Moving on up

The Son of Langpad

After six short but action-packed months at Teh Langpad I’m moving… upstairs! Sunlight!! Sweet!

So. Know anyone coming to the Bay Area that needs a place to stay with a coupla geeks? I got a room. And Teh Langpad I is now vacant, so if you got two people or a wife (or hubby! …including you!) I’ve also got a spot for you downstairs.

Ah, so contact info… drop me a note at my first name at flock dot com.

Scott Kveton is My Hero

Scott KvetonAnd I’m not kidding either. This guy is solid. He’s a gentleman scholar and an open source kick-ass-takin’-names do gooder mofo with an impeccable track record. And he’s so friggin’ on the ball… and yeah, nice.

I first encountered Scott when I was at Spread Firefox and he’s proven to be one of my best allies in my work to promote open source ever since. We’ve met up at a couple conferences and have built up a fantastic rapport in the short year and half that we’ve known each other. And so it just tickles me orange to see him profiled in InformationWeek’s Innovators & Influences: Change Agents for his work at OSUOSL in securing $350,000 from the search engine of search engines for the continued advancement and development of open source initiatives like Mozilla, Gnome, Gentoo, Debian and others.

The best thing about Scott? He shares my vision for the future of open source and where it’s going — in fact, our conversations have formed a great deal of my thinking about and approach towards our mutual goals. But then Scott’s got a headstart on me, having already delivered all kinds of results. Sigh.

Let me put it this way. He’s kind of like the Babe Ruth of open source. He’s taken aim straight at center field of the status quo and I have absolutely no doubt in my mind that he’s not going to absolutely smash every opportunity that comes down the pipe on his way to advancing the open source movement onward and everforward. 

Congrats, Scott. And to think, we’re just gettin’ warmed up.

On Integrated Feed Reading

Feed IconRyan King pointed me to a post by Tim Bray about how unintuitive feed consumption is in browsers today.

I couldn’t agree more. Indeed, RSS and general feed consumption in browsers have been tacked on, hacked in, and bludgeoned into the UI in inconsistent and narrow ways. Safari‘s got its poorly-named RSS view. Firefox (for now) has its simple toolbar and livemark feature as well as countless third-party add-ons.

We’ve also got some great web-based and desktop tools whose tasks are to deal only with feed content.

But all those are simply not sufficient nor reflect how fundamentally syndicated content is changing the way people interact, publish and share on the web.

To date, we’ve taken mere baby steps towards a truly syndicated web. We’ve tended to stay close to our concrete, static websites because of the familiarity and stability they offer us. We’re used to things existing in one place at a time in real life; on the web, general expectations have stuck to this powerful paradigm (look, I had a talk with my mum about this stuff so I know it’s true! If you already get RSS, you’re excluded from this generalization (notice my use of the word “general“?).

What is becoming increasingly clear, however, is that the old ways of thinking about content and where it should exist (or indeed where it actually does exist) no longer need apply. Consider podcasts, the perfect example of empheral media. You can’t search for podcasts directly; no, instead you have search for text about the podcast unless you go to some visual directory, which still relies on word and image (still not aural search technologies — we need the Riya of podcasting!). On top of that, you typically have to download the “physical” file and play it locally or on your pacemaker, severing the link back to the original source which may be updated or changed later.

The point is this: Tim Bray is not only right but the problem he describes goes deeper than just poor feed integration and workflows in existing browsers. It’s that browsers aren’t moving fast enough to embrace the potential that syndicated content has for radically improving the efficiency, responsiveness and collaborative nature of the web. Think about all the information you consume with feeds already — it’s only going to get worse until browsers fundamentally look at the web as an event stream and less as a library of independent books and pages.

Browsers in particular need to change to address this emerging opportunity and make it both easy and seamless to leverage the benefits of syndicated content. Flock is obviously taking a stab at it, both in the browser and in how we’re architecting our web real estate (or should I say faux estate?). In my view, Flock is an API aggregator that lives and breathes syndicated content. Yeah sure, it’ll load up webpages like any other browser, but it’s how we expose web services and feed content that’s really exciting and new.

So now I’m curious. As hourly Flock builds aren’t terribly stable, I’ve been without an aggregator for some time and so I’ve probably gotten behind in personal aggregation trends. How have you guys been managing your feeds? I notice that I get a lot of traffic from Bloglines and Rojo, so what are the key features you’re dying for in a syndicated content app?

A new approach to the always-on, always-connected worklife

Dead AdiumSo I’ve decided that I’ve gotta get my work-habit induced ADD under control. While I seem to be most in the zone when I’m doing 8,000 things at once, being able to focus on a few chunked at once will probably lead me to great strides forward in my productivity.

To that end, I’m going to try something new. 37 Signals once gave the advice during the Getting Real portion of one of their Building of Basecamp workshops to “shut off IM”.

I’ve been reluctant to do so for a couple reasons (mostly baseless), but recently I decided ah, the heck with it. Asynchronous email will suffice for 98% of my person-to-person communication needs. For the other 2%, I ought to make myself available for exactly that portion of my day.

So starting today (and let’s see how long this lasts), I’m going to spend at most 2 hours a day available on IM, IRC and Skype. I’ll still be in the Flock team channel, but that’s it. I’m also going to try to cut down email access during the day as well and do most of it on my daily train commute.

So that’s that. If you don’t see me on IM much anymore, it’s not coz I’m dead (though if I’m MIA for more than three days, send a search party). Hopefully this will lead to a new era in productivity for yours truly. We’ll see.

Now hear this: I FUCKING HATE THE RIAA

FUCK THE RIAA
For shutting down my favorite tab site. I will never pay for another RIAA-supported artist for as long as I live (and as much as I can help it). I just don’t see how pissing on your customers is the way to build relationships (unless you’re going after the most-reviled organization in the world award, in which case, having customers is actually orthogonally opposite to your goals).

Someone, please point me to anti-RIAA resources for finding music and tabs.

This is such bullshit. At least some folks are working on finding a cure for the commons RIAA plague.