background image by Aaron Straup Cope, made with prettymaps

January 28th, 2009,
there are 0 comments and the post was tagged with ,

NFB

I’ve been meaning to post this for a good week now, didn’t get around to it. The NFB relaunched their site with a completely new platform. I’m not a huge fan of the design, specifically the header, seems a bit dated to me but the rest is great, this is exactly what they needed; content front and center. Content, content, content. Well executed, clean. Congrats to Matt and the team.

January 27th, 2009,
there are 5 comments and the post was tagged with ,

Ouch

Si vous vous faites chier avec l’hiver et que ça vous tente de vous écoeurer encore plus, allez voir chez le trop talentueux Éric qui passe deux mois en Chine puis allez faire un tour chez le non moins talentueux (et mon associé chez Station C) Dan qui lui passe 4 mois en Thaïlande entre autre. Faut que je m’achète une caméra et que j’apprenne à m’en servir pour me venger au printemps à Berlin. Salauds!

January 26th, 2009,
there are 0 comments and the post was tagged with , , , , ,

Infrastructures

With all the talk about restarting the economy (US) or preventing more important slow downs (Canada), a solution oft proposed is to spend on infrastructure, creating jobs. In Québec I would certainly support that, it’s an old school solution that doesn’t encourage new forms of transportation but the existing infrastructure does need a good upgrade.

However, we should spend a lot of attention to other infrastructures as well. Michael Geist points out that there are various forms of infrastructure, all better fitted to the 21st century and at a time where it’s deemed appropriate to post deficits to prop up the economy, better preparing ourselves to the new economy should be a high priority and a higher value way of spending our money. His first suggestions for one, broadband infrastructure, should be seen as vital and we need to spend the money to catch up or at the very least keep our ranking. Quality access to the internet is a major issue that we need to keep on top of.

January 26th, 2009,
there are 2 comments and the post was tagged with , , ,

Résidents et visiteurs

J’avais déjà linké à Not ‘Natives’ & ‘Immigrants’ but ‘Visitors’ & ‘Residents’ sans commenter, récemment Martin a approcher ce sujet une nouvelle fois avec Pour en finir avec les natifs versus les immigrants digitaux ou il fait la promotion de cette vision, beaucoup plus appropriée et utilise la métaphore assez fidèle de la ville pour aider à bien comprendre ce point de vue.

Oui l’accès aux nouvelles technologies est plus prégnant pour cette génération, mais il ne provoque ni usage prescient spontané, ni compréhension transcentale: la plupart sont tout aussi “clueless” que n’importe quel “newbie” de 40 ans et plus devant Twitter, FaceBook et le Web 2.0…

Les “résidents” habitent une ville numérique, comme d’autre la cité politique, et connaissent bien tous les us et coutumes, les recoins et les raccourcis, les rabais et les pièges de ces lieux. Ces habitants construisent les divers quartiers de cette ville nouvelle.

Il me rappelle ensuite Clay Shirky dans Here Comes Everybody en nous rappelant que c’est un nouveau modèle ou nous pouvons maintenant “tout” voir. Ce n’est pas que le contenu est moins bon qu’avant c’est que maintenant tout est trouvable, le bon autant que le mauvais. Il y avais du mauvais avant mais dans les journaux personnels de fonds de tiroirs ou sur TQS ;), maintenant il n’y a plus la même séparation.

Quand Rioux trouve qu’il y a trop quartiers “mal famés” dans la blogosphère, ces “tribunes téléphoniques permanentes sans modérateur”, il oublie qu’il n’est plus dans un monde de “radiodiffusion”—où le contenu éditorial est une norme—mais, d’une certaine façon, directement dans la centrale téléphonique écoutant toute, virtuellement toutes, les conversations qui ont lieu simultanément. Juger la pertinence de la sphère “téléphonique” dans sa totalité n’a aucun sens.

Quote

January 24th, 2009,
there are 0 comments

We believe that we’re on the face of the Earth to make great products, and that’s not changing. We’re constantly focusing on innovating. We believe in the simple, not the complex. We believe that we need to own and control the primary technologies behind the products we make, and participate only in markets where we can make a significant contribution… We believe in saying no to thousands of projects so that we can really focus on the few that are truly important and meaningful to us. We believe in deep collaboration and cross-pollination of our groups, which allow us to innovate in a way that others cannot.
Tim Cook’s View of the Apple Philosophy

January 18th, 2009,
there are 1 comment and the post was tagged with , ,

History of The Internet


History of the Internet from PICOL on Vimeo.

January 16th, 2009,
there are 0 comments and the post was tagged with , , ,

La pantoufle d’Amir

Bref, ce n’est ni le Plateau, ni la gauche caviar qui font leur entrée à l’Assemblée nationale. C’est seulement le retour, fort modeste, d’une vision qui manquait cruellement dans cette enceinte depuis longtemps.
La pantoufle d’Amir

January 15th, 2009,
there are 0 comments and the post was tagged with ,

Pas de Lecavalier

[Attention, sports] Si vous suivez le moindrement le sport à Montréal, vous savez certainement que ces jours-ci c’est rumeur après rumeur concernant l’échange possible qui emmenerait Vincent Lecavalier à Montréal. Ça n’arriveras pas. Ça n’arriveras pas parce que le gros désavantage du Canadien c’est aussi un de ses gros avantages; Bob Gainey. Bob est stable, Bob reste calme, Bob se compte pas d’histoires. Il fait plein de bons coups et quelques erreurs mais il ne vire pas fou.

À moins que Lecavalier ne donne au Lightning qu’une liste très très courte d’équipes pour qui il accepterait de jouer, il va y avoir la moitié de la ligue dans le derby et c’est certain qu’il va y avoir un moron qui va virer fou et donner la moitié de son équipe + 12 millions pour le grand numéro 4 et le gars qui vire fou, c’est jamais Captain Bob. J’aimerais bien me tromper parce que ce serait cool de l’avoir ici mais, selon moi, oubliez ça.

Quick

January 15th, 2009,
there are 2 comments

Congrats to the identi.ca team, especially Evan for securing their funding, looking forward to what they have in store.

January 13th, 2009,
there are 1 comment and the post was tagged with ,

Deliciousness Stream

I’m sure a majority of my readers are already using delicious or at the very least know about it. It’s an essential tool for finding new things, not only for keeping tabs on them. Mitch for one has been saying so for a while and using it as a search engine. In that article he also mentioned in passing that ou can “link your account” to other people. To me this is the biggest feature and one that a lot of people don’t know about or simply disregard.

In delicious it’s called a network and you can add any user to your network. If you go to some else’s page, like mine you’ll see a blue group of links in the top right corner where you can “Add to my network”. Back on your own profile, under your username, you have a “Network” link. The page it goes to lists all bookmarks by everyone in your network and you can subscribe to a feed of that. I’ve got 29 people in there who are all pretty regular users so I get a lot of links from there, a lot of “meat” since it’s all things they want to remember.

Outside of the basic finding of link I also find it interesting from trends and background points of view. For example I follow 4-5 integrators who deal in xhtml-css every day. When within a few days I see most of them bookmarking tips and tricks about png transparency in IE6, I know they are also trying to move away from IE6, using png transparency and trying to patch IE6 for one of the last times. When I see another user tagging 8-9 new Drupal modules related to video, I know he’s working on a big video site based on Drupal. When another is tagging freelancing ressources I know he’s about to quit his job A founder is tagging articles about leaner times, runway for startups and rationalizing, I know he’s doing his homework and getting ready for the next year.

What’s different from blogs or pasted links in Twitter is that those links aren’t (in most cases) what people are sending on purpose, it’s not what they decided would interest others, it’s what interests them, relatively unfiltered.

At times it feels a bit like stalking which is another reason I mention it here; if you are bookmarking loads of things on a subject and you don’t want that trend to be known, you might consider local bookmarks or using the “private” checkbox because followers or people happening on your profile will be able to gather some info from that. The friend bookmarking freelancing articles would be a good example.

But aside from that slight warning, it’s just a great tool for discovery and to get a feel for what your peers are into at any given time.

Another great feature not always known and not always present in the various apps and bookmarklets people use to post to delicious is the “for:” tag. You can tag a link for any user by tagging it “for:inevernu” for example and that link will appear in their delicious inbox for the next time they go to their profile page. I’ve been using that a lot instead of sending links by email or chat. I use Delicious Safari which suggest tags so as soon as I’ve tagged for someone once, just typing “for” provides me with a list of contacts I can send links to. Great feature for knowledge sharing.

Have a look; networks and sharing.

Back to top

Tags

37signals adobe advertising africa alexhillman amazon api apple architecture augmentedreality authentic-media barcamp berlin blogging blogs books boomerangs broadband browsers business c61 canada carbonemissions cellphones cities climate collaboration commons-and-ip community content cool copying copyright corydoctorow coworking crapulence creativecommons creativity css culture cycling danahboyd data dataplans derekpowazek design django dopplr drupal ecofriendly economy election2008 environment europe events execution facebook firefox flash flickr food freelancing fun funding funny futur future gaming globalwarming google government green hardware ideas identica identity IE inevernu infographics infooverload innovation inspiration interface internet ipad iphone ipod johngruber legal list local mapping marketing media mediablurb michaelgeist microblogging microsoft mobile montreal motorsports movies music net-politics netneutrality newspapers newyork nfb oauth obama offline online opendata opensocial opensource paris patricktanguay pechakucha photography photolog policy politics privacy procrastination productivity projects publictransport quebec quebecsolidaire random rogers s3 science scifi search socialgraph socialmedia socialsoftware society sports startup startups station-c stationc stats sustainability sxsw sylvaincarle technology TED telecom theory tips travel tv twitter typography unconferences urbanism us usa uspolitics vc video visualization web2.0 webapps webdev webstandards webtech wiki wordpress world yahoo yulblog

Monthly Archives

Elsewhere