Archive for February, 2006

Buzzword compliant Blogging Application

logahead.gifI had the pleasure of checking out Logahead the other day and was thoroughly impressed. Especially since Logahead was designed and built by a 17 year old student from the UK. Turns out he wants to do game design, but he did a really nice job of developing a blogging application. Some one needs to hire this kid.

“Please note, logahead isn’t meant to be ‘the next big thing’ or a Wordpress replacement. I’m just a 17 year old student who wanted to learn a little about web coding and have a bit of fun. Enjoy!”

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Stick some music on your site with Stickam

stickam logoYou can Stickam video, music, photos and live video on your site for all to see, and for free. Stickam is a relatively new web product that allows you to upload, store and share your digital content. You can share your Stickam with anyone visiting your blog, myspace page or any site that allows you to customize your content . They give you unlimited bandwidth and 500mb of storage, which is not bad. The only thing I noticed that bothered me was that they don’t have a batch upload tool for music. I don’t want to upload 500mb of music, 1 song at a time. For pictures you can upload up to 15 at a time. I’m sure this will get worked out in future releases.

I haven’t really tried this out on my web site yet, so this post will be the first test. I plan on putting and permanent Stickam up on my personal Blog. When I get that up I’ll let everyone know.

Go signup for Stickam.
You can read more about Stickam from mashable and Download Squad and techcrunch.

Note: I originally posted this with the live Stickam player loading in this post. Well, turns out, it was not loading everytime like it should so I took it down and replaced it with a gif.

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Edgeio launches private preview

edgeiologo.gifThis past weekend, Michael Arrington and company sent out invites for a sneak preview of the new classified site, Edgeio. I have to start by saying that Edegio is one of the most beautifully designed sites that I’ve seen in a long time (thanks to Fred Oliveira). Here’s how Edgeio explains what they do:

edgeio dynamically organizes listings published from RSS enabled websites making them discoverable via the edgeio website and through an open set of web services. Our goal is to give publishers of all sizes the means to control how their content is published, discovered, and consumed. By doing so, edgeio provides everyone easy, up to date, access to content from the Internet’s edge.

Basically, edgeio aggregates content from any RSS enabled website. More specifically, they allow you to put a classified ad on your site, tag it as “listing”, and edgeio will pull that info from your site, via RSS, and organize it in the appropriate category on edgeio. I think this is a great concept, especially now that more people and companies are using blogs and making their content RSS accessible.

claim_pic.gifSigning up was very easy, as they don’t require a bunch of unnecessary information. However, claiming my blog was slightly confusing; they didn’t say anything about entering my rss feed but only stated to enter “website url”. After a couple of tries I figured it out though. They just need a little more information/explanation. They also require a little snip of code to be put in your code or on your listing page, so that they can “validate” your site. The other thing I noticed is their categories are slightly “jumbled” and has the potential of getting really crazy depending on how those categories are created. I would assume that they’re created based on categories set up by the site that they pull the listing from. Either way, I’m sure they’ll figure a good way to handle this in the long run.

banner_pic.gifAs I mentioned before, edgeio is very well designed and for the most part has intuitive navigation. They smartly used AJAX in several places and have RSS feeds for all of the information that you could possibly want. Edgeio also offers a banner code to put on your page, or I guess on any site to help promote your listings. Another cool thing I noticed is that you can link your profiles from ebay, linkedin and Flickr, with the hope of having potential buyers get to know/trust you a little better. I hope they will come up with some sort of rating/reputation system in the future.

profiles_pic.gifOverall, I think edgeio is a great concept. I do however, see a long hard road a head of them for acquiring user, both sellers and buyers. I hope they have some great marketing ideas up their sleeves. I’m not so sure if they’re going to be the ultimate destination for all classifieds but I do see them being a great source for employment and business related listings. I’ve seen a few articles questioning if edgeio will be they Ebay killer. I don’t ever see this happening but I do think, if enough people adopt this concept, then they could be a Craigslist competitor.

I wish edgeio much success and I for sure will use them for all of my future classified listings. I would encourage others to give them a try as well.

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Techcrunch wraps up another party

techcrunch.gifAs many of you already may know, Techcrunch had another party last night. Sounds like it was the biggest and most organized of the Arrington parties so far. You can see pictures from the party here.

I noticed today that Mike Davidson of Newsvine posted on his blog “7 Things I Learned From The TechCrunch Party”. It was an interesting post from his Seattle point of view.

Additionally, I received an invite for Edgeio today. Which is a Michael Arrington venture. Edgeio looks great. I plan on having a in-depth profile of Edgeio on Monday.

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Thisweekintech podcast with Goowy.com

Amber MacArthur and Leo Laporte from thisweekintech have a good PodCast interview with Alex Bard of Goowy.com. Go check it out. Goowy has some cool new features coming soon.

I did a couple of posts previously, about Goowy, here and here.

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Public lists for “listers”

listable_logo.pngSeems like every time I check out Digg or Reddit, someone has posted a “top 10” list for something. Seems like a lot of people are list crazy; I’ve even been known to make a list or two.

I came across a link (bet you thought I was going to say list?) the other day to site called Listable. Turns out, it’s a pretty cool web service.

By using Web 2.0 features such as AJAX, folksonomy (tagging), social elements such as voting/commenting and the listible’s listonomy (listing), resources can be sorted in a way that will be digestible. You can search what you need quick. You can contribute your resources easier.

That’s a very confusing way of saying that Listable is a service that allows you to make a list of anything, tag it and share it with the community. Check out the “Complete List of Web 2.0 Products and Services”

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Great art by Michael Leavitt

Just in time for Valentines Day, kind of. I guess if you’ve waited this long to get your girlfriend/boyfriend a Valentines Day gift. You’re screwed! Well, maybe next Valentines Day you can get Michael Leavitt to make an action figure of you and your spouse. Michael’s lives in Seattle and makes one-off action characters of artists, musicians, entertainers, and lately he’s been pushing the custom figure angle a lot more. He’s started doing custom wedding cake toppers, figures of people of themselves. If you’re getting married, then you have to get Michael to do a custom wedding cake topper for you. It’s a lot more personalized than the $9.99 generic cake toppers that you get at the craft store. Anyway, you can check out some of his work below ( love the Mary Kay Letourneau) and through the following links.

Here’s how he makes them
The Wedding Cake Topper Info
All of his work
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Dale Chihuly


Mary Kay Letourneau and Vili Fualaau

artarmyDavidBowie.jpg
David Bowie

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More Cool stuff from Yahoo

yahoo_logoLooks like yahoo has released source code for their UI Library and their Design Patterns. This is a very cool thing, well, if you’re into this sort of thing. It will be cool to dig around and see how they code stuff.

[via WeBreakStuff]

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‘Future of Web Apps’ slides From Tom Coates

Tom Coates has posted a great slide show presentation from his “Future of Wep Apps” presentation. Go check it out.

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Standardizing tags for band names at SXSW 2006

shadows_logo.gifYou might recall that I wrote a post back in November (Standardizing tagging, tags) that talked about the inconsistency’s with tag names. For example, if you go to Technorati and do a tag search for “web2.0”, you will get different results for “web20” and “web+2.0”. Essentially, they all are the same thing but, because people tag different from one another, there will always be some inconsistency.

Over at shadows.com they put together a list of all the bands that are going to be performing at SXSW (over 1,200) this year and suggest a tag for each band name. This is a pretty cool thing for bloggers and the media who will be attending SXSW in Austin, this March and writing about it.

How would you tag a band with a name like I Love You But I’ve Chosen Darkness? It turns out that the most common answer is not iloveyoubutivechosendarkness, it’s chosendarkness. Similarly, the most common tag for SXSW itself is not sxsw06, it’s sxsw2006.

This list from Shadows will make a great guide for the Record Labels as well.

Now, if only, someone would come up with some sort of “plug-in” that would make suggestions for standardizing tag names. Del.icio.us has a great recommendation feature for when you’re tagging your bookmarks but it would be cool if all of the other “tag based” web products would as well.

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