Chris Pirillo opens the Gnomedex conference and his Mom
decides to commemorate the event by taking a picture of him during his
intro.
Author Archives: John Keegan
More on Gnomedex
Chris Pirillo has posted some new bios for folks attending Gnomedex:
David Sifry – Technorati founder
Scott Gatz – Responsible for Yahoo!’s content syndication / RSS initiatives
Bob Wyman – CTO and co-founder of PubSub
Jason McCabe Calacanis – co-founder and CEO of Weblogs, Inc.
Scott Rafer – President and CEO of Feedster
Dean Hachamovitch – General Manager of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer team
I’m also posting this to test out a method to implement Technorati tags on BlogHarbor weblogs…
1 See you at Gnomedex!
I’ll be going to Gnomedex in 10 days and I am very much looking forward to it. It should be an exciting event, and I hope to learn a lot from the very smart folks who will be attending. Bob Wyman will be there, and I’m hoping to learn more about the Feedmesh from him; also looking forward to meeting Eric Rice, Roland Tanglao, Steve Garfield, and so many of the other folks will be at this event.
And if there are any BlogHarbor bloggers there, you know the first drink’s on me…
Please let me know if you would like to get together for any after hours sessions. 😉 日本語を話せる皆さん、いっしょに飲みませんか?
ISDN Pay Phones
Next to this batch of jidou hanbaiki or vending machines is an
ISDN phone. ISDN has been available on phone booths since the early
90s. These phones have an analog jack and an ISDN digital jack, make
sure you plug your laptop into the right one or Bad Things will happen.
Most ISPs can accept your connection as an ISDN connection for faster
speeds.
Of course, wi-fi and broadband/fiber-to-the-home have diminished the
importance and necessity of an ISDN connection, but at one time ISDN
was all the rage.
Did you know that the MP3 format was created to send audio over a dual
channel ISDN line? Using two 64 Kbps ISDN channels to create a single
128 Kbps, it was possible to transmit high-fidelity MP3 encoded audio
to a radio station, which changed the music industry in a way that was
not entirely planned for…
Vending machines
No set of pictures from Japan would be complete without some jidou
hanbaiki or vending machines. There may be as many as 5.5 million
of them in Japan, requiring the energy output of the equivalent of one
nuclear power plant to power all these machines. With more than 50
nuclear power plants currently operating in Japan, you could say that
2% of them are necessary just for the jidou hanbaiki.
1 BlogHarbor and Domination of the Blogosphere
I’ve seen a number of articles recently (like this and this) about why Yahoo, MSN, Google et. al. will crush companies like Six Apart and services like our BlogHarbor and I think the idea is ludicrous.
Will those companies be bigger than us? Pretty likely. Have more customers? Sure. But there’s not a reason in the world to think that they would crush us as in put us out of business.
Remember back five years ago this month (wow – has it been that long?) when NTT bought Verio for $5.5 billion? That was supposed to be the beginning of the end for the small web hosting companies. A watershed event – the takeover of web hosting by the bigcos.
Well, it never happened. Today there are thousands of thriving web hosting businesses. And there are great and profitable web hosting companies that have been created just in the last few years, when conventional wisdom would have told you that this had already become a commodity business and that creating a new web hosting company was insanity.
If you think Yahoo, MSN, and Google will suddenly become industry leaders at:
- Answering the phone when you want to know why your account isn’t working the way it should
- Replying to your email where you asked about some CSS code you can’t get working on your blog
- Helping you understand your billing options
- Creating a custom solution for you that isn’t “on the menu”
- Going the extra mile in helping you with an issue that is technically outside the “sphere of support”
then maybe you’re right, the bug guys will take over this industry. But I don’t think anyone would tell you that these are things that are viewed as the bigco’s strengths. When was the last time you called Google and asked them to explain to you why your site wasn’t ranked so well in their search engine? To help you fix your Blogger posting? Got a prompt reply from Microsoft about how to format a table on your MSN Spaces blog?
Why then, would you expect any of those companies to crush any company that can provide a comparable product or service with far better support?
You get what you pay for. There’s a reason that MSN Spaces, Yahoo 360, and Blogger are free: the companies that provide those services do not want to get into the support business. And web hosting – and its subset blog hosting – is inherently and primarily a support business, not a technology business. It’s much easier to create a scalable blogging platform than to support it. You only have to create it once, you’ll need to support it every day. Now that’s hard.
Hosting companies who understand this have nothing to fear from the big guys getting into blogging in a big way. Let them spend their marketing dollars convincing the public to get themselves and their businesses a blog. And when you or your family or friends or your business is feeling a little frustrated with the lack of support from your free blog provider, or are in need of something not on their menu (maybe a blog with a splash of domain name and a side order of email?), check us out: www.blogharbor.com.
Podcast icons
I was looking for podcast icons today and came across this source listing a bunch of options. If you’re looking to jazz up your blog layout with icons denoting your podcast feed and files, [blog.forret.com]has a great listing of icons you can use.
Internal Uses Of Blogs
Nice summary by Shel Holtz of the Internal Uses Of Blogs. This jumped out at me:
I’ve been engaged in employee communication for 28 years. When I started as an employee communications representative at ARCO in 1977, we used manual typewriters, a Compugraphics typesetting machine, and our primary communication vehicle was the weekly newspaper, the ARCOspark. I’ve watched all the advances in communication and few are as exciting as blogs.
He points out some of the internal uses at corporations would be:
- Executive blogs
- Alerts
- Projects
- Departmental
- Business literacy
Installing Fedora Core on the Mac mini
Colin Charles has an interesting article at the Red hat magazine on Installing Fedora Core on the Mac mini. He summarizes the installation of Red Hat Fedora on the Mac mini:
A pretty swanky mini box! That’s what the Mac mini is… tiny, aesthetically pleasing, and great with Linux. Save for the wireless, where a USB dongle might suit, everything pretty much works out of the box with Fedora Core 4 Test 3.
Mini servers, anyone?
True Hoop, True
I met sportswriter Henry Abbott at the recent NYC geek dinner; he’s got a new blog called True Hoop. Looks like he’ll be blogging the NBA scene; make sure to check it out if you’re a basketball fan.
And if you ever meet Henry, make sure to ask him to tell you what it’s like to go to a bagel shop in the midwest… Good luck with the new blog, Henry!
Pizza Dinner with Geeks in NYC
I went to a “geek dinner” in NYC on Monday night, a get together organized by Steve Rubel and Robert Scoble, which coincided with Dave Winer‘s birthday. I posted pictures here, and some on Fickr too, other Fickr pics are here and a movie is here.
It was an enjoyable night, and there were many very smart and interesting bloggers and tech folk there; I was able to meet many of them but missed most of them. Maultasch was there and he said he hated it, and I can very much see why. There’s a huge difference between the way that, say a group of sales and marketing extroverts might get together for fun and networking, and the way that self-confessed geeks get together…
Us geeks can be shy (Michael from Hacking Netflix and a few other folks notwithstanding). Maybe we could use a little structure with an informal gathering of 50 people. Opening welcoming remarks by the organizer, a simple ice breaker of some sort, a box of stickers from Staples for us to write our names on and slap on our shirts…
Maybe some folks might think that would go against the “grassroots nature” of this type of informal gathering, but my feeling is that it would make introductions easier and help take a little of the focus off the A-lister and put a little more on the guy next to you, enabling us to make more connections with each other. Making more connections with each other being one of the things that makes blogging such a worthwhile activity…