiness in return for new features).

Google Tasks on iPhone


I’ve been using Remember The Milk for tasks, which fits my requirement of being completely “in the cloud” (just like my Gmail, Google Reader, Google Calendar, etc.), and it’s way more robust (and has a very nice iPhone app), but I find that I don’t actually use RTM that much, and I bet I could get by with just Google Tasks now that it has an iPhone interface.

You can try it by going to http://gmail.com/tasks on your iPhone. More info available on the Gmail blog (found via Lifehacker)


Posted in: blog
January 28

iPhoto Loves Cats, iMovie Fixes Shake, Keep Your ISP Honest (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

I’m really going to try this time, to narrate my work consistently. I’ve set aside time, I’ve got a great workflow for all of the feed items and other stuff that I collect, and I realized that all I need is to gather, synthesize, and summarize at the end of the day. So here are some things that I’ve found interesting in the last day (that didn’t morph into blog posts of their own as I started writing about them):

iPhoto 09 Recognizes Cats’ Faces, But Not Dogs

Apple’s iLife ‘09 hit stores yesterday, and the wires are full of people reporting their experiences with its new features. One of the new new major features in iPhoto 09 (the other one being geotag/location support) is that it can recognize faces of people in your pictures. Apparently, it can recognize the faces of cats, too. But, for some reason, not dogs. Why does Apple hate doggies?

iMovie 09 Video Stabilization

The other iLife 09 feature that I’m excited about is iMovie 09’s new ability to stabilize shaky video. There’s lots of sample footage out there. Here’s some from from Beau Colburn (via Daring Fireball). It’s pretty impressive, and especially good news for owners of light little video cameras with small sensors, like my Flip Mino HD, which are extremely sensitive to camera shake. Can’t wait to try it out for myself.

Google Launches Measurement Lab - Tools to Keep Your ISP Honest

Via the Official Google Blog, Measurement Lab is a suite of tools to help you test your connection speed, see if your ISP is throttling bittorrent, etc. Great way to learn more about your internet connection, and see if you’re ISP is not giving you all the service you would like.

That’s all for today. This was fun! Let me know what you think in the comments. I’ll try to keep it up, but no promises. ;-)


Posted in: apple , blog , cats , flip , google , ilife , imovie , iphoto , isp , video

Amazon Kindle 2.0 Coming February 9? (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

I have been a huge Amazon Kindle fan and evangelist for quite a while (yes, that’s an Amazon affiliate link - make me rich! :-)). I did an excited video unboxing of mine when I got it, and I’ve written about it a fair amount since then. I use it an hour or two every day. I don’t know exactly how many people have been led to buy a Kindle after getting a breathless demo from me, but it’s more than a dozen. I’ve signed up for and done “See a Kindle in Your City” show and tell events. It goes with me in my cargo pants pocket everywhere. I pretty much love the thing. So of course, I’ve followed the rumors of the next Kindle version pretty closely.

Besides some pretty convincing photos of what Kindle 2.0 might look like that leaked on Boy Genius Report last year, there hasn’t been a whole lot of credible information on the subject. For most of its life, Kindle has been almost synonymous with supply problems. After it sold out in hours when it launched in November 2007, you had to wait 1-2 months for delivery of a Kindle. This persisted through April 2008, and happened again around the 2008 holidays (blame Oprah for that one). All year, the rumor mill has been on fire with Kindle 2.0 speculation - TechCrunch, Scoble, you name it, they’re predicting a new Kindle. Amazon has been typically coy, and has only said “the soonest we’d do a new Kindle is next year”. Well, now it’s next year, and there’s something afoot.

The New York Times reports that Amazon is holding a press event at the Morgan Library and Museum in New York City on February 9, and that Jeff Bezos is going to be there. They haven’t said this event will have anything to do with a new Kindle, but given the fact that the original Kindle launch was held at a similar venue, this is like Apple saying “we’re going to have a music-themed press event, and Steve Jobs is going to be there, but we’re not going to tell you what we’re going to announce.” Everyone knows that means new iPods.

So what will Kindle 2.0 be like? The NYT blog post I linked above has some speculation about a new ebook reader chip from Epson and e-Ink (who makes the Kindle’s distinctive electronic ink screen. Called Broadsheet, it would enable smoother screen refreshes by breaking the screen into a grid of 16 pixel areas that can be individually updated, rather than having to redraw the whole screen (at the cost of 750 milliseconds) every time something needs to be changed. This sounds plausible to me (apparently Sony’s latest Reader device already has the Broadsheet chip), but it’s not mind-blowing. I expect this to be an incremental upgrade to the Kindle, rather than something revolutionary.

The big question on my mind is, how will Amazon treat the enthusiastic early-adopter Kindle community when the new device comes out? They’ve legitimately earned a reputation for caring about the people who forked out $400 for one of their devices. They’ve been really lenient about replacing accidentally damaged or destroyed Kindles. They encouraged and even help facilitate people staging “See a Kindle in Your City” events, which means they understand the value of an in-person, hands-on demonstration in order to help people “get” the Kindle. Almost every Kindle owner I know has become an enthusiastic fan and unpaid Kindle salesperson. So what, if anything, is Amazon going to do for us?

That sounds really whiny and “entitled”, I know. Tell me how stupid it is in the comments. It would be absurd to hope for “free Kindle 2.0 to all 1.0 owners!” or something that doesn’t make business sense for Amazon. But it would be in line with how Amazon has heretofore treated the early adopter community if they did something like “$100 of the new Kindle for previous Kindle owners”. They’re a big company, their job is to make money. But I can’t help but hold onto a sliver of hope that they might do something nice, even though they don’t have to (sort of like Apple did with it’s $100 rebate for 1st gen iPhone buyers).

Bottom line is, I’ll likely buy a new Kindle, sooner or later, regardless of what Amazon does. Can’t help but hope Uncle Jeff will help a geek on a budget out a little. :-)


Posted in: amazon , blog , kindle

iStat for iPhone, Remotely Monitor Macs, Too (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

iStat is a popular app/Dashboard widget for Mac OS X users that shows you things like how much your CPU cores are being utilized, how much memory you have free, network traffic, etc. Now, Bjango brings us an iPhone version that shows you similar things on your phone:

iStatiPhone.PNG

Nifty, but not incredibly useful. Although it is a handy way to find out things like your cellular AND wifi IP addresses, MAC addresses, and other stuff that’s hard to dig out of the iPhone OS itself.

iStat for iPhone also has nicely done Ping and Traceroute features, but what really makes it stand out, in my opinion, is the ability to remotely monitor a Mac computer. There’s a little free server app you have to install and run on the machine to be monitored, but after that, you can add it to iStat on your iPhone and monitor it remotely (even over the internet, if you set up port forwarding on your router).

So if you’re the kind of nerd that cares how much physical memory you have free at any given time, and what your CPU core utilization rate is (obviously, I am this type of nerd), you’ll probably get a kick out of iStat for the iPhone. It’s on sale for $1.99 in the App Store (normally $2.99). If you’re a Macminicolo user, they’ve got a special deal for you.


Posted in: blog , iphone , istat
January 22

Narrating My Work (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

So much for rebooting my blogging. I suck.

But I won’t give up! I’m going to try narrating my work. I’m too heavy on the learn/explore/research side, and not heavy enough on the “share what I’ve found” side. Twitter and FriendFeed don’t count (well, they sorta count), but I think I CAN use them as notes/reminders on what I did/saw/thought about each day. A cheat sheet to my life. We’ll see how it goes.


Posted in: blog
January 14

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Posted in: blog
January 8

Keep Bad Apples Away From Your Team (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

I was listening to episode #370 of the This American Life podcast (which is one of my favorite podcasts), on the topic “Ruining It For The Rest Of Us”. At the beginning of the show, Ira was talking with a researcher who had done studies on the effect of “bad apple” behavior within teams. He looked at what effect someone who is a Jerk (insults other people, critical without offering a better option, etc.), a Slacker (doesn’t do any work, doesn’t seem to care, distracted), or Depressed (certain that ‘this will never work’, doomed to failure, etc.) has on the rest of the people on the team.

It’s obviously not a good thing. But what was surprising is that within 45 minutes, the other people on the team adopted the “bad apple” behavior. They started acting like the bad apple. Turns out it’s contagious.

This got me thinking about team dynamics, and the criteria we use when we build teams, interview people for a job, etc. When it comes to looking at the personality traits, and how well a person can fit within a team, it occurs to me that it’s crucial to avoid someone with those “bad apple” traits, because it will spread to the rest of the team.

Thinking back to teams that I’ve been on, I know this is true. I’ve seen it happen. And I’m really grateful that the team I’m on now at work, Intel Software Network, doesn’t have any Bad Apples to bring us down. I’ve marveled at how great the team dynamic is in this group since I joined almost two years ago, but only now do I realize that the lack of Bad Apples is one of the (probably big) reasons.

So keep Bad Apples away from your teams! It’s hard to make a person change behavior, and if you can avoid it, it’s probably better to not get into that situation in the first place.

Interestingly, the researcher on This American Life said they discovered an antidote to Bad Apple behavior - someone who exhibits strong leadership by asking a LOT of questions, of everybody. In fact, that person in the study was the child of a career diplomat. So if you do get stuck with a Bad Apple on your team, there may still be hope. :-)


Posted in: apple , bad , blog , thisamericanlife
January 7

Rebooting my Blogging (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

I’ve hit another one of those blocks. Before the end of 2008, I had grand visions of taking time off at the end of the year, having time to think, and write, and get some of the ideas that have been squirming around inside my head out and into words. But then the Snowpocalypse happened, and instead of nice, relaxing time off, we were all cooped up in our house for two weeks, getting on each other’s nerves. When the snow melted, we headed off to visit family in southern Oregon, which was fun, but busy, and full of activities. I’m not complaining, or trying to make you think I didn’t enjoy my vacation - who doesn’t enjoy a 3 day Guitar Hero World Tour binge and Nerf gun modding with the nieces and nephews? :-)

But i didn’t get the writing done that I wanted to. In fact, as you can see, it’s been weeks since I’ve posted anything substantial here.

So I’m going to try to “reboot” my blogging here, and just write, write, write. I’m going to try to avoid the distractions of throwing thoughtlings out on Twitter, sinking into reading feeds and forums, etc. It feels really weird to think that I’m actually procrastinating something that I really enjoy, that no one is forcing me to do. :-)


Posted in: block , blog , blogging , writing
December 21

Snowpocalypse 2008 (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Starting about last Sunday, December 13, 2008, we’ve seen an unprecendented amount of snow here in the Portland area. I’ve lived here for about 10 years, and have never seen this much. It usually snows at least once a year here, but it never sticks around for more than a day or so. Since snowstorms are so infrequent here, there aren’t enough snowplows, sanders, and other road equipment, and people aren’t used to driving safely in the snow (go slow, easy on the brakes, etc.), so the roads get WAY more hazardous than a few inches of snow should make them. That means everything shuts down - school was cancelled all week. I worked from home (though I could have gone in if I want to - Intel never closes for weather). Church was cancelled. It’s kind of crazy. :-)

I finally got out today and snapped some pictures with my “big boy” camera (Nikon D40), instead of the lousy iPhone shots I’ve been posting to Flickr all week. You can see all of the photos in this set. Here are a few, to give you an idea of what’s been keeping up cooped up inside for a week. :-)
The beginning of the Snowpocalypse:

Snowpocalypse Continues in Aloha (10:55AM 12/17)

Meltpocalypse on Thursday 12/18 (my birthday!)

Meltpocalypse in Aloha (11:20 AM 12/18)

Our backyard on Sunday 12/21:

Back Porch

View from the front porch:

View from the Front Porch

8 inches on the Garbage Can:

Snow Accumulation on Garbage Can

Our car was clear yesterday - we ventured out. This is 1 day’s snow and ice accumulation:

24 Hours of Le Snow

We’re safe and warm in our house, got lots of supplies, and enjoying the Christmas tree, etc. Our biggest problem is a little cabin fever, so we’re pretty grateful. It’s looking like we’ll get a White Christmas this year. We’re planning on traveling to southern Oregon after Christmas, so I hope this stuff melts eventually! :-)

Posted in: blog , snow , snowpocalypse , weather
December 11

New “Restore Session” UI Feature in Firefox 3.1 beta 2 (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Firefox 3.1 beta 2 (Mac) just crashed on me (well, it went unresponsive, and I Force Quit it), and I noticed when it came back that there’s a new “restore session” interface. Instead of just asking you “Start a New Session” or “Restore Previous Session”, you get to choose which tabs you want to restore.

Restore Session - Mozilla Firefox 3.1 Beta 2

This is super handy if you had a bunch of tabs open that you want to restore, but you suspect that one of them is what caused Firefox to crash in the first place. You can deselect the suspect tab, and still recover the rest of your open tabs. It’s no longer all or nothing.

Neato. :-)

Posted in: blog , firefox

New “Restore Sessions” UI Feature in Firefox 3.1 beta 2 (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Firefox 3.1 beta 2 (Mac) just crashed on me (well, it went unresponsive, and I Force Quit it), and I noticed when it came back that there’s a new “restore session” interface. Instead of just asking you “Start a New Session” or “Restore Previous Session”, you get to choose which tabs you want to restore.

Restore Session - Mozilla Firefox 3.1 Beta 2

This is super handy if you had a bunch of tabs open that you want to restore, but you suspect that one of them is what caused Firefox to crash in the first place. You can deselect the suspect tab, and still recover the rest of your open tabs. It’s no longer all or nothing.

Neato. :-)

Posted in: blog , firefox
December 10

Ten Thousand Tiny Twitter Tweets (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Twitter has become an integral part of my life. My friends there, who number in the hundreds, really are people I consider friends. I have real connections with each of them, even the ones I’ve not met yet “in real life”.

Thank you all for being my friends, and putting up with each one of my ten thousand tiny Twitter tweets. Here to ten thousand more! :-)

Tweet9999.jpg
Tweet10000.jpg
Posted in: 10000 , 10k , blog , milestones , twitter
November 19

How To Get People To Link To and Talk About Stuff You Write Without Being a Jerk (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

I’m writing this up to help bloggers and other people who create stuff online (videos, etc.) get their “stuff” more visibility, by getting more sites to link to it and talk about it. Specifically, I’m trying to help people in my group at work, Intel Software Network, by sharing some of my experience and ideas, since I’ve been blogging for over 5 years. I’m by no means an expert, just sharing what I know. I hope you’ll post a comment or otherwise jump into the conversation if you have ideas of your own on how to get more “outside” links and conversation around the things that you write.

This post is NOT going to be a list of “tricks” or quick fixes. I’m not talking about linkbait, or SEO black magic, or anything like that. Hopefully, the things I lay out will seem like common sense. It takes sustained effort over a period of time to build up your reputation and influence - you don’t just instantly “get famous”. So be prepared.

Update: Google has posted some great tips for bloggers. It’s mostly on how to optimize your site for Google, make your stuff more findable, etc. In case you didn’t want to just take my word for it… :-)

Step 0: Build Your Network

This is “step 0″ because it needs to be worked on for a while before you get real results. I’m talking about connecting with people, in real life and online. Get to know them, what they like, what they write about, and what they’re interested. Help them get to know you, what you’re passionate about, and what you know. You can do this by exchanging comments on each other’s blogs, following each other on Twitter, Facebook, FriendFeed, or whatever. The medium itself isn’t specifically important, but this is why I’m always talking about how important it is to connect with other people on places like Twitter.

Don’t be a snob about who you connect with. I have people in my network who are senior editors at large, popular tech publications, and also people who write small, narrowly-focused niche blogs or don’t blog at all. I’m friends with them because we have interests in common, and have shared inteactions - NOT just because of where they write! Don’t be blinded into thinking you need to connect with the “big fish” more than other people. First of all, it doesn’t matter. Second, you’re going to be asking people to link to or say something about your material, and you’ll sound like a jerk if it seems like you only care about attention from the “popular” crowd. Everyone has their own audience and sphere of influence. Be grateful for any and all links and attention that you receive.

Step 1: Create Interesting, Easy To Find Content

This is hopefully a no-brainer, but it bears mention. If you want people to link to something you’ve created, it should be interesting enough to merit the attention. No matter how good you think you are, not every single thing you write or create is going to get picked up on all the news sites and linked to all over the web. Some of your stuff is going to be higher quality than the rest. Consider exercising some restraint in what you try to promote, so you don’t become “the boy who cried wolf” by trying to get EVERYONE to link to EVERYTHING that you create. Attention and goodwill from other people is a precious commodity. Don’t squander it.

Also, make your stuff easy to find. For most sites, the majority of traffic comes from search results, not referring links. Think about what you’d search for if you were looking for the topic you’re writing about. Be clear and specific and relevant in your post title. Try putting your post title into Google, and see if Google has any suggestions for making it better (”Did You Mean…”).

Step 2: Link to Other People. A Lot.

Get in the habit of linking to other sites and people in your network. Do it a lot. It makes what you write that much more interesting and useful, and it’s a great way to connect with and show respect for the people you link to, and make them a lot more willing to link to you in the future. If you want people to link to you, don’t be stingy with the links you give out.

Don’t worry AT ALL about trying to keep people on your own site. Think of what’s probably the most visited and most useful site on the internet - Google. Is Google popular because they try to keep people on their site, or try to be “sticky”? No! Google is popular and useful because they send you away as quickly and efficiently as possible. Be like Google.

Step 3. Submit to the News Centers

There are lots of news sites and aggregators out there whose sole purpose is to link to interesting stuff that readers have submitted to them. Slashdot, Digg, Reddit, YCombinator Hacker News, etc. Discover which ones that are most influential for your area of expertise. Learn the process for submitting something, and what the criteria are for it getting published. Become a member of the community - read what gets posted, and post comments on stories.

When you have created something that you think would be a good fit for one of these news sites, submit it! On rare occasions, someone else might pick up your post and submit it, but for the most part, if you don’t do it, no one else will. Don’t be shy.

Don’t get discouraged if what you submit doesn’t “make it” to the front page of the site, especially on really big and popular sites, like Digg and Slashdot. Don’t give up, and keep at it.

Step 3.1: Use StumbleUpon

This one deserves its own subsection. StumbleUpon is a collaborative “hey, this is cool!” service that lots of people use. Basically, there are two sides to StumbleUpon. First, in the course of your web browsing, you “stumble” pages you think are interesting or cool. Second, you can see what pages other people have “stumbled” as interesting. That’s a super basic explanation.

The reason I put StumbleUpon apart from the other “news” sites is the quality of the visits that getting on StumbleUpon brings compared to the other sites. Getting linked on the front page of Slashdot or Digg will bring a BIG spike in traffic, but it doesn’t tend to last. People who read those sites are voraciously looking for “what’s hot”. Traffic from StumbleUpon is different. Because there’s not a “front page”, once your stuff gets into the database, it generates a pretty steady, constant flow of visits. Which is really nice.

Step 4: Ask Your Network, Nicely

Once you’ve built your network (see Step 0), get in the habit of letting them know when you’ve posted something that you think they may find interesting. Send out a link on Twitter, or in your Facebook status, etc. Try to make it “hey, I just posted this, let me know what you think” and not “hey look! I posted something awesome again!”. Ask (nicely) for people to link to your post, or to vote for it on Digg and the like. Again, don’t become “that person” who only ever tries to promote their own stuff. But when you’ve done something that you think deserves some attention, it’s OK to let people know about it. Again, if you don’t do it, it’s unlikely that anyone else will.

Step 5: Listen and Respond

Once you’ve put the word out, monitor for links and mentions of your stuff. This is where having “ego” search feeds, or a personalized listening dashboard like the one I created for Intel comes in handy. Set up search feeds (I use Google Blogsearch, Google News, Ask.com blog search, and Twitter search) for your name, and the URL and name of your site. This topic probably deserves a whole post of its own. I’ll write something up soon.

When a news site or a blog does link to or mention you, post comments on their site, thanking them, answering questions, and basically being involved in the conversation. The reason for doing this is to show that you’re smart, savvy, listening, and engaged in the conversation. Engaging in the conversation, wherever it happens, builds connections between the participants, and makes them that much more likely to want to link to you again in the future. Which feeds right back into “Step 0: Build Your Network”.

Step 6: Make This a Habit

Like I said at the beginning, this isn’t a trick that can be learned. This stuff takes time and effort. That’s why you need to think of it as skills to be learned and habits to be formed. Keep practicing. Accept that you might not get stellar results at the beginning. But if you keep it up, you’ll find that you’ve grown your own reputation, influence, and network of people who listen to you. That’s what makes all the effort worth it.

Step 7: ???

What have I missed here? If you have ideas, suggestions, or things that you do that you think would be helpful for people trying to get noticed and get linked to, please let me know. Post a comment, or post something on your own blog and link here. Like I said, I’m not proclaiming myself the expert on this subject. I learn lots every day, and I love it. So tell me what YOU do to get people to link to you and talk about you without being a jerk. :-)

Posted in: blog
November 14

Survival Mode (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Things have colluded to make the last three weeks or so super busy on a personal, work, and community level. It’s been pretty nuts. Continues to be. But if I can make it through this weekend, I should be OK for the rest of the year. ;-)

Some of the things I hope to be writing more about soon: Ignite Portland 4, Ignite Portland 5, more netbook stuff, and gearing up for a project I hope to kick off next year that I’m really excited about. So stay tuned. I’m not dead yet. :-)

Posted in: blog
November 12

Sprint’s “Now” Data Overload Widget - My New Screensaver (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Via John Gruber, Sprint, for some reason (marketing, obviously), has put up a giant Flash-based, um, dashboard display widget thingy, called “Now”, with a HUGE amount of data. Just let it all wash over you. Swim in the data. Perfect for info-crack addicts like me:

sprintnow2-1.jpg

The audio bits are a little annoying. Wish there was a way to turn them off.

This is my new screensaver, for now, thanks to IdleWeb, a cool free little Mac app that lets you display any web page as your screensaver. I had been using the Digg Arc visualization. We’ll see how long this one lasts. For my screensaver, I can’t stand just some random visualization. I want realtime ambient data streaming across my screen when I’m not

Know what would be really cool? An open, customizeable, hackable version of this. Like iGoogle, My Yahoo, or NetVibes run amok. A framework to build and display the data, and a library of widgets to show realtime information. THAT would be awesome. Someone get on building that, would you? :-)

Posted in: blog
November 10

? Let Google Reader Automatically Translate Feeds Into Your Language (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Official Google Reader Blog: Is Your Web Truly World-Wide?

Ever wanted to subscribe to a feed in a language other than one you understand, and have Google automatically machine translate it into your language? Now you can.

greader_translate.jpg

Of course, machine translation is usually terrible. I worked in software localization for a few years, where I learned first hand just how far out the idea of usable machine translation is. But hey, it’s better than nothing, and is a nice option for that Chinese or Russian blog you REALLY wish you could read.

I tried this out on the feeds for the Intel Software Network blog in Chinese and Russian, and it seems to work pretty well (as well as Google Translate ever does). Pretty slick.

Posted in: feeds , google , language , linky , localization , reader , translate
November 5

Michael Crichton Died of What? (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Michael Crichton Died of What?


Oh, those wacky Wikipedians. For a brief time this morning, when I first heard that Michael Crichton had died of cancer, his Wikipedia entry stated that he’d died "after a long, private battle with a velociraptor."

Somehow, I think he would appreciate the joke. The Wikipedia page has since been edited to remove the reference.

I loved the way he wrote about science. It wasn’t always science fiction, per se, but even when he was writing about corporate politics in Airframe, he just had a way of tickling both the literary and scientific parts of my mind. Too bad he won’t give us any more books.

Update: Hey, the New York Times linked to this post!

AP, CBS, IMDB, LATimes, and TinyScreenfuls


I know it’s just something Blogrunner automatically picked up, but it still feels pretty cool. The AP, CBS News, IMDB, the LA Times, and TinyScreenfuls.com. :-)

TinyScreenfuls.com on Blogrunner/NYTimes

Posted in: blog
November 4

Using the Web to Watch Election Results (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Every election is different - four years is a LONG time in Internet time. The tools and habits we have for getting our information can change a lot in four years. Here are some of the tools I’m using to track the election results today, besides my regular network of people on Twitter, FriendFeed, and blogs (which is where I get most of my news and information on any given day).

Google Maps Election Results

Pick your state, see live results. Get your own to embed on your site.

Google News Elections Coverage

Good summary of coverage from around the web. Has a nice mobile/iPhone version for keeping up away from a computer:

google_election_iphone.PNG

Twitter Vote Report

Interesting Twitter mashup, where people report conditions/experiences from their voting locations - wait times, any irregularities, etc. A real time stream of “on the ground” reports from Twitter, phone, SMS, and other means. Very cool grassroots project.

twittervotereport.jpg

Don’t miss the “See It In Action” page, which has a bunch of embeddable maps/widgets with lots of cool data.

What About You?

What sites/resources are you using to track the election results? If you’ve got something cool or interesting to share, post a comment! :-)

Update: Sarah Perez over at ReadWriteWeb has a much more exhaustive list of resources for getting your fill of this election. Video feeds, poll tracking sites, more mobile options, etc. If you’re looking for more election info, her post is a great place to start.

Update 2: Oh! And how could I forget http://election.twitter.com!

Posted in: 2008 , blog , election , google , mccain , obama , president
November 3

? iPhone 2.2 Update Brings Street View, OTA Podcast Downloads (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

New IPhone 2.2: The iPhone OS 2.2 Rumor Round Up

069FCA1E-4C62-42D2-A278-612B366F946A.jpg

OK, so we all knew that the iPhone 2.2 update was bringing Google Maps Street View and walking directions (about time, too). But Gizmodo says it will also include over-the-air podcast downloads. First I’ve heard of this, but a welcome feature that people like me and Dave Winer have been clamoring for from the beginning.

8EBFCE83-C0FD-4203-8626-D50DB8F75F75.jpg

And it suddenly makes a lot more sense why Apple rejected the “Podcaster” app (which downloads over the air, too) for “duplicating iTunes functionality”. At the time, we scratched our heads, because the iPhone had no such capability.

Posted in: google , iphone , linky , maps , os , podcasting , podcasts , software , streetview , update

Hey, You. Vote. (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Just do it. No matter which candidate you support. It’s important. It’s worth it. It’s your responsibility. Don’t be lazy, and let it slip. Please.

Posted in: blog , vote
October 29

Why Do All Netbooks Have The Same Specs? Microsoft and ULCPC (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

This post started as a comment over on jkontherun, where James posted a great hands on report of the new HP Mini Note 1000 netbook. It looks really, really nice - as soon as the 6-cell battery version becomes available, this will probably be the one I buy for my family (I have been a fan of and recommending the Eee PC 1000H, which is still a great netbook - a half dozen people I know have bought one on my recommendation, and they love them).

BTW, I’m posting this on my own blog, instead of on the Intel Software Network blog (where I’ve been writing an ongoing series of posts on “The World of Netbooks”) because it could be seen as a little controversial, and it represents my opinion, and my opinion only, with a healthy dash of speculation. I don’t have any inside knowledge of this topic - all I know is from what I’ve read on the web.

Have you ever wondered why pretty much all the netbooks on the market have essentially the same specifications? A 9 or 10 inch LCD screen at 1024×600, 1GB RAM, the Intel Atom processor, etc. I think I know. It has to do with Microsoft, and something called ULCPC - Ultra Low Cost PC.

Microsoft doesn’t want to keep selling Windows XP. They want to kill it, and sell Vista. Makes business sense. But, these little netbooks don’t meet the minimum specs for Vista.

So, MS grudgingly decided to keep selling an “ULCPC” or “ULPC” edition of XP, but only for systems that don’t exceed the specs they set: no larger than 10″ screen, no more than 1GB RAM, etc. If OEMs make netbooks with beefier specs, MS won’t let them sell them with XP.

I suspect that the 1024×600 screen resolution limit is part of those restrictions, but I can’t find anything documenting that as fact. And I’m seeing contradictions about the limits. For instance, the ULCPC specification states a CPU no faster than 1GHz, but exceptions are made for the 1.6GHz Intel Atom CPU we see is almost all netbooks. Same for the 80GB hard drive limitation - many netbooks have 160GB drives. I imagine that the complete ULCPC specs are known only to Microsoft and netbook OEMs. Someone correct me if I’m wrong. I REALLY had hoped that HP would buck the trend, since the old Mini Note 2133 has a 1280×768 screen, but alas, no.

One could argue that Microsoft is doing something “evil” here, or that they’re only practicing good business. Personally, I think they were blindsided by demand for netbooks, and had to scramble to get some strategy in place that would keep them from being shut out of the game altogether. But it’s a frustrating, arbitrary limitation, and one of the big reasons fanboys like me hold out hope that Apple will make a netbook. I mean, I actually like using XP on my netbook, but I’d like better specs in a netbook than what we’re ever going to see as long as MS gets to dictate their terms. Sure, Linux is an alternative, and a good one, but all the programs I love to use run on either Windows XP or Mac OS X. And if Uncle Bill won’t give me what I want, I can only hope that Uncle Steve will. :-)

Oh, and raise your hand if you think Windows 7 is going to run better than XP on netbooks? That’s what I thought… ;-)

Posted in: blog , microsoft , netbooks , windows
October 28

Flickr Now Lets You Embed Slideshows (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

Just noticed (via a blog post from Frasier Spiers, the guy who wrote the awesome Flickr Export for iPhoto and Aperture) that Flickr now apparently lets you embed slideshows in your blog/other places. Is this new? Frasier says it is, but others on Twitter are telling me it’s been there for months. I don’t recall it being there before, and I’ve never seen one used before today. But maybe I just haven’t been paying attention, and this is old news. Anyway. (Update: Apparently this feature is about two months old, according to the Flickr Blog, but I couldn’t easily find anything about it in my searches, so it obviously needs more attention. ;-) )

For demo’s sake, here’s a slideshow of my set of photos from the PC Mall in Shanghai, China:


This seems to work anywhere you can view a slideshow on Flickr - any set, any photostream, etc. (Hint: when in doubt, try adding “/show” to the end of the Flickr URL.) Look for the “Share” link in the upper right corner of the slideshow. You can customize the embed code, with different preset sizes (small - 400×300, medium - 500×375, large - 700×525, and super-sized - 800×600), or enter a custom size.

The slideshow itself appears in Flash, which means it won’t work on the iPhone (bummer!) or any other browser/device that doesn’t support Flash. The embedded slideshow has all the same controls as a normal Flickr slideshow - previous, next, jumping to a specific photo, etc. Oh, and they’re supported inline in Google Reader (like YouTube and a few - but not all - other embedded content types):

FlickrSlideshowInGReader.jpg

I can see myself using this feature a LOT. Quite often, when I have some photos to share, I’ll do a post with one or two representative photos, and just a plain text link that says something like “check out the rest of these photos in this set on Flickr”. Now, I’ll be able to embed the whole set of photos right in the post. That makes me happy. :-)

Posted in: blog , embed , flickr , photos , share , slideshows