Author: nchenga
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Web 2.0 Fonts
Soft, futuristic, or classic?
Here’s a list of the fonts being used for Web 2.0 logos.
see also: the Flickr collection.
via del.icio.us
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Buon Weekend
It’s Saturday morning. Time for the traditional weekend post, but don’t expect any recipes today. (I did bookmark a great recipe blog though. Somewhere.)
For some reason I set the alarm yesterday evening…. so here I am on my second cup of Mzuzu coffee and my second cup of Rooibos. Still half asleep.Pages that caught my (short span of) attention this week:
- What do you think of my brochure?
- The paradox is that the long stuff gets skipped. The long stuff gets ignored. Short books sell better, short commercials get more viewers. So repetition becomes essential.
- I read David’s post, It’s a great time to start a business, in response to Caterina’s warning. He has some good points. I guess, I still remember the dotcom boom and crash too vividly. Once burnt, twice shy.
Va bene… have a good weekend! Alles wird gut.
BTW, I’ve turned off the default rich editor feature in WordPress. It was driving me up the wall when I wanted to edit the HTML…
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come fare il sugo
stamattina ho provato fare un sugo con tutti i pomodori che non ho mangiato.
Ho trovato questa pagina:
(importante per me: deve stare semplice)
e tutto nella pentola. vediamo come ha funzionato…dopo
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Fairtrade markup
Guardian report on Fairtrade:
It’s not exactly ethical, but it’s not exactly news. Retailers stay in business by driving down the prices paid to farmers and preserving their own profit margins – making Oppenheim’s article an indictment of capitalism rather than Fairtrade. As Harriet Lamb points out, ‘We set the price for the farmers, which is the only bit we could ever begin to control. If we tried in any way to set the price for the consumer, we would be taken to the Competition Commission.’ In other words, it is the retailers and middlemen who determine the mark-ups – based on the amount we are stupid enough to pay. At least under the Fairtrade system, it is consumers in the north who are being exploited, not impoverished farmers.
via Swampcottage
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Hype antibodies
agree with this even though we’re still far from this kind of hype here in Europe:
It’s a bad time to start a company -
Don’t make me think
on my reading list:
Steve Krug’s “Don’t make me think”
started skimming thru and it looks good. Lots of imgs and examples and
cartoons to illustrate usability issues. -
The Eventual Death of Software Developer Magazines
Software development magazines are losing ground compared to blogs, wikis… See Eric Sink’s post:
For a while it was fashionable to predict that the Web would eliminate publishing, or at least that it would eliminate magazine publishing. Ten years later, most of these pubs are still around. But there is obviously some truth here. Today’s developer-focused magazines are looking very sickly indeed. The health of a magazine is very closely correlated with its page count.
I also like the straightforward articles on marketing: Marketing for Geeks
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How to Write About Africa
Writing a book about Africa? Consider these tips.
(and the same applies to films, TV reports, music videos, TV series and other media that help to foster wrong or one-sided cliches)
via: Swamp Cottage
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deja vue
reading TechCrunch feels very much like the dot com boom, non?
http://www.techcrunch.com/
The typical Web 2.0 story: somebody builds a web app. suddenly it pops up on del.icio.us or digg or both.
The web app gets swamped with hits. Next, registration is closed or the web app is down, while the app is moved to a new data center. For example see the following entry on Zooomr:http://www.techcrunch.com/2006/03/11/flickr-has-some-catching-up-to-do/
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Today is Pi Day
I heard about this yesterday evening on BBC radio:
March 14, written as 3-14 in the United States date format, represents the common three-digit approximation for the number À: 3.14. It is often celebrated at 1:59 p.m. in recognition of the six-digit approximation: 3.14159. Some, using a 24-hour clock, celebrate it at 1:59 a.m. or 3:09 p.m. (15:09) instead. -
For Alexa Traffic Graph Junkies
better interface:
Alexaholic – Get Your Alexa Traffic Graph Fix HereSee for example the traffic stats for some CH blog aggregators.
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Basel Blogger Meeting
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coComment is Swiss
completely missed this:
coComment is a Swisscom spin-off… based in Bern.
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The Obliteration Phenomenon
[…] a great deal of important work gets “obliterated” if you measure influence purely in terms of citations (or, I would argue, hyperlinks). Whiles citation analysis gives an excellent picture of how influence works in the great middle tier of scholarship, the technique falls on its face when it comes to truly groundbreaking work, which often tends to get buried in an avalanche of footnotes for follow-on, derivative works.
Which leaves me wondering, is there a corollary effect on the Web? The sheer explicitness of Web linking seems to privilege measurable manifestations of influence: Google pagerank, Technorati rankings, traffic stats, and so forth. Does such a myopic focus on metrics mask the subtler dimensions of influence? Are there hidden works out there exerting a deeper, implicit influence that doesn’t show up in terms of pagerank? This is a tough hypothesis to prove, but I suspect that pagerank and other supposedly meritocratic weighting algorithms give us an overly simplistic and potentially misleading notion of how influence really works.
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Buying a New Laptop
I’m planning to purchase a notebook in the very near future. It should:
- work flawlessly with Ubuntu
- be mobile and quiet (not to heavy and big)
- work with many applications at one time in GNOME / KDE with reasonable performance, i.e. mostly Web, email, Open Office, programming, DVD, music, (no gaming)
- cost around 1500 CHF
I’ve browsed thru a couple of Linux laptop pages:
There’s tonnes of information out here… and I need help on the specs. Esp. with graphic cards and processors.
I guess, one way is to take my live CD and test my way thru…What is your experience? Appreciate any help you can provide
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Skyscanner.net
looks useful:
Cheap flights – low cost and budget airline specialistesp. the Month View which shows you the cheapest fare.
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Help Save the German Language
Adopt a German word for 5 Euro:
http://www.wortpatenschaft.de/Apparently the German language needs your help:
…Werden Sie Wortpate! Beschützen Sie ein deutsches Wort und übernehmen Sie dafür die Verantwortung: Entwickeln Sie das Wort weiter, pflegen Sie es, hüten Sie es vor Mià Ÿbrauch oder Verdrängung! Schreiben Sie Gedichte mit Ihrem Wort, tauschen Sie sich aus mit anderen Wortpaten und schaffen Sie Wörterbiotope oder -museen, ertüfteln Sie Wortspielereien. Und helfen Sie gleichzeitig mit einer kleinen Spende dem gemeinnützigen Verein Deutsche Sprache. Ihr Einsatz für die Gemeinschaft!
Sie sind der einzige. Jeder kann nur ein Wort betreuen. Jedes Wort wird nur einmal vergeben. Unsere Datenbank sagt Ihnen, ob ihr Lieblingswort (noch) zu haben ist. Sie erhalten dafür eine Urkunde, welche Sie als offiziellen Paten dieses Wortes ausweist. Das Wort “kostet” fünf Euro. Der Erlös geht an den Verein Deutsche Sprache e.V. Der VDS setzt sich ein für Pflege und Weiterentwicklung der deutschen Sprache. Sie helfen also unserer schönen Muttersprache (die über 1500 Jahre alt ist) und stärken unsere kulturelle Identität. Sie helfen uns allen – und helfen sich damit selbst. Geistiger Umweltschutz.
And here’s a list of anglicisms you should avoid.
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the smells and sights and sounds…
quote from an interview with Alexandra Fuller:
I am not sentimental about Africa as a place of memories — and I use the word ‘Africa’, knowing that I speak of only a tiny fraction of the continent — so for me, I am not stirred up with old emotions when I go home. When I get off the airplane in Lusaka, I feel at home. The smells and sights and sounds of the part of Africa that I come from are not memories, but a continuing reality. This is what is familiar to me.
(…)
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Advanced User Guide for Flickr
useful:
Flickr Advanced User Guide
includes useful tips such as how to specify the photo privacy level when uploading imgs per email:e.g.
- foo13bar+friends@photos.flickr.com – Visible to friends
- foo13bar+family@photos.flickr.com – Visible to family
- foo13bar+ff@photos.flickr.com – Visible to friends and family
- foo13bar+private@photos.flickr.com – Only visible to you
further tips:
http://lifehacker.com/software/flickr/


