Blog

  • Lafayette Project… still secret, but…

    The Lafayette Project is still under wraps, but MegNut and two other early bloggers are the founders, and at least in what little they say, I think they are tackling a real problem. That problem is “We want to help readers browse weblogs when they *don’t* know what they’re looking for.” (The entire admittedly vague explanation.) This problem is what I meant when I wrote

    One challenge to part of Chris Anderson’s quote… “you fire the information out there, and interested people will find it.” I don’t believe it will always be found. In fact, I think that’s blogging’s greatest weakness — it’s not good at opening up to non-bloggers. (full post)

  • Enabling comments

    Should not be so hard to do, but I found the instructions, so we’ll see if this works.

  • Too much typing

    Watched 12 hours of user tests over the last two days, typing into my work blog the entire time… more than 40 pages of single-spaced transcripts/notes, on my laptop without the ergonomic keyboard. Ouch. But also used the opportunity to make my blog more of a public item at work, to positive response. Since a real transcript costs $80 per tester (we’ll order a few of them anyway, for future use), I’m both giving my take on the tests and spreading the word far and wide… at least internally. But I need to set up the home computer, at least, with voice activation. How do software programmers, who avoid meetings, etc., keep typing 100% of the time?

  • How will my assumptions hold…

    Bringing in real people today to look at some new ideas at work. This is labeled ‘user testing’ — but it really means ‘assumption testing.’ Various ideas and strongly-held beliefs make their way into concrete form (in this case, web pages) based on gut instinct, log files, and compromises between internal consistuents. Now we really see what people think. I hope the folks coming in today are talkative: we should pay them by the word, because the more they explain the why behind their actions, the more we’ll learn. I’d love to do testing based on what’s been live for 2+ years almost as much as the prototype we’re showing today, but that will have to wait.

    This small, new site has more machine ‘readers’ than humans. And I know how much trouble we go to at work to screen out the machines. What I haven’t done at work, because the scale is impossible, is look at the log files directly, as Tim Bray suggests. The log files are raw, unfiltered, and probably confirm that even in an active, information-seeking world — we’re all using tools to help bring us that information.

  • 1,000 words

    I’m not going to do it, but I can write 1,000 words a lot easier than I can find/draw/photograph a picture to tell the same story. I find it frustrating to work with people who are need visuals because I have a harder time explaining myself. But it’s not worth beating my head against the wall. I just need to find the right tools for translating verbal ideas into graphic form. I am sorely lacking in this department, one of the many reasons I was thrilled to just re-use an existing theme for this site. Any suggestions for ‘graphics for word weenies’ programs? I’ve used Visio, but feel like that’s overkill, and feels too formal. For output, I want nice web-friendly formats. I care little about resolution. This isn’t a burning issue for me, but it’s one of those areas where I know I need help. There are others, but you don’t need to hear about all of them. 😉

  • How I benefit from the…

    Tiny, tiny example. Yesterday I noted that I was trying ImageWell, which (I now know) I came across via John Robb’s blog. I had one odd crash later that day, after upgrading to MacOS X 10.2.5. I didn’t think much of it, nor connect the dots. But I later read Chris Gulker was also trying ImageWell, and having some problems since upgrading to 10.2.5. I was fortunate enough to follow in his footsteps, and it seems like the author of ImageWell helped Chris track down a solution in no time (basically, quit the application, delete the preferences file, and restart the application). One three-way dialog between parties unknown to each other which resulted in two satisfied customers, neither of whom had to pay, since ImageWell doesn’t appear to ask for/require payment. My thanks to Chris for responding to my comments on his site. Maybe it’s time for me to enable comments.

    My wife doesn’t understand why I want to blog. This is one small example.

  • ImageWell… I’ll try it out

    Low on my list, but high on my family’s, is getting more pictures of the boy on his website. I’ve been letting it go for at least 6 months now. In part, this is due to iPhoto disrupting my old process, and me not pushing through to find a new way. I forget where I just came across ImageWell, but I had bookmarked the site, and I’ve now downloaded the application. We’ll see. My only annoyance during the investigation and download process was not knowing whether the software is freeware or not. I will pay for software if I find it really useful, but before I try something, I prefer to know whether it’s fully functional, a demo, etc.

  • Publish and forget

    Via Jon Udell’s comment on overlapping scopes, I found and read Chris Anderson’s essay titled “What is a blog?”. I’m glad I did. This topic could be dismissed as more navel-gazing here (blogging about blogs, etc.). But I think this public distillation of the benefits and uses of this form of communication will help clarify what’s important, useful, and effective about blogs. Without waiting to explain what’s going on, most of us are just jumping in. If it’s rewarding, however you define that, you continue. I have been trying to explain why more people at work should be publishing blogs, and why we as a company should consider public-facing blogs, too. When I run into skepticism, I want to have direct answers. The phrase “publish and forget” is one memorable benefit. Here’s the context:

    One reason I believe that blogs are great for corporation internal communication is the question of distribution lists. Inside of Microsoft we live and die by email. However the constant spam of email to large distribution lists ends up drowning out the important information. For many types of communication (but not all) blogs provide a better way of communicating. There are many cases where you as the publisher of a piece of information don’t know who would be interested. Blogs are a way to “publish and forget” – you fire the information out there, and interested people will find it. Once I add our internal blog server to the corporate search service, suddenly I could find people that worked on products that I wanted to communicate with. Amazing. [Chris Anderson, SimpleGeek.com]

    While I love the phrase ‘publish and forget’ — it underlines the simplicity — I don’t like the word forget… because often my point in blogging something is not to forget it. If I blog it, I want to remember it, at least. I also want to share things, but first and foremost I’m sharing with myself.

    I appreciate the digital form because you can say the same thing (without repeating yourself) to many, many people. When I publish something to my blog, it’s at least in part because I don’t want to have to repeat myself the next time the subject comes up. Of course, that requires introducing people to your blog. At work, with my internal blog, I’ve been doing that slowly… once you’re public, you have a reputation to maintain!

    Back to the main point… email is the #1 application on the web, with instant messaging nearly as popular (anyone know if/when it will catch up to email?). The reason blogs are continuing to grow is that it’s yet another form of communication, not ‘just’ publishing. (I work for a media company. My father worked for a book manufacturer. My grandfather was a textbook publisher. I like publishing.) Also, blogs are growing, in part, because those most dependent on email are finding it harder and harder to keep the signal-to-noise ratio high. I wonder if we solved the spam problem, would blog growth slow? I don’t think so, but interesting idea.

    One challenge to part of Chris Anderson’s quote… “you fire the information out there, and interested people will find it.” I don’t believe it will always be found. In fact, I think that’s blogging’s greatest weakness — it’s not good at opening up to non-bloggers. If you’re within one of the various circles of influence, you’re often aware of the general meme of the day/week/month, and these circles of influence don’t require participation beyond regular reading. For example, I’ve been reading the well-known bloggers a lot longer than I’ve been blogging. But what if you don’t blog? What if RSS is an acronym you don’t understand (let alone debate what it stands for)? There are plenty of smart people who don’t (yet?) blog, but having them as part of the audience, if not the conversation, is important in the long run. Maybe the explosion of RSS-reading applications, some of which introduce the concept under the guise of familiar applications like Outlook, will bring blogging that much closer to transparent/mainstream in the next year. I think it’s going to take longer than that.

  • Blurring the lines

    I’ve been up for over two hours already, and at least one hour of that was spent on a work project. Then I had breakfast with my son. Now I’m headed off to the office. The point? Where do I draw the line between work and home? It’s a wavy, thin line, to be sure. I’m not connected to all my work resources at home because MacOS X is more of a challenge for the work VPN… and that, ironically, sometimes makes me more productive. I have to focus and am less prone to the distraction of the newest problem (of whatever importance). I certainly send myself a lot of email between home and work. What does that mean? Other than the fact that my memory has become digitally dependent?

  • Elaborate joke, or real? Either…

    I received an email this morning inviting me to submit a video about my blog for possible inclusion in a television pilot about blogging. Quote:

    “We want to bring this phenomenon of personal expression to television for the very first time, and have been scouring the web for appropriate sites. Your web site seems like a potentially great fit for the show.”

    Scouring? More like scraping, it seems. A potentially great fit? I’ve been blogging for two weeks this round. Somehow I’ll bet every single person who received this email is a ‘potentially great fit’ — call me cynical, but…

    Here’s the full text of the email. Judge for yourself. Have others received the same email? I’m guessing hundreds if not thousands of these unsolicited emails went out to any bloggers who happen to use Radio Userland, or who post their plaintext email on their site.

    I didn’t start a blog to become famous on TV. I started a blog as a personal record, a chance to practice what I preach, an opportunity to add my voice to the conversation going on between the dozens of interesting bloggers I read now. I would like to be ‘famous’ for my words and ideas, or way of expressing them. But I think of that as ‘locally’ famous, among a small community of people whom I know and respect for their ideas, even if I’ve never met them.

    If they were going to send spam, why not at least show the sophistication to point people back to a blog? 😉