monkinetic weblog

Since 1999, IX Ed.

Archive for 2008

Distributed Social Networkers

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

Yesterday the news came out that Chris Messina, my DiSo co-conspirator, and Will Norris, author of the WP-OpenID plugin, are joining Vidoop to work on DiSo full time. This is excellent news, for Chris and Will obviously, but also for the ideas and ideals that DiSo represents.

DiSo’s stated goal is to be: “an umbrella project for a group of open source implementations of these distributed social networking concepts.” At the core, DiSo represents an ideal where online “social networking” is not limited to silo sites, where you can enjoy rich interactions with others in that silo at the expense of interacting with those outside. It also means that your online social identity is not a game of tetherball - where your idenity can follow you around some, but it’s still tied to that one provider (I’m looking at you, Google).

No, in the ideal that Chris, Will, Stephen Weber, myself, and many others envision, your identity, your friends/contacts, your interactions can be managed from a space that you control - your own site. This may be a weblog - WordPress is the DiSo Project’s first platform - or some other type of site, but it’s your site. And by building components on common internet standards (Microformats, OpenID, Oauth, XMPP, etc) your home on the web can join a larger network of people, regardless of platform, including but not limited to those users in the silos.

This is a large goal - a grand scheme if you will - and it’s being built in the open, piece by piece, by a group of developers who see the larger picture and are contributing their time, knowledge, and skills. Scott Kveton is someone who has been around the Open Web block and is excited about DiSo; by bringing Chris and Scott on board, he and Vidoop are investing in an open future that is looking bright for all of us.

MT Friends Progress

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

A few of you might be interested in my (frustratingly slow) progress on a Friends/Blogroll plugin for MT. You can watch it take shape in my Flickr set: MT plugin 101.

OpenID login broken?

Friday, April 25th, 2008

Apparently some readers have been having problems logging in with OpenID on the site (apparently related to this bug). I think I’ve fixed the problem - if you’ve been trying to login, please give it another shot and let me know if it works.

Happy Birthday Hubble!

Friday, April 25th, 2008

18 years ago today, in 1990, the Hubble Space Telescope was launched into orbit on the Space Shuttle Discovery.

the most sophisticated optical observatory ever placed into orbit around the Earth… After the U.S. Congress had authorized its construction in 1977, the Hubble Space Telescope was built under the supervision of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) of the United States and was named after Edwin Hubble, the foremost American astronomer of the 20th century. The HST was placed into orbit about 600 km (370 miles) above the Earth by the crew of the space shuttle Discovery on April 25, 1990.

Of course, it then nearly immediately needed corrective surgery:

About one month after launch, it became apparent that the HST’s large primary mirror had been ground to the wrong shape owing to faulty testing procedures by the mirror’s manufacturer.

(Via The Encyclopedia Britannica’s new free-to-bloggers-and-their-readers program, Image courtesy of HubbleSite)

Upcoming Movies

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

A list of upcoming movies I want to see this summer:

Twitter down, and I didn’t know about it

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008

Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol

B/c Twitter is frowned on at work, I don’t visit and did not know until last night that there was an ongoing outage in progress. Dave has one plan for a route-around, I’ve got another:

It’s been discussed extensively elsewhere, but I’ll repeat it here: I think what might do the trick is to start federating Twitter using XMPP. Twitter uses XMPP internally, and some very interesting federating work was done in the halls at Social Graph Foo Camp between Blaine Cook (Twitter) and Ralph Meijer (Mediamatic). A network of XMPP servers, implementing PubSub (and possibly PEP should be able to subscribe to the message stream from Twitter and vice-versa. Then when Twitter is up, Twitter users can follow me and see my updates, and I can follow them and see their updates. When Twitter is down, anyone on my service or on a peer service will still see my updates.

The competition comes in the form of add-on services/features: Twitter has SMS integration, Dave would probably offer RSS integration (RSS-to-XMPP for example), etc.

So, knowing how long this has been discussed, what’s the holdup?

R.E.M. - Accelerate - Track by Track

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

R.E.M. is sounding like a band again, instead of Whiny Michael and the Stipes.

I bought R.E.M.’s new album last week, and I’ve been listening to it on and off since then, and I’m starting to develop some thoughts. For better or for worse, I tend to examine each new R.E.M. album in the light of how does this album build on / relate to what has gone before, and how does it explore new territory? I’m happy to say that for me, Accelerate does both with vigor.

Living Well Is the Best Revenge (3:12)

Out of the door loud, fast. Sets the tone for the album. Companion tune to New Test Leper from New Adventures In HiFi, barking back at a media that, in the end, doesn’t really matter. Bonus points for the return of Mike Mills to background vocals (or at elast to appropriate volumes), and for Mike and Peter for a return to Document-quality rock-n-roll. R.E.M. is sounding like a band again, instead of Whiny Michael and the Stipes. - 4 Stars

Man-Sized Wreath (2:32)

I can’t quite get a grip on Man-Sized Wreath. Not sure if it’s the lyrics or the tune, but while I can already sing along to most of the lyrics (it’s catchy!) I can’t tell you why. Yet. 2 Stars

Supernatural Superserious (3:24)

First single, very hooky. Really fun to listen to. Companion tune to Nightswimming from Automatic For The People. Michael sings to the lamenting youth from Nightswimming, assuring that it doesn’t last. - 4 Stars

Hollow Man (2:39)

I love Hollow Man. Following tender mostly-acoustic verses, the chorus winds up and rings out like a 70’s sitcom theme (in a good way) then comes to a satisfyingly noisy spinout at the end. Some excellent Murmurs-era guitar work from Peter Buck (still looking for the specific song I’m thinking of). - 4 Stars

Houston (2:05)

Lovely, dirty organ that sounds like it was resurrected from a swamp, or from a flooded church (a true New Orleans Instrumental?). Also, includes an echo of the acoustic riff from Try Not To Breathe. - 3 Stars

Accelerate (3:34)

Michael’s invoking cartoons (”where’s the cartoon escape hatch for me”), which had me thinking of the Dr. Seuss references in The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonight, but it comes amid a fast, full-of-fuzz song that conveys the fear, urgency, and tension in the lyric. - 3 Stars

Until the Day Is Done (4:09)

This is another one that’s growing on me. Followup to Ignoreland from Automatic For The People and would fit nicely on that album right after it. Another politically-flavored song, but is lamenting after the angry protest of Ignoreland. - 3 Stars

Mr. Richards (3:46)

Mr. Richards is a slow, loping, admonishment (beat-down? ) of the title character (who at one point I thought was referring to Michael Richards, of Sienfeld fame, but now I’m not so sure). - 3 Stars

Sing for the Submarine (4:51)

A weird song that is really growing on me, and (IMO) references several 3 R.E.M. songs from the past:

Horse to Water (2:18)

You’re only as big as your battles

  • 2 Stars

I’m Gonna DJ (2:08)

Somehow reminds me of 1995’s Revolution but without the cool “La La La”s. I suspect it might take the place of The End Of The World As We Know It as a show-closer, but I hope not. - 3 Stars