Archive for the 'blogs' Category
Friday, December 8th, 2006
Rafe Neeldeman responded with a comment on yesterday’s post with a link to more details from the discussion over at his blog. The ideas is beginning to take form. I’m thinking it would be a good idea to get the guys at Twitter involved. Seems that they have the infrastructure already in place to get mobile message-response going. Twitter mashed up with Platial for a trip status updater. I think another layer to add would be an emergency contact round-robin. If you stray from course or fail to respond to a check-in, your emergency list will be contacted who will then be responsible for assessing the severity/lethality of the situation and calling the authorities if necessary.
A Webware challenge: Make cell phones better lifelines
Posted in ideas, moblog, Web 2.0, On the Internet, links, blogs | No Comments »
Sunday, November 12th, 2006
I’m loyal to digg to a fault. I’m not the kind of guy who gets the scoop on stories on digg. But I do DIGG stories on a regular basis and depend on digg to send me interesting content. I am, to be certain, much more loyal to digg than reddit or newsvine. I don’t know why. Maybe it’s just the popular hang-out I dig, so to say.
However, one of the problems I have with Digg is the fact that there doesn’t seem to be a place to DIGG stories that fall outside of the interests of their tech-base. Digg, and if you get dugg in particular, can be a very powerful promotional tool. As a fan of LifeHacker (and would-be advertiser, would that I had the budget to do so) I know firsthand the power of having a front page DIGG story. Lifehacker Editor Gina Trapani told me recently that when Lifehacker recently launched a feature which allows readers to DIGG a story from withing the story itself (a simple feature) that it helped move the traffic needle. DIGG, she claims, can account for an additional 40,000 + page views to a particular story if the story makes it to digg’s front page.
(more…)
Posted in blogging, Web 2.0, rant, random, On the Internet, blogs | 1 Comment »
Wednesday, October 25th, 2006
If the Sudanese Government can expel a UN Envoy from Darfur because of what he says on his blog, how would the blogosphere react? The time is now for bloggers around the world to speak up and take action for the benefit of the 200,000 dead and 2.5 million refugees in Darfur.
It’s autumn in America. That means it’s time for football on Saturdays, raking leaves, and gaining all the weight you’ll resolve to lose right around January 1. Autumn is also the season where broadcast television gives us some new stories to wrap our noodles around. On Sunday night chances are you and most of your friends are watching one or more of the following: Sunday Night Football on NBC, Extreme Makeover: Home Edition on ABC, or 60 Minutes on CBS. Each varies in its direction and degree of impact on society and culture. Sunday Night Football is an entertainment lobotomy - the end result is not to be inspired or motivated for world change. Extreme Makeover, on the other hand, does for do-gooders what ought to be done. I have no problem taking my shameless Sears and Ford promos with an hour-long rebuilding of a deserving American life. 60 Minutes has been a Sunday night mainstay on broadcast television for over 38 years now. It consistently pulls in high ratings and has a simple, formulaic television journalism style that can be copied but rarely matched by the other networks (20/20, 48 Hours, try as they might).

(more…)
Posted in blogging, rant, random, reviews, On the Internet, articles, blogs | No Comments »
Thursday, September 14th, 2006
There’s a very subtle mention of Dandelife in this article on the Read/Write Web blog from this week. In it we are used an example of a web app that’s useful for something. And that’s that.
I have insight to the web desktop debate as well. But I’ll do that over there.
Webified Desktop Apps vs Browser-based Apps
Posted in nods, Web 2.0, On the Internet, links, articles, blogs | No Comments »
Friday, August 18th, 2006
Leah Peterson did a little interview with me this week. If you have any questions about the who, the what and the why of dandelife.com it’s a dern good place to start.
Link
Posted in nods, reviews, On the Internet, links, blogs | No Comments »
Friday, August 18th, 2006
John just sent me this link. It’s a good story on a vernacualr photography blog called bigghappyfunhouse. Love the site because it’s one of those rare nostalgaic gems that reminds you just how rich, beautiful and storied the past is. This particular post is about the end of an era at Comisky Park - where the Chicago White Sox used to play. Well-written and worthy of a place on dandelife.
bighappyfunhouse • found photos. free pie. • hi andy
Posted in blogging, storytelling, photoblogging, On the Internet, blogs | No Comments »
Thursday, August 17th, 2006
I read about this insanely detailed, very well-written, astutely-researched e-Book on the Beatles Revolver album in this week’s Rolling Stone. Sure enough, I found an insanely detailed, very well-written, astutely-researched e-Book on the Beatles Revolver album at the end of the road. Any student of rock, fan of the Beatles or armchair pop-culturist would love to mosey on down abbey road and download a free copy of this e-Book. It’s long so you may want to print out a few pages and consume over a few nights.
Abracadabra: The Beatles: Revolver
Posted in blogging, lifecasting, random, On the Internet, links, blogs, biography | No Comments »
Monday, August 7th, 2006
In this month’s Seed Magazine, there’s an article on page 43 by Sean Carroll, a cosmologist at the University of Chicago, about the arrow of time. It’s a two-page spread about how time - unlike space - only makes sense when it is observed going in one specific direction. You can look in a mirror and your surroundings still make sense, as it were. But if you watch a movie backwards, on the other hand, the mirror world backwards world makes no sense at all.
I won’t go into detail (for that, you can pick up a copy of Seed Magazine yourself) about why and how time trajectories may actually begin to make sense but I will say that from a Dandelife point of view, there’s nothing to worry about time suddenly beginning to flow backwards. It’s just a natural side-effect of blogging about your past.
Sean is one of the bloggers at CosmicVariance.com. It’s a fun blog and well worth a daily ping. If you like science, the observable universe and grasping at knowing things that would prefer to be cosmic secrets, especially.
Posted in ideas, dandelife, On the Internet, articles, blogs | No Comments »