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

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  • 28 Jan 2008
    technology
    adobe, air, analytics, freebies, google, twhirl, twitter

    Breath of fresh AIR

    I’m finding more and more reasons to like Adobe’s new AIR technology. They describe it as ‘a new technology that makes possible exciting new software applications that merge the desktop and the web’; in practice, it opens software development up to those who chose to specialise in more ‘creative’ fields like Flash. And of course, because it’s AIR, the same app runs on both Windows and Mac (with Linux support  to follow).

    Two current favourite tools: Analytics Reporting Suite, for looking at your Google Analytics data; and Twhirl, a lovely little Twitter app. In both cases, the originating website was already perfectly usable, but the convenience of a desktop app takes it a step further.

    The Analytics tool is a reminder of the web’s limitations, even in the post-Ajax world: it’s just quicker, neater, and arguably prettier. And there are countless reasons to like Twhirl: you can log into several accounts at once; the interface removes the need to remember all those ugly Twitter codes; and there are ‘toaster’ alerts when a friend sends an update. Both are highly recommended… and free, obviously.

  • 25 Jan 2008
    company
    feedburner, harrisment, puffbox, wordpress

    Meet the new Puffbox site

    Everything seems to have rolled over successfully, so I think I’m now safe to talk about the new Puffbox.com site.

    The majority of Puffbox’s work since launching in April 2007 has been based around WordPress. I make no secret of my feelings for the product; so it was only natural that, at some point, I’d want to take control of my own affairs and build a self-hosted WordPress site from scratch.

    I found plenty of excuses not to abandon my long-established WordPress.com blog, but in the end, two milestones forced my hand: passing 50,000 page views, and Jeremy Gould‘s announcement of tomorrow’s UK Government Barcamp. As ever, a fixed date in the calendar soon focused the mind.

    An immediate question arose: which was more important, the blog or the company background? In the end, the blog won on points. For me anyway, the blog’s (almost) daily stream of news and opinions is the best indication of what I’m about. But the site still needed a solid corporate side, otherwise it was going to look like an amateur blogger in search of pocket money. Hence the split homepage, with a clear colour distinction between ‘company’ (white) and ‘personal’ (green).

    I designed it in collaboration with Jonathan Harris, a former colleague at National Statistics, now working freelance; he’s also done another piece of work with me, which we’ll unveil next week. All the templates were coded from scratch, although I took some inspiration from the Hemingway WordPress theme(s): particularly as regards the very vertical presentation, with the sidebar becoming a footer. Icons come from the Milk and Green set. The homepage ‘grid’ layout of recent posts is done using multiple WordPress loops, a technique I’ve had to perfect for several recent client projects.

    I’ve learned a few lessons in building the site, but most important of all is that you should always redirect your main RSS feed through Feedburner from day one. What a relief it was to flick the switch from old site to new, and see the subscriber base carry over (almost) seamlessly. The Feedburner stats are nice to have, but they are nothing compared to the convenience of having a perma-URL for your feed. Now it’s all free, there’s no excuse not to.

    And by public demand, there’s now also a link for the comments feed. Of course, being WordPress, the feed was already there if you knew where to look. But in honour of Alan in Belfast, first to comment on the new site, I added an explicit link – and named it after him. 🙂

  • 24 Jan 2008
    e-government, politics
    barcamp, paulmurphy, peterhain, reshuffle, walesoffice

    Panic over

    Well, that’s a relief. With Peter Hain resigning at lunchtime, there was a rush of quite rational speculation that the Wales Office might be folded into a new ‘department for the devolved bits’, covering Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.

    I’ve been doing a bit of work for the Wales Office over the last month or so, which I’ll (hopefully?) be unveiling at Saturday’s government BarCamp. I’m exceptionally proud of it, and I think it’s a potentially groundbreaking piece of work for e-government. But if Downing Street had announced the end of the Wales Office as a department in its own right, the whole point of my project would have disappeared. And for a moment this afternoon, it looked like my masterpiece might never see the light of day.

    Paul Murphy, I can’t tell you how pleased I am to hear of your appointment. I note he’ll also be chairing a ‘new cross-departmental committee on IT and information security – although the grammar of the No10 announcement doesn’t make clear if it means IT generally, or IT security specifically.

  • 24 Jan 2008
    Uncategorised

    New Puffbox.com site now live

    Thanks for coming. Now go away.

    As announced here a few weeks ago, I’ve taken the brave decision to leave behind my WordPress.com-based blog of two years standing, in favour of a self-hosted solution under my company Puffbox’s brand. It makes sense for all sorts of reasons I won’t list here. If you want to keep receiving my regular rants and reflections, you’ll now need to visit the all-new puffbox.com instead.

    If you’re signed up to the RSS feed, and you’re in the majority who changed their settings as instructed, you shouldn’t now have to do anything. If you didn’t, shame on you. Hurry up.

    I’m planning on leaving this site ‘live’ as an archive; in time, I may migrate all the old stuff over to the new site, but I’m reluctant to do so in these early stages, in case it’s seen as a ‘splog‘.

  • 24 Jan 2008
    politics
    blogging, kevinmaguire, mirror, newspapers, reshuffle

    The Mirror should be ashamed

    Maguire blog misses HainI’m sitting here at 6pm on a huge day in politics. A political heavyweight has unexpectedly resigned, freeing up two seats at the Cabinet table. We’ve got all the usual fun and games of the ensuing reshuffle – who’s up, who’s down, who’s been snubbed – and widespread speculation about a merger of several government departments, with an impact on the Ministry of Defence. It’s Gordon Brown’s first resignation, and there’s a good argument to say this is the blogosphere’s first scalp. It doesn’t really get any bigger.

    Over at the Mirror’s ‘Kevin Maguire & Friends‘ blog? Nothing all day. Not a peep, from Kevin or indeed his friends. My advice to the Mirror: kill the site now. If you can’t make it work today, you never will. Shameful.

  • 24 Jan 2008
    technology
    coffee, homeworking, tefal

    Three-second kettle: best gadget ever

    Three second kettleI am in awe of the latest gadget to appear in our house: the new Tefal QuickCup ‘kettle’. I don’t pretend to understand how it works; something to do with spirals. All I care about is: you fill it with cold water, you press the red button on top, and within three seconds it starts spitting out hot water at a coffee-friendly 85°C. There’s a built-in water filter, too.

    Even better, it can apparently ‘save up to 65% energy’ compared to a normal kettle… so it’s environmentally sound too! Granted, it’s a bit noisy, and it sprays a bit if you don’t put the mug relatively close up to the spout – but worst case scenario, it’s noisy and spitty for three seconds. I think I can put up with that.

    This totally redefines the process of making a cup of instant coffee, and my world is hereby changed for ever. Unfortunately, the inevitable result will be a dramatic increase in my caffeine intake. Amazon has them for less than £50. Coffee on demand, with a green conscience? For fifty quid? Come on, people. It don’t get much better.

  • 24 Jan 2008
    Uncategorised

    Whitehall staff have no life

    MySociety’s new travel-time maps are a fine piece of data visualisation / mashing, and a sociological warning.

    In his book Bowling Alone, Harvard professor Robert D Putnam concluded that ‘every ten minutes of commuting reduces all forms of social capital by 10%’. By which calculation, if you live more than 50 minutes’ travel from your workplace, your involvement in your community and society reduces to – er – zero.

    Meanwhile, the latest data from the Council of Mortgage Lenders shows first-time buyers are typically having to borrow 3.3x their income. And National Statistics data puts the median gross salary of a civil servant at ‘approximately £20,000 on an FTE basis’ (Sept 2006, see PDF).

    Put those numbers together with the MySociety maps, and the picture is pretty bleak: Whitehall staff on all but the highest salaries can’t expect to live anywhere near their work, and hence can’t expect to have any kind of a social (capital) life. We end up with a central government bureaucracy ever further distanced from the citizenry it’s trying to service. Or am I stretching things too far?

  • 24 Jan 2008
    e-government

    New FCO blogger: Kosovo calling

    Another new FCO blogger: this time it’s Ruairi O Connell, Deputy Head of the British Office in Pristina. ‘We are where we are,’ he writes in his first posting, putting his diplomatic training to good use. Sky News foreign affairs editor Tim Marshall is rather more forthright on his excellent blog: the ‘last question’ in the Balkan Wars, namely the fate of Kosovo, is about to be thrashed out one way or the other. Serbia is midway through a two-round Presidential election, with the ‘ultra, and I mean ultra-nationalist’ candidate winning round one; round two takes place on 3 February. An insight from the UK’s Embassy-in-waiting could be very timely indeed.

    I note, incidentally, that two senior FCO people spoke on Wednesday at a conference on ‘Transforming Public Sector Communications’, one giving a case study on the FCO’s blogging initiative. Would have been nice if they’d written some of it up on one of the various blogs.

  • 23 Jan 2008
    Uncategorised

    New Independent site: what an improvement

    There’s no denying the Independent’s new website is a dramatic, and I mean a dramatic improvement. (Mind you, it couldn’t have been any worse.) Presentationally at least, they’re right back up there with their ‘broadsheet’ rivals.

    They’ve struck an excellent balance, putting a lot of content and navigation options up-front, without becoming overwhelming. The use of Proximic to deliver related content seems to work well (although I hate the labelling); and the comment functionality, where they’ve chosen to use it, is nicely executed. Countless RSS feeds throughout the site – more than they publicise, as it happens. It looks like you can get an RSS feed of pretty much every level in the navigation structure, simply by adding /rss to the URL. In theory you can also get RSS feeds of search results, but it doesn’t seem to be working. Excusable teething troubles.

    Interestingly, when it comes to blogging, everything’s still over at Typepad. (I confess, I never knew they did so much blogging – but judging by the low numbers of comments, nor did/do many others.)

    According to the Press Gazette, the site ‘previously carried only news stories that had been repurposed from the newspaper’ – and having dropped by the site several times today, to see a virtually identical homepage, that’s still undoubtedly the core of the web offering. Sure, there’s a bit of ‘today’ copy from PA in there, but that doesn’t constitute rolling publication as such. I’m a bit wary of news that they’ve ‘taken on six members of staff to upload breaking news stories throughout the day’. We’ve surely gone beyond mere ‘uploading’, haven’t we?

    But that’s just nit-picking, isn’t it. Well done, Independent. You just caught up, big time.

  • 23 Jan 2008
    Uncategorised

    Telegraph's new election map

    I quite like what the Telegraph have done with their hexagon-based election map… a few holes in the data, slightly too long for comfort on a normal screen config, and a few not-quite-accurately-placed places (especially in NI), but a nice app nonetheless. I still have a soft spot for the Tetris-style presentation of the Electoral Calculus site, though.

    Oh… and while we’re on the subject of the Telegraph, full credit to them for embracing OpenID. On one hand, it’s a smart branding move: its readers see themselves as ‘Telegraph people’, so why not authenticate themselves against the Telegraph site? On the other, it’s smart project management: sometimes the best way to get from A to B is to go via C.

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