Links for 2008-07-03 [del.icio.us]
- Media Matters - Fox News airs altered photos of NY Times reporters
Oh man. These people really are incredibly stupid. - Mapstraction - mapping-service-indepentent mapping apps
Provides an "abstraction layer" for client-side mapping, letting developers build mapping apps that can utilize multiple mapping services or switch between mapping services.
Things We Like- June 2008
Useful Websites You Should Know About
As someone who was born in the generation that lives, breathes, writes, eats, sleeps, and drinks the Internet, I have become jaded with how many useless and uninteresting websites that I have found over the years. It seems like every time that I sign online, I am bombarded with a flood of websites that I could easily do without. There are certain sites, however, that are so useful and innovative in their clean design and functionality that I would be at a loss on the Internet without them. As an Independence Day present to the readers, I decided to share these with you.
Like a Wikipedia of television shows on DVD, this collective information website gives users the latest information on box art, bonus material, and release dates for all their favorite TV shows. Other great features include in-depth reviews of new and old releases as well as a voting forum for which shows should be brought to DVD. The voting forum has been sited many times by production companies as influencing their decisions and release schedules. I visit this site at least once a week to see if anything good is coming to my local Best Buy, and I will keep voting for Daria until MTV gets off of their lazy butts.
The best in personalized clothing sites, this website offers users the ability to create custom outfits using their special online design tool. Text, graphics, and type of material can all be tweaked to give an end result for which you are looking. Numerous ‘earth-friendly' products, including hemp shirts, are available for green conscious consumers. I've ordered at least three products from this site in the past, and I can attest that delivery is efficient, and the product was always exactly as I had specified. In fact, I'm wearing a t-shirt from the company as I type this.
Yelp is a fast-growing review website that was made specifically for restaurants and social scenes. Currently, it features only bigger cities in the nation, but new cities are added frequently. Unlike other consumer review websites, the written diatribes contained on the site are detailed, clean, and sometimes pretty funny. The rating system is also clear and intuitive. Users can upload their own pictures of the place that they are reviewing to further give users a taste of what they might be missing. I always check out Yelp when I need to hit up a new bar or take the family out to a local restaurant.
Not so much a website as an open source tool, Pidgin offers users the ability to combine all of their chat features into one cohesive list. All of your AIM, MSN, Gtalk, and other SMS programs will be conveniently placed into one ultimate buddy list on the side of your screen. No longer do you have to load three different windows to keep up with all of your online friends.
Ask Idealware: VOIP Phones for Small Organizations?
Ron Zucker, with 2020 Vision, responds:
Are any nonprofits using VOIP phone systems? Yes, certainly. Some love them and swear by them. The availability of advanced phone services, including voice mail and "Find Me" phone routing at a very reasonable price, is certainly attractive. Does VOIP make sense for smaller nonprofits? That's harder.
One of the key considerations for VOIP is the reliability of the internet connection that you're using. If your internet connection goes down, so does your phones. If it blips out just for a second - which you wouldn't typically notice if you're just surfing the web - your VOIP phone call will be disconnected. For most home VOIP users, this is fine. If your phone is down for a couple of hours, or it disconnects, they'll call you back. If it's someone you really care about, they have your cell phone. But for business, that's typically not acceptable; you don't KNOW in advance who needs to find you (what if your phone's down on the day your big grant proposal is due?), and an unstable phone system is just plain unprofessional.
If that kind of reliability is important to you, to use VOIP you really need an internet connection with a Service Level Agreement (SLA) of at least 99.9% uptime (i.e. down less than two working hours per year -- 52 weeks/year minus 10 federal holidays times 40 hours/week = 2000 work hours/year). And most cable and affordable DSL internet services aren't willing to give you any SLA at all, let alone a 99.9% uptime commitment, or any arrangements for you if they fail. (Note: Some business DSL services will give you an SLA. You'll need to check it with your provider.)
So that would imply you likely need to have a T1 internet connection. A T1 comes with uptime guarantees and failover solutions - but at a cost, often between $350 to $650 per month.
On the other hand, a Plain Old Telephone Service (commonly abbreviated POTS) tends to be very reliable. And they're really not very expensive. At 2020 Vision, we spend $17/month for 2 lines that are local plus charged long distance, and $39 for two that are unlimited long distance. Incoming calls are routed to local lines first to keep the outgoing calls on the lines that include free long distance. Can you REALLY beat that by enough to justify the lower uptime of a VOIP line? Especially when you consider that you typically need to buy new physical phones when you switch to a VOIP line?
VOIP phone service is certainly worth investigating if you have a T1 connection already, or one makes sense for other reasons. Or if the reliability of your phone service is not a critical concern. But for a typical small organization, Plain Old Telephone Service is likely to be pretty hard to beat.
The Ask Idealware posts take on some of the questions that you send us at ask@idealware.org. Have other great options? Disagree with our answer? Help us out by entering your own answer as a comment below.
Solution: Posterous
Campaign media could be so much more exciting - posted by Nicco
Between my work on NewsJunk and PDF last week, I???ve been mulling over the state of political campaigning and technology. On the Dean campaign, the campaign???s blog ??? Blog For America ??? was a critical communications implement. We built a big daily readership and we thought of it like our own cable channel or major newspaper. There was an explicit understanding that it was our media outlet, and that Matt Gross, Zephyr Teachout, and Joe Rospars (among others) were our ???reporters on the ground???, covering the campaign ??? inside the headquarters and out on the road.
Dean desperately needed alternative sources of media. When I joined the campaign, every single news story about the presidential primary started something like: ???John Kerry, Dick Gephardt, Joe Leiberman and five other presidential candidates?????? Dean never got any press of any kind. But Trippi noticed that the blogs were writing about Dean. There was even an unofficial Dean campaign blog. Now here was a way to get ink, even if it was the virtual, blog kind of ink! Trippi started by posting on the unofficial Dean campaign blog as the campaign manager. And then there was an explicit decision: if the mainstream press isn???t going to write about us, then we???ll cover our campaign ourselves. Our rallying cry became: To the blogs!
Recognizing the power of new media to build our own work-around the ???gatekeepers??? of the modern political process gave the Dean campaign critical fuel, and the energy of the entire blogosphere was gasoline on the fire of Dean???s growing grassroots momentum. I???ve long thought that the secret sauce of the Dean campaign were the monthly in-person Meetups that Michael Silberman managed, but watching this election unfold I???m realizing that our blog???s end-run around traditional media (with the help of the rest of the blogosphere) was equally important.
All of which leaves me mystified why the campaigns haven???t built their own media operations. And I don???t mean just blogs. Why not a 24-hour newsroom, with anchors and field correspondents and commentators? The technologies needed ??? and even the distribution ??? are not expensive any more. You can buy a lot of consecutive time on cable with the kind of budgets we???re seeing this election cycle. Presidential campaigns of either party could attract top talent to create and manage the content. Not to mention the grassroots power of utilizing your supporters to create content.
Feeding NewsJunk over the last few weeks has made me recognize some of the gaps in media coverage ??? and the opportunities the campaigns are missing. There remains a mysterious and much revered relationship between the political campaigns and the political press corps, but I???m unconvinced that it serves the people well. And in all honesty, I???ve been disappointed by most of the blog coverage and commentary of the election; that???s why on NewsJunk you see mostly mainstream news sources. The blogs seems to mostly repeat items from the mainstream press ??? not just the news, but the commentary as well.
And it???s not just political news, commentary, and policy debates. Have you ever listened to Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell sportscast one of the Eagles??? football games? It???s fun. Give Al Gore a show on how to go green. Who would host ???Deal or No Deal??? on Obama???s network?
The great challenge of creating a news organization ??? or if it???s going to be broader than news, let???s call it a media organization ??? the great challenge is honesty. Campaigns are famous for spin and obscuring the hard questions. Even on our Dean campaign blog, it was hard to find an accurate and serious accounting for our loss in Iowa the morning after. But the radical transparency and honesty of your own media outlet would say volumes about the kind of President you might make, and the opportunities to set the agenda seem enormous.
I noticed that Linda Douglass, a major television journalist for ABC News, joined the Obama campaign as senior staff. [Full disclosure: EchoDitto does unrelated tech work for Linda???s husband, John Phillips.] It???s time to kill the 30-second spot and instead focus on the exciting opportunities and possibilities of the next generation of Fireside Chats. It???ll be fun. I promise.
Ahem ! Mash ahead.
We’re starting a Chain Reaction
Drupal for NGOs - July 2008
Links for 2008-07-02 [del.icio.us]
- Bike-friendly mapping directions in NYC
This gives starting point/destination directions in NYC, tailored for bikes. That means it routes you on "bikeable" streets (not highways). Neato. - Neat video of a train that doesn't need to stop to board
With a secondary entry/exit car on a raised platform, this train is designed not to stop for boarding or existing passengers. Pretty neat.
A new chapter.
Sweden’s E-Mail Eavesdropping Law Causes Online Uproar
PDF08: Technology is Changing Politics and So Can We
As a loyal technology fan and social change enthusiast, attending my first Personal Democracy Forum (PDF08) in NYC excited me. The ability to mingle with others who share my interests and desires to use technology to make changes in the world and ease our lives is an unbelievable experience that I couldn’t pass up. As I walked into the Lincoln Center Rose Hall, with the grand glass windows and stunning views of Columbus Circle and Central Park I instantly thought WOW – what an amazing place, just based on the location this conference is going to be great! I then walked into the atrium where many of the sponsors/exhibitors had their booths, and went to join my colleagues at our ImpactWatch booth. As I surveyed the room, I took in the beauty of the floor to ceiling glass windows and looked at the various booths around me. From the previous grand technology conferences/trade shows/exhibition fairs I’ve attended in the past, I assumed that this conference would be like all the others, packed full with booths with insight on new products and ideas and tons of swag, but when I looked around, I realized I had the wrong assumptions. Now, while I will say that the booths in attendance did advertise excellent products, including ours =), I had previously thought this conference would have had more companies in attendance advertising the other great products that are available to the online political community. After this realization, I decided to sit in on my first session and recognized what PDF08 really is all about.
Zephyr Teachout, the Director of Online Organizing for Howard Dean’s ‘04 Campaign, began the forum speaking about the evolution of the internet and the various ways people can use it for social change. As she quoted poet Walt Whitman, “Democracy rests finally upon us,” I realized the overall point of the conference is to network and engage with others about how to use technology to our advantage to address the issues and make progress. It was not as much as about the exhibitors, like at other conferences I have attended, but more about meeting others and dialoguing about our interests and sharing our ideas for the future. Throughout the day I spoke with other industry pioneers who are using the internet to educate the public and at times even ease people’s lives such as Arianna Huffington (Huffington Post), Jeff Jarvis (Buzz Machine), Robin Chase (Zipcar founder and now Meadow Networks), and Tim Breidigan (Eventful). Each person I spoke with furthered my interest in how I can use my abilities and the internet to aid in the world’s progress.
At the end of day one, Elizabeth Edwards spoke at the conference via Skype, for the bad weather had kept her from reaching NYC, and it was through seeing another example of how the internet connects people and how politicians are making a difference with their use of technology that I realized that change begins with us. Craig Newmark, founder of Craigslist, said in the Closing Plenary: Redefining Leadership in a Networked Age that when, “you give people real power and you trust them, they will then take that trust and take responsibility.”
As PDF Founder Andrew Rasiej closed the conference by suggesting that next year’s PDF be renamed the Participatory Democracy Forum, I reflected and realized that what I really learned at PDF 2008 is that with the creativity, drive, and trust, the public truly can make changes in the world and, it is through the use of technology that we will achieve whatever we put our minds to.
Campaign media could be so much more exciting - posted by Nicco
Between my work on NewsJunk and PDF last week, I’ve been mulling over the state of political campaigning and technology. On the Dean campaign, the campaign’s blog – Blog For America – was a critical communications implement. We built a big daily readership and we thought of it like our own cable channel or major newspaper. There was an explicit understanding that it was our media outlet, and that Matt Gross, Zephyr Teachout, and Joe Rospars (among others) were our “reporters on the ground”, covering the campaign – inside the headquarters and out on the road.
Dean desperately needed alternative sources of media. When I joined the campaign, every single news story about the presidential primary started something like: “John Kerry, Dick Gephardt, Joe Leiberman and five other presidential candidates…” Dean never got any press of any kind. But Trippi noticed that the blogs were writing about Dean. There was even an unofficial Dean campaign blog. Now here was a way to get ink, even if it was the virtual, blog kind of ink! Trippi started by posting on the unofficial Dean campaign blog as the campaign manager. And then there was an explicit decision: if the mainstream press isn’t going to write about us, then we’ll cover our campaign ourselves. Our rallying cry became: To the blogs!
Recognizing the power of new media to build our own work-around the “gatekeepers” of the modern political process gave the Dean campaign critical fuel, and the energy of the entire blogosphere was gasoline on the fire of Dean’s growing grassroots momentum. I’ve long thought that the secret sauce of the Dean campaign were the monthly in-person Meetups that Michael Silberman managed, but watching this election unfold I’m realizing that our blog’s end-run around traditional media (with the help of the rest of the blogosphere) was equally important.
All of which leaves me mystified why the campaigns haven’t built their own media operations. And I don’t mean just blogs. Why not a 24-hour newsroom, with anchors and field correspondents and commentators? The technologies needed – and even the distribution – are not expensive any more. You can buy a lot of consecutive time on cable with the kind of budgets we’re seeing this election cycle. Presidential campaigns of either party could attract top talent to create and manage the content. Not to mention the grassroots power of utilizing your supporters to create content.
Feeding NewsJunk over the last few weeks has made me recognize some of the gaps in media coverage – and the opportunities the campaigns are missing. There remains a mysterious and much revered relationship between the political campaigns and the political press corps, but I’m unconvinced that it serves the people well. And in all honesty, I’ve been disappointed by most of the blog coverage and commentary of the election; that’s why on NewsJunk you see mostly mainstream news sources. The blogs seems to mostly repeat items from the mainstream press – not just the news, but the commentary as well.
And it’s not just political news, commentary, and policy debates. Have you ever listened to Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell sportscast one of the Eagles’ football games? It’s fun. Give Al Gore a show on how to go green. Who would host “Deal or No Deal” on Obama’s network?
The great challenge of creating a news organization – or if it’s going to be broader than news, let’s call it a media organization – the great challenge is honesty. Campaigns are famous for spin and obscuring the hard questions. Even on our Dean campaign blog, it was hard to find an accurate and serious accounting for our loss in Iowa the morning after. But the radical transparency and honesty of your own media outlet would say volumes about the kind of President you might make, and the opportunities to set the agenda seem enormous.
I noticed that Linda Douglass, a major television journalist for ABC News, joined the Obama campaign as senior staff. [Full disclosure: EchoDitto does unrelated tech work for Linda’s husband, John Phillips.] It’s time to kill the 30-second spot and instead focus on the exciting opportunities and possibilities of the next generation of Fireside Chats. It’ll be fun. I promise.
Pen and Paper Mockups
As we develop websites at The Bivings Group, our designers often sketch out concepts on pen and paper before creating more formal wire frames or draft design compositions. Given the work we do, it was interesting to see these pen and paper mockups of some of my favorite websites, including Twitter, Flickr and Vimeo. Check out the initial sketch for Twitter below:
Interesting tidbit: the idea for Twitter originally came about in July of 2000.
<via Ajit Verghese via Boing Boing>
Keep those emails simple
Government websites need pavements
Links for 2008-07-01 [del.icio.us]
- Debunking the open rate
If you’re looking for one quick measure of success, just take your open rates with a grain of salt. - bethemedia » home
Join NTEN and nonprofit technology community and help us build a toolkit and instructional guides about how social media strategies and tools can enable nonprofit organizations to create, compile, and distribute their stories and change the world. - WRL Releases Special Report Assessing the Antiwar Movement
What is lacking in today’s peace movement? - Obama: the Nonprofit Sector's Favorite Son?
"Forget solutions. I’d be happy just to see some attention paid ..." That's about what he's going to get. - Real change happens off-line
Social movements are based on collective action. By contrast, Internet activism is individualistic. - How Can Your Organization Avoid Drinking the Web 2.0 Kool Aid?
A wiki worksheet at be-the-media.org.
Links for 2008-07-01 [del.icio.us]
- That Violet Blue thing - Boing Boing
Even the greatest proponents of online transparency aren't always so hot at it... - polarization in blog readership by political ideology
Everyone tends to stick to their own echo chamber, but conservatives are particularly bad about it. Post contains link to PDF academic paper w/ detailed methodology & results.
Social Media is… well, Social
Recent blog posts
- txt gr8 way 2 fight crime
- Daily Digest: You're Not the Boss of Me Now...
- The FISA Protest and myBO: Can We Talk? Can They Listen?
- Policy not (much) Politics Events for July and after
- Daily Digest: Next for FISA on MyBO? "Don't Ask Me, I Just Work Here"
- UK Shows the Way Toward Public Data 2.0
- PdF2008: Edwards, Lessig, Zittrain, Pesce Keynotes Are Up on Pdf.Blip.tv
- New Political Patterns in Book-Buying
- Daily Digest: Millennials of the World, Unite!
- Jerry Michalski Talks About Small 'g' governance


