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69 Sexy Portfolio Designs To Inspire You

69-Sexy-Portfolio-Desi...

   Today designing a unique, compelling portfolio has become a crucial task for designers, studios, companies and everyone whose business is on the Web. Not only does it help one stand out among the numerous competitors, but it is also a great tool for self-expression and demonstration of skills.Now designers face new challenges in attracting the capricious web audience – a plain web page with a project list on it is out of date and boring, while fancy Flash websites with intricate navigation are annoying. Fortunately, despite all difficulties beautiful and artistic designs are appearing in an endless stream. Designers skillfully use all the benefits of the digital age and create websites that are rich in effects and eye-popping yet simple and accessible.In this post you can see a collection of 69 new, ingenious and beautiful portfolio designs that will hopefully become a decent inspiration source for you. The collection includes both Flash and HTML websites, however all the designs are stuck to the balance of visual attractiveness and usability. Notice that every screenshot is clickable and leads to the website itself.69 Exquisite Portfolio Website DesignsThis By Them The portfolio of This By Them is done in cool retro style. Just look at these awesome graphics and regard for details! Neat accordion slideshow pattern enables to navigate the site at ease.Nora Rose Travis Creative idea, contemporary style, exquisite implementation of clever JavaScript & CSS hooks make the portfolio of Nora Rose Travis look magical. And now a trick (not for the faint of heart!): open this design in IE6. See? Internet Explorer kills the design magic.Carlos Cabrera This design successfully combines features of portfolio and online store. It provides easy accessibility and navigation; plus, featured works floating in the background deliver additional efficiency and visual appeal.ThousandMinds A super stylish dark web design with enjoyable navigation.Alt DesignPuppetbrain A funky old-school design with a funny curious character running all through the website.Huan David Perafan Baez A beautiful Flash website with horizontal navigation and amazing uninterrupted illustration in the background. The preloader is impressive here as well.Sahar DesignAttack of the WebSomos la pera limoneraPSD to XHTML ConversionFlourish Web Designkoraykibar.comDaZaThe Staff RepublicN E P O M U KDubaiDesignchapelMoxie SozoNEWRAFAELPerceptorJohnny doesGomediaKarijjobefriendly duckRichie QilayoutLoewy DesignNick Hand The portfolio of Alaska-based designer Nick Hand looks awesome with its vintage grunge background, sleek transition effects and transparent areas wrapped in dotted lines. Great example of one-page portfolio design.Corking Design This beautifully dark website belongs to Daniel Cork, a web designer from Manchester, England. Nifty texture, elegant logo and typography implemented in this design are really striking.CreativeThe Each section of this single-page portfolio has its own background texture and graphic elements that are interwoven very smoothly. Urban graphics at the bottom of the page unites all section designs and contains navigation bar and copyright info. Such design technique can be rarely seen today; it’s really beautiful and unconventional.Mutant Labs Mutant Labs studio claims to be a new breed of media scientists. Well, the scientific experiment on their portfolio style was a success – we’ve got an original and tasty design.Nosotros Beside clean and simple layout, the portfolio of the creative agency Nosotros provides prominent data visualization and infographics.Camellie While many websites in our collection integrate several elements that make up a beautiful design, Camellie’s portfolio highlights the only element that dominates the overall design theme. Splendid, original illustration is the very spice that makes this site look awesome.Imaginaria Creative Beautiful textures, large typography in the backgrounds, warm colors and smooth transparency result in an exquisite website design.Mika Mäkinen Although this website is Flash based, it won’t confuse you with cluttered interface and complicated navigation. Instead, it is straightforward and beautiful. Among the major features of Mcinen.net are liquid resolution, large-scale layout and wonderful photographic background on the main page. Excellent work!Atomic Cartoons Inc. Wonderful single-page portfolio with vertical navigation. Atomic Cartoons did justice to themselves by featuring amusing illustrations throughout the website.Toy.ny This “toy” is really worth “playing” with. Sober colors and unobtrusive, minimal Flash animation which beautifully renders the typo, provide an enjoyable visual and content exploration experience.Fat-Man Collective The portfolio of Fat-Man Collective is really something. The way this “lovely bunch of digital creatives” combines simple navigation, amusing Flash effects and original content presentation will win your sympathy immediately.Project 365 Light and clean one-page portfolio of Project 365 looks fresh and positive, mostly due to lovely doodle typo used in this design.Filipe Carvalho Classy typography and good color management is what makes this portfolio design stand out.Mikio Inose The portfolio of the Japanese interface designer Mikio Inose has a sleek, Apple styled design. Bright colors and wide space in the header, non-standard fonts in the post titles and one-column layout make this design unique.Diego Latorre Sexy design of Diego Latorre’s portfolio won’t leave you cold. Here everything from textures to the smallest graphic element is about details. Nothing left hanging here, great work indeed.Esteban Muñoz Neat black-and-white portfolio design is featured by original line-art illustration that sticks to your mouse cursor and can be moved around the bottom of the page.Nouincolor Style, laconism, individuality.25AHSafarista DesignKashmir Creative The portfolio of Belgium business communication agency Kashmir Creative looks stylish and contemporary. Much of this is due to the choice of colors and a professional photo filling up the background of the site.Kyle Steed The header of Kyle Steed’s portfolio is beautified by his own hand drawn font “Steed”.Arteye WhyisboxSynch Media A cool robot illustration and all this cheerful geometry make this design look positive and fresh.Blue PixelDaniel Kusaka Although personal portfolio of Brazilian graphic designer Daniel Kusaka is based on Flash, it loads fast and provides good content accessibility. Colorful clues chaotically stretched about the project gallery, as well as good work with thumbnail lighting, make this design look topnotch.Garbadge.ro You may be confused with the navigation of this website at first, but you will quickly figure out how to get to the work gallery and the personal stuff of designer George Petrescu. This Flash-like motioned grid is developed by means of fancy jQuery.Pirolab Again, lots of awesome visual effects here and no Flash!Joby Kidd81 A big fun in this one. No doubt, this cartoonish, childlike design took some really adult skills to be done.IAAH This design is everything but ordinary. As the guys from IAAH say, this site is meant to challenge the concept of space and how it is perceived within the browser window. Experimental layout may frustrate the advocates of simplicity and usability standards, but if you enjoy approaches that push the boundaries of web design, portfolio site of Iamalwayshungry studio will appeal to you.Glasshouse The portfolio of Cape Town based digital communication studio Glasshouse is beautiful, original and well developed.Laureano Endeiza This portfolio design offers a wide range of various options – you can switch between several design themes, filter displayed portfolio categories and read the site both in English and Spanish. Great!Nide.inc If grid layouts are classics of web design, this Japanese website is avant-garde, without fail.HALO Creative Agency JoolzOscar BarberefingoFran BootMopStudio The border between originality and weirdness is rather fuzzy here. Perhaps it will take us, Western culture representatives, a few years to understand the delicate philosophy of Japanese web design.Paravel© Julia May for Smashing Magazine, 2009. | Permalink | 111 comments | Add to del.icio.us | Digg this | Stumble on StumbleUpon! | Tweet it! | Submit to Reddit | Forum Smashing Magazine Post tags: portfolios, showcases

November 26, 2009

from: Planetaki-Planet-Clipper_TM

Mobile Movie Search Gets the Google Treatment

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Smartphone users just got an early holiday treat from Google.

Now, when searching for movies on their iPhones or Palm WebOS- or Android-powered devices, users can get not only theatres, showtimes, and films; they can also get trailers, ratings, and proximity-based information. This way, you can get in the car and peal out of the driveway before conducting a desktop search for movies, thus saving yourself another excruciating 5 minutes of "holiday cheer" with the family.
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In a quotation-laced post on the Google Mobile blog, Google mobile UX designer Nick Fey revealed that information will be available in English only for now in the US, UK, Canada, Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand.

Users of the abovementioned devices can now go to google.com in their web browsers. After searching for the term "movies," users can then tap on the "More movies" link for a panoply of new features and aggregated data. Users can then browse through film titles or nearby theatres.

One of the most welcome features is the ability to play movie trailers in the mobile browser without having to navigate elsewhere. This eliminates the usual need for multiple browser tabs or frustrating cross-app navigation.

Here's a spiffy demo video from our friends at Google:

The new features also include ratings and categories, movie posters, and every other imaginable detail about the films listed. The information will also include upcoming showtimes for the nearest theaters, which are conveniently presented in a Google Maps interface.

"We keep information on this page succinct," said Fey, "so you can quickly browse through shows and showtimes to help you decide which movie to see. If you want more details about a specific movie, just touch the poster or movie title and you'll see our new movie details page that has a synopsis of the movie, a more detailed list of showtimes, the cast and crew, and pictures."

In a way, the features remind us a bit of SkinniPopcorn, a web and mobile app that integrates movie-related Twitter data, movie trailers, film reviews from the New York Times, and synopses. And that site is available on any mobile device with a web browser.

Still, for the map and showtime information, Google wins this round.
Discuss

November 26, 2009

from: Planetaki-Planet-Clipper_TM

Firefox's Plan to Kick the Login's Butt

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Firefox gets distributed social networking and identity management.

The good people who work on the revolutionary, open-sourced, and occasionally maligned browser have been hard at work on making cross-site navigation and portable IDs a solvable problem. A discrete button to the left of the URL that can tell users whether or not they are logged in to a particular site and allow them to log in without further navigation? Accuse us of punning, but definitely sign us up. Google Chrome: Start taking notes.
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Our friends at Mozilla posted this teaser back in the spring, when they touted a way to eliminate clicks and keystrokes between navigating to and being recognized by a given website.

Our own Marshall Kirkpatrick enthused, "Earlier this week, we argued that browsers and social networks were fast converging, and that with more users and some feature advantages, Firefox could be the best real competition for Facebook... This is just one more chapter in a much larger story - but look how easy this makes OpenID to use!"

But now, Mozilla's UX chief Aza Raskin has posted more updates to his personal blog that indicate new hotness is coming soon. The new feature will harness the power of Mozilla's Weave to make your online identity something that's stored in your back pocket more than it's stored in your cookies or a third party's server.

Decrying redirects and iframes, Raskin tells of a brave new world where an in-browser button that defies navigational difficulties allows for something closer to true identity portability than we've seen yet:

Identity will be one of the defining themes in the next five years of the Web. Nearly every site has a concept of a user account, registration, and identity. Searching for "sign in" on Google yields over 1.8 billion hits. And yet, the browser does nothing to make this experience better save for some basic auto form filling. The browser leaves websites to re-implement identity management, and forces users to learn a new scheme for every site... Your identity is too important to be owned by any one company.

Finally! They said it!

And now, we give you screenshots:

So, what's the verdict, readers? Does this surpass Chrome's identity-porting capabilities? Does this create massive privacy issues for users who don't want their personal traffic tracked?
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November 26, 2009

from: Planetaki-Planet-Clipper_TM

Social Aggregator Sobees Adds LinkedIn Support

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One of the first social networking aggregators to take advantage of LinkedIn's brand-new API is Sobees, whose two client applications both now offer LinkedIn integration in addition to the other supported networks. A challenger to similar services like TweetDeck, Seesmic, and PeopleBrowser, Sobees is a social networking aggregation tool originally launched as a desktop app back in 2008 with a web app version added earlier this year. Like its competitors, Sobees' clients use a columnar interface to display real-time updates from sites like Twitter, Facebook, and MySpace.
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Sobees essentially functions as a social networking client for the sites it supports, each site with its own column and separate set of functions and tabs. For example, in the Twitter column, you can switch through tabs to see replies and direct messages and you can use buttons on the side to create groups or view your favorites. Meanwhile, the Facebook column offers Facebook-specific features like the ability to view photo albums and status updates or check out profiles, friend lists, and your inbox.

Sobees Adds LinkedIn

Similarly, the newly-launched LinkedIn functionality will include features specific to LinkedIn. At launch time, those are as follows:

Update your status

View connections

View profiles

Get updates (connections updates, status updates, application updates, jobs posted, groups joined, recommendations and profile changes)

Search or search with advanced functionality

While the desktop version of the program is Windows-only, the web-based application is built using Microsoft's Silverlight technology which works on any operating system, even Linux.

When you go to set up the web version for the first time, you'll be presented with the four supported services and a button reading "connect." At first, clicking the connect button seemed to have no effect but that was because the browser's pop-up blocker was turned on and Sobees launches the authorization screens in a separate window. After navigating past this small obstacle, the rest of the set up process was completed in a matter of minutes.

At this point, you're now presented with multiple columns containing the services you authorized during setup. You can also choose to add a real-time search column if desired and you can re-arrange the columns into a number of different layouts using the "change layout" button at the top.

FactFinder API Integration Lets You Know if a Link is Worth Clicking

Besides simply displaying the most recent updates from the various services, Sobees also offers a unique feature other social networking applications don't have - Factery's FactFinder API integration. (Read more about Factery's API here). In short, this API allows the Sobees client to instantly and automatically parse the URLs posted in Twitter links to help you determine whether or not the link is worth clicking. Using the FactFinder toggle button to the left of the column, your Twitter stream is filtered to show only links with Factery data.

Once switched on, tweets with links are appended with the source URL and various "facts" snipped from the article being shared. Depending on the amount of info the API pulls, a "more..." link may appear at the bottom of the facts displayed. Click this link to see more facts - aka snippets - from the article in question and then click "less" to once again collapse the window. Anyone who has switched to Twitter as their primary source of news will love this sort of feature as you can get the gist of an article without ever leaving Twitter.

If you're interested in trying the updated Sobees clients, you can download the desktop version here or load the web version at sobees.com/web.
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November 26, 2009

from: Planetaki-Planet-Clipper_TM

Advanced Power Tips For WordPress Template Developers

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   Back in July, “Power Tips for WordPress Template Developers” presented 8 basic techniques for adding popular features to the front end of a WordPress-powered website. The premise was that WordPress has become an elegant, lightweight content management solution that offers the fundamentals out of the box, atop a modular core that offers incredible potential in the hands of a capable developer.WordPress does not try to be an “everything to everyone” CMS right out of the box. Many systems do an average job incorporating 99% of what the potential CMS market might need, even if the last 15-20% is used only by a fraction of the market and adds considerably to the system’s overall “heft” (or bloat). At the other end of the spectrum are completely custom solutions that are finely tailored to exact needs, at the cost of reinventing wheels like polished content editing with media management and version control.The self-proclaimed WordPress “code poets” have, alternatively, focused on doing an A+ job with the “fat middle”: the 80-85% of features that almost everyone needs, and coupling those with a first rate framework and API that enables capable developers to add in almost any niche or “long tail” feature. In fact, the core WordPress framework is so capable that a handful of “intermediary” frameworks that sit on top of it have already emerged.That previous “Power Tips” entry scratched the surface, covering a handful of API calls mixed in with some simple PHP code and configuration tips intended to help beginner WordPress template developers kick their game up a notch. This article takes power tips to the next level, expanding on some of the topics in the first article, and introducing more advanced techniques and methods for customizing not only the front end, but the content management (or back end) experience.You may be interested in the following related posts:Power Tips for WordPress Template Developers10 Useful WordPress loop hacksCustom Field Hacks for WordPress15 Useful Twitter Hacks and Plugins For WordPress100 Amazing Free WordPress Themes For 2009Multiple Column Content TechniquesThe average blog or website has a single, clearly defined block of space for a given page’s or post’s unique content. But there are plenty of creative websites that don’t conform to this simple notion of “one unique block” per page. A creative online portfolio layout might feature a screenshot and project description in a left column, and a list of technologies used in a right column. Both the left and right column are unique to each portfolio page.Here’s a screenshot from an in-development website project, built on WordPress. The “projects” area features portfolio-like layouts of green building projects throughout the state. In addition to a specially designed gallery visualization, note that the individual project profile has two distinct columns.A more commonplace layout might feature an obvious, primary block of page content, but also feature a sidebar element that is unique to the current page: maybe a quote from a customer about a specific product or service. The “Power Tips” article offered a method to associate sidebar elements with multiple pages using custom fields and page IDs (tip #6). That approach isn’t very effective or efficient for designs with a 1:1 relationship between sidebars and pages (where each page has a unique sidebar element).Yes, the developer could add table buttons to the WordPress editor, and let content authors fend for themselves: a solution prone to problematic layouts and bad output relied upon far too often. Here are a few simple options that keep layout in the hands of the template developer while making content management easier and problem-free.Short, simple, and HTML free? No worries.Before we delve into solutions that assume a need for HTML formatting in this second content block, let’s review a more basic solution. If the second column does not need to be formatted – or maybe should not be formatted by the editor for design reasons – then a simple custom field will do the trick. In the case of a simple sidebar element, like a customer quote, this may be just the trick.There are already great tutorials and useful custom fields hacks that walk through the WordPress custom fields feature, so if you are not familiar with the basic idea behind custom fields, start there. Let’s go ahead and create a custom field named “sidebar_content” (also known as the “key”), and put some simple content in there. Just to shake things up, let’s assume we do need a very basic HTML feature for our content authors, who know nothing about HTML: line and paragraph breaks. Let’s also assume that we want to format this sidebar content on the front end with some of the basic automatic niceties we get when we output post content, like curly quotation marks.Here’s how we can output this in any template file, using the “the_content” filter to apply the WordPress content filter to our custom field. That filter converts single line breaks to break tags, double line breaks to paragraphing tags, and even transforms simple quotation marks to curly quotes!$sidebar_content = get_post_meta($post->ID, "sidebar_content", true);

if ($sidebar_content) {
echo '<div id="sidebar_content">';
echo apply_filters("the_content", $sidebar_content);
echo '</div>';
}Of course, we can make this even more intuitive for the content authors by creating a new meta field box for sidebar content instead of relying on the generic “custom fields” box… which will be covered later in this article!Using the More Tag for… MoreThe WordPress editor has a button “more tag” button that is primarily intended to separate “above the fold” content from “below the fold” content. If you are not already familiar with the “more” divider, read up on that first.If the pages or posts that need a two column layouts also rely on traditional more separation, this tip will most likely not be effective, unless one of the columns is also the intended “above the fold” content. However, most instances where a two column layout is desirable don’t overlap with a traditional above / below the fold need. It is fairly rare, for instance, for pages (vs. posts) to actually make any use of the more tag. So let’s start taking advantage of that feature!The basic idea is that content above the more divider will represent one block of HTML content, while content below the divider will represent a second block (be it a sidebar element or column).Here is how to retrieve content above and below the more divider as separate blocks of HTML content in the corresponding page template file.global $more;

$more = 0;
echo '<div id="column_one">';
the_content('');
echo '</div>':

$more = 1;
echo '<div id="column_two">';
the_content('',true);
echo '</div>';The global “more” variable lets WordPress know whether or not the content is being rendered in an “above the fold” (or “teaser”) only view. By passing an empty string to “the_content”, we prevent a “read more” link from showing up below the HTML content. And, for column two, we pass a second parameter to “the_content” – true – which instructs WordPress to output the content without the teaser.If the intent is to output the second block of content outside of the loop in another template element, such as a sidebar, this approach is a bit trickier. One option would be to store the second block of content in a uniquely named variable, declare it as a global variable in the sidebar, and – if there is any content inside the variable – output a new block. An alternative could involve checking which page template is in use with the “is_page_template” function, and, if the two column template is in use, calling “the_content” with the second parameter set to true, as in the example above.The Plug-in Solution: Adding a Second HTML Content Block to the EditorThe ideal solution, of course, might be a second HTML editor field on the WordPress page or post editor. Unfortunately, no such plug-in existed… until recently! While writing this article, we decided it was time such a solution did exist, and so the author of this article is happy to present a free, open source plug-in that combines some savvy understanding of how TinyMCE works (hint: it’s as simple as a class name) with the custom meta box tutorial covered later in this article, and a little bit of extra customization and polish thrown into the mix.Secondary HTML Content adds a second HTML editor to pages, posts, or both (customizable with a simple settings panel). You can output the content in a sidebar with an included widget, or integrate it more tightly with the template by using “the_content_2″ and “get_the_content_2″ functions.Associating Pages with Post Content: Reloaded“Power Tips” covered the basic foundation for associating different WordPress pages with different post categories. The basic premise was that many sites require, effectively, different post “feeds” on different pages. For instance, there may be a company blog, but there may also be an independent news feed.This continuation offers specific tips that extend the core concept introduced in part 1, making it easier to have multiple page / category associations, preventing entrance into the “real” category archive, and ensuring that individual post views retain a visual and architectural association with their parent “category page” layout.Be sure to read part 1 before proceeding.A Review of the Basics & the Two Fundamental ApproachesAt the heart of the category / page association (covered in part one) was:A matching of the “page slug” with the “category slug.”Using “query_posts” and the category parameter to exclude standalone page categories from the primary feedUsing a dedicated page template with “query_posts” and the “category name” parameter to create a page featuring a feed for a single category.Before delving into the tips that extend those ideas, it is important to make a distinction between two common but fundamentally different use cases for page / category association. The more typical use case, which the first part was tailored to, is a website that has a primary feed, like a blog, but also has one or two distinct feeds, most often for a formal news or press feed.The second use case is a bit more esoteric: there is no primary feed. The site has many pages, and many (but not all) of those top level pages are individual feeds of posts. The example, at the end of this power tip, m62.net, is one such use case. Another common use case might be – again – a portfolio centric website.Let’s say we want to create “Joe’s Portfolio”, and Joe wants to feature 4 distinct areas of expertise. Each area of expertise should be a top level page, say, joes-portfolio.com/web-design, joes-portfolio.com/graphic-design, etc. Joe wants to have a little write-up about each service area at the top of the page, followed by a feed of case studies. Why a feed instead of sub-pages? Maybe Joe wants prospects to be able to subscribe to an RSS feed for each area of expertise; maybe he wants to easily cross-tag case studies based on industry; maybe he plans to update frequently and doesn’t want a huge page sitemap or wants visitors to page through a date-organized collection of case studies. There are many reasons to use posts instead of pages.The following tips provide solutions for both use cases.Automatically Determining the Page / Category AssociationPart one suggested that a unique page template be created for any page associated with a category. That page template would then query for posts using a hardcoded category name or category ID. If there are only one or two standalone “category pages”, this is an efficient and effective solution.However, if there are many page / category associations, as in use case #2 (no primary feed), the process of manually creating page templates for each association is tedious to build and maintain, and not realistic if content editors who don’t program need to be able to create more page / category associations on demand.An alternative would be to create a generic page template, let’s say “template-category-connector.php”, that is assigned to all pages associated with a category, and automatically determines the right category to query.The following code performs the matching and executes the post query. The magic happens by taking advantage of our matching page and category slugs. Once again, if the website does not use permalinks, an alternative approach will be required (one permalink-free alternative could involve a custom field with the associated category ID).$cat = get_category_by_slug($post->post_name);
query_posts('cat='.$cat->term_id);That’s all there is to it… just proceed on with the post loop to output the applicable category’s posts. Note that the template should probably check for an actual return value from line 1, and output a graceful error in the event there is no match.Handling Entry into the “Real” Category ArchiveNow that there is a dedicated page layout that handles the category feed, we will want to be make certain that the visitor doesn’t land on WordPress’ default category “archive” view. For instance, when using permalinks with the default “category base” value, the archive view for a category with a top level category assigned a “web-design” slug would be: mysiteurl.com/category/web-design. However, the intent is for visitors to view this category at our top level page: mysiteurl.com/web-design.By combining the WordPress category template file with some smart redirects, we can prevent entry into the default category archive. Out of the box, the WordPress template system allows developers to create global category archive templates as well as templates for individual category archives.If we are in use case #1 – a site with a traditional blog feed and a standalone news feed on a “press releases” page – we will want to use the latter solution. Let’s say, as in part one, the category ID for “press releases” is 5. We create a template file in our theme folder named category-5.php. Under use case #2 (no primary feed), we will want to redirect all category archive traffic, in which case we need to work with the category.php template file.A few lines of code in either template file will redirect visitors to the right place. We’ll also pass HTTP error / redirect code “301″ – which will tell search engines to permanently redirect their link to the right location. Note that this particular code assumes we are using a permalink configuration. Line 2 can be modified to accomodate that situation.$destination = get_bloginfo('url');
$destination .= str_replace('/'.get_option('category_base').'/','/',$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']);
wp_redirect($destination, 301);In effect, that code removes the category base (”/category” by default) from the overall relative URL, and safely redirects the visitor to the page with the matching slug. Of course, if the site falls under use case #1 (one or two stand alone feeds), the line three could dropped into a specific category template (i.e. category-5.php) with a hardcoded absolute URL for the redirect destitation.Hiding Standalone Categories from the Category List & Primary Site FeedIn the first use case (only isolating one or two categories from a primary feed), it may be necessary to prevent isolated categories or the posts within those categories from appearing in some common theme elements that would traditionally include them.Consider the example from part one: a site with a traditional blog and a standalone press release feed. Assume the owners of the site want the RSS feed for the blog to be persistently available throughout the site (typically manifesting itself as an RSS icon in the browser location bar), but don’t want the press release items included in that primary feed. By default, the WordPress primary feed is available at “/feed”, and includes all published posts, regardless of category or any other post property.To exclude categories from the primary RSS feed, we need to filter the WordPress function that retrieves the posts. Let’s again assume that the category ID for Press Releases is 5. The following code should be placed in the template’s “functions.php” file.add_filter('pre_get_posts','exclude_press');

function exclude_press($query) {
if($query->is_feed && !$query->is_category) $query->set('cat','-5');
}To summarize, we use the “pre_get_posts” filter to modify the post query before it executes. Within a new filter – named “exclude_press” – a conditional confirms that the post query is for a feed, and that the query is not for an individual category. If the check pans out, the query is modified to exclude category 5 before execution.The notion of globally filtering the post query may have broader implications depending on the site’s unique requirements. With some smart conditional checking, the filter could be extended to prevent the category from appearing anywhere except within the category or isolated post view. But be careful when extending the filter, and be sure to consider all possible views, including administrative views!The category list is another frequently used site element that isolated categories should, in most cases, be excluded from. If the template calls the category list in only one or two places by code (as opposed to using the categories widget), excluding categories from the list is straight forward.wp_list_categories('exclude=5');However, if the categories widget is in use, or the category list is used throughout the template, an alternative approach is required. Enter the “list_terms_exclusions” filter. Again, the following code should be placed in the “functions.php” template file.add_filter('list_terms_exclusions', 'filter_press');

function filter_press($exclusions) {
$exclusions .= " AND t.term_id != 5 ";
return $exclusions;
}The return value of a “terms exclusions” filter is tacked onto the “where” clause in the SQL query that retrieves the terms. Without digging too deep here, the reason for discussing “terms” as opposed to, say, “categories” is because WordPress abstracts a variety of different taxonomies (link categories, post categories, tags, custom taxonomies, etc) into a unified database model that handles all taxonomies. Calls to “get categories”, “get tags”, and so forth, are all referring back to general “terms” behind the scenes. Ever wonder why category, tag, and other IDs tend to jump around? They are all being added to the same table. Assuming a fairly clean install, try adding a new post category, and note the ID. Then add a tag, and note its ID… one greater than the new post category.Retaining the Page Layout for Post Views within a Category PageOne of the most common challenges to tackle with page / category association is retaining a sense that the visitor is still within the “category page” hierarchy – and not a global feed hierarchy – when a visitor is reading an individual post. Part one hinted at this challenge under “The devil is in the details,” and started to suggest a path that incorporated using the “in_category” function. We will explain how to use “in_category” within templates, as well as how to trick functions that reference the original query object into thinking that they are “within” the category page.Let’s start with case #1, and building on the example in the first article, assume we only need to contend with one isolated feed, “Press Releases” (category ID 5).Say the theme has a sidebar template that lists post categories when rendering the blog part of the site, and when rendering a standalone page, shows a page list instead. Here’s an extremely simplified version of what that might look inside the sidebar template file.if (is_page())
{
wp_list_pages();
}
else
{
wp_list_categories();
}Of course, there may be alternative widget sets for pages or posts, and there is likely to be more than just one element in the sidebar. But the concept should hold. Now going back to the example, the theme should render posts in category 5 (Press Releases) as if the visitor were on a page (not the blog). Leveraging the “in_category” check, the code above would now like the following:if (is_page() || in_category(5))
{
wp_list_pages();
}
else
{
wp_list_categories();
}Note that if there are multiple categories whose posts should resemble page output, the “in_category” function should be passed an array of IDs, like so:in_category(array(5,7));The need for a “in category” check is probably moot in case #2 (multiple page/category associations, without a primary feed): the template is probably structured to output the same elements on pages and posts from the get go. In other words, everything is handled as if it is a page since there is no primary feed. However, the following tip – that dynamically looks up the faux parent page ID (the page associated with the category) – is necessary for the next part of this tip. Just amend the code to check if “faux_parent_page” has a valid value: if it does, then the post is inside an isolated category associated with a page.Once again, this approach to dynamically seeking the faux parent page (the category page) depends on taking advantage of the matching permalink structure between post categories and pages that is at the heart of this association. If the site is unable to use permalinks, a more complex alternative look up of the faux parent page will be necessary.foreach(get_the_category() as $category) {
$faux_parent_path = '/'.get_category_parents($category, FALSE, '/', TRUE);
}
$faux_parent_page = get_page_by_path($faux_parent_path)->ID;Now that we have the ID of the category’s associated page, we can trick “black box” theme elements that determine page or post properties on their own (by referencing the post query) into thinking they are actually working with the category page.The most common use case is page navigation. Whether its breadcrumbs, a top level page menu that should retain “current” (on) states, or a side navigation menu that should display the current section, there are many “black box” navigation functions that need to be tricked into rendering themselves as if on the category page.Let’s use a simple top level page list, which should maintain proper “current_page”, “current_page_parent” (and so on) classes when on a post under a category page. Here’s what that simple function might look like before our changes:wp_list_pages('depth=1');Of course, posts do not normally have parent pages, so there will be no “current” classes assigned to that output when reading a post. Here is how to trick that function into thinking it is rendering the navigation for the “parent” category page.//retrieve faux parent page dynamically… can skip and hard code in case 1
foreach(get_the_category() as $category) {
$faux_parent_path = '/'.get_category_parents($category, FALSE, '/', TRUE);
}
$faux_parent_page = get_page_by_path($faux_parent_path)->ID;

//reset the post query as if on the faux parent page
query_posts('page_id='.$faux_parent_page);

//execute our "faked out" function
wp_list_pages('depth=1');

//reset the query back to the initial state
wp_reset_query();If there are multiple elements that need be “tricked,” a best practice would be to put the “faux parent page” retriever at the top of the template, and declare it a global in any template files that need it. This would avoid repeated look ups of the faux parent page.An Example: Seeing it All Put TogetherA great example of a WordPress-powered CMS that pushes use case #2 to its limits can be seen at the home of m62 visual communications, at http://www.m62.net.All of the navigation items across the top (Presentation Theory, PowerPoint Slides, etc) are pages associated with post categories. The sub-navigation on the right contains sub-pages that are also associated with sub-categories. For example, in the screenshot above (available here), the visitor is on the “Pharmaceutical Templates” page (faux category), which is a child of the “PowerPoint Templates” page (also a faux category). The content starting with “Download free” (below the page title) is the content from the “Pharmaceutical Templates” page. The posts below the “Next Steps” bar, titled “Latest in Pharmaceutical Templates”, are the posts inside that category. The applicable related category is automatically discovered by the WordPress template, populating the category name “Latest in X” and recent posts. Now let’s look at one of the posts inside that category.Using the tips outlined above, the individual post retains the feel of being within the “Pharmaceutical Templates” page, right down to the breadcrumb navigation and “current” states in the navigation.But not only does m62.net use category / page associations for most top and second level navigation items, it actually extends the concept to tags. The 5 “tabs” on the top right actually represent post tags, and each has a “tag page.”Stay tuned!The second part of the post will be published here, on Smashing Magazine, in two weeks. Hence, you may want to subscribe to our RSS-feed and follow us on Twitter. Any ideas or suggestions? Comment on this article! Would you like to see more similar articles on Smashing Magazine?(survey) © Jacob Goldman for Smashing Magazine, 2009. | Permalink | 22 comments | Add to del.icio.us | Digg this | Stumble on StumbleUpon! | Tweet it! | Submit to Reddit | Forum Smashing Magazine Post tags: PHP, templates, wordpress

November 26, 2009

from: Planetaki-Planet-Clipper_TM

Navigation App Waze Makes Crowdsourced Map-Building a Game

Navigation-App-Waze-Ma...

The latest edition of mobile navigation app Waze has just launched in the iTunes App Store and on the Android Market Place with the Symbian and Windows Mobile versions available on the Waze website. In this updated version, the company has added even more features to their already popular "munching" game which sends a Pac-Man like character loose on the roads to help build the company's mapping database and validate the roads already in place.

Unlike other mobile navigation apps, Waze "crowdsources" its map-making process, reliant on its users to switch the app on when driving around town. Then, using the phone's built-in GPS capabilities, Waze uses the information sent back to create base maps and determine traffic patterns in order to warn other users of traffic jams ahead.
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Although Waze is an application dependent on critical mass to become successful, they've already had good results since their original launch in Israel. In less than a year's time, Waze was able to map 91% of the country thanks to user involvement. The company believes they will have similar results here in the U.S. with highly populated urban areas being mapped first with the rest of the country following over the coming months.

Making Maps is Just a Game

To encourage users to contribute to the map-building process, the company came up with an idea to make it more of a game. Originally, the Waze character would appear and munch dots on the screen when you ventured onto a road that didn't previously exist in the company's database.

Now, with Waze 2.0, the gaming elements have been enhanced even further. Users will now munch on other goodies like cherries, hammers, and small gift packages which generate bonus points. The extra goodies will be placed on locations where the map has issues with the higher-point items on maps with the most issues.

To kick off this new release, the company is also hosting a contest dubbed the "Holiday High Points Challenge" which runs from November 25th through December 9th. During this time, which includes the busy traveling period of the Thanksgiving holidays, Waze hopes to tap into the high number of drivers who will be trekking around town and across the country to visit relatives. The top three users who earn the most points during this period will win Amazon gift cards in the amounts of $500, $300 and $200, for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd places respectively.

Crowdsourcing: Better Maps, Faster

The Waze application was one of the more innovative companies to appear at the most recent DEMO conference where they launched their turn-by-turn directions feature. Because they're not using map data from Tele Atlas or Navteq - the two big names that license map data to other companies for use in applications - Waze saves money while also being able to sell their own data to other companies at reduced rates. The company also claims that their crowdsourced method has dramatically shortened the months-long update cycle for maps.

While Waze may not be ready to replace your in-dash GPS just yet, it gets closer every day as more roads are mapped and more users join the service. Early adopters who want to contribute to the project can download the mobile application from the company's homepage here.
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November 26, 2009

from: Planetaki-Planet-Clipper_TM

Wikileaks Releases Over Half a Million Pager Messages from 9/11

Wikileaks-Releases-Ove...

Earlier this morning, Wikileaks began to post pager messages that were sent on September 11, 2001. According to Wikileaks, these messages were intercepted by an "organization which has been intercepting and archiving US national telecommunications since prior to 9/11." Some of these messages are from officials in police and fire departments, though a large number of messages are also from businesses. Others are automated messages to engineers that were sent by computers about network and hardware issues.
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Wikileaks is posting these messages semi-live - in sync with the events of 9/11. It's not clear how Wikileaks got this data or who intercepted these messages.

This archive is likely to become an invaluable source for anybody who wants to study the events and the public's reaction on this day. Chances are that conspiracy theorists are already wading through this data looking for an official page that authorized the destruction of Building 7.

As is to be expected, the archive includes many Twitter-like messages like "Bush calls World Trade Center crashes apparent terrorist attack." Others are internal messages from unknown businesses or government departments ("please due to the incidents taking place and with trying to close centers Please do not tie up aol today unless it is business. Thanks") or personal message ("Things are getting worse....fear is rampid...please call me. HISD are advising to come get children etc.-sm"). This thread on Reddit highlights some of the most interesting (and often shocking) messages.

We don't know the nature of Wikileaks this source yet, so it's only prudent to treat this data with some skepticism. Wikileaks, however, has a track record of releasing authentic information and it seems unlikely (but not impossible) that somebody would go through the trouble of writing 500,000 pager messages just to be featured on Wikileaks.

Examples

Here are a few examples from Wikileak's archive:

2001-09-11 11:20:01 Things are getting worse....fear is rampid...please call me. HISD are advising to come get children etc.-sm

2001-09-11 11:20:01 have you seen the news this morning? penagon and world trade center attacked Mark Hodges - SunIT Ops

2001-09-11 11:20:01 Alaric! Call me on my cell!! Will!

2001-09-11 09:15:01 I just got a page from Jurko in New York. He said they are okay. Thanks

2001-09-11 08:55:35 BreakingNews@CNN.COM| CNN Breaking News|BREAKING NEWS from CNN.com -- World trade center damaged; unconfirmed reports say a plane has crashed into tower. Details to come. For complete coverage of this story visit: http://www.CNN.com

08:50:50 BOMB DETINATED IN WORLD TRADE CTR. PLS GET BACK TO MIKE BRADY W/A QUICK ASSESSMENT OF YOUR AREAS AND CONTACT US IF ANYTHING IS NEEDED AT 212-647-xxx.

2001-09-11 08:45:39 I love you and miss you very much!!!!!!xoxoxoxoxoxoxoxo I waited to wave at you at the doorway and you didnt :( I paged you.... you didnt call :( Did I make you angry with me? I love you

2001-09-11 08:45:46 Update X4236083. PROB: Funlove Virus at KCMART IMP: Affecting 33 workstations. STATUS: Desktop technicians are on site and addressing individual workstations. No servers infected at this time. Peoplesoft has been checked and cleared. Bridge
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November 26, 2009

from: Planetaki-Planet-Clipper_TM

Merrill Lynch: Cloud Computing Market Will Reach $160 Billion...Really?

Merrill-Lynch-Cloud-Co...

The estimates for cloud computing can make you wonder sometimes about what to believe. Analyst firms and it looks like investment houses, can be notorious for wild estimates about market sizes.

So we have to wonder about the estimates from Merrill Lynch, which is estimating the cloud computing market to reach $160 billion by 2011.The estimate includes $95 billion in business and productivity applications.

Whoa! That makes cloud computing one of the fastest growing markets in the world.
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But Merrill Lynch is not alone in its lofty estimates. Earlier this year, Gartner pegged the market at $150 billion by 2013.

In their estimate, Gartner included Google Ad Words estimates in their estimates. This seems sketchy at best. Here's what Gartner analyst Lydia Leong wrote back in May:

"Obviously, one argue whether or not it's valid to include advertising revenue, but a key point that should not be missed is that in the trend towards the consumerization of IT, it is the advertiser that often implicitly pays for the consumer's use of an IT service, rather than the consumer himself. Advertising revenue is a significant component of the overall market, part of the "cloud" phenomenon even if you don't necessarily think of it as "computing".

What's at risk is making cloud computing totally irrelevant. How can corporate IT departments make sense of the market when it appears that cloud computing is essentially tied to anything connected to the Internet?

But then you need to look at the dynamics in play. IT is built on legacy systems, custom, built to order environments. Cloud computing provides a level of automation.

From the PriceWaterhouseCoopers summer Technology Forecast:

"Legacy IT soaks up much of the available IT budget and is a primary barrier to IT responsiveness and overall business agility."

The report goes on to say that cloud will be necesssary for automating the world of IT:

"...IT must adopt an architecture that creates loose coupling between the IT infrastructure and application workloads. It also must modernize and automate IT's own internal business processes for provisioning, managing, and orchestrating infrastructure resources."

In other words, cloud computing will be huge but to call it a $160 billion market seems like a form of hype that can lead to all kinds of issues. It's almost reminiscent of the dot-com bubble.

And look what happened there.
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November 26, 2009

from: Planetaki-Planet-Clipper_TM

The Real-Time Web and Its Future: Sample Chapter, Table of Contents Available Now!

The-Real-Time-Web-and-...

We're excited to announce that our latest premium research report will be available for download on Monday! Titled The Real-Time Web and Its Future, the report is a broad and deep look at the emerging world of real-time technology on the web. Based on 50 interviews with companies, engineers and executives building or leveraging real-time technology - the subtitle of this report could very well be "Real-Time, Beyond Twitter and Facebook."

Social networks, infrastructure providers, media companies, non-profits and financial services companies were all interviewed and will all find this report useful to quickly develop a sophisticated understanding of this important trend on the web. Large portions of the web will be operating in real-time and this report will provide you with an important competitive advantage. You can pre-order the report at a $100 discount here; check out the Table of Contents (PDF) and a sample chapter (PDF) below.
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There is so much work being done around push delivery of messages - messages between people, between websites and people and between machines and machines - that it's impossible to capture the whole market.

What we've done is develop in-depth case studies of 10 companies that are illustrative of general trends or have wildly innovative strategies. We've profiled twenty four key people to watch in order to understand the future of real time. We've done overviews of three of the biggest sectors in this market - search, stream readers and filtering/text analysis. And we offer five visualizations to help you understand the issues and strategies.

This report captures the wisdom of thousands of hours of work with real-time technology by people breaking new ground - then it was distilled down through hundreds of hours of interviews, research and writing by ReadWriteWeb staff and hundreds of Real-Time Summit attendee conversations. Now you can purchase the report and get an in-depth understanding of this emerging trend in just a few hours of reading and for a bargain price of $200 by pre-order, or $300 next week.

Pre-order today and you'll receive a link to download the 60+ page PDF on Monday, November 30th.

For your perusing pleasure we offer today the Table of Contents and one full sample chapter for download. Or, check out this excerpt from that sample chapter below.

Ted Roden Brings the Real-Time Web to the NY Times and EnjoysThings

By day, Ted Roden works at the very top floor of the New York Times building, in the R&D; department. The Times has a great team of engineers; they do cutting edge work in APIs, data visualization and computer assisted reporting. Roden does work with real-time data at his day job, but he gets full creative freedom when working a side-project called EnjoysThings.

The primary contributions Ted Roden makes to understanding the real-time web include articulating:
the material benefits of going real time
the importance of user experience
the changing landscape in analytics and advertising

We had a conversation with Roden about what happened after he added a real-time feed to EnjoysThings; he articulates well some of the biggest advantages of a real-time infrastructure.

EnjoysThings is a visual bookmarking site, like Delicious for images and other media. Even text snippets bookmarked are highlighted visually. User experience is a key consideration in all the site's developments and the service is a lot of fun to use.

This summer Roden added a premium subscription option to the site, called Joy accounts. Joy accounts cost $20 per year for access to all the current and forthcoming premium features, or users can pay $5 for a single premium feature like disabling ads on the site or being able to view NSFW content.

One of the features Joy account holders get is access to a real-time view of new content
shared. That real-time stream can be viewed in any browser but may be best served up via a Firefox sidebar. A real-time feed as up-sold value add? That's remarkable and Roden says the response has been positive.

The sidebar is simple but compelling. New content is pushed live into the side of the
browser as soon as it's shared on the site, including images. At first Roden said he used AJAX set to poll his site every few seconds. Then he switched to a Comet implementation. He says he's using the open source infrastructure Tornado, from Facebook, for his real-time prototypes at the Times.

EnjoysThings is still very small but the implications of adding real-time to this site could
likely be incurred by sites of any size.

1. INCREASED TIME ON SITE

"People leave it open all day long," Roden said of the sidebar. "Time-on-site has seen a
huge increase. It's like when the new content comes in on the Facebook Live Feed, if you know it's about to pop in 5 seconds you'll stick around."

There are a number of different factors that are making time-on-site an increasingly
important metric on the web, compared to pageviews. Increased consumption of video
is the best known, but as real-time streams of aggregated content become increasingly
common, increased time-on-site will be an important measurement of how successful an implementation is.

2. DECREASED SERVER COSTS

After implementing real-time infrastructure, Roden reports that "my site runs a lot more
smoothly, I'll probably move the whole site to that technology because deep down it's
much easier on the database for me."

"I used to get hit by Stumbleupon and [the site] would start to crawl. Then I changed to some of this real time stuff and I've reduced the number of servers. Instead of the users sitting on the page and refreshing, I push it out to them. My EC2 bill has gone way down." Roden's experience compliments the story that Google's Brad Fitzpatrick told us about using PubSubHubbub push feeds to deliver shared items in Google Reader to FriendFeed. Changing from polling to real-time push cut traffic between the two sites by 85%. Likewise, magazine-style feed reader Feedly says that the part of its service that now consumes PubSubHubbub from Google Reader has seen a 72% reduction in bandwidth.

...(continued) To read the rest of this sample chapter, see the PDF download above. Please see also the Table of Contents and pre-order now to get a great discount on the forthcoming report!
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November 26, 2009

from: Planetaki-Planet-Clipper_TM

5 Mobile Apps to Be Thankful For if You Are Flying This Thanksgiving Weekend

5-Mobile-Apps-to-Be-Th...

Thanksgiving is generally a horrible day for air travel, but tradition and the sweet smell of Thanksgiving turkey still makes millions of Americans forget the potential horror of being stuck in an airport. If you are one of them, or even if you are just heading to the airport to pick somebody up, here are some mobile applications and web sites than can help you make your Thanksgiving travel less stressful.
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Flightcaster

Not sure if your flight will leave on time? Surprisingly, the airlines often don't have the most accurate information. Flights will show up as 'On Time,' even though your plane, which is supposed to take off in 15 minutes, is still sitting on another airport 500 miles away. FlightCaster looks at data from the airlines, FAA and combines this with historical data and weather information to give you a more accurate picture. The result is a good prediction whether your flight will leave on time.

Flightcaster is available as an iPhone and Blackberry app. The service is also available on FlightCaster's website.

WorldMate

WorldMate, which is available in a free and Pro version for the iPhone, BlackBerry and most other mobile phone operating systems, gives you a one-stop shop for all your travel info. You can simply email receipts for your flight and hotel bookings to a private Worldmate address and the software will automatically update your itineraries on the mobile app. What makes the pro version so useful is that WorldMate also alerts you of delays and gate changes through push notifications and SMS messages. WorldMate also offers a list of nearby hotels and the ability to search for alternative flights if yours gets cancelled.

TripIt's iPhone app offers similar service.

TripCase

TripCase offers fewer features than WorldMate, but it's free and also comes with push notifications. It's available for the iPhone, Blackberry and Windows Mobile. Besides flight information and baggage claim info, TripCase also allows you to send out information about your flight status to your friends and family. You can also publish photos on your personalized TripCase site.

Next Flight

If you get bumped off an oversold flight or miss a connection, Next Flight can help you find alternative flights. The company indexes schedules from over 1,100 airlines and 4,200 airports around the world. Next Flight currently sells for $2.99 in the App Store.

Flight Status

If you are just picking somebody up at the airport, Flight Status is a nice iPhone app that gives you arrival information, including which baggage claim to go to. Flight Status is only available for the iPhone and costs $4.99. Flight Status was developed by the same company as Next Flight and also features data from 1,100 airlines.

Bonus: Flight Advisor Twitter Feed

If you just want to get a quick overview of airport delays in the US, also have a look at the Flight Advisor Twitter feed.

What About You?

Do you have your own favorite travel apps that we didn't mention here? Let us know in the comments.

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November 26, 2009

from: Planetaki-Planet-Clipper_TM

Building Better Bloggers: The Dream Communication Pipeline

Building-Better-Blogge...

It's only late afternoon and we've already got a Thanksgiving mystery. API strategist Ben Metcalfe and former SVP of Marketing for Tesla Motors Daryl Siry recently launched Daryl Siry recently launched Plato's Forms. The duo are intent on "solving the problem of rapid proliferation of misinformation in online media." Although their recent blog post confirms the company's $545,000 dollars in new funding, they are keeping mum on product specifics and how they'll transform media in Spring 2010. In our commitment to truth, justice and better blogging, ReadWriteWeb has a list of issues we hope Plato's Forms addresses:
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1. Timeliness: RSS feeds are by far the most convenient way for writers to get your news, but sometimes we need more info. There's no doubt that Peter Shankman's free Help A Reporter service is a fantastic one. However, while this is great when you've got at least a day's lead to write, this is not a useful service for those looking to file within the hour.

2. On Topic: While services like Cision and Burrelles Luce may give you general contact info, they are often mistagged or accompanied by outdated descriptions. This means that relevant pitches get buried between spam and off-topic releases.

3. Personal Space: While many would disagree with me on this, I firmly believe that neither LinkedIn, Facebook nor early Sunday morning phone calls are appropriate for pitching. A great service would allow writers to be responsive while still maintaining a sense of personal space.

4. Accuracy: One of the fantastic things about Mozilla releases is the fact that on any given day you can sit in the project's IRC and chat with developers in real-time. Candid chat conversation is often a better way to communicate than even telephone simply because it allows for quotes but it doesn't allow for the injection of buzzwords and nonsensical jargon. Analyst and category chat rooms might help aid us in rounding out stories.

Photo Credit: Mike Licht
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November 26, 2009

from: Planetaki-Planet-Clipper_TM

Volvo IT Department Gets Banned From Wikipedia For Racist Rants

Volvo-IT-Department-Ge...

One of the risks facing any enterprise is how to deal with people who use the corporate network to post rude, sexist or even racist material on public facing web sites.

That issue is coming home to roost for Volvo, following the news that Wikipedia has banned editing from machines inside the Volvo IT Department for racist remarks left on the pages of two well-known Pakistani Cricket players.
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According to the Channel Register, someone in the Volvo IT Department wrote a number of racist remarks in articles about two Pakistani cricket players: Wasim Akram and Inzamam-ul-Haq. The IP Address, 192.138.116.230, maps back to the Volvo IT Department.

The rants were not directed at the players but other contributors to the site. Less than 20 minutes after the rants were left on the site, Wikipedia banned the Volvo IP address until early December.

Volvo made a statement that they are investigating the incident.

According to Channel Register, Volvo stated:

"We have a policy describing acceptable and prohibited use of Internet services and the measures to be taken if these services are misused."

How to deal with the way people conduct themselves using the web and real-time applications will become an increasingly challenging issue for the enterprise. How this pans out will come down to the policies companies establish.

The truth is, we are in the early days of microblogging and even writing to the web. Corporate policies are few and far between. But you know this issue is going to be on the minds of managers everywhere as as incidents like the one at Volvo repeat themselves in any number of ways.
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November 26, 2009

from: Planetaki-Planet-Clipper_TM

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