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The Blurring Line

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Browsers In The Wild

Time is an interesting creature of change…  The more things change the more they stay same??  To a certain degree I find that to be correct.  Internet Explorer always seems to be a few revs behind its competition i.e. Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Opera and Safari.  I find it interesting how Opera and Firefox are leveraging the Internet to enhance the browsing experience.  It makes a lot of sense.  This could also be attributed to the general nature of improvement – things evolve over time.

Opera Unite

Opera’s Unite, the web server in a browser,  is a good example of a web browser that is much more than a web browser.  It is an application that uses Opera servers (or personal servers) to share content.  That is a very vague overview, but it makes a point; web browsers today are much different than web browsers of yesterday.

I think this is a trend started by Firefox.  Firefox plug-ins that integrate delicious, flickr, facebook, or any kind of social media that is web based – is a change from the norm.  Even Mozilla is graying the line between desktop and webapp.  The introduction of Weave lets users sync up their browsers across many PCs and mobile devices.  Allowing for a more constant web experience – such a great idea.

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You Had Me At Headline

Sunday, September 2nd, 2007

It’s no secret, the headline is a critical piece to any article. Be it online, academia, or just for fun. The article’s headline is going to make or break the article. Should you spend forever debating on what the article should be headlined with? No, of course not. But think of something clever and build from there. I’ve found that a good headline can help you remind focused on writing.

This definitely has deeper implementations as your article propagates through-out the Internet or “blogosphere (buzzword)”. Social networking sites seemed to be geared toward people with the ability to write that great headlines. Even regular readers are drawn in by a great headline. Make it clever, make it short, grab their attention!

A lot of my articles are hit and miss, but I can definitely say that ones with good headlines have been read. I’m not doing this for hits though, this isn’t a money blog. I just want to write and if people would like to join in and share I think that is great.

Here is my list of keys to great headlines:

  • Keep it short
    • We have short attention spans
  • Action, Action, Action verbs (BAM!)
  • Stay focused to main point(s)
  • Write the headline first
  • Don’t be afraid to change the headline
    • Your topic can evolve while you are write
  • Look for articles of similar topic
  • Ask for help if you are stuck
  • Break rules, be different, have fun

My most read article currently is AT&T in Bush’s pocket and I think this is a good example of a great headline. It is short, has action, summarizes the main point, and draws the reader into the topic. The headline makes you think and makes you want to read more.

Also Here Comes Linux, Thanks Vista! is my second most read article. I think this illustrates that summarizing an article and making the reader want more is a delicate art. Also I think sheer luck plays a vital role in this whole process!

I don’t think there is some magical formula for effective headline writing, but there probably is. I think when writing an article you should have fun and hopefully that will show through to your readers. At least, that’s what I try to do, because that’s what I enjoy when I read an article. I’ve read enough technical documents in my day to know, that you can learn more when you are having fun!

The Sweet Sound of Change

Thursday, August 30th, 2007

Nothing endures but change.
-Heraclitus

I find myself in my final year of College, at last. This marks yet another year of changing faces, places, and alike. The common thread among all my education has been change. College is about adapting, learning, and changing.

I begun my college career in 2001. Yes I have been in school for going on 7 years now. I guess I am not a traditional student per say. I am thankful for my experience and I think I have an interesting perspective on college life. The landscape of colleges is totally different now as compared to 2001. I think this is true in about any area of life. Things change, times change, change occurs.

There has been such a bigger emphasis on “group work” in the past few years as opposed to earlier years in my college career. I think this is valuable experience for the work field. Working with people is vital in any area of the “real world”. The way we interact with people is crucial for success. I think I am an easy fellow to get along with and that goes a long way.

I hope this year, as opposed to years passed, I am going to integrate things from my classes into my blog postings. I think this will be interesting and fun to see what people think of the things I learn in school. This semester I have some fun classes like UI Design and Implementation, JAVA II, Network Security, and Astronomy. Hopefully this will keep me fairly excited about the subjects that I am learning.

I am ready for change, and we must remember that change is not bad. Change is the essence of life.

Why I use Adblock Plus

Friday, August 17th, 2007

Adblock Plus is a great extension for the wonderful and growingly popular browser Firefox. If you don’t have Firefox plus get it and use it! If you don’t like ADs on the pages you view, you have a choice, you can control how you want to experience the Internet. This is much like watching TV, if you don’t like the commercials you can either change the channel or flip to another channel.

firefoxdesktop

Well this post is all about http://whyfirefoxisblocked.com/ because the author of this site is claiming Firefox’s Adblock is stripping him of income! You don’t need to visit, here is the general idea.

“The Mozilla Foundation and its Commercial arm, the Mozilla Corporation, has allowed and endorsed Ad Block Plus, a plug-in that blocks advertisement on web sites and also prevents site owners from blocking people using it. Software that blocks all advertisement is an infringement of the rights of web site owners and developers. Numerous web sites exist in order to provide quality content in exchange for displaying ads. Accessing the content while blocking the ads, therefore would be no less than stealing.”

That’s right it’s no less than stealing! stealing, humbug, etc etc, those whipper snappers. Oh no, should the owner of a site have to actually change to adapt to his/her readers! That is non-sense! This reminds me of my previous post, The DRM Dream is Over, because it is similar to the views of the Music Industry/Movie Industry/etc. It’s really like any business, you have to adapt to your customers or your customers will go somewhere else.

The first reason why I started to use Adblock Plus was those stupid ads with the smiley faces that yelled at you! I can block ads in my own mind thank you, just like I can when I am watching TV. When there is a commercial I space out till the commercial is over. I have no idea what the commercial was about and ADs are much like that.

So Adblock Plus saves my mind much processing power, so I can do more critical functions. Like blogging.
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How I Deal With Criticism

Monday, August 13th, 2007

I am not a professional writer. I have never claimed to be nor intend to be, but I think one of my goals for this blog is to become a better writer. Communication with ourselves and our fellow human beings is a critical part of everyday life.

Recently, one of my articles that was on Digg got a comment, lets say I have a critic.

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Here was my thought process on this comment by noamsml:

  1. Anger :x
  2. Sadness :-(
  3. Happiness :-D

I was a little upset when I first read this comment. Illiterate? Is my writing that terrible? Is my writing so bad that people think I cannot read. Are my thoughts so crazy that they are ridiculous? I was angered and wanted to bury the comment, but I did not. Common sense grabbed a hold of me again. That’s his opinion and as my girlfriend said, “You can’t please everyone“, a truly profound statement at the time.

Next, I go through a phase of sadness, everything I write is junk, complete junk. Why do I even bother? I do enjoy writing, but if I’m not a good writer why should I even try? This stage didn’t last too long, because I think I finally got it. Criticism is how people become writers, better communicators, and well better at anything. People should have varying opinions and I can use this as an opportunity for growth; enter happy stage. So I went back and re-read my article Here comes Linux, Thanks Vista! to critique myself. (more…)

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