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30/06/06

Tits 2.0

I’ve pre­vi­ously writ­ten about how Dan­ish tabloid Ekstra Bladet never misses an oppur­tu­nity to mix what­ever event — with a tit­tie com­pe­ti­tion and some gal­leries of said titties.

Now, they’ve gone 2.0 on our asses (no pun — or bun — intended). In rela­tion to the soc­cer world cham­pi­onship, they’ve dis­cov­ered body painted fans on Flickr.

What more do you want? Oh, you can do that your­self with­out the EB titie hub? Oh…

29/06/06

Good enough isn’t good enough

May I sug­gest that we take the notion of ‘good enough’ and turn it into “best pos­si­ble given the avail­able time and resources”?

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29/06/06

Happiness is…

…bor­row­ing an iPod from some­one you like filled with great music, find­ing music you lis­tened to over 10 years ago. And tak­ing it for a walk.

27/06/06

Berlin trip

.!.

Watch the video

Happy new year. Greet­ings from an old car on the Auto­bahn lead­ing to Berlin, includ­ing an album of the year rec­om­men­da­tion. High-speed review­ing and chit-chat get absorbed by tire-noise… And the video is in Dan­ish, sorry.But to wrap it up: If you’re in Berlin for the 22C3, ping me so we can go have coffee.
Also, I’ve been play­ing with my movie export set­tings after watch­ing Ryanne’s post on  iPod H.264 com­pres­sion over at Freevlog. The movies should play nicely on your iPod so you can watch dur­ing your daily com­mute and stop feel­ing like you’re wast­ing your life…
27/06/06

DK] Hør Rødby-Puttgarden">[DK] Hør Rødby-Puttgarden

Life­Suks: Hør roma­nen Rødby-Puttgarden af Helle Helle:

DR har­fået Helle Helles super­ro­man Rødby-Puttgarden langt online til gratis afspilning som lyd­bog, den er ind­talt af Helle Helle selv. Frem til 17. juli 2006 kan du lytte til Helle Helles ‘Rødby-Puttgarden’ på DR Lit­ter­atur. Den har foreløbig ind­bragt hende Kri­tik­er­prisen 2005 og en 2. plads i P2 romanprisen. 

Super!

27/06/06

External XML-data into umbraco

Kasper just did a good intro­duc­tion, com­plete with expla­na­tions, clean code etc.

You won’t find that here, just some of the things I’ve done recently, includ­ing hard­coded URLs, IDs etc. You’ll fig­ure it out, I’m sure.

Thanks to Niels for the intro­duc­tion (he made the del.icio.us one). This is incred­i­bly easy — oth­er­wise I wouldn’t have been able to do it ;-) But you might as well grab the­see now that I’ve made them.

List your recent del.icio.us items: delicious.xslt
Dis­play square thumbs from 23: 23.xslt
List your 5 recent plazes: plazes.xslt
List your Last.FM tracks: lastfm.xslt

26/06/06

Business and sense 2.0

Just a small follow-up on my pre­vi­ous post, Busi­ness and sense to clear up a few points.

What I intended to do was to let out a lit­tle steam and sug­gest that we take a slightly dif­fer­ent path; I get annoyed when I see bull­shit, espe­cially when it’s unnesse­cary. It’s my right, might be healthy — and I don’t think it’s too anal and fear-driven/arrogant to sug­gest that who­ever think­ing they get it, make sure they do their best.

Gun­nar Lange­mark has posted some related thoughts, stat­ing that there are mul­ti­ple ways of doing things and that it’s the way it is. That’s true. But I don’t see that being a rea­son not to try our best. 

Gun­nar sug­gests we pick our fights; bat­tle the big com­pa­nies instead of fight­ing the ant war. I couldn’t agree more. The thing is, I fully believe that the best way of fight­ing every­one else is to make sure we play our own game. A decent game with no sell­ing out and a clear state­ment of the val­ues we believe in. And that’s that, really. I’m not try­ing to cause a fight. Instead I sug­gest that we take it upon our­selves to dis­cuss some of the things out in the open and back our actions with words — and our words with action. We share the objec­tive, I believe. I don’t think there’s any value in being an arro­gant 1%‘er — but that what­ever value’s in there should be made clear. 

25/06/06

DONA — videoblogging">DONA — videoblogging

.!.

Watch the video
Jon Froda og Andreas Haugstrup on vide­blog­ging and organ­i­sa­tions. A lit­tle report from ITU
24/06/06

links for 2006-12-24

.!.
21/06/06

Business and sense

Things to con­sider: I have a feel­ing peo­ple work­ing with net tech­nolo­gies and dig­tal com­mu­ni­ca­tion are hav­ing fun these days. Com­pa­nies are begin­ning to see social media as real­ity, just as the devel­op­ment of new web tech­nolo­gies in recent years seems to have paved the way for a new way of pro­vid­ing ser­vices etc. But if we are to take our­selves seri­ous, what are we doing to pre­vent things from going dot-com 2.0? For every new breed of tech­nolo­gies and ways of doing things, hype builds and under­ground entre­pre­neurs and devel­op­ers make it into main­stream. What do we think of our ‘indus­try’? Are we doing our best to pro­vide real value? What are the odds that peo­ple won’t be writ­ing books on the web 2.0 bub­ble in 5 years time. Will peo­ple smile when we men­tion ‘social soft­ware’ just as we do now when talk­ing about mid-nineties ad agen­cies enter­ing the world of the web?

I find too much buzz every­where I look. And already, I’m spend­ing a lot of time jok­ing about a lot of the terms that reflect the things we are doing, just as I find myself explain­ing to clients that “this is not hot air” when they’re curi­ous about some of the new ways of think­ing. I’d like for every­one to think about what they say and write, how they por­tray their own field of work and how and what they sell.

Some things to keep in mind:

  • Man­i­fests should only be made, when there’s a rev­o­lu­tion around the cor­ner. This is a list. 
  • Words are impor­tant. Sim­pli­fi­ca­tion equally so. but you don’t say ‘beta’ when you mean ‘agile’ — or ‘web 2.0′ when you mean ‘ajax’ — or ‘social soft­ware’ when you mean ‘com­mu­nity’, do you? Don’t worry about miss­ing out on all the good buzz, your cus­tomers will thank you in the end. 
  • Words are impor­tant. Be care­ful with terms like ‘econ­omy’, ‘rev­o­lu­tion’ and ‘par­a­digm’. New oppor­tu­ni­ties don’t make a rev­o­lu­tion, some­thing involv­ing money doesn’t con­sti­tute an econ­omy. It sounds cool but these words have a mean­ing already. Maybe your cus­tomers get con­fused when they know the orig­i­nal one. Iook it up — and use with care. 
  • When point­ing to tech­nolo­gies mark­ing a new begin­ning, make sure you’re point­ing to the actual one mak­ing the dif­fer­ence. Blog­ging might not mean shit — easy pub­lish­ing in gen­eral might do. 
  • Show value. Telling cus­tomers that “it’s new”, “every­one else is doing it” and that they should “jump on the train” remind me of the early dot-com years. You’re sell­ing hot air based on fear. 
  • Buzz is bet­ter than hype. Both, how­ever, have a ten­dency to end up as sell­ing points in their own right. They’re not. When you say “web 2.0″, do you know why you do it? Do you think it is a fit­ting con­tainer for a new way of doing things — or a clever mar­ket­ing tool? 
  • That something’s ‘new’ isn’t a rea­son for any­one to do any­thing. To refer to the speed of which infor­ma­tion travel and gets gen­er­ated and to claim that ‘things are hap­pen­ing really fast now’ is to ignore how most civ­i­liza­tions evolve. I would be very sur­prised if things didn’t con­tinue to develop this way from here to eter­nity. So that’s not the prob­lem you should say you’re solving. 
  • What hap­pens when all your cus­tomers have bought your ser­vices? Does your com­pany name or pro­file imply that what they’re buy­ing is just a way to ‘get up to speed’ or imple­ment ‘that new thing’? Can your see your­self and your com­pany in two year’s time? Are you hon­est about that you can’t? 
  • Is it clear from the way you’re com­mu­ni­cat­ing that you didn’t invent all the terms you’re using? Is it clear who did? And what it is you’re adding on top? 
  • Fram­ing is impor­tant. In many ways, our core ser­vice is to enable peo­ple to use new tech­nol­ogy and pro­vide new ways of think­ing about a lot of the things they would nor­mally do by giv­ing them a vocab­u­lary; a way to think and talk about things that are new to them. Think hard about how you use terms. Are you draw­ing on known con­cepts to make things clearer where you should make a clear dis­tinc­tion? If you didn’t know what you know, would it make sense? Is there a risk your terms could obscure a good inten­tion? Have you thought about metaphors lately? 
  • Net­works are cool. Being in more than one is not bad. Is the foun­da­tion of your net­work based on val­ues you’ve made an effort to explain — or is your pro­file ‘new’; hint­ing that this is the new black with­out fur­ther proof? 
  • When you explain the pos­si­bil­i­ties with tech­nol­ogy and the ways we use it, do you attempt to trans­fer indus­try terms to a busi­ness envi­ron­ment uncrit­i­cally? Are you con­fi­dent that term x, known and debated within the indus­try, pro­vides any real value to a cor­po­rate client — or would they be bet­ter off get­ting your take on some of the values? 
  • Would you rather not worry about all this hippie-nonsense and force your cus­tomers to swal­low the blue pill — as it is good for them? 

I might add to this list, i might not. That doesn’t mean it’s in beta. It just means that maybe i find some time and some more input — and maybe i don’t.

Update: Gun­nar Lange­mark posts what I believe is a com­ment to this post. Some dif­fer­ent views…and some of the same conclusions ;-)