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Web winks: It's such a wild, wild web. Taming it might not be possible, but I'll report on it.

It’s a fact that Wikipedia has now entered our lives just like Google has. Despite a certain lingering mistrust of its user-submitted and hence potentially error-prone content, most people - including me - will probably seek information on Wikipedia after checking Google, or instinctively click on the Wikipedia link in the Google SERP right off the bat.

Wikipedia, however, still suffers from a major weakness: it lacks the support of quality photographs. In comes Fotopedia. The France-based project describes itself as « Images for Humanity ». It’s an online encyclopedia of photos, organized in articles and subjects that tap directly into Wikipedia for their text content. In that sense, it positions itself right between Wikipedia and Google’s map-based Panoramio.

Fotopedia Screenshot

So users can create articles or add their own photo albums, and take an active part in shaping the encyclopedia by submitting and voting for pictures, either from other articles, their own Flickr account or their computer via the Fotopedia client.

The web site’s interface is quite attractive and does a nice job at keeping the photos in the limelight; this isn’t about textual knowledge but rather visual knowledge, and beauty. Here’s an example of a personal Bloody Bay Wall album which pictures’ now belong to the Little Cayman encyclopedia article.

 

 Posted at 2:43 PM in Reviews: & Web winks: 4 Comments » Toggle display  Reply
I have more Google Wave invites to hand out. As always, ask very nicely or trade! Once I send them out, be patient, they take a while to arrive. I can’t say that Wave has hooked me at all yet, but I’m still experimenting with it...

 

 Posted at 4:06 PM in Web winks: No comments yet »  Post one!

Well, fame will have been short for the newcomer SexyLightbox. At 1:30 AM the same day, I have just decided that Shadowbox was stronger, more polished and better built.

Inspired by SexyLightbox’ rounded corners and colour schemes, I’ve adjusted Shadowbox to resemble it using CSS3’s new border-radius property. It’s a work in progress, but Shadowbox prevails...

 

 Posted at 2:37 AM in Web site news: & Web winks: No comments yet »  Post one!

Starting with the previous post « Taming Coney Island » and on, all slideshows will be powered with the SexyLightbox script, replacing Shadowbox - at least temporarily. It’s not necessarily better but looks very slick and was worth a try since I am always on the hunt for new tools. Click on these links or the images below, have a look, and please don’t hesitate to leave feedback!

 

 Posted at 1:28 AM in Web site news: & Web winks: No comments yet »  Post one!

My Google Wave invites have just been replenished. I’ve got a few to give away if you are interested. Just ask very nicely. A thoughtful comment would be nice. Or some barter exchange. A script. A piece of software. I don’t know. Surprise me.

Update 5: No more invites available for the time being, I’ll wait until the ones I sent have been activated, which hasn’t happened yet. I guess the latest wave (pardon the pun) of invites released to current users overwhelmed the team. Be patient, they will arrive...

On a different topic, I am now running Windows 7 and enjoying it very much so far.

Update 4: Still looking for a deal on Windows 7, 32 bit Home Premium... Any students out there not needing to upgrade or blessed with a Mac?

Update 3: Patience everyone, none of the invites I sent have been processed yet. As I said, it might take a few days. You’ll get an email from wave-noreply with the subject « Your invitation to preview Google Wave ». Make sure to check your spam folder as some people have reported finding that email in the spam...

Update 2: Those of you who have already received my invite are welcome to drop me a wave for testing purposes...
vmounier ( a t ) googlewave ( d o t ) com

Update: Ok, invites are going fast, so I’m going to up the game a bit. I’d really like to upgrade my laptop to Windows 7. If anybody can get me a good deal, there’s still an invite waiting. ;-)

For lack investigating time, I can’t say I’ve played with Google Wave much since its limited release a few weeks ago. I would describe Wave as a fusion of email, chat, social networking and online cooperation tool. It retains Gmail’s famous conversation-based style and indeed, like Gmail years ago, it is being made available as a beta to a select crowd via an invite-led viral campaign.

I’m not much of social networking freak myself, so my testing of Wave will be aleatory. I wish it was somehow integrated with Gmail, which would in my eyes make it much more useful. Still, Google is storming the web with cloud applications and communications tools, and with Google Voice having just been launched and the Chrome OS soon to follow, one can be sure that Wave fits snugly into a grand scheme that would, and probably will, consecrate Google as the leading worldwide online player.

 

 Posted at 7:24 PM in Reviews: & Web winks: 22 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

Everybody knows it: Internet Explorer sucks. It sucks mostly because even in its 8th version, it still isn’t standard-compliant. The other four major players in the browser field, Firefox, Chrome, Opera and Safari, have synchronized their efforts and achieved a rather similar level of compliance. Web designers can target them globally and obtain very consistent results. But IE remains a mystery. No matter what, version after version, it just doesn’t manage to catch up with the pack. So a carefully designed web page looks beautiful - as intended - on most browsers but on IE, it’s likely to be ugly and/or broken.

But picture this: Google, in its rather obvious ongoing campaign to steal some of Microsoft’s monopoly and fame, has just released a very clever plugin called Google Chrome Frame. Once installed, the little beauty allows someone browsing the web with Internet Explorer to actually experience web pages as they would be seen on Google Chrome - meaning the right way. The plugin simply turns IE into a standard-compliant, nice-playing browser. Wow.

The Google Chrome Frame plugin simply turns IE into a standard-compliant, nice-playing browser.

The idea, to quote TechCrunch, is both hilarious and awesome. I find it quite satisfying to see most of the industry rallying against IE, because I am le tired of getting headaches trying to make my pages IE-compatible or of finding ways for them to degrade - never mind gracefully - decently. In this sense, Chrome Frame seems like a godsend. Drawbacks are likely to surface and the plugin will without a doubt have its share of detractors, but I think it’s a fantastic idea, even if only in its hilariousness.

From a designer’s point of view, going the Google Chrome Frame way is a two-step process: the addition of a simple meta tag is enough to make a page compatible, and then a slightly more complicated piece of code allows for browser detection and prompting the IE user to install the plugin.

Make no mistake about it, this is all in a very, very early development stage. As it has become customary with Google, the project was made available to the guinea pigs, I mean the developers, in order to leverage their time and speed up the gestation. But the newborn looks impressive and is sure to make many heads turn. It should be noted that Chrome Frame isn’t really a browser plugin but rather is installed - and thus eventually removed - like a program, to and from the Control Panel.

If you’d like to see it in action - provided you are indeed still running some version of Internet Explorer (my heart goes to you), you can go to my new sitemap and install the plugin. Because of its beta stage, Google Chrome Frame doesn’t yet seem to reload the page correctly once installed, so you’ll have to close and restart your IE browser. But at that point, what a difference. Notice for instance that suddenly, IE is rendering drop shadows and rounded corners correctly!

So the million dollar question is: who will install this? It can be argued that a good percentage of the people who are still using Internet Explorer do so because of an inherent fear of change, of the unknown, of computers and complicated installs. If switching over to Firefox is too intimidating, installing a plugin might still appear to be too much trouble and be skipped. Time will tell.

 

 Posted at 10:16 PM in Bits and pieces: & Cool: & Web winks: No comments yet »  Post one!

There’s a new kid on the blog. You will have noticed the green (or red) vertical tab, left of all things major - on the very edge of Coriolistic Anachronisms. It’s called Tweetboard and it’s a new widget that links to the blog’s Twitter account and allows, among other things, for visitors to leave threaded (or nested) messages, a feature blatantly lacking on Twitter itself.

The sweet little thing is still very much in alpha phase and being released on an invite basis, but seems worth a test run. I might keep it or I might not, since at first glance I can see it competing with the main entries for visitor comments. But as always, I like doing live trials and I’ll ditch whatever doesn’t suit me...

So if you are Twitter-equipped (Who isn’t nowadays? Nobody, I fear.) feel free to tweet back right in the window and watch your prose appear after a minute or so in forum-like threaded style.

 

 Posted at 5:15 PM in Web site news: & Web winks: 5 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

Update: The movie director’s message is simple. Yann Arthus-Bertrand says: « HOME has been made for you: share it! And act for the planet. »

Yet in its infinite wisdom, YouTube, officially hosting it for the web, has managed to make embedding the movie impossible - at least for my location. What’s up with that? Morons!

I AM pissed off!

Now I’m going to skip YouTube and wait for a theatre show or a DVD. YouTube ruined the impact. And I’ll make sure to write to Arthus-Bertrand. Any way, in case you want to still go ahead and watch it on YouTube, set the player to HD if your connection speed allows, and if it really moves, try full screen

 

 Posted at 1:36 PM in Web winks: No comments yet »  Post one!

Update: I decided the body of this entry didn’t belong on the front page and moved it here instead (original entry). This is dark material and it is time for the blog to turn back towards the light. I am keeping the page up at its new location for two reasons:

1 - It serves as a first experiment of the Cover It Live system;

2 - I remain extremelly curious to find out what actually happened on board flight 447 and I assume others might, too. This is not morbid curiosity but the pilot in me tackling very practical considerations and wanting to know the technical facts.

 

 Posted at 4:12 PM in Web winks: 1 Comment » Toggle display  Reply

Please contribute if you feel like it as long as it remains respectful, open-minded and positive. The purpose of all this, at this stage, is to find out what happened and learn from it rather than criticize or point accusing fingers. My most sincere condolences go to the families affected.

« L’instant d’après le vent se déchaîne,
Les heures s’allongent, comme des semaines... »
Francis Cabrel

UPDATE, July 3: While African and Brazilian air traffic control authorities are arguing about having or not followed hand-over procedure, the BEA sheds no light on the crash in its most recent report, which, even though rather detailed, cannot reveal much more than an apparently high vertical velocity and normal flight attitude at the time of impact. 

UPDATE, June 27: Brazil has officially called off the search for bodies and debris.

UPDATE, June 25: One of the 50 bodies recovered has been identified as the Captain’s. I had my own minute of silence thinking of the struggle he might have faced, for a few moments. But then again, he was where he most wanted to be and I believe that he will have done everything he could for the safety of his flight and his passengers, until the end. No one could ask for a better epitaph.

UPDATE, June 23: The French press mentions, since yesterday, rumours of weal acoustic signals having been received by the French sub Emeraude and that could turn out to be from the beacons of flight 447. Nothing has been confirmed yet but the BEA is expected to issue a statement later. If they are located, the next challenge will be their actual recovery. But they hold the key to the mystery of AF447’s disappearance and we can hope answers will come forth.

UPDATE, June 20: A strange new trend in the French media quotes sources discussing a leak in the wastewater system and a corresponding early LAV ACARS message, which I have never seen. Or have I? It would have weakened the composite membrane around it and caused in-flight break-out. Not very credible so far.

Otherwise, I am glad that some people are keeping a sense of humour despite the tragedy. This from PPRuNe:

"About all I have been able to conclude is that if I am ever on an A/C in distress I will hold on to the lav door, clutch the defibrillator case, and try to post a msg here as to what happened so you all don’t have to wonder."

(Note: the lav door and defibrillator have been recovered intact. « Here » refers to the PPRuNe forum thread dealing with the AF447 crash and which is now in its 105th page, or 2083 posts and counting!)

...

UPDATE, June 18: The media is losing its interest in the crash as no apparent progress is being made in the recovery/investigative efforts. The number of bodies remains at 50 and additional pieces of debris are being picked up. If nothing else, the debris field drifting north should help investigators come up with a vague crash location approximation based on current/wind drift. No news of the black boxes of course - that would be big news. I have never seen so much public speculation and coverage sprout for an airline crash, but then again never has this happened before (such a high-profile crash with so little clues and at a date recent enough to have had the modern internet at its full strength.)

Here’s a link to a page with a recap of the main pictures/graphics that have been published so far.

...

UPDATE, June 15: The following found on the otherwise very serious PPRuNe, proof that everybody and their dog is looking for answers. It had me laughing for 5 minutes. I can think of a few rude answers...

« I’m sorry, but I feel I need to ask you what on earth a pilot tube does? »

...

UPDATE, June 14: As the count of recovered bodies climbs to 50 and still no answers have come forward, this is being pondered on Plane Talking:

This was the same press conference where Air France made the ludicrous claim that lightning might have been involved, and the incorrect claims that the automated ACARS messages, immediately before all contact ceased, detailed a series of unprecedented electrical faults.

Why did Air France make these statements? It had the ACARS messages. They do not require decoding by its operations and maintenance personnel who would have read them for what they are as fast as they appeared. These messages did not support the public comments by the airline in a press conference it held many hours after it knew the jet had crashed.

...

UPDATE: While the first unofficial autopsy reports seem to indicate in-flight break up of the plane, other reports unofficially conclude the same after Airbus operators recreate the flight on A330 simulators. The assumption that all pitots failed due to ice accumulation has to remain for the latter to be credible. This was discussed on Plane Talking.

...

UPDATE: L’Emeraude, French attack sub, is currently participating to the search, covering a daily area of 20 square nautical miles, which doesn’t seem like much but hey, it’s better than nothing! I wish them luck. I’m glad to see the navy used in such a way.

The French Pourquoi pas will be on site Thursday with its mini subs and the US towed beacon locators will begin their search on the week-end.

...

UPADTE: 41 bodies have been recovered so far, which is quite impressive.

As the French Sub Emeraude is expected on site very soon, the US has announced it will contribute two high-tech devices, « towed pinger locators », to assist in the effort to locate the emergency beacons. Meanwhile, the French research ship Pourquoi pas will use its deep diving subs for the same purpose. Links to two of these subs here and here.6:01

Click here to toggle the display of older updates

 

 Posted at 7:29 PM in Other: & Web winks: 6 Comments » Toggle display  Reply
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