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Entries from December 2007

31 December 2007

Out with 2007 and in with 2008

Yep, it's the end of the year again. And what a year it has been for me, especially tacked on to the year I had in 2006.

I'm looking forward to next year, since it is promising to have a little bit of everything for me. Many interesting things cropped up at the end of 2007 that will have repercussions far into the next year, if not longer. With a Zen Calm, I await to see how things develop.

As for all of you, thanks for stopping by. I expect to show up in more places next year, so I hope I can catch up with many of you.

Ah, I hear the Date Line rapidly approaching (indeed, my tweeps are popping off in synch). I'm going to step away for a bit to set off some fireworks, sip something nice, and think of what 2008 will bring.

Happy New Year. Feliz Ano Novo. Onnelista Uutta Vuottaa.

And see you on the other side.

links for 2007-12-31

30 December 2007

Response to Christian's post: Fragility of Digital Life

Christian Lindholm has a rough end of year, electronics-wise (link below). Machines acting up, licenses expiring, and data at risk. It brings up an running discussion we've been having since I joined his Lifeblog team at the start of '04 - the future of memories.

Here's a note to Christian:
Ah, dear friend, some things never change.

Why is it that we cannot find a solution? Is it because we are all atomists migrating into the digital world, so we don't get it?

What do the digital natives believe? Or have they not accumulated enough digital baggage to care? Or do they not even have a concept of something digital vanishing?

Of can we not find a solution because the solution is to change the way we store digital memories, the way we need to put them in the cloud, the way we put more and more of our past into bits?

Heh, we've been wresting with this for some time, Cassandras of the digital future. Not to be dramatic, but Humanity must deal with this or we will have a past we cannot revisit.

After a chat with your British Library friends, go over and check out the Long Now Foundation projects to preserve things for millenia (and I need to find that seminar about it).

Link: ChristianLindholm.com: Fragility of Digital Life:

I am back on-line after a two week long outage. This was due to some old billing address with my provider coupled with a bit sloppy service at Saunalahti, my host provider. This combined with an upgrade to N95 8GB that went worse than expected, as I could not use the old Lifeblog 2.1 on it. This led me to export all my 30.000 items out of Lifeblog, make a back up, restore the back up. A full week-end of computing time. Soon the beta of Bootcamp expires, so I have to do another week-end of fiddling. The only thing I conclude is a digital archive is vulnerable, I have made decent back-up's of my Lifeblog, have some in London, some in Finland on several HD's etc. still I feel extremely fragile.

29 December 2007

links for 2007-12-29

28 December 2007

Tweeps on the analyst couch

In the past week or two, a few of my tweeps, Alex, @alexdc, and Sue, @dswaters, both from different circles (indeed, one in Miami the other in Perth), did a bit of soul-searching regarding their usage of Twitter. While I have had many discussion with folks regarding how they use their social networking tools, only Twitter seems to make people speak passionately. I think it's due to the personal nature of Twitter.

Harriet, @hwakelam, also from Perth, wrote a nice exploration of her relationship with Twitter (see below). She points out what, to me, is a key struggle many of us have - how to keep it broad to include weak ties, yet keep it tight, to enrich the strong ties.

Link: Technology Twitter: Twitter love....:

We are cutting edge - modern and traditional simultaneously. We don't want to limit our relationship only to me and mine. But nor do I want to obsess about Twitter's other relationships.... Twitter and me, we want to listen to the world, but we are also exclusive - we want to revel in our individual relationship..

And, as these things seems to happen, coincidentally, Stefan made a great comment, on my previous post, that cuts right into this (see next).

Link: Lifeblog: Socialstream - a project on Unified Social Networks:

the thing is none of the social services out now offer the granularity that real life offers. i would love to add anyone i ever had a meaningful conversation with in my social network, but i'm not going to treat them the same way.
Comment by: Stefan Constantinescu | 27 December 2007 at 20:34

As gregarious creatures, we constantly make and break social connections, weak and strong. And, as humans, we have evolved to be able to handle not only a large number of different circles of social relations, but a large number of different strengths, too. Yet, our social network tools online make us cleave to a preset that usually makes it hard for us to manage this granularity.

Earlier this year, our concepting team had a very long running discussion about this. We sensed this need for granularity. We also saw that there had to be a way to let the software know what the 'settings' were just by our actions. Yet, automated relationship management just wasn't our cup of tea. Also, to make that complexity visible was daunting - heck, even though humans are good at it, we don't really know explicitly our parameters, nor would software make it easier, it'd just get in the way.

In the end, we felt most comfortable with Public-Friends-Family-Self (for example, Flickr's model).

In the end, maybe it is better to handle these gradations of linkage by partitioning ourselves across many services (profiles?). Indeed, that's what I've been trying to do, establishing a range of connections strengths for each of the social networking services I use, each playing to the strength of that service. And I have seen others do the same.

Hmm, this is a thought that is taking me back to the drawing board.

27 December 2007

Socialstream - a project on Unified Social Networks

One thing that has been bugging me for a while is that, while we discuss the demise of the Website due to the fragmentation of the Web, we don't seem to be straight on what will be the organizing principle (ok, so maybe it's just me).

I have always had an allergy to rearranging the Web in the model of consumption based around widgets, RSS, and aggregators such as NetVibes.

Oh, yes, I exalted aggregators. But, the more I worked with folks on the concept, it became clear to me that it was the _individual_ that was the organizing principle. It's not about aggregating my Web, but aggregating what I _do_ on the Web, with the _people_ I do it with, and thereby enriching my real world life.

And, indeed, that has heavily focused our goals for Ovi.com.

And watching the rise of very focused person-person communication and lifestream (strong 2007 term) tools such as Facebook, Jaiku, and Twitter, has further affirmed our direction, centered around social networking in the sense we are used to - direct communications, not some sort of passive publication model with some commenting by strangers that characterized the Blog Years (hence Vox).

And then Socialstream crossed my path (see link below). This is quite much what I have been trying to gel around. And these guys do (and say and show) it so well.

You want to see where the Web is going? Read this then:

Link Socialstream:

Socialstream is a system where users can seamlessly share, view, and respond to many types of social content across multiple networks.

links for 2007-12-27

26 December 2007

The future of zoos

Society has come a long way in animal welfare. But we still are caught trying to balance the needs of humanity and the needs of the animal. Zoos are one example.

How do we balance conservation (needed due to the effects of human activities), education, and animal welfare?

Certainly, large carnivores always seem to suffer.

Link: Tiger escapes pen, kills visitor at San Francisco Zoo - The Boston Globe:

A tiger escaped from its pen at the San Francisco Zoo yesterday evening, killing one visitor and injuring two others before police shot it dead, authorities said.

25 December 2007

links for 2007-12-25

24 December 2007

links for 2007-12-24

21 December 2007

A WiFi mesh network for the Haj

There is something absolutely exotic about this set-up.

Maybe it's the medieval setting, maybe it's the history of the Hajj, or maybe it's because the Saudis can be so hip and so anachronistic at the same time.

In any case, it's cool.

Link: Wi-Fi mesh lights up Mecca for Hajj | InfoWorld | News | 2007-12-19 | By Stephen Lawson, IDG News Service:

Hajjis, as the pilgrims are called, come to the city in Saudi Arabia from around the world for several days of religious rituals. More than 2 million gather each year. A network of about 70 meshed routers from Tropos Networks has been set up to provide free Internet connectivity, according to Denise Barton, director of marketing at Tropos. Users only have to register before using it. Barton believes it is the first public Wi-Fi network set up for the Hajj.

17 December 2007

links for 2007-12-17

16 December 2007

Among other random news, Six Apart spins off Livejournal

I was in California this week and stopped by, as usual, to say hello at Six Apart.

Lots of things have happened since I last saw them, some that I knew already, and some that I didn't, and some new items that were interesting.

In the 'already knew' was Ben and Mena's new family member. Cute little one, already fashion conscious, matching outfits with Mom. Another one was the new CEO, Chris Alden (I didn't get to meet him this time, nor did I get to catch up with the previous one).

In the 'didn't know' was the spinning off of LiveJournal. I remember when they bought LiveJournal, oh so many years ago. Along with the purchase of LiveJournal came Brad Fitzpatrick, who ('already knew') has recently moved to Google and is likely influential in the OpenSocial work going on there. I wonder who from the original LiveJournal team is still around, and how Brad's departure influenced this spin-off. In any case, Six Apart has a very challenging product line, so I believe them when they say it was spun off to improve the product portfolio (and return Six Apart to its roots).

Another 'didn't know' was Moveable Type going open source, properly. I seem to recall them mentioning this a while back. Well, now it's there. Though, I am not sure what that means for MT or Six Apart.

In the 'didn't know, but interesting' is that David Recordon works (is back) at Six Apart. David is the key guy in the development of OpenID. In the 15 minutes we chatted, we realized that there was more for us to discuss. I hope I can haul him out to Finland to enlighten the folks I work with. OpenID is a piece in the current developments that are set to transform social networking and the way we build social networking services.

I like to follow Six Apart because I worked so closely with them in my Lifeblog days and they introduced me (and still are) to so many important Web movers and shakers. Also, when we first started talking with them in the start of 2004, they were a cautious and small company in a very obscure area. In the first year we worked with them, they grew rapidly, defined the Web news of the day, and went from a small start up to a bold new player in the Web.

And, with some of the news above, I think Six Apart has grown up to be a mature Web company, no longer a start-up. They have a strong valuation, a stable workforce, and are spinning off products. But, for me, the real indicator of maturity is that one can start finding people who worked at Six Apart and have moved on to do great things and now proudly count Six Apart as part of their pedigree.

Wow.

12 December 2007

Cool eco-savvy phone from Nokia, the Nokia 3110 Evolve

Folks, I don't usually gush about gadgets, but this one makes me happy. It's a phone that was built in a way quite different from other phones, 'incorporating environmentally friendly innovations':

  • bio-material covers, unpainted and less fossil fuels to produce (50% renewable materials)
  • sales box made of 60% recycled materials
  • intelligent charger that turns off when charging is done

And it's a basically good phone.

Way to go.

Looking forward to laying my hands on one.

And a few comments from an environmental site.

11 December 2007

A few changes from my side

I'm leaving the Ovi team and shifting to the new Social Media relations group in Markets, Communications. The official start date has not been set since I have a few things I need to wrap up here on Oviland, but, barring any wild lightning strikes out of the blue, it will happen in January or February.

Just to be clear, I am not leaving because of any disappointment with the way Ovi.com has been developing. Indeed, the Ovi team is amazing, and I have done and learned quite a bit with them and have no problem working with them. Also, the direction of Ovi, and Ovi.com in particular (which I strongly influenced), is on the right track.

But, Ovi.com is a demanding mistress and she's worn me down. I just need a little life-work balance and this next gig, hopefully, is of a different scale and scope that should give me some more control over what and where and how I do things.

This is a good time to shift, too. Ovi.com has hit its first iteration (we're in internal beta). We've been well received by analysts and press and are looking to go before the real critics - the users. Also, the Ovi team is going through some new arrangements and some fresh blood is joining.

As for this new gig, this is very much in line with things I did before starting Ovi. I will be leading external social media activities, engaging with social media leaders and commentators. I will also be building and driving (as Editor-in-Chief, as it were) Nokia's social media 'hub' (for want of a better term).

Social media outreach was what I did in my Lifeblog days (the first team to do such in Nokia) and this is a great evolution from those days, this time with more resources, more support from the company, and from a higher perch. And the field has evolved in those years and I think there is potential for some innovation in this space, something my mix of publishing, social media, and service design might help me bring forth.

I am sure we will have some great discussions around this.

Anyone have social graphs from Twitter?

I would love to see the stats on the numbers of direct, @, and general twits mapped against the total followed and followers per Twitter user.

I think the tighter connections are in the direct messages, then the @ messages. I think these messages reveal who are the closer ties in followed and follower lists.

Would be interesting to know percentage of private twitterers, also (and mobile and such, too).

Yeah, wondering a lot about how social networks map across Twitter.

Next time I per chance bump into Ev, I'll ask. But, there are some of you who know him or will see him sooner than I. Indeed, I think he's at Le Web, so maybe you could ask him there and let me know!

Do you like apples? Them's a lot of apples

One thing I like to point out regarding the mobile space is the scale of things. Here we have numbers (below) on just one device from Nokia. And it's one of the high-end pricey ones, too.

But that pales in comparison to the Nokia 1100, of which Nokia sold over 200 million since 2003.

Link: Nokia sold nearly 4 million N95 as end of Q3 2007:

Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, CEO at Nokia revealed this morning during a Nokia investors day that the company has already sold almost 4 million units of its Nokia N95 Smartphone at the end of the third quarter 2007.

10 December 2007

links for 2007-12-10

Bookplates in the modern world

Some friends and I were talking about bookplates (see link below to definition). My friend's father had one, full of personal symbolism, on a few very old and noble books.

We then discussed how bookplates might seem a bit hollow in this day of paperbacks or hardcovers that come and go.

True, I said, books have a very different value these days compared to only 50 years ago where books were revered and kept in a family for a long time. But, then again, these bookplates could be made smaller, into sort of travel stickers. Then wherever the book went (for I think books should not be sitting on bookshelves, but need to be read and loved) people could put their own logo-sticker-coats of arms of the book to indicate a traveling book.

Kinda gives the book a life of their own (analog spime, anyone?).

Link Bookplate - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:

A bookplate, also known as ex-librīs [Latin, "from the books of..."], is usually a small print or decorative label pasted into a book, often on the inside front cover, to indicate its owner. Simple typographical bookplates are termed 'booklabels'.

08 December 2007

links for 2007-12-08

07 December 2007

Book by Craig Venter - A Life Decoded: My Genome: My Life

Well, I was wondering when someone would write a book about Venter (who deserves a Nobel, a few times over).

Turns out he wrote one himself. I think I gotta get me a copy.

I found out about this book through an article on him in Salon that my wife sent me. I haven't read the article, but will on my long trip tomorrow.

Link: Amazon.com: A Life Decoded: My Genome: My Life: Books: J. Craig Venter:

A great deal has been written about Venter as the head of Celera, the private research company that won a race with the National Institutes of Health's Human Genome Project to sequence the human genome. His role in this historic accomplishment has been both vilified and praised. Now, in a clumsily written autobiography, Venter offers his side of the story, portraying himself as the eternal underdog, fighting for truth and attempting to make scientific discoveries solely to help others. (Publishers Weekly).

links for 2007-12-07

Stephen Johnston in Vodafone Receiver #19 on: Thoughts on 3.0 - this time with added You-nicorn

Stephen Johnston has contributed an article to Vodafone's Receiver mag (see link below). Cool (way to go, Stephen).

He pegs the current discussion around 'what's next' on the Web, progressing from the start of the Web - info - through the current push - people - to where it might be going - semantics.

He rightfully points out that, once more, folks are thinking tech rather than user. Just the other day I was bemoaning that RDFSs or OWLs and what not that 'librarians' need to attach to everything manually by processing everything is NOT the future, but some dream of MIT-types (we have a few semWeb folks at Nokia, too).

For some time now, I've been characterizing the waves of Web as 'them web', publishers moving into the digital world, pushing top-down info to the vast public; 'me web', people becoming the publishers themselves, yet still pushing 'content' to the public; and 'my web', the connection between me and mine, ring-fenced world of content pools.

This semWeb talk has me thinking that there is a need for all the stuff that has been created to be made more useful. For example, how can all the info in BioMed Central, PLoS, or Wikipedia (1st wave publishing), user comments and notes (2nd wave publishing), relationships between readers, commentors, and creators (3rd wave?) mesh together in a self-making semantic web of content, interactions, and meaning WITHOUT some braniac librarians annotating the world for us?

I want it to grow, much the same way the Web had been growing, by people going about their business, bottom up, rather than pushed at us and based on some W3C working group multi-year RFP structure, top down.

It's up to us to create the tools and services that folks use that helps them attach meaning to the Web, much like paths across a campus quad arise by the daily choices of the users. And, as Stephen points out (of course, we work for the same company, too), the mobile phone has a big role to play as some hyper-nifty sensor (and lots of us bring in the concept of 'context').

Indeed, all this semWeb stuff has returned to the forefront of my thinking due to a chance encounter with the folks at BioMed Central, an open access publisher of scientific papers, results, and studies. I've known about semWeb for a long while. But now, I see semWeb popping up all over the place. I hope there's something to it.

Link: Vodafone Receiver » #19 | Thoughts on 3.0 – this time with added You-nicorn:

What I'm looking for in 3.0 is the truly breakthrough user experiences that hit you in the stomach, the way that using Google (and Google Earth) did the first time you used it, or the way that Mocha's little legs (see above video) wiggle in a furry flurry of happiness.

06 December 2007

links for 2007-12-06

I'll be in SFO next week

Folks, I haven't been to the US since June. Feels like a dog's age.

Unfortunately, my schedule is packed and spread out all over the place.

In any case, let me know if you're around and I'll see if we can met up.

Maybe I should just do a bar meet-up, what.*

See ya!

*When I told my wife about the idea of just setting a place and time and notifying all your friends to meet up there, she's sort of now made it her main way to meet up with all our friends, heh.

Ah, con-men exist in every medium

I also got a shoulder tap about some shady dealing (see link below) from an online publisher. It not only bugs me that this gives other publishers a bad name and erodes trust in the openness of relationships built over the Web, but that he did this to folks I know, worse yet, GOOD and TRUSTING folks I know.

I've been a writer for a long time and have valued my work, so I am always on the look out for those who would take advantage of me. I am not saying that my friends could have seen this coming - you really can't - but I suppose we need to talk amongst ourselves to make sure this doesn't happen too often.

Alas, a previous guy Oliver dealt with had proposed I join his publishing network. The guy tried to stroke my ego, as if I were some online n00b writer, but the deal was so krappy that I turned it away.

Oliver and gang, I wish you the best as you guys pick up the pieces and move on.

I also wish you the best in getting this guy canned.

Link: David Harper’s Different Things » Blog Archive » What’s Up With Blognation’s Founder?:

Several friends of mine were affected by questionable business practices of Blognation’s founder. Please see Oliver Starr’s “Open Letter to Sam Sethi” (Reposted in full below with permission of the author.) Then head over to Debi Jones who continues the story with “Blognation: The Blogger’s Prelude and Tale.“

03 December 2007

mTrends on Dopplr going mobile

Rudy, over at mTrends is breaking the story that Dopplr will launch a mobile version tomorrow.

Good for them. It's been really nice to see Dopplr slowly grow and add some simple and useful features around their main feature of 'declaring the future'.

Tomorrow is an important milestone for me (and the Ovi.com team), as well. We also believe in starting with the simplest core proposition that adds value to a user and then build upon that. If we were to wait for our total vision for Ovi.com to be complete, we probably would never release a thing.

I'll elaborate more tomorrow.

Link: mTrends - mobile media lifestyle trends - m-trends.org:

Dopplr will announce their mobile site at Nokia World on Tuesday.

BTW, no, I will NOT be at Nokia World. And no, I will NOT be at Le Web 3. Long story.

My Photo

My writings

  • Cognections - site
    Precognition, cognition, recognition - photos and writings.
  • Life blog - site
    Thoughts and actions ranging from biomedicine, molecular manipulations, indiscriminate writing, the long now and a post-electronic age, various forms of performances thespian and corporate, and philosophizing on the fusion of Internet and mobile devices.
  • One night
    A global story of one night in the mobile life. Written for Vodafone's receiver magazine. Made into a podcast, too.
  • chillin'
    Deep thinking while up in the stratosphere.
  • The Depths of Thought and the Inquiry into Our Spirit
    Something I wrote eons ago, wondering at the difference between humans and other animals.