Items tagged with internet

Link // 08.07.2008 // 9:09 AM // 1 CommentA Timeline of Internet Memes

Holy shit this is awesome. Via Rex. Visit site »

Link // 06.04.2008 // 2:29 PM // 0 CommentsVanity Fair: How the Web Was Won

Vanity Fair has “an oral history of the internet,” in which several pioneers, from Steve Case to Marc Andreessen to Jeff Bezos to Jerry Yang to Craig Newmark to Cindy Margolis (yes, Cindy Margolis), right up through Larry Page, Fake Steve Jobs, and Mark Zuckerberg discuss the history of this medium. Pretty awesome. Visit site »

Event // 03.04.2008 // 6:05 PMROCK.OPERA.SXSW - Rock with Opera at the “Rock Bands Rock Opera” Party!!!

March 10th, 2008–March 11th, 2008 in Austin, TX

Event // I attended // 01.29.2008 // 1:34 AMWeb Directions North 2008

January 28th, 2008–February 2nd, 2008 in Vancouver, British Columbia

Event // I attended // 01.29.2008 // 1:34 AMThe Future of Web Design

April 18th, 2007, 12 AM in London, England

Link // 09.17.2007 // 9:39 PM // 0 CommentsTimes to Stop Charging for Parts of Its Web Site

TimesSelect goes the way of the dinosaur. Welcome aboard the cluetrain, NYT. Visit site »

Link // 08.20.2007 // 1:57 AM // 0 CommentsWhat A Comment Stream Would Look Like In A Meeting

Definitely funny — at least if you’ve ever tried to read Digg.com comments. Visit site »

Link // 08.13.2007 // 2:15 PM // 4 CommentsAdactio: Reflection

Jeremy has some great thoughts here on the nature of online conversation. Based in part on a back-and-forth he and I had over the weekend, I was feeling similarly depressed about the ability for people to communicate as civil human beings for the past couple of days. Besides that exchange, I managed to (seemingly) offend Eric Meyer and Christian Montoya, and I had to read this incredibly depressing post and its subsequent comment thread. I was quite down for a while there— so much so that Michelle noticed and I ended up venting to her about it.

While I generally don’t agree with Jeremy’s belief that comments on blogs are a bad idea, over the weekend I knew exactly what he was talking about. I think the best piece I’ve ever read on on this topic is Wilson’s Shouts and Echos.

I don’t have much positive to say on the matter — I just hope it stops, at some point. Visit site »

Link // 07.06.2007 // 1:05 PM // 3 CommentsHow To: Use IRC On The iPhone With Colloquy

I haven’t complained much about the lack of an SDK for the iPhone, mostly because the iPhone already has 90% of the apps I’d want on it. But IRC is one of the three biggies it’s missing, for me personally (the other two are instant messaging and a good RSS reader). This is definitely a hack, but it’s a fairly elegant one and Nathan reported success with it. Worth giving a shot, if you want to IRC on the road. Visit site »

Link // 07.03.2007 // 1:12 PM // 1 CommentThe iPhone’s Secret Blindspot

… Jobs does not understand the 21st century computer usage paradigm. In this century, people don’t send memos to each other. And that’s what email is - electronic memos. Today, people chat; they blog; they share multimedia like pictures, video, and audio; they flame each other on forums; they link with each other in intricate webs; they swap effortlessly between different electronic personae and avatars; they listen to internet radio; they vote on this that and the other; they argue on wiki discussion groups.”

Okay, two things:

  1. People don’t use e-mail today? Hello?! Do you have a job? Hell, a third of my day is often spent e-mailing.
  2. Isn’t almost everything that this guy says people do (instead of e-mail, I guess), possible on the iPhone?

Weird piece, man. Weird piece. Visit site »

Link // 05.22.2007 // 5:29 PM // 0 CommentsSlate: You cannot resist lolcats.

Im in ur mainstream media. I can has world domination? Visit site »

Link // 03.23.2007 // 7:15 AM // 0 CommentsNews Corp. and NBC to take on YouTube

This is about as likely to unseat YouTube as the Zune is to unseat the iPod. That is to say, not chance in hell.

By and large, traditional media companies are losing to tech companies and web startups. Why? Basically, because they’re followers. Very few of them have the foresight to snatch up the brilliant young minds in the web world, and instead just follow the leader (in this case, YouTube). But the Internet seems to favor innovative and first-to-market products. Traditional media hasn’t released many of either.

(All that having been said, there are a few traditional media companies who get it…thank God.) Visit site »

Link // 03.07.2007 // 2:40 AM // 0 CommentsAdult’ spam hits all-time low

Porn and such now accounts for only three percent of junk mail. My completely uneducated analysis is that porn, unlike drugs and financial “advice”, is something people actually seek out on their own. There’s less need to send unsolicited advertisements, because people actually want porn. Visit site »

Link // 02.07.2007 // 12:15 AM // 0 CommentsZe Frank: Waves

Probably my favorite episode ever. Or at least the episode most relevant and personal to me. Visit site »

Link // 01.25.2007 // 3:16 PM // 0 CommentsForbes: The Web Celeb 25

Forbes picked the 25 biggest web celebrities. They get the list right, for the most part, but I’m not sure Jessica Rose should be number one. Still, interesting read. Notables (to me, anyway) include Merlin Mann, Leo Laporte, Seth Godin, Jeff Jarvis, and Jimmy Wales. Visit site »

Link // 01.24.2007 // 8:26 PM // 0 CommentsJames Bennett: A chronicle of the Ages of the Web

A funny and entertaining spin on the history of the web, Tolkien style. I’ve suggested to James that he extend the narrative to include the Server Side Dominion, which was once ruled by Perl and CGI, before being taken over by PHP and Java, and more recently by modern, dynamic languages. Visit site »

Link // 01.08.2007 // 4:09 AM // 3 CommentsPavatar: decentralized avatars for blogs and the like

I really like this idea. For the most part, the implementation seems sound. I think I’ll be whipping up some Django code to implement it here. So if you comment on this site, make yourself a Pavatar. :) Via Matt. Visit site »

Link // 01.03.2007 // 10:30 PM // 0 CommentsSam Ruby: OpenID for non-SuperUsers

Maybe more appropriately titled “OpenID for less-Super Users”, this is a nice post covering the basics of the authentication system. Visit site »

Link // 01.03.2007 // 12:42 AM // 0 CommentsThe Long Tale of 2006

But what makes the long tail so disingenuous is that what happens in the long tail has almost no ramifications on what happens in the head.” Indeed. Insofar as I can tell, Newsvine is about the only “long tail” style web app that has made compensating the users for their user-generated content a part of their business plan. It frightens me to think just how much great stuff is on YouTube that the creators will never see a dime for. Long tail, my ass. Visit site »

Link // 12.12.2006 // 6:36 PM // 0 CommentsSome interesting market research on what people do online

Relatively new Internet activities such as blogs, video, and phone calls are the fastest-growing in terms of usage, though old standby services like e-mail and shopping continue to dominate Internet users’ time.” Instant messaging, watching videos and downloading music are way up over last year, while reading news, sports, finance, and job searching are down. Visit site »