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G-Fi: GPS-Informationen via W-Lan

Posted in Read this at July 31st, 2008 / No Comments »

gfi.jpgAngepriesen als “The World’s First Mobile GPS Network Router” will der Hersteller Posimotion Anfang September das $180 teure G-Fi auf den Markt bringen. Das G-Fi mischt die Eigenschaften eines Netzwerk-Routers mit denen eines externen GPS-Empfängers und liefert die aktuellen Positionsdaten drahtlos an alle verbundenen Geräte aus. Ausgestattet mit einem internen Akku und in etwa so groß wie eine Schachtel Zigaretten ist das G-Fi kompatibel zu beiden iPhone-Generationen, dem iPod Touch, Mac und Windows-Rechnern sowie allen Windows-Mobile Geräten.

G-Fi works in harmony with all of our upcoming location-based applications, conveniently available through the iTunes AppStore.” Mit Dank an Joel für den Tipp.

, ,

A lot of people have been having trouble with the Contacts application in iPhone 2.0 on both first-gen and 3G models. And though lag has been reported throughout much of the iPhone, it is especially apparent in Contacts.

But there is a quick fix until this bug is addressed. You can use the Google app to access your contacts. If you need to search for a contact, this is especially helpful, as the search function in the Apple Contacts gets rather sluggish after awhile. 

So, once you install the Google app, all you have to do is search for a contact and you'll get results much faster than searching or scrolling through your standard Contacts list. This isn't a permanent solution, but it will certainly be helpful in the meantime. 

[via iPhone Atlas]

Shared by Robert Scoble
This is the kind of post I wish I would do more of. Wonderful information here.


Lifehacker readers range from the complete newbie to the most seasoned techie, but where do the Lifehacker editors stand? We polled our own editors for the computer hardware and applications they swear by and we're breaking it down for you here. This post is categorized into the software each editor uses on a daily, the operating systems we live in, the hardware we rely on, the peripherals we utilize on a regular basis, and webapps we need. Then we tell you exactly what kind of user we think we are.

Gina Trapani, Editor:

The Basics

  • Firefox: I spend the majority of my day in my favorite browser, where I manage email, write Lifehacker posts, read RSS, and surf. My must-have Firefox extensions include: Foxmarks (so my bookmark are everywhere), DownThemAll! (for downloading big files), CoLT (for grabbing links to drop into Lifehacker posts), all of the Better Extensions which I put together, Firebug and Chris Pederick's Web Developer toolbar (for development), and Greasemonkey and Stylish for customizing pages. (Here are my current user style picks.)
  • Quicksilver: On any Mac, I'll Cmd+Spacebar out of habit, because I've come to rely on QS so much for launching apps, moving files, resizing images to Lifehacker's standard sizes, and accessing frequently-used documents on the Shelf.
  • TextExpander (Mac) and Texter (Windows): Not only does TE and Texter help me write Lifehacker posts by auto-expanding HTML snippets, it auto-corrects typos and helps me stay on track with our style guide (by automatically replacing things like "wifi" with "Wi-Fi", for example).
  • TextWrangler (Mac) and EditPlus (Windows): Everyone needs a good text editor, and these two are my picks. (TextWrangler is free, but EditPlus is not).
  • KeePass: The day I sat down and created my KeePass password database—and decided every time I'd set up a new password I'd store it there—was a good day indeed. While I do use Firefox to save web-based logins, KeePass is an awesome secure parking place for Wi-Fi, network, computer, and file passwords as well as software serial numbers. Since it's Mac and Windows compatible, if I save a password on the PC's copy of Firefox, I'll also enter it into KeePass so I can still look it up on the Mac.
  • Adobe ImageReady: A throwback to my web dev years, I still reach for an old copy of IR whenever I have to do any image editing beyond simple cropping and resizing. Been meaning to get good at a free option for awhile now—and I'll have to, since Adobe discontinued ImageReady releases.
  • Adium (Mac) and Pidgin (Windows): I'm not a huge IM user, but when I need to hop on for a quick chat these are my two clients of choice.
  • Cygwin: I'm not running a Linux desktop full-time, but I do need my ls and scp. While Terminal.app offers these Unix command line tools built into OS X, Cygwin can give it to you on Windows.
  • InstantShot (Mac), Skitch (Mac), and SnagIt (Windows): Since I take screenshots all day long, these three apps are indispensable. For a simple snap and resize, I use InstantShot and Preview; to annotate screenshots SnagIt and Skitch get the job done.
  • Mozy (Mac and Windows), Time Machine (Mac), and SyncBackSE (Windows): Since I work at home with no IT department backing up a network drive, backing up my important data's up to me. I bought an unlimited Mozy subscription for off-site backup in case of fire, flood, theft, or tsunami, and use Time Machine and SyncBack to run regular local backups to a FireWire drive.
  • GeekTool (Mac) and Samurize (Windows): I like having my todo.txt, a calendar, and a set of daily reminders in front of my face every day. So while I keep my desktop clear of shortcuts and documents, GeekTool and Samurize pins my top tasks, a two month calendar, and remind reminders to keep me on track during the day. Here's more on setting up GeekTool on the Mac, and incorporating text files on your desktop with Samurize.


Primary OS

It's changed over the years and will continue to shift, but right now I split my time about 80%/20% Mac OS X and Windows XP. I plan to increase my Windows time (and get Vista into the mix) to better serve Lifehacker readers, who are primarily Windows (about 70% at the moment, though this chart changes by the minute). Setting up a Hardy desktop is also looking more and more tempting.


Hardware

I used to use four different computers on a regular basis, but keeping them all maintained, synced, backed up, and up to date with operating system patches became too much. So last year I decided to simplify and pare down the machine I use for work purposes to one laptop (so I could take it with me when I travel), and chose:

  • A 15-inch MacBook Pro to which I added a stick of memory, using Adam's guide. I run both Windows XP and Leopard on this machine with VMware. (I used to Boot Camp and virtualize that partition in Parallels—but when I needed more internal hard drive space, I killed the Boot Camp partition and now just virtualize XP.) I've also got...
  • An ancient Dell Dimension tower which I launched Lifehacker on mostly goes unused now. For awhile I used it as a file server, but to reduce energy consumption, I decided keeping an always-on file server was overkill for the two people who live in my household.
  • A G4 PowerBook, which was replaced by my MacBook Pro last year, lives in the living room. For a beat-up secondary computer, the PowerBook still does triple duty as a media center file server for my XBMC, a recipe reference in the kitchen while we cook, and my other half's main computer.
  • A classic Xbox running XBMC is my primary media center for watching downloaded video, and my TiVo records TV episodes online.


Peripherals

Besides a stack of external hard drives, a Netgear router, an ink jet printer, and a widescreen Dell monitor I hook the MacBook up to when I'm at my desk, I've got:

  • A Fujitsu ScanSnap mobile scanner for Mac, which is perfect for scanning receipts, contracts, and newspaper articles. I reviewed the Windows version here and loved it so much, that when I sent the review unit back to Fujitsu I bought the Mac version as soon as it was available..
  • An iPhone, which I had misgivings about purchasing when I lost my Nokia. The iPhone 2.0 software isn't without problems that are dogging me as well as a couple of others, but for the most part, it's a very pleasant gadget to use.


Webapps

Even though I still like keeping important files saved to my local hard drive, I've moved most of my daily work into a Firefox tab (which makes it easy to access from the iPhone as well). I use dozens of webapps, but the primary ones are:

  • Gmail: A year or so ago I abandoned Thunderbird to use Gmail's web interface exclusively, mostly for its conversation thread view (which T-bird doesn't quite handle as well) and its keyboard shortcuts, and because I'm constantly working on the Better Gmail extension.
  • Google Reader: Once I switched from Bloglines to Google Reader, I've never looked back—even though Adam did almost convince me to move to NetNewsWire, I'm too happy with my Reader workflow to change things up. I'll often read feeds while I'm on line at the grocery store or in the doctor's waiting room, and star items that may turn into Lifehacker posts later.
  • Google Calendar: The Lifehacker staff uses a shared GCal calendar to schedule vacations, conferences, and software launches, and I use it for my personal calendar as well.
  • Campfire: In lieu of instant messenger, at Adam's suggestion, the Lifehacker staff started hanging out in a Campfire room throughout the day while we write, which helps us coordinate and ask quick questions and make decisions so much faster than over email.
  • Twitter: I don't have the time to fool around on Facebook or Flickr as much as I used to, but contributing to and scanning Twitter is a fast, efficient way hear what my pals are up to and blog with very little effort. Twitter's helped me keep in touch with my NYC friends, find story ideas faster than they break in my RSS reader, recruit guest writers, keep tabs on people I admire and look up to, and poll people I trust quickly.
I also love MediaWiki and del.icio.us. Here's more on the apps that run Lifehacker's virtual office.


Self Assessment

I'm a late early adopter. I love to try out new apps, but after reviewing thousands over the years here at Lifehacker, I think long and hard before I actually work one into my daily workflow. I'm a big open source advocate—to the point of a tendency toward that "tinfoil hat" free software extremist mindset—but I will (and do) compromise for beautiful and easy-to-use software, too. It's great that you can do so much in the cloud these days, but I like to store and manipulate my own data and avoid webapp lock-in as well—so, for example, I back up my Gmail account via POP. I love tinkering with software, but I'm not as much of a hardware DIYer as my co-editors, many of whom have built their own computers.


Adam Pash, Senior Editor:
The Basics


Primary OS
I've been primarily operating in OS X since I built my Hackintosh, but I'm always running VMware Fusion (another must have) with Windows and (sometimes) Ubuntu.


Hardware
I'm using the Hackintosh as my main desktop, an aging MacBook Pro with OS X and Vista in Boot Camp, and an older Windows box that's a dedicated Media Center back-end. Then there's the Xbox 360, of course, which gets about as much tinkering time as the Media Center.

Both of my desktop computers (the Hackintosh and the Vista Media Center) were built from the ground up.

There's also my iPhone, which I use almost as much as my laptop these days.


Peripherals
After a weekend of watching a friend regularly reboot his router while I was visiting recently, I should give credit to my router, which is intermittently either running Tomato or DD-WRT. They're rock solid.

I've got a Logitech MX Revolution wireless mouse and one of the new slim Apple keyboards, both of which are very nice to work with daily. I've also got a cheap-ish Canon MP180 printer/scanner combo with a recently broken printer tray.


Webapps

  • Love Gmail. I've been making a small move to desktop apps lately, but until Google makes a desktop version of Gmail (not likely) or someone rips off the main tenents of the Gmail interface, I'm not leaving it any time soon.
  • I'm also a big fan of Mediawiki as a software, and—naturally—Wikipedia. I may have well been answering this question in 2004.


Self Assessment
I'm a big fan of anything I can build for cheaper than I can buy it. Hardware DIY gets easier and easier every year, and I've managed to do just fine for myself without ever picking up a soldering gun or anything of the sort. It's all much easier than most people think.


Kevin Purdy, Associate Editor:
The Basics

  • Firefox: With the following extensions: Foxmarks (syncing between systems and Firefox portable, Password Exporter (same reason), CustomizeGoogle (newly installed, mostly for the Google Link annoyance described at #8, and the dev build (i.e. Firefox 3-compatible) of Tab Mix Plus.
  • Launchy and Texter: Both suggestions from Adam, both indispensable to my Windows work. When I'm in Linux, though ...
  • GNOME Do and Snippits: The Linux semi-equivalents.
  • Pidgin: I used to use the last version of vanilla AIM that worked with the (then-free) DeadAIM plugin, until I became a Linux geek and friends started hitting me up on GChat.
  • GIMP: Because I truly do suck at Photoshop, so I'm learning day-by-day with its free counterpart.
  • Prism: For running Campfire, Google Calendar, and a few other apps in distraction-free shells on the desktop.
  • Revo Uninstaller: For cleanly and completely uninstalling most of the software I test out on the job.

Primary OS
I honestly split my time between Windows Vista and Ubuntu Hardy Heron (8.04). Up until recently, I'd been almost exclusively running Hardy (which I've openly professed my fondness of) with a wirelessly synced iPod touch, but I can't get my dual monitor setup working in Hardy, and iPhone 2.0 put a nix on the second—for now.


Hardware

  • A 5-year-old desktop I built myself, now doing light testing duty with XP installed
  • A Lenovo ThinkPad T61P (dual-booting Ubuntu and Vista)
  • My parents' old desktop, turned into a multi-function home server (converted with help from Gina's guides and this starting point.
  • My wife's Compaq Presario laptop, which suffers its fair share of guinea pigging.

Peripherals
  • Linksys WRT54G (ver. 6) router: Big mistake, considering I have to wince every time Adam finds a new Super Router firmware (like Tomato or DD-WRT), and I have to sit it out with my locked-down blue box.
  • HP Deskjet 825c: Hooked up to the home server for remote printing (from every system except Vista, of course).
  • iPods: I've got an old 4 GB Mini, the wife has a 4 GB Nano, and I'm constantly tweaking my 8 GB touch.
  • LG LCD monitor: Originally for the old desktop, now a dual screen for the ThinkPad.

Webapps
I use quite a number of them, but the main ones are:
  • Google Docs: I might switch over to the more feature-rich Zoho Suite one day, because the feature I love most about GDocs is simply that it saves every few seconds. The accessibility and offline abilities don't hurt, either, though.
  • Reader: Both during morning posts and casual browsing through the iPhone-friendly beta.
  • Gmail: Big surprise, I'm sure, but I mostly use it through Thunderbird via IMAP for both work and home mail.
  • Remember the Milk: On my AWN dock in Linux, on my iPod touch, my iGoogle start page, through my phone and email—a truly universal but simple to-do list.

Self Assessment
I'm obviously a big fan of open source and free software, as you can probably tell from the lists above. I chose and customized my laptop in large part for its Linux-friendliness, and I'll always favor software and webapps that can be accessed from any computer. In general, though, I can never leave well enough alone—a good trait in writing for this site, I'd think—and while I'm pretty satisfied with my current array of tools, I'm thinking a few lower-tech, real-world productivity tools—index cards, anyone?—could probably find a useful home somewhere in my system.


Jason Fitzpatrick, Contributing Editor:
The [Free] Basics

  • Launchy: Although I'm a relatively new user of Launchy, I'm finding rapidly that I use it enough that I'm frustrated when I'm on a computer that doesn't have it.
  • Digsby: With lots of people on lots of different messaging platforms, Digsby makes my life easier.
  • Picasa2: When dealing exclusively with client files I'll use a program like Adobe Lightroom, but for ease of use and for a program that is easy to use for my non-techie wife, Picasa2 is a fantastic fit.
  • TeraCopy: I hated the built in file handler in windows. When you're moving 80 gigs from one drive to another you don't want to come back after your lunch break and see there was an error at the end of the transfer and the whole thing aborted. TeraCopy takes that pain away!
  • xplorer2 lite: I also hated the default file explorer in windows. When you're editing large amounts of media and organizing it, having an explorer alternative on steroids is the only way to go.
  • UltraVNC: Over the years there have been all sorts of fancy new ways to remotely connect to your home PC, but I've never found anything I like more than a basic VNC connection.


The [Paid] Basics

  • Photoshop: I've been using Photoshop for almost 15 years now and short of writing my own programs and playing with them, haven't had more fun with another piece of software.
  • UltraMon: If you have dual monitors, it's invaluable.


Primary OS
My primary OS is Windows XP. I'm usually in some state of tinkering
with OS X (working on a hackintosh just for kicks), and Linux. I find as time goes on that with Linux I'm less tinkering with the limited free time I have to play with it and more enjoying it. Linux has really matured since I first installed it in 1994.


Hardware
I used to be an avid computer builder. As far as my primary machine for daily use goes, I usually just purchase a machine that's on sale and throw a bunch of ram and hard drives in it. I don't game much anymore, so my rig doesn't need to bleed speed. All of that said I have a ton of parts and I often strip down computers before people send them off to be recycled so I have more than enough motherboards, hard drives, etc. to build all the random projects I set my mind too. The level of parts in my workshop has reached a saturation point actually, and it is extremely likely that my next computer will be built from them with a few newer pieces thrown in.


Peripherals
I don't really have any peripherals that I love... except my Logitech Trackman Wheel. I've been using a Logitech Trackman for over ten years now and I love controlling the entire movement of the mouse with just my thumb. If Logitech announce they would no longer be producing the Trackman, I'd go out and buy a stockpile just to be safe. If we're being a bit looser with definition of peripherals, I'm quite fond of my Windows Mobile phone, the HTC Apache, it's a rather common WM phone but I like having a device I can custom and tweak to my hearts content. I frequently use the BuildOS program from PPCGeeks.com to rebuild my entire phone and try new things.


Webapps
The only web apps I use with any consistency are Gmail and Google Reader. I also use SmugMug to catalog and share media with family and clients and Mozy to backup data. For my Windows Mobile phone I use the service DashWire to conduct remote backups of contacts and other data.


Self Assessment
My computer usage reflects strongly on my general personality. I don't use many social networking tools, I'm not the kind of person that twitters the minute details of their life. I share my personal pictures on a password protected site only for family, not on flickr. When I'm working I use a pretty spartan set of tools which helps me stay focused. Google reader to distill my feeds, Firefox to help fling me about the web, a simple calendar, contact list, and to-do list in Outlook to sync with my Windows Mobile phone. And when I'm goofing around instead of getting work done I'm all over the map experimenting with new software, dubbing foreign films, playing in Photoshop, building a Tivo clone out of spare parts from my workshop bins, trying out new tweaks on my XBMC, etc. I love experimenting and playing with computers, I've just come to a point in my life where I have enough of a time crunch that I have to be careful to fence off the "Let's see what we can solder to this!" part of my love for computers from my "Let's get some work done and pay the bills!" part.


Tamar Weinberg, Contributing Editor:
The [Free] Basics

  • Notepad2: I'm not a developer so I don't really need the extravagant features offered by LH favorite Notepad++. I do love the line-numbers and color-coding of Notepad2, and that's all I'm looking for in a Notepad replacement.
  • Pidgin: I'm a fan of purple penguins and find Pidgin's options easily configurable for my needs . I also use a very old version of AIM with DeadAIM because the GUI is oh-so-nice. By the way, Digsby is on my list of apps to try!
  • Irfanview: Because it's so incredibly lightweight and small, Irfanview is a great app to use for image viewing and to resize or crop images quickly.
  • Firefox: Firefox 3.0.1 is a terrific browser, and unlike 3.0, this baby doesn't crash at all on my computer.
  • VLC Media Player: I used to open files and never be able to locate the proper codecs. VLC eliminates that hassle. When I have downtime and want to watch a movie or TV show on my computer, VLC does a nifty job, and it's also pretty lightweight too, which adds to the appeal.

The [Paid] Basics
  • FlashFXP: Unlimited lifetime upgrades and a purchase that was made several years ago made this an easy choice.

Primary OS
My primary operating system at this time is Windows XP Pro. Ah yes, a Mac OS would be nice, but I've been procrastinating on making the plunge! Windows XP does what I need. Additionally, I run a Fedora 9 box in the corner of my apartment and am always SSH'd into it to tinker around with the system.


Hardware
My main computer is a Dell XPS M1710 laptop, but I built the two desktops I use (they run Windows XP and Fedora 9). I test Lifehacker software on another old Dell laptop. I also have a Macbook Air that I haven't yet used. I know Gina is going to kill me when she reads this.


Peripherals and Gadgets

  • Samsung ML-2010: Really the family printer of choice, and we like it because of the network printing capabilities. I'm a big fan of getting up to gather my printouts days after I print them out!
  • Flip video: I'm new to the video world, but the Flip has proven to be a small yet affordable camcorder that produces quality results.
  • Treo 755p: I've been using Palm OS for almost 10 years now and can't really fathom moving over to a Windows Smartphone.
  • iPod touch: I once wished for an iPhone without the phone. Then, Apple announced the iPod touch. All it needs now is more storage space.
  • Lots of external hard drives: I've suffered way too many hard drive failures to risk losing data again, so I have more than a terabyte of data stored on external hard drives in the event that my main drives fail.

I don't use other peripherals on a regular basis primarily because my desk is my lap and my office chair is a couch. There's not much you can use here without things falling all over the place.


Webapps

  • Gmail: I really like Gmail, especially since it now supports IMAP. I have 4 tabs of Gmail for the three accounts I use (three of which are on Google Apps for Domains). Really, who doesn't like Gmail?
  • Flickr: To put it simply, photo sharing rocks. I'm a big fan of social media and I love being able to tag photos, comment on them, add notes, and organize them into sets that others can easily see and navigate to. I also love how you can bookmark your favorite photos with the "call a fave" feature.
  • Twitter: I use Twitter on a pretty consistent basis mostly to foster and build professional relationships. I enjoy that it has an API with hundreds of available applications. I primarily use Twhirl with Twitter and I take heavy advantage of the SMS tools when I'm mobile.
  • WordPress is my blogging platform of choice, but I do use MovableType maybe even more regularly.
  • FriendFeed: FriendFeed is one of my favorite tools ever to keep abreast of the news that interests my colleague and peers, and the conversation is growing. The best part is that you can hide the noise and only focus in on the signal.
  • Carbonite: This non-intrusive backup solution for Windows and Mac is tough to beat for the price of $49.95/year for unlimited storage.

Self-assessment
Much of what I use revolves around my work behavior, since I'm tremendously focused on using the computer for all work and no play (if I play, I'll go with a console of some sort—my Wii and Xbox360 get some nice face time when I have a spare moment). I'm somewhat old school but I love to try new things provided that I don't have to install them on my computer (well, for the most part).


Now it's your turn...
Readers, what are your preferred freeware, shareware, and commercial apps? What gadgets and peripherals tickle your fancy? Which webapps do you use consistently? Share your all-time favorite recommendations in the comments.


Shared by Robert Scoble
I saw the same thing. But, now, I'm getting an even more engaged audience on FriendFeed and when I blog I find that I get even better visitors to my blog than before. So, I think the time invested in FriendFeed is a win for me and my audience overall.

The start of this post (see the image above) may be a good reason for many people for not to join FriendFeed ) . It shows what happened to number of visitors to this blog after I joined FF - it had dropped by half (actual numbers aren’t relevant, graph shows monthly statistics). The reason is pretty obvious for any long-time blogger - no posts, no visitors. I don’t post as often as before for a good reason - sharing news, interesting links and the whole conversation around these happens on the FriendFeed. While I didn’t set up a dream system I wanted to (see my comment on previous post on the FF), I don’t have any issues with so-called “information overload“. Actually, I don’t believe in any information overload - we are just pretty bad at managing incoming information - but that’s a story for another post.

Rooms are neat feature of FriendFeed - they act a filter and keep the conversation focused. Instead of looking at a stream of titles ranging from linux hacks, through hardcore programming stuff and other bioinformatics-related topics, up to cancer research and science philosophy, I can just go into one of the rooms and see only items related to a particular topic. Yesterday Deepak wrote on the new rooms at FF (for Python, Ruby and R for Bioinformatics) that were created by people from life-science community. There is also a room for Science 2.0 and Open Science, DIYBiology and even a room which collects links to a must-read material - BioGang classics (since I started this post, Ricardo had created OpenWetWare FriendFeed room).

Rooms help in keeping the flow of links under control, but the conversation is the key point of using FriendFeed. Almost every single item posted into The-Life-Scientists room generates comments, sometimes turning into pretty long discussion. Because FF aggregates Twitter updates, majority of “Dear Lazyweb” Twitter requests result in FriendFeed based conversations. And there’s more and more people participating (The Life Scientists room has over 200 members). As usual, there’s a catch - focus and depth are not good sides of FF comments (for example, compare reaction to the recently posted very nice essay by Michael Nielsen on The Future of Science: number of comments on his blog and on the FF are comparable, although discussion/arguing with the essay points happened mostly on the blog). But that’s not a problem - it’s just a result of a speed with which items appear and disappear on the FriendFeed (some of you have seen that tracking real-time stream from concurrent sessions on the recent ISMB conference).

Even such shallow and quick interactions with people on the FriendFeed generate some level of trust, and that I think will lead to couple of interesting things:

  • more people will try how does the online collaboration work (for example, in reflection after recent Cameron’s talk Brian Kelly from UKOLN wants to write his article online)
  • PI-level scientists will join FF to participate in the discussion (we see that already, although so far there’s only very few of them)
  • there will be serious articles why FriendFeed, Twitter and online collaboration are bad for scientists and how these can break their academic career, in similar way as there were for blogs (see recent Pedro’s post)
  • we will see (and read, since it’s going to be open-access) first peer-reviewed publication from an idea that originated at FF/Twitter

Is FriendFeed going to be a hub for science? I don’t really think so. At the time, when mainstream science will pick up FriendFeed I think we are going to be already somewhere else, because there will be more interesting and more useful platforms for scientific collaborations (like for example cyn.in - looks promising, although it’s not yet optimized product). But the time spent at FF will give us an advantage: connections, collaborations, wide spectrum of information and advice from smart people.

Zemanta Pixie

openid-logoThere are a lot of websites that require a username and password. Everyone I talk to hates that fact and typically uses the same username and password for each site. Granted security experts will complain loudly about this, but people do not want to complicate their experiences. Who really wants to remember that they have a different username on several sites and every site has a different password? The few people I know that try to have different passwords tend to write them down in a notebook. Obviously, this is not that secure either, but what other choices do we have?

myspace-openidRecently, MySpace announced that they were joining OpenID as a provider. At first glance, most people might read this and say “that’s nice,” and move on to the next story. However, for mainstream Internet users this is fairly important. The multiple usernames and passwords that people have can sometimes be replaced by a single ID using OpenID.

The idea is that you use one of your accounts as your Internet ID. Then other sites that require a logon will redirect you to your OpenID provider to login before allowing you to start your session. This sounds great, right? And you may already have an OpenID available or becoming available in the case of MySpace. The list of OpenID providers includes:

-AOL
-Blogger
-Flickr
-LiveJournal
-Technorati
-Yahoo
-WordPress


When MySpace is added to this list the number of potential users will be much larger. At some point, Google and Microsoft will probably announce support for Google Accounts and MSN accounts as OpenID providers in order to ensure they are not left behind. If they do announce support for these, most US Internet users will have an OpenID account available to them.

What if you already have accounts at various sites that allow OpenID? Well, in most cases you can just attach your OpenID to your existing user account and use it to logon during future visits. There are also sharing options, like sharing photos in Flickr or sharing RSS items from Google Reader. Maybe a site supports OpenID, but some sites want to show what I am sharing from services like Flickr and Reader. How can we control this? There is another option that is available that many aggregation and integration sites are using called OAuth. OAuth describes itself as an open protocol to allow secure API authentication in a simple and standard method from desktop and Web applications.

As you can see from this short description, this is not meant to be used by mainstream Internet users directly. To describe this in regular terms, OAuth does basically the same thing as OpenID, but adds more security around the process. The user process is basically the same as OpenID, a user gets redirected to a site to login and sent back to the page they were initially using. However, the purpose is slightly different. OAuth is trying to have better and more secure integration across various sites. If you use one site to print photos and Flickr to share photos, you need some way to securely share the information.

OAuth is sensitive to users marking things private on various sites, and has specified ways to ensure access is approved and is only temporary. A good developer overview of this is available at the Beginner’s Guide to OAuth Part II. Why is all of this important? This is all important because people are sharing information more than ever before.

There are aggregation sites like FriendFeed that import your public shares from various sites for everyone to view. Websites that allow sharing know that you want to allow access to some of this information to other applications as well. In order to do this in a secure and standard manner, something like OAuth is necessary. What would happen if OAuth was not supported? In the photo sharing example, you would need to provide your Flickr username and password to your photo printing site. Without the standard, there would also be less support for this type of thing because each service integration would require a significant amount of work.

Obviously, both OpenID and OAuth are needed for a better user experience. OpenID solves the problem of having far too many usernames and passwords to remember. OAuth solves the problem of how to share information between sites without giving your password from one site to another. Together the technologies may make things simpler for the user. Thankfully, users do not need to do anything to take advantage of these technologies. The one thing users can do is email the support team of each of your favorite sites and make sure they support OpenID and OAuth.

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Related Articles at Mashable! - The Social Networking Blog:

The Daily Poll: How Often Do You Use OpenID to Login?
Another Victory For OpenID: Yahoo Announces Support
Blogger’s OpenID Support Now Official
Wikispaces Adds OpenID Suport
Blogger Beta Gets OpenID Support
Wetpaint Adds OpenID Support
Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, IBM and Verisign Join OpenID Foundation

While the world debates the long-anticipated launch of Cuil today, it's time to take a look at what Google's next challenge really is.

It's NOT Cuil.  It's not Microsoft.

It's in the mirror.

By any historical reference, Google has become a huge company in a very short period of time.

In the past few months, they've literally been firing on all cylinders.

They've entered radio, TV and print advertising.

Media buyers are completely at a loss (They don't tell 'the boss' that ... but they are).  Do they trust the (relatively new) Google Ad Planner product as it begins to migrate across ALL advertising sectors?

It's actually one of the best times in history for media buyers because the choice is extensive.  They just need to work through this 'new curve', and in the current economy, they need to do it quickly.

The unique culture at the company will be a difficult to maintain at this level and is a large part of their 'employee happiness and retention' program.


In the meantime, some of Google's strongest 'allies', including a few (not all) of the 'original' SEO crowd, are starting to take measured shots at the company.

It's just the beginning.

Microsoft's been dealing with this ever since their environment turned 'corporate'.  A LOT of tech advisors, consultants, and administrators literally trash Microsoft on a regular basis.  Some simply won't use anything they make. (A pretty difficult prospect at best in the enterprise right now).

Recent stats from a variety of companies have Google with 65-75% of search. 

When you reach the pinnacle, people are going to take shots at you.

Google has literally changed the landscape (and NUMEROUS industries), as Microsoft (and IBM before them) did.

It's not a coincidence that Google is growing it's NY staff (close to Madison Avenue and Wall Street) while others are scaling back,

Google's biggest challenge going forward is PR. 

How will they handle it?

That chapter will be written later this year and well into next year.  It could very well be one of the most difficult obstacles the company has ever faced.

Eric Schmidt has his hands full and nobody's really talking about it yet .... so I thought I would :)

Food for thought.
Enjoy the week all
Charlie
...

Who Is Your Information Filter?

Posted in Read this at July 28th, 2008 / No Comments »

This comment by Michael C. Harris on FriendFeed the other day caught my eye:

Heaps of fantastic shares from unknowns get almost completely ignored and yet Scoble shares “Scoble” and gets 50 comments

Michael is hitting on something very important. In FriendFeed, not all shared items are created equal. I’ve noticed some people are really good at getting people to click through on a shared item and start a conversation.

I think of these people as the new Information Filters. They have a knack for getting their subscribers to check out stuff they find interesting. More so than your average social media user.

Over time, a logical outcome would be this: as the Information Filters share information with their subscribers, click-throughs and comments occur on that content. Which attracts new people into the discussion. Who then subscribe to the Information Filter. Which increases the click-throughs and comments. Repeat…

Good Information Filters can find themselves with a lot of power to direct traffic, and subtly influence what others take in when it comes to information. This isn’t without precedent. Television and the web are prior examples of this.

Migration of News Consumption Habits

Both television and the web have seen changes in the way people get their news. In both TV and the web, the changes are based on the strength of someone’s personality and judgment as to what the audience wants:

In 2004, CNN reported a Pew Research Center survey of news viewing habits. The survey found that 21% of people aged 18 - 29 got their news on the presidential election from Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. A follow-up report “Where Americans Go for News” by Pew also noted:

During these late night hours, many young people are tuning into comedy shows such as David Letterman and Jay Leno. Those under age 30 are among the most likely to watch these types of shows 17% watch Leno or Letterman regularly, compared with 8% of 30-49 year-olds and 12% of those age 50 and older.

What do Jon Stewart, David Letterman and Jay Leno offer that the traditional news broadcasts don’t? Humor, obviously. They also get to pick the most interesting news items for their shows. NBC News anchor Brian Williams noted the obligation of professional news organizations to offer news that likely doesn’t interest most audiences:

Some people call it ‘eat your peas’ journalism because it has to include everything that’s good for you to know to be a good citizen of the world. We put it out there.

In this comment, you see the larger societal obligation felt by the mainstream news media. They cover everything, even the stuff you don’t care for. There’s a tension between ensuring people get a full range of information about our multi-faceted world, and what people are willing to pay attention to.

The web has undergone a similar change in reading habits. Matt Drudge’s Drudge Report has eclipsed traditional news outlets in terms of influence. From The Telegraph’s article Matt Drudge: world’s most powerful journalist:

So much internet traffic can be directed to an item linked to by Drudge that unprepared websites have been known to collapse under the strain.

For politicians, the effect is akin to a needle injecting information into the media bloodstream. A positive story can give a shot of adrenaline to a flagging campaign. More commonly, negative information can be like a dose of poison being administered.

Drudge rose to prominence when he famously put the Monica Lewinsky story in play. Since then, his traffic has grown enormously. It’s not just about that one scoop. Drudge has a good sense about what is newsworthy. From the Washington Post blog The Fix:

The second major reason for Drudge’s influence, according to the Fix’s informal poll of Drudge-ologists is his ability to sniff out a potentially big story when others — including reporters — miss it at first glance.

“He can identify what’s a big deal even when the reporters who actually cover and report on an event don’t realize what they have,” said one GOP strategist granted anonymity to speak candidly. “He scoops reporters’ scoops.”

What do Jon Stewart, David Letterman, Jay Leno and Matt Drudge have in common?

  • They don’t actually find and report news (for the most part)
  • They only present what they find interesting
  • They have shrewd judgment as to what audiences will like
  • Their personalities are part of their effectiveness as news filters - people trust them

Each of these guys have emerged as a key Information Filter.  New social media platforms, such as FriendFeed, are starting to see the emergence of their own Information Filters.

You Are Who You Follow

This is something Robert Scoble emphasizes: you define yourself by who you follow. Early FriendFeed employee Kevin Fox described the general role of your friends on FriendFeed:

The nature of FriendFeed is that you start to think that the world is like you, because your friends shape your FF world. I think the FF world is full of Obama supporters, and other people thing it’s full of Twitterers. Pick your friends wisely because they define your FF.

In an equal world, information shared by any of your friends will merit click-throughs and discussion. But the practical reality is that some people will be more “equal” than others in terms of driving the discussion agenda. There are two highly correlated components to that:

  • Number of subscribers
  • Reputation for identifying what is interesting

The sheer number of subscribers make some people Information Filters. The big power users on Twitter: Leo Laporte, Dave Winer, Robert Scoble, Jason Calacanis, etc. These guys really drive discussions around ideas, opinions and news. If you subscribe, you can’t help but be overwhelmed by the discussions they can kick off.

The reputation for finding interesting stuff is a little harder. Like Matt Drudge and Jon Stewart, you need to have a sense for what people want to know and find interesting. Some people are naturals at this, but I think anyone can learn how to identify interesting stuff.

Louis Gray is a really good Information Filter. Out of curiosity, I took at look at the last 30 Google Reader shares he put into FriendFeed. And I compared them to my last 30. I wanted to analyze the interaction around them: Likes, comments.

The chart to the right graphs the total Likes and comments for the 30 Google Reader shares of each of us. Louis is clearly good at putting things out there and having people discuss them. You’ll see the Likes and comments on his shares are double mine.

I consider Louis to be one of my Information Filters. He’s great at identifying the good stuff. And he takes this role seriously. He wrote a post Roll Your Own Blog Leaderboard with Google Reader Trends, in which he identifies the blogs he’s sharing most often.

The Effects of Our Information Filters

NBC News’ Brian Williams had this to say in response to the increasing use of applying personal filters to news:

Do you have a problem with people personalizing the news vs. you saying ‘these are the top stories’? Is there a danger in that if you give people too much personalization?

Williams: That’s for others to decide. I will say that if you’re using a filter, if you wake up in the morning and you have loaded up your computer, in other words to say, ‘Foreign news totally bums me out, this Iraq thing, it just ruins my day. Keep it away from me.’ Is that what [James] Madison had in mind, do you think? Is that what [John] Adams and [Ben] Franklin and [Thomas] Jefferson had in mind? Did they expect a little more informed electorate, to quote Mr. Jefferson? Did they expect a little more from us as citizens? I can’t judge people.

Democracy, on the other hand, looking at the argument, it’s their right [to filter]. I’m a lover of news and information, I’m a lover of American history, it’s my hobby. So if I had my druthers… Some people call it ‘eat your peas’ journalism because it has to include everything that’s good for you to know to be a good citizen of the world. We put it out there.

I can’t start programming the ‘NBC Nightly News’ with just the news that doesn’t bum people out. Just the news they want to see and hear. But I can’t stop someone from using filters, from using pay-as-you-go technology to get what they want. I will probably have my own opinion in a couple years about what we’ve become as a society as a result of if we stop getting the news that’s at all negative.

There’s a similar concern about over-reliance on our Information Filters in social media. That it becomes too easy to rely on what they find, and put in front of us. Robert Scoble asked a question that touched on this recently:

Hmm, how come you all like commenting on Google Reader Shared Items here in FriendFeed but you all do so little Google Reader reading yourselves?

Check it out for a good discussion around the merits of using FriendFeed exclusively for reading new blog posts.

Choose Your Information Filters Carefully

Brian Williams alluded to the “eat your peas” element of being an informed citizen. That is, take in information even when it doesn’t interest you. But that’s really fighting against human nature. We’re time-constrained, and social media has made it easier than ever to perpetuate our natural tendency to rely on the advice of friends for what is interesting.

So really, the best thing to do is to choose your Information Filters wisely.

What do you think? How do you select your Information Filters?

*****

See this post on FriendFeed: http://friendfeed.com/search?q=%22Who+Is+Your+Information+Filter%3F%22&public=1

zeitvertreib1.jpgWer nun schon seit Wochen, auf sein iPhone der 2. Generation wartet, sich damals in den eMail-Verteiler eingetragen und zwischenzeitlich bereits mit einem SMS-Gutschein für eine Plastik-Hülle vertröstet wurde, dürfte heute aus allen Wolken gefallen sien.

Denn die Post, die von T-Mobile heute an etliche Frühbesteller verschickt wurde, führte weder zum bestellten Gerät noch zu einem weiteren Give-Away an die verärgerte Kundschaft. T-Mobile verschickt iPhone-Vorlagen aus Papier und ruft zum "Basteln" auf.

Christian schreibt uns:

Ich habe heute morgen Post von den Rosa Jungs bekommen ! Ich habe als Bestandskunde im XL Vertag am 01.07.2007 verlängert und noch mmer kein Iphone erhalten . Rechnung für VVL schon bezahlt etc.! Jetzt bekomme ich heute morgen Post und etwas unglaubliches ist passiert !

Ich habe ein iPhone erhalten !! Aber leider nur aus Pappe zu selber basteln - mit dem Spruch "ALS KLEINER ZEITVERTREIB " !

Update: Wie in den Kommentaren angemerkt wird, befindet sich auf der Rückseite des Bastelbogens ein Gutscheincode für eine iPhone-Schutzhülle. Über die Art der Aufmachung lässt sich sicher weiter streiten, aber aus einem zweifelhaften Bastelbogen wird somit wenigstens der Gutschein für eine kleine Entschädigung.

Zwei Fotos in groß folgen im Anschluss…

brokenadrm.pngVor knapp einer Woche haben wir über das Auftauchen erster Cracks, für die im AppStore vertriebenen iPhone-Applikationen berichtet. Heute nun scheint das Fair-Play-DRM der von Apple angebotenen Apps endgültig überlistet. Gefunden und beschrieben von Zeph Leggett, lässt sich der “Kopierschutz” aller AppStore-Applikationen bereits mit den Mac OS X Boardmitteln anzeigen, und kann mit Hilfe eines jailbroken iPhone direkt von den erworbenen Dateien entfernt werden.

Um die hier (for education purpose only) beschriebene Vorgehensweise nachvollziehen zu können, braucht es kein abgeschlossenes Informatik-Studium. Die ausführbare AppStore-Datei enthält bereits genaue Informationen über ihren verschlüsselten Bereich. Ist dieser einmal in den Speicher geladen, erlaubt ein einfacher Memory-Dump die 1-zu-1 Kopie der nun unverschlüsselten Daten. Das Ergebnis ist eine DRM-freie Kopie der erworbenen Applikation

Wie Apple auf das nun offengelegte Verfahren reagieren wird bleibt abzuwarten, dass es jedoch weniger als einen Monat brauchte, Apples neues DRM zu brechen stimmt nachdenklich.

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stewart butterfield.jpgStewart Butterfield co-founded Flickr with his wife Caterina Fake, sold it to Yahoo in 2005 and left the company this summer. He's happy to be gone, and he'll tell you about it if you ask. ZDNet did:

"I felt like the biggest problem while I was there [was that] that management was oriented a little bit too much towards the quarterly results," said Butterfield in an interview with ZDNet.com.au today.

"If the entire focus of the company is produce a certain amount of operating free cash flow or a certain amount of capital expenditure ... it isn't hard for other people to out-manoeuvre you, when they're not so concerned about those things," Butterfield said.

Butterfield said he saw Google as a more innovative company.

"I am sure the management at Google, despite their outward proclamations, are every bit as concerned about those numbers, but they are taking bigger strategic risks, and other web start-ups are as well," he said.

Butterfield also spoke out about Microsoft's attempt to buy Yahoo, the failure of which has resulted in diminished confidence in Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang and a management exodus at the search firm.

"It was not so great," he said. "Once the ball was rolling I would have rather seen the acquisition happen. I think a lot of damage was done to Yahoo. Not only from a company perspective, but from a leadership and moral perspective."

See Also: Flickr Duo Ditching Yahoo, Too
What, Exactly, Did Jerry Tell Yahoos Last Week?

Photo: Stewart Butterfield