Dotcomslashblog
October 9, 2008 at 7:13 am | In Flickr | Leave a CommentFrom now on, this blog will no longer be updated. I’ve set up shop at nilsgeylen.com and the new blog there resides under the subfolder /blog
nilsgeylen.com/blog
Hence also the new blog’s tentative title: dotcomslashblog. The creativity!
Most functionality is in place; bear with me as I trod along trying to make things work and/or look good.
Should you update any feeds?
The short answer: yes, that would be best. Here it is.
The long answer: you certainly should if you’re subscribed to the wordpress.com feed
http://nodependenciesnologo.wordpress.com/feed
I’ll double-post for a while, but that feed will soon be phased out.
You could also switch if you’re subscribed to the FeedBurner feed
http://feeds.feedburner.com/ndnl
I’ve already redirected that one to syndicate content from the new domain, but it’d be stupid to stay with that. That one too may be deleted at a certain time. My apologies if one or the other pops up twice in your reader.
Then again: most people already ‘grab’ their stuff from ‘the cloud’ – getting their content here and there, from Twitter or Friendfeed – without sticking to silly outdated things like RSS.
And to think we were convinced we’d be able to keep up.
So, in any case, head on over to the new address and subscribe – if you like. Using your browser will subscribe you to
http://nilsgeylen.com/blog/feed
whereas using the feed icon will subscribe you to the new feedburner feed
http://feeds.feedburner.com/dotcomslashblog
If all that makes sense.
What should you expect?
Nothing – that always works out to your advantage. Let’s just say I intend to post more, but also ‘more seriously’. The terms ‘grown-up’ and ‘higher quality’ sprang to mind.
Incidentally, that is also why the blog is in a folder, not in the root: I tend to think that blogs are on their way out and the main domain will reflect that broader choice of new, more appropriate services and modes of communicating. But as it says on the home page, more about that soon.
If you don’t like serious, there’s also a stream and a tlog. The former self-hosted on Sweetcron, the latter still over at Tumblr – for now.
Oh, and a hat-tip to my mate Allen from Sustainable Hosting, who’s made this switch a cinch.
30 Boxes Stirs, Flickrstyle
November 10, 2006 at 8:13 am | In Flickr | 3 Comments
Yes, 30 Boxes is still alive. Thank God for Flickr.
On that other little Flickr tracker, FlickrNation, Thomas Hawk presents us a cool tool that allows you to show off your Flickr photographs in a 30 Boxes calendar view.
You don’t have to sign in or even be a 30 Boxes member. Just add your Flickr feed and you’re offered a neat piece of code that you can embed anywhere you like – although not (yet) in a WordPress.com template like this apparently.
It’s not unlike Flickr’s own calendar viewing option, but it does have the added value that Flickr pics aren’t the only thing you can add to your boxes.
The service offers mashups for your blog’s feed, your iCal data or just about any RSS or XML feed you like.
It’s also dynamic, so that when you manage your photostream, the changes will show up in your boxes.
A mini version meant for blog sidebars was also announced.
It doesn’t seem entirely up to par yet. As you can see from the image above, it seems to think I only began snapping on 1 November and when I added my blog feed it seemingly arbitrarily chose to display a mix between post titles and post pictures.
What is cool, though, is that you can choose from a number of calendar themes (e.g. OSX, Flickr White, GMail blue, etc.).
No, it won’t make me use 30 Boxes now.
But go and play with it, it certainly has potential for a lot of uses and a lot of photosharing fun.
Interestingness: Manipulated and Patented?
November 7, 2006 at 2:17 am | In Blogs, Flickr, Groups, Interestingness, Opinion, Photosharing | Leave a Comment
I have absolutely no clue how interestingness works. For all I know, someone at the Flickr HQ does exactly the same like me, browsing the millions of photographs available and tagging them as favourites.
Flickr Hits, however, has an interesting post out today, asking if Flickr is deliberately blacklisting certain groups from interestingness. I haven’t the foggiest about this claim either, but seriously? What would be the point?
Well, let us see what would be the point.
The discussion first got sparked at the 4 Aces group. 4 Aces is one of those massive membership groups (although 3,289 is still within reason) with a multitude of photographs that is mind-boggling (29,812) – although even that is relative of course.
One of its members posted about how he was under the impression that the group is being barred from showing up on the Explore pages. He comes to this conclusion based on four assumptions:
- images of his, with quite a few favs and comments, didn’t show up on Explore;
- images belonging to the group have disappeared from Explore;
- one image, that made it to number 120, disappeared after being added to the group;
- a random screening of four Explore pages on a given day didn’t yield one image from the group.
Now, with what little I remember from science class and how to conduct credible research, I think I can safely say this testing technique is far removed from the principles of the scientific method, i.e. being duplicable, predictive, controlled and falsifiable.
But, wait, I’m not here to bash the gentleman in question. I also hold other values near and dear to my heart, such as being critical, inquisitive and not afraid to speak your mind. So, in a way I’m happy with his thoughts.
The question is, however, not whether Flickr is banning groups for no good reason (I’m convinced they don’t), but how does Flickr calculate its interestingness and – more importantly – does it have the right to alter these devious and hidden mechanisms so that the results better reflect what is truly the bees’ knees on any given Flickr day?
I think yes – definitely.
Flickr isn’t about scoring, about making headlines or becoming popular. Personally, I don’t even much like these groups, that exist solely on the basis of adding more and more images with nothing else to bind its members than nonsensical rules like ‘you have to comment on the picture third from the left on the second page’.
The images may be beautiful, it may be great to get a lot of comments, but what does it really say about you and your photographic skills? Not much, I fear.
For a minute, imagine if blogs worked like that. ‘I’ll comment on your previous post if you’ll comment on mine tomorrow’? It’s madness.
And it is exactly the reason, if I may assume that much, why Flickr keeps tweaking its interestingness formula, so that the numbers and the herd don’t overrule the quality of the content. That isn’t blacklisting, it’s creating a reliable quality product.
In that same vein, I was surprised to read The Tech Den’s criticism of Flickr apparently patenting interestingness. Apart from the question if words can be patented, I don’t think Flickr is patenting just a page rank system (like Google’s) or a front page system (like Digg’s).
I think Flickr is just trying to keep Flickr interesting.
I know I would spend a lot more time on YouTube, for instance, if they had anything even remotely similar, and if they wouldn’t just feature the junk of the day that finds its way to the top via MySpace clicks.
So, join Flickr, join as many groups as you like, but remember what it’s about – the sharing of our collective photographic memory or just letting your friends know what you’ve been up to, but not about who and how many you can convince to like you.
Flickr Open Mic Night in San Francisco
November 4, 2006 at 5:35 pm | In Events, Flickr | Leave a Comment
It’s a pretty big world, so chances are you’ll be nowhere near the San Francisco Apple Store tonight at five p.m.
If you are, though, you might want to go have a look at Flickr’s open mic night and watch fifteen Flickr members do a small presentation of their work, their passion and whatever fun or interesting stuff they might want to share.
All details at the Flickr blog. If you want to participate, be there at four and look for Heather Champ somewhere near the Genius Bar.
If you participated, or just went, let me know.
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