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Simon Dickson's gov-tech blog, active 2005-14. Because permalinks.

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  • 7 Feb 2006
    Uncategorised

    Google brings chat to email

    Google just has a habit of getting things right, don’t they? Esther Dyson thinks it’s ‘blind evolution… they don’t really see where they’re going (and) neither do we.’ But it keeps delivering. (Thanks to Lloyd for the link.)

    Today’s hot news is the integration of instant messaging within Gmail – without the need for Google’s IM/VOIP client software. On reflection, of course, this is the most natural thing in the world. Don’t you find yourself, all too often, firing emails back and forward to someone, when an IM session would be much smarter? Er… so why didn’t everyone else think of it? And full marks for just doing it, without a teaser announcement.

    I use Gmail for (pretty much) all my email these days. This is why. I’m sorry for even thinking about switching to the new Hotmail, guys. Just give us something like Windows Live Domains next, please.

  • 6 Feb 2006
    Uncategorised

    links for 2006-02-06

    • 30 Boxes
      The online calendar app with all the buzz.
      (tags: web2.0)
    • Sifry’s Alerts
      Technorati chief David Sifry has as good an overview of the blogging business as anyone. His website tracks 27.2 million blogs, a figure that is doubling every five and a half months. His regular ‘state of the blogosphere’ reviews are full of good data.
      (tags: blogging ephemeral.work)
  • 6 Feb 2006
    Uncategorised

    Al Jazeera in English

    There’s no doubt what the most intriguing media launch of the year will be. There’s now a likely launch date of ‘late April or May’ for Al Jazeera International, the English-language channel from the (in)famous Arabic news network. A piece in today’s Guardian announces Rageh Omaar as their latest signing, alongside David Frost, Stephen Cole and Osama bin Laden. 🙂

    I’m genuinely surprised to see they haven’t changed the channel’s name. English-language culture is so used to being dominant, it’s going to sound odd hearing someone say in English, with the most Home Counties of accents, ‘you’re watching Al Jazeera International’ (or even ‘AJI’). And being realistic, the brand doesn’t start with a clean reputation – fair or otherwise. The Guardian reveals:

    ‘During the course of a day, AJI will follow the sun around the globe, broadcasting for four hours from Kuala Lumpur, 11 hours from Doha, five hours from London and four from Washington. Each team, more or less, will determine its own news agenda.’

    … which sounds like a fascinating concept, although not too far removed from the practicalities of something like Sky News, with its various shifts through the day.

    Most intriguing will be its use of external contributors. It could – conceivably – become a model of delegated, if not exactly ‘citizen’ journalism. Its website for contributors promises:

    ‘Al Jazeera International Programme Department will not have legions of in-house producers. Instead we want to make the best freelancers and independents a part of the organisation. To enable this we have created this extranet commissioning system which will allow and encourage journalists worldwide to pitch stories and receive rapid decisions… Underlying all this is the channel’s mission to explain the world through the eyes of real people. From the specific to the general, the camera on location to the debate in the studio. But witnesses, on camera, come first.’

    What impact will it have? Well, you can’t exactly argue with Al Jazeera’s brand recognition. 😉 Its web presence ranks among the world’s top 250, although the English-language web service only accounts for 8% of its total traffic. It’s going to be a hard sell, but they have a good balance of old faces and new thinking. With no legacy to hold it back, and a maverick reputation to maintain, it’ll certainly be interesting to observe, if not to watch.

  • 6 Feb 2006
    Uncategorised

    Blogs on content sites: first sighting

    Just spending a bit of time cruising round the various US sports sites, to see who’s doing what with Superbowl coverage – when I noticed that Foxsports.com is offering readers the ability to create blogs. Fairly bog-standard as blogs go, really: and most disappointingly, no (evident) particular attempt to tie the blogs to Foxsports.com content, in either direction.

    I’m glad to see this happening, but I expected much more (although to be fair, it looks like the project manager recognises it’s only a first step). Imagine how it could be. The big content sites get lots of extra content, lots of extra ad impressions, and the goodwill of the blogosphere. Bloggers get lots of lovely photos and audiovisual to complement their passionate ranting, which – frankly – is usually more fun to read than the usual bland match reports. Readers have a natural ‘speakers’ corner’ destination for when they want something a bit more ‘juicy’, a bit more ‘us’. The brand is seen as ‘ours’, not ‘theirs’, and in step with the whole ‘2.0’ zeitgeist. Everyone’s a winner.

    Sooner or later, a content site will work this out. Allowing readers to create amateur blogs alongside professional editorial, with the usual blogging techniques to tie the two together. Movies seem to be the most natural topic for this: lots of content, lots of copyright-released media assets to offer your bloggers, and everyone has an opinion. There’s even a natural revenue model, in the form of profit-sharing on cinema ticket or DVD sales. Amazon/IMDB, what’s keeping you?

  • 5 Feb 2006
    e-government

    Steve Rubel on press releases

    Steve Rubel makes some fair points about the future of press releases. I haven’t made a secret of my firm belief that press officers’ days are numbered, nor of my dream of ‘taking down’ a Whitehall press office. We’ll still need media relations managers, press conference organisers, cuttings reviewers and communications writers. But it simply won’t be the all-powerful press office of old.

    I’ve spent a lot of time in press offices in the last couple of years. Many incoming phone calls, perhaps the majority, are met with the response: ‘have you looked at the website?’ I’m sure press officers know which way the wind is blowing. But I’m equally sure that, having spent years looking down on the ‘nerds’ in the web team, they won’t be keen to admit defeat.

    ‘Press releases’ (note the quotes) are as good a starting point as any for a discussion thread. It makes sense to tie any press release mechanism into the ‘right now’ search engines like Technorati. All of these are good things… and as Steve points out, they’re going to happen anyway, so you might as well be part of it. The organisation might even profit from doing so.

  • 5 Feb 2006
    Uncategorised

    30boxes justifies the hype, probably

    No doubt which web-based calendar service is getting all the hype: 30boxes just opened the doors on its beta phase, and at first glance, there’s some merit to the industry buzz. I really like the way you only have to fill in a single text field to create an entry: ‘Trip to London tomorrow 5pm’ will create an appointment in your calendar for the following day. It’s Web 2.0, so naturally there’s RSS left, right and centre. A nice touch to let you browse back in time through your Flickr photos.

    There’s a fundamental problem with these calendar services. You’ll only appreciate how good they are when you put your whole life in their hands. And are you prepared to risk doing that with an untested beta product? Well, yes. There’s enough immediately visible in 30boxes to suggest that it’s the one to watch. But until there’s a way to sync up with Outlook, and thence to my Windows Mobile PDA, I’m no more than an interested onlooker in this space. As soon as someone cracks the sync’ing, though, I’m ready to jump at it with open arms.

  • 5 Feb 2006
    Uncategorised

    RSS crossing the chasm – and plenty more to come

    Dave Winer says he knows what RSS needs to break through; Robert Scoble says it already has. I’m with Dave on this one… I’m not sure Robert’s wise to take a gathering of web 2.0-literate blog-savvy cognoscenti as a representative sample. (Frankly, I’m surprised that only 80% of the attendees at a conference like LIFT were hooked into RSS.)

    Having seen the new IE7 beta, I’m more convinced than ever about the potential for RSS, and the likelihood that Microsoft’s products – Vista and Internet Explorer, via the Windows RSS Platform – will carry it into the mainstream. The next couple of months are going to be very interesting, as developers discover what can be done with the centralised Common Feed List and Feed Store.

    It was one of those light-switch moments when I first saw an illustration of Geoffrey Moore’s Crossing The Chasm theory. He breaks the ‘product life cycle’ for new technology into five chunks, with a big chasm between the ‘visionaries’ and the ‘pragmatists’. Think of any new technology, and it’s easy to identify the ‘crossing the chasm’ moment: the iPod’s impact on digital music distribution, for example. I suspect we’ll come to see the release of IE7 as being the moment RSS crossed the chasm.

    By the way, Dave is right to point out the potential disconnect with online tools like Bloglines. So I’m delighted to spot this in a post by one of Microsoft’s RSS team:

    When you discover and subscribe to feeds in IE7, it adds them to the Common Feed List and the new subscription is available to other applications. Not only can the user benefit from multiple applications using the Common Feed List, but we expect that over time, online services will provide tools that synchronize the Common Feed List with their services. This will allow roaming of the user’s subscription list not only between applications, but also between computers.

    As more and more of us work from home, or multiple office locations, this is going to be critical. Glad to see it’s already being considered.

  • 3 Feb 2006
    Uncategorised

    Where are all the Brits?

    I’m genuinely shocked by the apparently small numbers of people in the UK using RSS. Every global study I’ve seen recently has shown Bloglines to be the most popular tool for RSS consumption. Helpfully, Bloglines tells you how many members are signed up to (almost) every feed. I’d say that makes the Bloglines community as representative a sample as you’ll get (without really trying). When you dig around the numbers, it’s quite startling.

    The most popular single feed on Bloglines, after Bloglines’s own (for which data isn’t published), is Slashdot – with just short of 60,000 subscribers. The BBC’s main international news feed is #6, with over 35,000 subscribers. How many does the main UK news feed have? As I type this… just 844. The international sports feed has 3,237 subscribers, the UK feed only 149.

    Either Brits don’t like Bloglines, although I can’t think of any reason why not, or any alternative mopping up the UK marketplace… or Brits don’t do RSS. Weird.

  • 2 Feb 2006
    Uncategorised

    French media's joint RSS push

    Doing some unexpected research on international use of character sets (thanks again, IE7!)… and I came across something called AlertInfo, which I hadn’t heard of before. Basically, it’s an open-source RSS reader for the French market, produced by an organisation called Geste – ‘groupement des editeurs de services en ligne’. You don’t exactly need an A-level to translate that, do you? 🙂

    Nothing spectacular about the software, at first glance. What’s remarkable is that it’s an initiative supported by a large number of competing French media players – such as newspapers Le Monde, Le Figaro and Liberation – with the apparent aim of extending RSS takeup, in the interests of the industry as a whole. Can you see that happening in the UK?

  • 2 Feb 2006
    Uncategorised

    IE7: be careful what you wish for

    The novelty factor of having a new beta of Internet Explorer v7 has worn off rather quickly. Suddenly I’m looking at sites I’ve set up in the past, some with very high profiles – and we have some serious layout issues to resolve, like key homepage content just disappearing.

    As the Microsoft IE team explains in this MSDN article:

    ‘Internet Explorer 7 contains a number of improvements to cascading style sheet (CSS) parsing and rendering over IE6. These improvements are aimed at improving the consistency of how Internet Explorer interprets cascading style sheets as recommended by the W3C.’

    Improvements, improvements, improving… OK, OK, we get the message. Yes, in the long run, this is great: I’m sure we’ve all spent ages crafting pages in Firefox, only to see some horrendous results in IE6 (or vice versa). Hooray for standards, etc etc. And in the immediate term, there’s no need for panic, as IE7 is currently only in beta, and hence limited in its circulation.

    But somewhere in between, there’s the reality that IE7 is now ‘out there’, and judging by comments emanating from Redmond, is more-or-less feature-complete. When they write on their blog:

    It’s a difficult challenge to keep compatibility with sites and apps but break compatibility for standards compliance, and we would appreciate you checking your sites and making necessary changes where you’ve hacked in non-standard stuff for IE in the past.

    you don’t have to read too far between the lines. The message is ‘hey, you wanted standards compliance, you got it.’ And guess what: now we have to deal with it.

    This is your head-start: use it, before IE7 goes final, and Vista hits the shops.

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