Dug Song nicely captures the rally on the Diag in support of Google’s Fiber for Communities program.
Dug Song nicely captures the rally on the Diag in support of Google’s Fiber for Communities program.
My friends, this is a call to return to blogging; a return to those halcyon days where everyone had their own URL, their own HTML, and their own theme. The days before Twitter & Facebook began consuming our lives (both our content and our time).
Friends, collegues, those of the greater geek community:
Stop throwing away your content.
Looking at my own experience I can see why social networking sites are becoming so popular. I had stopped posting on my personal blog because it had become too much effort. It was so much easier to post a quick thought on Twitter or to upload a picture to Facebook. And the feedback was immediate, because that’s where the people are. Your collegues and business contacts are on Twitter. Your mom and dad are on the Facebook. We gravitate to these sites because that’s where the rich interactions take place.
But tell me, what happens to those interactions after a week? A month? A year? These interactions effectively dissappear for you, unless you are willing to hit the “next page” link hundreds of times and wade back through the timeline. If you wanted to, could you get that data back? If you wanted to, can you even find that data in the first place?
These sites want your data under their control. Facebook, as an example, has made it clear that they own the rights to your data. But that’s just the legal aspect about what they can do with your data outside of the site. My concern is: what can you do with the data outside of the site? We are all pouring content into these sites (myself, included) and there is no easy way to get it back out if we wanted to. Good luck looking back 20 years from now and trying to find all the nice things people posted on your Wall for your birthday. And that’s nothing compared to the unthinkable: if any of these sites shut down and disappeared off the face of internet tomorrow, where would all that content be?
So, be aware. Take control of your data. I’m not saying to quit Facebook or Twitter or Tumblr or anything drastic. After all, that’s where the people are. That’s where the conversation can happen. Just remember that everything you do there is ephemeral. It can disappear on the wind like a conversation in the park. Before you post, take note of how valuable that content is to you both now and in the future. Here’s a couple of concrete things you can do to try to protect your content:
I’m still trying to figure out the balance for myself. I’ll probably still be posting plenty of content on protected sites in the days to come. But these sites will not be around forever. Plan accordingly, and think.
While dropping the kiddos off at school this morning, a particularly awesome Irish tune came on to 107.1 to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day. I had never heard it before so I fired up Shazam on my iPhone and it identified it as “From The Back Of A Broken Dream” by the band Flogging Molly. Not only that, it found a video on youtube so I could share it with you. A nice way to start the day.
found via metafilter
Professional League soccer team Cerezo Osaka take on a team of 100 Japanese primary school children. Hilarity ensues. The kids are pretty good.
Note: You may want to skip to about 5:00 into the first video to bypass the introductions.
After a long time in hibernation, I have jump-started Rhymes With Toaster as a WordPress blog. Drupal has been wonderful to me, it’s my primary framework when I develop at my dayjob. But it has become clear that I do not need to have a personal hosting space when all I really need is a place to throw up some thoughts, link to other resources and redirect email. Also, drupal is a bit of overkill for a personal blog.
So, I’ve migrated all my old content to WordPress and will be using wordpress.com for the host. It’s much simpler for the needs and the cost is certainly cheaper than a full hosting plan.
I hope to be posting more regularly in the very near future.