It’s been up there for a couple of months, but I’ve only just spotted it: the European Commission’s channel on YouTube. You have to admire their choice of username, although the content is a bit dry and corporate. Embedding and comments are both enabled though, making them slightly more democratic than Downing Street.
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Guardian buys Kable
Interesting to see the Guardian splashing the cash for e-gov specialists Kable (aka kablenet.com, Government Computing, etc). Guardian boss Tim Brooks says it’s an ‘attractive market with good prospects for growth’. See coverage from acquiree and acquirer. If GNM wants to acquire any blogs in a similar territory, I’m open to offers. ๐
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My new Ubuntu laptop
Over the weekend, I finally took the plunge and installed Ubuntu Linux on my still shiny-new laptop. Contrary to Microsoft’s promises, Vista hadn’t made me go ‘wow’, not once. It was taking ages to boot up, and I really don’t like its networking functions. With virtually nothing on the new laptop, certainly nothing I needed to worry about losing, it seemed like the right time to try something risky.
Just as well: the Vista C and D drives were destroyed by the partitioning process. So I’m now using a Ubuntu-only laptop, as opposed to the dual-boot machine I had intended.
So far it’s an enjoyable experience, but I do want my Vista setup back – after all, I did pay for it. Like most Acer machines, my laptop came with a hidden partition, which should let me reinstall the factory Vista setup painlessly. Except it won’t. I’ve got a support call in with Acer HQ, but my guess is that since the hidden partition has swelled up from 2GB to 56GB, I need to repartition again.
Of course, Dell would have to pick today to announce the availability of pre-installed Ubuntu machines in the UK market…
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Sky News reporter files via Flickr 'n Twitter
Some fantastic experimentation going on at Sky News, with reporter Derek Tedder microblogging from the Heathrow climate change camp. He’s sending a steady stream of concise updates via an account at Twitter, with photos being uploaded to a Sky News account at Flickr. It looks like he’s using a Nokia N73 cameraphone, and twittering via IM.
This is precisely the kind of innovation Sky should be doing: free to do, using widely available tools, and on a story which (for now) won’t have any major impact on anything or anyone. If/when it all kicks off, presumably at the weekend when ‘direct action’ is threatened, it could really come into its own.
Oh, and incidentally… I note the Flickr account has been active for ages; and until now, appears largely to have consisted of uncredited viewer-submitted photos of the recent flooding. Which is as clear a breach of the Flickr community guidelines as I can imagine:
Donโt upload anything that isn’t yours.
This includes other people’s photographs and/or stuff that you’ve collected from around the Internet. Accounts that consist primarily of such collections may be terminated at any time.
At the present time, with 36 of the 37 pages being other people’s flood photos, I’d say that qualified as ‘primarily’. Danger, danger.
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Sky News joins Facebook
Hot on the heels of their showbiz-only app comes a full-on Sky News Facebook app. I still like the idea of RSS-to-Facebook, but to be honest, once I’d added the showbiz app, I forgot all about it. On reflection, why would I look at my own profile for content updates? Meanwhile, I’m seeing a steady stream of updates from Five Live, because it’s a ‘friend’. Maybe that’s the way to do it. Sky could change its status each time it has a (decent) ‘breaking news’ story: ‘Sky News is reporting that…’.
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Five Live's new logo
Radio Five Live has a new logo. I’ve always found it a bit weird for radio stations to have logos – but in these days of converged media, with screens on your radio, and radio on your TV, I suppose it makes sense. It’s a big number 5, in a circle, so it can’t have cost much. ๐ I only know this because it just popped up in my Facebook news feed. This stuff works, folks.
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Guardian launches social network (finally!)
The new website for The Guardian Weekly is the first really interesting development we’ve seen from Faringdon in quite a while. In print, it’s really a ‘best of’ selection from the daily newspaper, plus the Observer, Washington Post and Le Monde. Online, it’s going for something completely different.
The site splits in two. The ‘blue section’ is professionally produced editorial, ‘all linked by the common theme of reporting the experiences of individual people’. Blogging by proxy, if you like. The ‘brown section’, My Guardian Weekly, goes all social-networky. Once you register, you can submit articles for inclusion in the ‘blue section’; you can create a ‘watchlist’ of friends; upload photos; send ’email’; submit comments on ‘blue section’ articles; and see yourself, and fellow registered users, on a Google Map mashup. Oh, and it looks much more Guardian-y, too.
There’s also the intriguing notion of a ‘campaign on a major issue chosen entirely by Guardian Weekly readers and website users’. Social networking with a centre-left purpose? Intriguing.
Comparisons with the Telegraph’s equivalent service are inevitable. The key difference is that the GW site brings the users into the ‘proper’ editorial. My.Telegraph gives you a blog, but keeps you at arm’s length from the real journalism. GW doesn’t give you a blog (per se), but invites you to be part of the real journalism. Personally, that feels like a more engaging offer. But I guess they’ll have to set the bar relatively low; readers need to feel there’s a high likelihood of their writing being accepted.
Only the niche-market Weekly product for now… but I wouldn’t be the slightest bit surprised to see this as the ‘beta’ for a new Guardian Unlimited.
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If Google News really wants my comments…
Lloyd Shepherd hits the nail on the head. If Google News is going to start hosting original news content, in the form of comments from people involved, then it has moved from being a search engine for published news, to being a news publishing rival. I always felt that news publishers’ anger at Google News was misplaced. Far from building a business on other people’s content, Google News (surely?) acts as a generator of extra traffic for those very news publishers. But this changes things quite dramatically.
Or rather, it won’t. I just don’t see how it can possibly work. ‘Email us your rebuttals, and include some kind of identification method’? I’d have thought Google’s efforts would have been better directed at some kind of ‘related blog posting’ function. Maybe I could register my name with Google News, and when it sees me mentioned in a news story, it could check my blog for a relevant posting. (A bit like Technorati, but with proactive rather than reactive indexing, maybe?) I wouldn’t have thought it would be too difficult to find corresponding keywords.
It wouldn’t have to be blogs, necessarily. It could include press releases, speeches, transcripts, etc etc. Anything which counts as primary source material. So for example, any time you saw David Miliband quoted, you’d hit the Foreign Office ‘latest news’ page, and see what you could find. Any time something is quoted from the Commons, you’d scan the (almost real-time) Hansard transcript. Doesn’t that keep everyone happy?
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Thirty nine years, and we're still doing it
Here’s one for anyone with any experience in large corporate environments, particularly government.
Organizations which design systems are constrained to produce designs which are copies of the communication structures of these organizations.
You see this time and again in corporate websites. But depressingly, these words by computer industry veteran Mel Conway were written as far back as 1968.
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The death of cinema generally
Over at the Telegraph, Ian Douglas has some interesting ideas about your local cinema. It follows in the wake of comments by Dave Winer, prompted by his trip to see the Simpsons movie.
Home technology is rapidly catching up with cinemas, in terms of quality and pricing. You can buy a setup relatively cheaply, which is at least as good as the local multiplex, and has added conveniences. (I speak as someone who just bought a famous-name 42″ LCD TV for under ยฃ700. There are some benefits to being flooded, I guess.)
The exact same thing happened to amusement arcades: when the PlayStation brought true arcade-quality gaming to the living room, they failed to deliver something better. And there are few more depressing places than a seaside amusement arcade these days.