Submit Response » flickr http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog Tue, 10 May 2011 01:19:15 +0000 en-us hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.8.1 Today’s Links (20/11/08) http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/11/20/todays-links-201108/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/11/20/todays-links-201108/#comments Thu, 20 Nov 2008 18:19:56 +0000 http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/11/20/todays-links-201108/
  • Journeyman Leather Belts
    Nice belts, handmade in Shetland.
  • BNP Members List Leaked - Complete details of all British National Party Members here!
    One member, a man from Pinner, that the press haven't picked up on, whose notes are just a trifecta of fail: "Former policeman. Lecturer in human rights/data protection."
  • RPX: Instant OpenID and Data Portability
    Lets you farm out authentication, so users can use their existing accounts on other services (Google, Yahoo!, Facebook, OpenID, etc.) to log in to your site.
  • Iranian Blogger Could Face Death Sentence
    It's Hoder, who I know through MetaFilter.
  • Radio Wallah
    "Click on the links below to see some fabulous transistor radios from the fifties."
  • GREY GARDENS ONLINE INFORMATION DATABASE
  • Mens Underwear and Male Underwear from Sunspel
    Nice T-shirts. As worn by Charlie Watts!
  • groupr
    "groupr is a small web application that groups photos in Flickr groups that you belong to into a series of web pages, so that you can easily look at them and see what's been added."
  • Official Google Blog: Feed me! Google Alerts not just for email anymore
  • Fix for Flickering Fullscreen Application with Compiz | Tombuntu
  • TypePad - Why Blog - Journalist Bailout Program
    Send a link to your last published piece to SixApart, and they'll give you a free TypePad account, and enrol you in their advertising programme.
  • A Tutorial on Hyperfocus Technique
    Thanks for the link Dad!
  • Hyperfocal Focusing Photography Tips - Digital Camera Techniques
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    Today’s Links (02/04/08) http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/04/02/todays-links-020408/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/04/02/todays-links-020408/#comments Wed, 02 Apr 2008 20:46:08 +0000 http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2008/04/02/todays-links-020408/
  • BBC - Radio 4 - Arts and Drama - Rise of the Footnote
    Nice little doc on the footnote.
  • Ask Mr. Biggs! Recycling real talk radio phone calls since 2006. » Maintenance Mode
  • Tributes as artist Angus Fairhurst is found dead, aged 41 | Art & Architecture | guardian.co.uk Arts
    Very sad.
  • Exclusive: Hands-on video with the 3G iPhone - Crave at CNET.co.uk
  • Find Your Friends « Flickr Blog
    Very slick. (Weird how many people I know have opened Flickr accounts without ever uploading photos.)
  • Microformats | weblog | This Fortnight in Microformats - March 17th–30th
    These little summaries are great. (I’m interested in microformats and have implemented the relevant ones on my sites, but most of the stuff on the discussion lists/wiki sort of whooshes over my head.)
  • BBC - White Season - All White in Barking
    Well worth a download if you missed it on the telly.
  • Macworld | The browser bunch
    Good comparative review of browsers on the Mac. I use Firefox (mostly for the del.icio.us add-on and Greasemonkey, which I need on a couple of sites I use heavily) and WebKit nightly builds for when I know I’ll just be tootling around the web (it’s fast).
  • We Tell Stories - ‘Fairy Tales’ by Kevin Brooks
    Oh dear, I’m falling behind.
  • BBC NEWS | UK | Scotland | Tayside and Central | Children find human head on beach
    At Arbroath. Jeepers.
  • YouTube - Full MoOn 4
    I think this is from the opening night of the Full Moon, formerly the Acropolis, St. Jean d’Angely. Wishing we’d gone for my birthday now!
  • swg3.tv | Studio Warehouse Glasgow
    The warehouse is turning into a bar for the duration of Glasgow International. Handy!
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    BURPING And PUKING http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2005/12/20/burping-and-puking/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2005/12/20/burping-and-puking/#comments Tue, 20 Dec 2005 11:58:30 +0000 http://mottram.textdriven.com/weblog/?p=1027

    The Big Unmasking of Pseudonymous IDs Native to Glasgow (BURPING), now aptly renamed to Party Uncovers Knowledge of IDs Native to Glasgow (PUKING), was a hoot. Thanks to Biotron for gathering the Glaswegian citizens of Flickr.

    Len And Teamy In Eggface Pleasure (on Vimeo)

    This telephone video documents one of many highlights of the evening—the moment when a Japanese man threw fried egg at our faces.

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    Subtlety http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2004/02/12/subtlety/ http://submitresponse.co.uk/weblog/2004/02/12/subtlety/#comments Thu, 12 Feb 2004 16:03:56 +0000 http://mottram.textdriven.com/weblog/?p=567 Two problems, two solutions, and a trite conclusion:

    The problem with links, in the context of weblogs, is that they are assumed to be endorsments by the linker of the file being linked to. Not, of course, by the real human reader, who can evaluate a link in context, but by the unthinking spider sent out to read weblogs by the search engines, aggregators and filters that we rely upon to find content - especially ephemeral, of-the-moment content - on the web.

    For example, if I link to the British National Party, I am improving its ranking on Google and inserting it into the indices of Blogdex, Memigo et al. In short, I am, albeit infinitessimally, casting a microcontent vote for the BNP.

    This is not ideal. I don’t agree with the BNP, to put it mildly, and my link to them ought to register that fact. The developers at Technorati (one of the more sophisticated trackers of weblog linking activity) have cottoned on to this and propose an interesting solution: VoteLinks. Without getting too technical, the Technorati team are suggesting a way to flag links on a web page with a vote for the content being linked to, a vote against it, or an abstention.

    You won’t be able to see the difference but this link to the BNP registers my disapproval of their site’s content, rather than simply pointing to it and, therefore, implicitly endorsing it. Future applications designed to track linking activity across weblogs and websites will be able to register this disapproval, aggregate it with the disapproval of others, or weigh it against the approval of others still. The result: differentiation between fame and notoriety, with linking as commentary rather than simple pointing. Sweet.

    Similarly, the problem with the social networking sites (aside from the fact that they are essentially pointless) is their binary approach to relationships. A fellow user of Friendster is either friend or not-friend. When relationships are so bluntly defined, the usefulness of a vast, browsable network of related people diminishes with every connection made. There is, obviously, a significant difference between the Friendster I’ve known since childhood and the Friendster I met in a nightclub once six months ago, and marking both relationships as the same breaks the social functionality of the site.

    Flickr, the social network meets photo sharing meets live chat site that launched Tuesday last, provides a solution. The site has been garnering much praise for actually having a point - the focus is firmly on the photos - but taking it for a spin last night, I was as impressed by the rubric for categorising relationships as I was by the slick interface. Instead of simply flagging someone as a friend, you can rank them as Acquaintance, Friend, Best Buddy or Soul Mate. The wording is mawkish, reading like an American take on the primary school playground demotion (‘Get out of the sandpit! Eric is my best buddy now!’), but the comparative subtlety should give Flickr a longer shelf-life than the countless networking sites I’ve joined, only to lose interest in within a month.

    The point? Subtlety is good. I might be looking at this through weblog-tinted spectacles, and this point is a commonplace for fellow travellers, but it seems that where I once saw the web as an archive of information to be mined for research, that archive now seems to sit beneath a web of people; people who filter and mediate by making links. Where information can often be ranked simply (not always, I know, but often), uncovering the links between people, their views and tastes, cannot. These subtle tweaks to the way we make links, be they social or hyper, aren’t just interesting, they’re fast becoming essential if we are to have any chance of navigating the massive messy morass of information that is the web.

    Not unrelated:Blog Discussion and Citation, Flickr - Birth of an online community.

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