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Wordpress 2.3 — tag time

Like a burning comet ☄ Wordpress 2.3 has arrived; the big outward-facing feature is baked-in tagging support.

Two plugins of note at this early stage:

(1) Tag Managing Thing — Wordpress allows you to transform categories into tags, which isn’t quite right. Anything else, and you are either writing SQL or using the Tag Managing Thing. You will find it helpful for renaming, splitting, and deep-sixing tags.

(2) New Tag Cloud — plugin which exposes a Wordpress widget that is a micro wrapper around wp_tag_cloud (except that number behaves differently, go figure). The built-in widget for displaying a tag list/miasma doesn’t allow for any customization, and where’s the glory in that?

There are the usual errors and omissions in how tags are handled in the front-end template and WP administration. But the big plus is that, finally, the table structure is a little more civilized as re: post categories and link categories and (now) per-post tags baselined into Wordpress.

To say more would be to devolve into standard issue tag-and-bucket praises of del.icio.us, for which there’s neither space nor time enough, tonight!

Weblogs as display windows for social software [3]

Thinking about the relationship between

  1. sites or services that don’t generate easily digested text content and
  2. strategies their proprietors use to squeeze a weblog or similar attention stream out of whatever does get generated.

Sometimes [1] is because there’s not enough text — maybe a video site — and sometimes it’s because there’s too much text — like a wiki. Any wiki weirdo can glaze over at RecentChanges, but it’s data, not narrative.

Ideally, there’s a weblog or proto-weblog that serves as a single, high-level summary of what’s going on: if you’re going to watch just one thing, that’s the thing; or if you’re trying to understand the service and take the community’s pulse, it’s what you load up and skim over.

So here’s what I got, relevant examples culled from my personal web haunts.

If there are any bird’s-eye blogs you think are particularly effective or ineffective I’d enjoy hearing about them.

AboutUs

AboutUs has a daily stream of featured wiki pages on its front page, and a separate log of conversation and cool stuff called the DailyBuzz. There’s a separate AboutUsWeblog.org, which is a Wordpress blog that republishes some of the featured pages — but not all of them, or at least not on a regular schedule — along with random clippings from the DailyBuzz and the occasional free-form blog post. Blog posts are typically written in the hasty, careless tone that pervades the AboutUs house organs — if you listen, you can hear the copywriting sausage grinder whining away.

CommunityWiki

The CommunityWiki used to have a cool front-page faux weblog as described here, but apparently it didn’t get exported to the future.

Hiveminder

Two prongs for Hiveminder: a Best Practical weblog which has announcements about all of the company’s products and some human interest stuff, and Hiveminder News for product-specific notices. Both blogs are written in a fun and sometimes digressive “friendly programmer” voice. The Hiveminder News is baked into the product, and the updates are usually nice and terse, with the occasional longer introduction for a new feature. Awesome!

Plazes

The Plazes crew keeps blog.plazes.com, which is the usual jumble of product announcements plus publicity and corporate updates. The thing I appreciate about the Plazes blog is that is showcases the mashups, integrations, and art projects people have done using the Plazes API and feeds. These community_indicators are signs of life for the service, but they also do a better job of demonstrating what Plazes is all about than the Plazes site itself can. For a service which you need to have an active network and client software in order to really enjoy, seeing some of these projects gives a hint of what the experience might be like.

Revver

Revver (aka Commie Youtube) has a very active blog that streams a mix of service status crap and surfaced videos. Seems like a few missed information interior decoration opportunities, though: the blog is buried in footer navigation on the main Revver site, its branding is way off — the header is a video thumbnail montage which fundamentally looks like crap, and you have to work your way beneath the fold in order to find the new Transformers-esque Revver logo (which appears only in the little tiny video rolls in the sidebar).

Listless [2]

I blame del.icio.us digg ma.gnolia reddit slashdot stumbleupon etc. for everything. Lists: easy to write, easy to read 7 ways 10 ideas 20 projects 51 snake-oil objects ideally functioning as some shim for your Amazon affiliate id or shiny ppc bait or science knows what other gummy phosphorescent batshit. Lists considered harmful — headlines considered harmful — social bookmarking considered harmful — points, ratings, stars, popularity considered harmful. You are considered harmful. (8 things considered harmful!) That’s it — that’s all. Net extremely hoseled. Get off my lawn. Close the laptop. Stand up. Walk into the sea. Breathe.

VIRUS — blog petri dish

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VIRUS semacode unreadable logo

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Metacrap: your vital Wordpress plugins [1]

Nearing the line of empire with various Wordpress blogs in my life — here’s the baseline plugin list I’m using. There’s a complexity cost with this stuff, so each one counts (and several of them really, truly belong in the core software):

Also: two moonshine plugins (for ad management and server-side logging) that I use a lot but will never clean up enough for public distribution.

Local is the new local

What should local media cover? What’s local, and which media?

Here’s an answer:

Little League (text messages), church carnivals (database), downtown characters (multimedia), car washes (video), profiles of people who cook my food and wash my vegetables (multimedia), neighborhood business owners (podcast), garage sales (map), changes in local and state laws (database), local school activities (calendar), local politics (blog), local natural beauty (slideshow), school lunch menus (database), localization of national issues (enterprise stories, databases, multimedia).

Reading this list — and thinking about what else you’d like to append to it — makes you realize how many projects there are, waiting for somebody to be present, able, and excited. Arbor Update, ArborWiki, MiTechNews podcasts, Teeter Talk, Downtown Ypsi, the Mangy East Quad Blog, the Frieze Building Blog, etc. and so forth right down the list(s) — these projects are all essential, but even in our little rust belt reality-distortion-field map blip there’s room for so much more.

(Now back to your regularly scheduled term-paper addled radio silence.)

Cheap Shots opening [2]

Tonight, 7:00-10:00 PM @ Gallery 4, 212 Nickels Arcade.

(A full-size version of this image.)