Alle Jahre ist es wieder soweit: ich installiere eine aktuelle Distribution auf meinem Notebook. Diesmal Ubuntu Dapper Drake.
Monthly Archives: August 2006
4. Frankfurter Web Montag
Mit Lukas, der mit seinem ersten Web Montag gleich ins richtige kalte Wasser sprang und uns die Idee von Yadis/OpenID näherbrachte, und Cosima habe ich diesmal gleich zwei Neulinge mitgeschleift. Beiden hats gefallen. Prima ;)
Meine Sicht der Vorträge in so-kurz-es-geht: Microfomats sind seltsam (+1), WCAG 2.0 braucht noch ein paar Jahre (wen wunderts), manche Websites *müssen* häßlich sein (+1), Black is beautiful (+1!!!11), OpenID *könnte* *ein* Identity-Problem lösen. Mehr gibts im Echo-Überblick.
Kuscheln war lustig, auch wenn Candelua nicht persönlich dabei sein konnte ;)
Nochmal zu OpenID. Identity-Management besteht aus meiner Sicht aus mehr als Authentisierung. Und genau da fehlts bei allen Ansätzen, egal ob Microsoft oder Opensource-Frickeleien. Es gibt mehr als einen Sascha A. Carlin, oder besser, es gibt mehrere Instanzen von ihm. Ich würde in einem Identity-Manager all diese Instanzen zusammenfassen können, ohne dass von außen Rückschlüsse auf alle Instanzen möglich sind. Lukas schlug in der Diskussion vor, mehrere OpenIDs zu nutzen. Wäre denkbar, wenn man sie intern zusammenschalten könnte.
Und noch ein Gedanke zu Web Units (aus Martins WCAG-Vortrag). Der Begriff gefällt mir sehr gut, bildet er doch die Realität ab, dass eine Webseite (page) aus mehr besteht als der eigentlichen Information. Bin mir noch nicht sicher, ob und wie man diesen Gedanken technisch umsetzen könnte, aber inhaltlich bin ich voll dafür.
phpBB 3.0 Beta2 released!
Siehe Meiks Ankündigung auf phpBB.com und Jonathans LoC- und Bug-Statistiken.
Geschützt: Working with papers
While working on my diploma thesis, one thought recurred all the time working with a paper.
For better understanding I will first reiterate how we (well, at least me, but perhaps many other people, too) work with papers.
Sitting at your desk, you have a paper in front of you, a pen and a text marker, and a notebook. While reading the paper, you mark parts of the text and take notes either in the paper or in your notebook.
What kind of notes do you take, and which parts do you mark? Quotations you might incorporate into your own text, references (I have the pages with references printed twice so that I can always have them at the ready without breaking the reading process by switching pages.), concepts mentioned in other papers (quoted, extended or worked on), and a lot more.
After you read 10 papers or more, you have a bunch of notes. These are written down either in the notebook or on the papers or on both (perhaps complementary, perhaps scattered, perhaps [but much less probable] ‘mirrored’).
Now that you read the papers, you need to sort your notes. That includes reading your notes, re-reading some passages of the papers, looking through other papers as well to solve references and links, summarizing concepts spanning across different papers. This process is very time consuming and can lead to frustration (“Where the heck is that Meyer paper gone?!”, “I can’t find that reference again, it ought to be here somewhere…”, “Second, which David paper is that, the 2004 or the 2005?”). Of course, over time you will come up with certain tricks to help youself. Living is learning.
But.
All these papers I read are printed copies of online resources (PDF and HTML). Virtually all papers produced are accessible as online resources (paid or free), at least in technology related fields. So we do have two versions of them. One printed on our desks’, one either on the Web (Which I more and more find to be an extension to my harddrive.) or on our computer. On one half you have jotted notes, marked concepts. The others’ are untouched, not mapping your work on them. Both need to be sorted, ordered and filed - in different ways using different means. And then there is the information in your notebook, that isn’t part of any collection but is a separate isle on its own.
There are software tools to faciliate this process. But they break the process, too, because they don’t integrate all steps. There are (highly sophisticated) bibliographic tools for literature management, mindmapping tools, note management tools and of course word processors.
What is missing is a tool that helps you getting it all together. Reading, note taking, spanning concepts, references, links, quotes and all the pieces of information you as a reader create while working with texts.
Let’s think about a blank computer screen. We vertically devide it in two parts, the right one smaller then the left one. In the right part, the sidebar, you can define areas. You can give them headings like “quotes”, “references”, “concepts”, anything you like. In the left part of the screen, the content area, texts are displayed (Who the heck cares about formats when reading?, HTML, PDF, DOC, its all the same.). Your mouse is the tool you actually work with. Just mark a fews words and drag them into your “quotes” area, where you might enter a short hand. Find an interesting reference, and put it into the “references” area, entering a short hand. Mark a heading, drag it onto another heading from another paper already in the “concepts” area - and voila, they get linked to each other.
I think you can see what I mean. Of course most of the work the tools needs to do is to be done in the background. What I want is an unobstrusive UI. And I mean unobstrusive. Just pointing, clicking, dragging, a few hits on the keyboard, enter, done.
Here are some tools I discovered and tested. Unfortunatly, none fulfilled my requirements.
[Scrapbook](http://amb.vis.ne.jp/mozilla/scrapbook/), an extension for [Firefox](http://www.mozilla.com/firefox/) is en route to become such a tool. Today its UI is still to complex, needing to much attention, and to small, embedded in the browser’s window. If it could work with PDF documents and if the interface would be streamlined, offering less options but more commands, it would be great.
[Google Notebook](http://www.google.com/googlenotebook/overview.html) offers, via a browser plugin using a web interface, functionality to create notes. Notes are filed in Notebooks, which can be structured in sections. Both the web interface and the plugin are in need of refinement to make them usable. Today it is simply a sticky notes-like tool to jot down unstructered notes.
[Onfolio](http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/76774)
Feddisch
X. X. X.
America’s Web 2.0 canon
Die BW erklärt uns die Welt und schreibt:
A lot of these global entrepreneurs are simply copying the biggest ideas in America’s Web 2.0 canon. For every Digg.com, the popular U.S. site that lets readers nominate and vote on the most important news stories, there’s a Yigg.de (the German version of the same).
America’s Web 2.0 canon? Weia… Mal abgesehen davon, daß digg.com selbst kopiert hat, wie die meisten Sites die so aus America’s Web 2.0 canon geschossen kommen.
Quelle: http://money.cnn.com/2006/08/09/technology/webaroundtheworld.biz2/index.htm
lilina und lylina - Kleine eRONAs ;)
Der lilina news aggregator ist eine kleine Version von eRONA. Er bietet einem Nutzer die Möglichkeit, seine Feed-Sammlung zeitlich geordnet online zu lesen und per URL die Feed-Sammlung selbst als OPML abzurufen.
Es fehlt ein Feed für die aggregierten Einträge, weshalb ich lilina eher als Feed-Reader denn als Aggregator bezeichnen würde. Zudem bietet es keine Suchfunktion und ist auch nicht mehrbenutzer-fähig. Dieses Manko macht der Fork lylina wieder wett, in dem es dritten Nutzern erlaubt, aus der Menge der Feeds eigene Übersichten zusammenzustellen. Das Anlegen neuer Feeds ist ihnen aber verwehrt.
Es sind in jedem Fall interessante Projekte, und ich denke, ich werde die Darstellung der Eintrags-Liste für eROINA adaptieren.
The Big Picture
Beim Lesen von FAQ: Protecting yourself from search engines | CNET News.com entdeckt: The Big Picture. Kühle Sache.
The Big Difference Between Old And New
Digg klaut bei Netscape, was Netscape von Digg klaut - irgendwie ;)
Valleywag, Silicon Valley’s Tech Gossip Rag
Save Digg (unaffiliated with Digg.com) lists the defectors’ submissions to Netscape. (Submissions are headlines and synopses of a web page or article, along with a link). The site encourages Digg users to “fill in” for the ex-users (who go by Wayjer, Bloodjunkie, and dirtyfratboy) by submitting the same stories to Digg.
The following Diggers were bought by Netscape, but they can’t buy us all. Digg their posts to help our favorite news site fight the man.