Archive for July, 2005

Sunday, July 31st, 2005

Learning Dutch: Watch movie Quicktime, 2.6 min 11 MB
(Original post, via We Are The Media)

Sunday, July 31st, 2005

Discussion about who defines what “media” is. Watch movie Quicktime, 1.6 min 3.1 MB
(Original post, via DLTQ.org)

Saturday, July 30th, 2005

Recent patent applications result in talk about Google ranking. Basically: incoming links still matter a lot. And some other stuff.

Saturday, July 30th, 2005


looking into the lens” (Quicktime movie quote using Mefeedia. Original movie found at DLTQ.org.)

Friday, July 29th, 2005


couldn’t really get a job…” (Quicktime movie quote using Mefeedia. Original movie found at Steve Garfield’s Video Blog.)

Friday, July 29th, 2005


A star wars fight on stage?” (Quicktime movie quote using Mefeedia. Original movie found at Ourmedia MediaRSS Feed.)

Friday, July 29th, 2005


finding nemo, for real!” (Quicktime movie quote using Mefeedia. Original movie found at Dailymotion.)

Friday, July 29th, 2005

We go round and round:


it’s important to try to look into the dirty face of reality” (Quicktime movie quote using Mefeedia. Original movie found at blip.tv.)

Friday, July 29th, 2005

relPamyment is like syndicating your tipjar.

RelPayment: how to get paid. An overview page we wrote for videobloggers on how to use relPayment.

I am not sure if this will take off, but at least now there is a possibility. If videobloggers want to use it, they will, and if aggregators start to support it, it will be another babystep towards videoblogging viability.

The important thing to note here is that watching video through an aggregator is, in terms of cost, fundamentally different from watching text. The text is already contained in the RSS feed, so it has already been downloaded. The video isn’t. It’s an enclosure link, so for every viewer that watches it, the videobloggers’ bandwidth gets hit. The same applies to podcasting.

RelPayment is an attempt to make this “stealing of bandwidth” a little bit fairer videobloggers.

Again, I’m not sure it’ll take off. I’m not sure videobloggers are all that concerned about money. But if there’s demand from the vloggers, it might.

Thursday, July 28th, 2005

Russell Beattie Notebook - What’s Wrong with All The “My RSS” Portals. Some good points: the standard “a-box-per-feed” won’t cut it.

Thursday, July 28th, 2005

Metathought productions? I wish I thought of that. A trailer for a movie about media as an echochamber. Sounds familiar, bloggers?


Watch movie Quicktime, 6.9 min 15 MB
(Original post, via Everyday Films with Eric Rice)

Thursday, July 28th, 2005

Videoblogging in the Sahara: Watch movie 5.5 min 17.3 MB
(Original post, via the RAD blog)

Thursday, July 28th, 2005

The Long Tail: Filters 101: an interesting taxonomy of filters.

Tuesday, July 26th, 2005

Mica: “there’s a lot to think about!” Watch movie Quicktime, 0.7 min 1.8 MB (Original post, via scratch video)

Tuesday, July 26th, 2005

A nice example of a videoblog. Watch movie 5.7 min 18.7 MB (Original post, via Ourmedia MediaRSS Feed)

Monday, July 25th, 2005

Forbes.com put Mefeedia in its ‘Best of the Web’: “BEST: Breadth of offerings, including links to other vlog portals. Quick free registration. WORST: Forums are like a ghost town and design is wanting.”

All true :) Their “Obtain the Forbes Best of The Web logo for use on your site” is coorporate bullshit though: you need to fax them for approval to use their logo. You got to be kidding me - what a scam.

Monday, July 25th, 2005

Bloug: World’s Oldest Information Architect? (check the great picture!): “Mariano Amartino’s abuelita, 89 years old, has a message for the folks at O’Reilly (which I’ve taken the liberty to translate): “Where the heck is the Spanish version of the second edition of the Polar Bear? Enough waiting already! You should be very, very ashamed of yourselves.”

This is why we set up the translations group at the IA Institute. Here’s the Spanish page, with a whole bunch of articles about IA in Spanish. But not enough.

Sunday, July 24th, 2005

The best compliment ever for Mefeedia: “I love what you did to the place. So close to homemade but no lumps“.

Although there are plenty of lumps left :)

Wednesday, July 20th, 2005

Two cultures of fauxonomies collide… (via David)

Discusses, basically, how tag usage evolves and how different people tag differently.

“At a really grand level, if you can imagine a one hundred year tag-cloud around a gay novel, then it might start with lots of people using the tag invert, with this gradually giving way to homosexual, then gay and potentially after that, queer.”

That’s all pretty interesting, but things get much more exciting when we starting thinkig about other languages and really different cultures.

I wrote about tag namespaces before: “tag “namespacesâ€? will develop, somewhat mirroring languages, but also other social groups like interest groups, specialist communities.”

In other words, different communities develop their own categories and language, and this will be reflected in their tag use. We might even be able to infer communities from commonalities in tag use.

See also “Tagclouds and cultural changes“, which talks about the spreading of the ‘Ajax’ concept.

Tuesday, July 19th, 2005

Today I’m reviewing (and perhaps testing) a location aware mobile media app. Fun!

Monday, July 18th, 2005

So I checked my stats after a long time and poorbuthappy.com has been serving over 1,000,000 pages (not hits) a month for the last few months. Wazanga!, I would say, were I to say such things.

Monday, July 18th, 2005

Yahoo’s new cross-lingual (not multi-lingual) video search is wicked cool, but they have this weird use of a checkbox. There are 2 radio buttons and one checkbox. If you click the checkbox, the two radio buttons grey out. The only explanation I can think of is that it’s a hack in the code - somehow it was easier to implement this than to just have the checkbox as a third radiobutton (which would be the correct way). Strange though, to see such a beta UI hack on Yahoo.

Monday, July 18th, 2005

Sometimes a picture works better: this is how Mefeedia (the first video aggregator) supports rel=”payment”. If you put a link with rel=”payment” in your blog post, Mefeedia will show a support link in its interface.

When we thought of it, it made sense. Only slowly am I realizing now why it makes sense, and why it might make less sense for text bloggers.

Rich media aggregators (or enclosure aggregators) like FireANT, Mefeedia and iTunes, don’t get their content from the RSS feeds that’s already been syndicated. The media content is linked from the RSS, not embedded, like text content. So you HIT the owner’s bandwidth every time someone watches or downloads a movie or a podcast. It costs them. That’s why it makes more sense to have a payment link for rich media than for text media.

Or it might just be the early morning coffee.

Cross lingual search

Sunday, July 17th, 2005

Yahoo! Search blog: Sprechen Sie Deutsch?: Yahoo is getting some brilliant cross-lingual search out there. Cross lingual search is when you retrieve documents in various languages. There are different ways of doing it: translate the query, or translate the documents. I think they’re translating the queries. But they go the extra step and provide machine translations for the returned results.

Sunday, July 17th, 2005

Congo Girl - Thoughts about Kinshasa: “It is coming up on a year now that I have lived here, and in talking to a colleague a week or two ago, I realized that adjusting to this environment has been difficult for one reason that I had overlooked. I am trying to adjust to two new cultures. The first is, of course, Congolese culture. Very different from the US, the South, New Orleans — though I’ve found more links between NOLA and Kin than I ever would have though possible. The second is Belgian/European culture. As a previously colonized country, there are a lot of holdovers in style and approach and work ethic and education methods, as well as food and drink and entertainment. When I am inclined to escape from Congolese culture and retreat back into what I know, I find it isn’t really there. ”

The unexpected culture adjustments are often the hardest ones :)

Sunday, July 17th, 2005



June 2005 001

Originally uploaded by Peterv2.


More kitten lovy love.

Cat time

Sunday, July 17th, 2005



June 2005 032

Originally uploaded by Peterv2.

I got kittens, I got Flickr set up. It’s cat time!

Sunday, July 17th, 2005

After fixing the lock-out problem with my blog (which is why I wasn’t posting much lately), I’m gonna go post crazy. Beware.

Getting logged out of Wordpress and can’t log back in?

Sunday, July 17th, 2005

If you haveWordPress 1.2.2, and you have your blog directory in, say, http://domain.com/myblog/, and your wordpress directory in a different directory, say, http://domain.com/wordpress/, and you delete your cookies, it can be impossible to log back in, even if you have the correct username and password.

How can you tell? You are trying to log in, and it doesn’t let you but reloads the login form, but without an error. That means you have the right username and pass, but something else is wrong.

Here’s how to fix this problem.

  1. Go to Mysql, you can use PHPMyAdmin, most hosts have that installed.
  2. Go to the options table, and find the row in which the option_name field = http://domain.com/myblog/. On the command line, or in PHPMyAdmin’s SQL page, you can enter this: SELECT * FROM `options` WHERE option_name = ‘home’;
  3. Change the value of that field to your wordpress directory: http://domain.com/wordpress/
  4. Now go login to your wordpress. It should work fine and let you log in.
  5. Back to the same row in the database, change the value back to http://domain.com/myblog/
  6. Go check your blog. It should work fine.

You’re done.

rel = “payment” proposal

Sunday, July 17th, 2005

Yesterday, I met with Jay, Josh and Kenyatta. We were talking about standards for videobloggers, and how we can set good standards now, before the likes of Apple, MSN or XXX try to control the space. Jay said: “how can we get people paid with standards?” (Getting some $$ is a big thing for videobloggers, with hosting costs and all.) Josh was explaining an idea with an RSS namespace. I said “rel=donate”. It just made sense. Josh proposed we changed it to rel=”payment”, which made even more sense. Jay posted a video.

I implemented it for Mefeedia this morning - still testing but it works. Post a post with a video and a rel=”payment” link, and it’ll show a nice “Like this video? Support this videoblogger” link.

Why might this work? producing video is (perhaps) more work than text. Videobloggers love to be paid. As for the standard: it’s supersimple. Only the aggregators need to support it, not the creation software. And it degrades perfectly. Share and enjoy :) Standards are about implementation, not definition. We’ll see.

rel = “payment” proposal

Sunday, July 17th, 2005

Yesterday, I met with Jay, Josh and Kenyatta. We were talking about standards for videobloggers, and how we can set good standards now, before the likes of Apple, MSN or XXX try to control the space. Jay said: “how can we get people paid with standards?” (Getting some $$ is a big thing for videobloggers, with hosting costs and all.) Josh was explaining an idea with an RSS namespace. I said “rel=donate”. It just made sense. Josh proposed we changed it to rel=”payment”, which made even more sense. Jay posted a video.

I implemented it for Mefeedia this morning - still testing but it works. Post a post with a video and a rel=”payment” link, and it’ll show a nice “Like this video? Support this videoblogger” link.

Why might this work? producing video is (perhaps) more work than text. Videobloggers love to be paid. As for the standard: it’s supersimple. Only the aggregators need to support it, not the creation software. And it degrades perfectly. Share and enjoy :) Standards are about implementation, not definition. We’ll see.

Tuesday, July 12th, 2005

A great new blog about how we are the media. Lots of videoblogging there. Give him some linky love.

Saturday, July 9th, 2005

Bre is using the Mefeedia quoting tool and made this quote which has been cracking us up all morning: “I think it is important to try to look into the dirty face or reality“.

Quoting and linking

Thursday, July 7th, 2005

I released version 3 (still beta) of Mefeedia today. It has lots of cool stuff, but what I’m most proud of is the first version of a video quoting tool. Here’s a screenshot:

Basically, it lets you select a part of a bigger movie, and create a new movie out of that. You can then link to that on your blog. The idea is that in the videoblogging world, people don’t link a lot to each other like text bloggers do. I think it’s because videobloggers can’t easily quote a post and then comment on it and link to it. So I’m trying to change that. Let’s see if it works.

Here’s an example quoted movie, by the way. “Like I’m trying to pull a fast one or something.â€? (Quicktime movie)

I am still experimenting with what works best.

  • Include a thumb and a reference to the original blogpost? Just link the quote?
  • Add a frame at the end of the movie that gives some metadata?

Right now, the quoting tool is just smil, which, if you’re quoting something at the END of a movie, makes it slow. I’m working on ways to improve that…

Thursday, July 7th, 2005

Programmers are lazy. The easy things get skipped. Which might be why we still don’t have decent text areas and one-click RSS subscribe. Or is it? It might be a matter of standards, support and politics? Which?