Some very rambly off-the-cuff commentary on the bruhaha between some Six Apart folks and Automattic's Matt Mullenweg.
Entries matching ''
← first ← previous page 448 of 573 next → last →
Action Streaming
In another frenetic burst of coding, the prolific Stephen Weber ported MT's Action Streams plugin to PHP, then to Wordpress. Examples:
Drivetime Debrief - Aaand, Action!
I recorded another short (6 min) podcast today on the way home from work, blathering on about Action Streams, Stephen Weber, DiSo, Movable Type, and WordPress!
Drivetime Debrief - Aaand, Action!
aaand-action tags: "" tp_commentcount: "0" tp_favoritecount: "0" tp_urlid: 6a010534988cd3970b0120a5b369aa970c
I recorded another short (6 min) podcast today on the way home from work, blathering on about Action Streams, Stephen Weber, DiSo, Movable Type, and WordPress!
Google Contacts API debuts - how useful for distributed sites?
how-useful-for-distributed-sites tags: ccc tp_commentcount: "3" tp_favoritecount: "0" tp_urlid: 6a010534988cd3970b0120a55cea62970b
#ccc; padding 1px;" />
Yesterday Google released a new contacts API, which has social network operators scrambling to implement.
Have you ever been on a web-site that asked you for your Google username and password so that it can import your Gmail contact list? Did you think twice before giving out that information, hoping the web-site would not use it to access your credit card information stored with Google Checkout? Now you don't have to!
We're happy to announce the availability of our Google Contacts Data API that gives programmatic access to your contact list. The contact list is shared among Google applications like Gmail, Reader, Calendar, and more.
This is exciting news for those of us working on DiSo -- it would be great to give users the option to add their Google Contacts to their friends. Well, at least until I started reading the Developer's Guide. The API (like many of Google's APIs) requires AuthSub support in the client, which requires registering your site with Google:
Note: You must register your application domain with Google before you can use AuthSub with the Contacts Data API.
It's my understanding that this means that any blog owner who wanted to use a hypothetical DiSo Google contacts import would have to have registered their site with Google, which sounds like a huge roadblock for us. Am I reading this wrong? I'd love to hear from other developers on this.
Google Contacts API debuts - how useful for distributed sites?
how-useful-for-distributed-sites
#ccc; padding 1px;"/>
Yesterday Google released a new contacts API, which has social network operators scrambling to implement.
>Have you ever been on a web-site that asked you for your Google username and password so that it can import your Gmail contact list? Did you think twice before giving out that information, hoping the web-site would not use it to access your credit card information stored with Google Checkout? Now you don't have to!
>We're happy to announce the availability of our Google Contacts Data API that gives programmatic access to your contact list. The contact list is shared among Google applications like Gmail, Reader, Calendar, and more.
This is exciting news for those of us working on DiSo -- it would be great to give users the option to add their Google Contacts to their friends. Well, at least until I started reading the Developer's Guide. The API (like many of Google's APIs) requires AuthSub support in the client, which requires registering your site with Google:
>Note: You must register your application domain with Google before you can use AuthSub with the Contacts Data API.
It's my understanding that this means that any blog owner who wanted to use a hypothetical DiSo Google contacts import would have to have registered their site with Google, which sounds like a huge roadblock for us. Am I reading this wrong? I'd love to hear from other developers on this.
iPhone SDK: "Our platform beat up your honor student"
So far, Apple's doing all the right things with the new iPhone SDK. AWESOME.
Drivetime Debrief - Getting the stuff from the place to the thing
Recorded another quick podcast on the way to church this morning, on learning how to get stuff out of MT and onto a page...
Drivetime Debrief - Getting the stuff from the place to the thing
getting-the-stuff-from-the-place-to-the-thing tags: "" tp_commentcount: "0" tp_favoritecount: "0" tp_urlid: 6a010534988cd3970b0120a5b36895970c
Recorded another quick podcast on the way to church this morning, on learning how to get stuff out of MT and onto a page...
Drivetime Debrief - Getting the stuff from the place to the thing.
Happy Birthday, Grandpa!
My grandfather, Marion Richard Ivy, veteran of 3 wars (World War II, Korea, and Vietnam), retired teacher, master woodworker, hobbyist gemcutter, man-about-the-house, and all-around awesome grandpa, turns 21 today! Someone get that man a beer! :-)
Drivetime Debrief - On Movable Type
on-movable-type tags: "" tp_commentcount: "5" tp_favoritecount: "0" tp_urlid: 6a010534988cd3970b0120a5b36afb970c
On my drive home yesterday afternoon I called up BlogTalkRadio's Cinch service and recorded some thoughts on my early experiences with Movable Type, which I'm looking at while researching some stuff for DiSo. Topics covered:
-
installing MT on OS X
-
general UI
-
blog menus v. system menus
-
extending Movable Type
Drivetime Debrief - On Movable Type
On my drive home yesterday afternoon I called up BlogTalkRadio's Cinch service and recorded some thoughts on my early experiences with Movable Type, which I'm looking at while researching some stuff for DiSo. Topics covered:
Drivetime Debrief - Learning A Platform
Quick recording today on the way home on how I get into a new platform, touching on Wordpress, Drupal, Movable Type and more.
learning-a-platform title: Drivetime Debrief - Learning A Platform slug: drivetime-debrief---learning-a-platform tags: podcasting, posdcast, wordpress, blogging, drupal, movable-type tp_commentcount: "1" tp_favoritecount: "0" tp_urlid: 6a010534988cd3970b0120a5b3669e970c
Quick recording today on the way home on how I get into a new platform, touching on Wordpress, Drupal, Movable Type and more.
Election 2.0 on Ma.gnolia
Sorry for the dearth of content here lately, but life has been a bit overwhelming. One link for you: I've started an Election 2.0 group over on Ma.gnolia (waves at Larry), where I'm bookmarking "Links about new trends and ideas in election law, theory, and practice", as well as links relating to this year's election. It's a public group - feel free to join, contribute, and follow along. Please keep it on-track and respectful!
A Visual History of Redmonk.net
I'm using the Internet Archive/Wayback Machine to compile a Visual History of Redmonk.net.
← first ← previous page 448 of 573 next → last →