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Friday, June 20, 2003
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A first draft of my contribution to Sam Ruby's Well Formed Weblog wiki. Packages of structured data are becoming post components. [PhilWolff]
The virtue of blogs has been their simplicity. Each post only needs one field, and maybe a title and url.
Not everyone is served well by this lowest common denominator. Sometimes you have a burning need for more structure, at least some of the time.
When you know a subject deeply, and your observations or analysis recur, you may be best served by filling in a form. The form will have its own metadata and its own data model.
Consider a school soccer coach. An after game report typically includes:
Wouldn't it be handy for your blogging tool to:
News aggregators and news readers should be able to:
"The Semantic Weblog" will create a happy blend of natural, human unstructured words, pictures, sounds, and video with machine readable and highly comparable more-structured data. Companies that make personal planners (filofax, Day Timer, Day Runner) sell paper forms. These help you: This behavior should translate nicely to blogging, especially as blogging tools support faceted presentation (you see what you're intended to see). Organizations have been using forms since the Ottoman Empire. Forms help: And that's when people fill out forms. By having machines deliver transaction notes and reports to a blogger's news reader, you can provoke commentary about those transactions in the blog. Along the way...
I'm thinking we could follow the example of:
Development Diary, Notes, Download, Mailing List, SourceForge.
* [PhilWolff] This extension may be out of scope per Sam's blog post I'll take feedback in the comments to this post or, even better, on the wiki page.
community klogs life strategy
Have you ever taken a blogging vacation? I mean a vacation from blogging? Three flavors: The unblogged vacation may be part of blogging mental health, part of the ergonomics of this thing we do. I took one recently and it changed what I'm writing, how I'm writing, and for whom. Sort of hitting the reset button, taking a step back, and touching on my motives and my personal rewards. We are stressed enough. The average worker only takes 21 minutes for lunch. And what happens when your blog is part of your workplace persona? Maybe this is a new employee benefit. Have you taken a break? What happened? Suggestions?
life technology
UPN is trying Jake 2.0, a new series about a secret agent augmented by "nanites." Christopher Gorham ("Felicity") stars as Jake Foley, a computer technician who is transformed into a secret agent for the National Security Agency (NSA) after he is accidentally infected with nanites, based on the real life, beyond-state-of-the-art nanotechnology that reduces the size of a computer to the molecular level. Upon discovering his new mind-boggling powers, Jake begins to operate at an atomic level, possessing superhuman strength, lightning-fast speed, heightened hearing, magnified vision and the ability to communicate telepathically with computers. The NSA soon realizes Jake is an untested asset and forms a Special Ops team with him at its core. Remember the Six Million Dollar Man? Bionics. Now And Again? Brain transplant. The Hulk? Gamma radiation. Like these predecessors, the technology ain't available today. We're barely able to make tiny tubes. Not molecular machines that understand all of human anatomy, physiology, and mechanics under coordinated control of human consciousness. And certainly not Neo-like telepathy with machines. So this is pixie dust, magic, deus ex machina. Completely unbelievable. I can't wait. Reviewed on Ain't It Cool News and TrekToday. [a klog apart]
community klogs
Last summer I posted about four roles for intranet blogging: catalyst, coach, armorer, practice leader. Matt Mower advocates the role of "Intranet Editor." Here' s a sixth: Scribe. The person who takes amazing notes. Thorough. Complete. Unfiltered. I saw Doc Searls do this at the first SuperNova (the man must type 120 words per minute). Matt scribed the Gurteen KM gathering (an amazing job). Heath Row the Jupiter WBS sessions (the man has endurance). Common emphasis on high fidelity capture of who said what. Light on opinion. Value to the team: Professional transcription can run 3-4 hours for every hour recorded. The scribe shortcircuits this with realtime, if imperfect, capture and publishing.
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