Here’s a feature I’d like to see in future versions of Amazon’s Kindle’s software: user profiles. My wife and I would like to share the same Kindle, she with her books, me with mine and both of us sharing the NY Times, the New Yorker, etc. The best way to do that would be for us each to have separate bookmarks, so that I could just pick up the Kindle, switch to my book marks and pick up in the document and on the page I was last reading.
Author: Doug
One Million and Counting
Bernadette Clavier, Executive Producer of our Social Innovation Conversations channel, says we just passed the one-million audio download milestone over there. Congratulatons to Bernadette, Leah Silverman and the rest of our SIC producers, writers and engineers.
Bug- and Feature-Tracking Report Online
By popular demand, I’ve posted a report from Jira, our issue-tracking system, for all to download. Many (most?) of the items won’t make sense to anyone who’s not actually writing code for SpokenWord.org, but you may find it interesting. By all means, feel free to peruse it and if you find a feature request that you think should be escalated (or one that should be added), let us know. The best place to discuss bugs and new features is on our Spoken Word Strategy discussion list.
What Would it Take?
Now that SpokenWord.org out of the alpha/beta phase…
- What would it take for you to:
- recommend SpokenWord.org to your friends?
- send a link to your collections to your friends?
- How should we spread the word?
- a JavaScript or Flash widget for displaying your collections on other web sites?
- a better email-to-a-friend feature?
- better links to social networking sites?
- direct interfaces to Facebook, FriendFeed, etc?
Give us your ideas on our Discussion List.
SpokenWord.org UI Improvements
I’ve just enabled some much-requested UI improvements to SpokenWord.org. Over time we’ve been displaying more and more metadata on the detail pages for members, programs, feeds and collections and you’ve told us they’re just too cluttered and hard to navigate. As of early this morning we’ve moved most of the metadata and actionable links on those pages to the right column. I hope the data are easier to find and the pages are now eaier to read.
Swine Flu: Why All the Hype?
As I wrote on Twitter earlier today: “35,000-50,000 die each year from influenza [and subsequent bacterial pneumonia] in the U.S. The panic over this swine flu is whacko. Is it just a slow news week?”
Okay, so I can understand the media frenzy — we’re all used to it — but what about the Obama administration? Janet Napolitano (Homeland Security) and CDC officials aren’t just accepting interviews, they’re pushing this. When’s the last time a U.S. president opened a major press conference suggesting we wash our hands and stay home from school or work? It’s really quite extraordinary. And puzzling.
And then it hit me. Of course! The Obama administration is scared to death that this could be their Katrina. They know the chances of the H1N1 flu becoming a true national tragedy are quite slim, but they’d rather risk the consequences of overreacting than take the chance they’d be blamed for an inadequate response. For them it’s not about the likelihood the swine flu will become something we should worry about. Instead, it’s about *their* risk of being associated with the previous administration’s national-response failures. Once I figured that out, it all made sense.
I don’t want to give the impression that this isn’t a potentially serious situation. I believe it is, particularly because the virus has essentially spread worldwide and development of a vaccine has just begun. I hear it could take 9-12 months before large quantities can be available and by then 25%-30% of the population could have already been infected. And we also don’t know how virulent this microbe really is. Only one fatality yet in the U.S., and that was a young child who came here from Mexico. 160+ deaths in Mexico, but we don’t yet have a clue of the actual death rate. How many were infected and recovered? If the virus is already widespread, 160 deaths could actually suggest a milder-than-usual outbreak.
Bottom line: It’s early. Let’s all hope the pandemic (already declared by the WHO) turns out to blow over quickly. But in the meantime, there’s certainly no shortage of attention being given to it, from the White House on down.
A New Program Page (SpokenWord.org)
Tweaking the UI design for SpokenWord.org, starting with the /program detail page. One of the most-frequent complaints is that there was too much metadata on our detail pages for programs, feeds and collections. Here are examples of a new /program page and a /feed page in the old style. Note that many of the links and metadata have been moved to the right-hand column and the tag cloud has been eliminated.
What do you think?
Abandoned-Feed Hijacking (FeedBurner)
I was researching a new feature for SpokenWord.org when I came across a site that lists an old URL to the primary IT Conversations RSS feed. Curious, I clicked on it and discovered someone else’s content there. I just assumed that when we abandoned that URL years ago it would simply disappear, but that appears not to be the case. (http://feeds.feedburner.com/ITConversations-EverythingMP3)
I’m not sure how this happened. Are some site looking for abandoned FeedBurner URLs? How do they learn that a URL has become dead? If you’re thining of changing or abandoing an RSS feed URL hosted at FeedBurner — okay, I admit you should never do that — just remember that someone else may come along and grab that URL for themselves once the FeedBurner free-redirection period has ended. You’re probably better to keep that URL forever even if it means you need to run permanent redirection at the target.
Open Search for SpokenWord.org
I’ve created an Open Search description file and <link> tag to SpokenWord.org. If you’re using a browser that supports Open Search, you can now add SpokenWord.org search to your list of available search-engine shortcuts. In Firefox, for example, use the pull-down in the upper-right corner of your browser window and select Add “SpokenWord.org”. More Open Search stuff still to come as I figure it out.
David Simon on Bill Moyers’ Journal
Readers of my blog know I’m a big fan of Bill Moyers and his Journal on PBS. Friday’s show was one of the best, dedicated entirely to an interview with David Simon, creator of The Wire. I’ve rarely heard someone express as clearly how I feel about the state and the future of America as Simon does in this interview. Make sure to listen through to the end. Video [part 1 and part 2] or audio.