« June 2008 | Main | August 2008 »

July 2008 Archives

July 13, 2008

Twitter fun

I'm getting a lot out of running twitter thanks to Matthew Hall @aDb who put me on to the Sydney Twitter Underground Brigade STUB or @stub on twitter. They're a very interesting bunch of people, and they meet up in meat space very often. I'm using the very creative nick of @IanWoolf.

Twitter is a 140 character microblogging platform. The experience is a little like instant messaging, because people who follow your entries in the twitter window are able to reply to you and have a conversation. Unlike mailing lists you don't have to read every single message, and it doesn't clog your inbox. You can sample what is going on in your spare moments of rest or in the background. However unlike instant messaging, every tweet on twitter is a broadcast unless you flag it as a direct message. When you tweet a message on twitter, you don't just broadcast to every person who is following you, but also to the web at large. This means if someone is running a keyword search and you trigger a flag on their search, then they will notice you.

In my first week on twitter, I had just upgraded to Firefox 2.0.1.4 and it wasn't working. After spending most of a day trying to resurrect my customised profile, I complained on twitter. Straight away someone from Mozilla replied with a suggestion to fix things. I had a conversation and shortly restored my browser to working order. They had a constant search for all mentions of "firefox", so I just had to complain and the Gods of Mozilla heard my whine and came to my rescue.

I also have my twitter feed piped through to my facebook status timeline, so that my facebook friends also receive the messages I send. I'm currently following 79 people, a large number of whom I've met at STUB meetups or technical conferences such as PubCamp and BarCamp. Not all of these people follow me back. Such as @MarsPhoenix who tweets updates from Mars. In the same way I don't follow all of the people who follow me.

You can send and receive twitter updates on mobile phone as well as on computer, either by SMS, email, or internet. I just signed up for the beta version of a message by voice service as well, so if I get stuck in a lift again like I did the Wednesday before last, I will be able to broadcast my call for help to my twitter and facebook friends, and not have to rely on the indifferent service of the hotel staff or the lift company.

The social networking world is crazy with services in beta at the moment, all invitation-only while they get the bugs out, like gmail used to do.

July 23, 2008

Chris Watkins explains Appropedia

MP3
Chris Watkins spoke to me about the Appropedia project to make information about sustainable technology freely available where-ever its needed.

July 24, 2008

Burning stake




Burning stake


Originally uploaded by iwoolf.



Edwin at the Heretic's BBQ during World Catholic Youth Day Week in Centennial Park. What's a BBQ without a burning stake?

ABC unveils six-channel internet TV

ABC unveils six-channel internet TV - TV & Radio - Entertainment - theage.com.au

The Age reports that ABC have opened their broadband TV service where you can watch anything from ABC1 or ABC2 from the last 30 days as a stream in your browser for free.

iiNet currently are the only ISP who don't meter your ABC downloads. For iiNet customers, its like getting a free set-top box to watch ABC2, and a free ABC-only DVR - in your browser.

This is going to change the way many people watch and record ABC. Why record, when its waiting for you online?

The service is geographically locked by IP, which means if you're not living in Australia, you'll need to know how to spoof an Aussie IP to watch. Alternatively you could settle for downloading the many shows ABC have made available as video podcasts.

About July 2008

This page contains all entries posted to Here's Why in July 2008. They are listed from oldest to newest.

June 2008 is the previous archive.

August 2008 is the next archive.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.