Posts Tagged ‘Web 2.0’

Twitter needs to change their meta description

When you add a page to Facebook, maybe for later keeping or sharing it with your friends, Facebook looks at the meta field "description" in the source code.

On Twitter ALL pages have the same meta description:

<meta name="description" content="Twitter is a free social messaging utility for staying connected in real-time">

This means that when you post a Twitter page (no matter if it's a profile page or a single tweet) the description posted to Facebook (which you can't change) is: "Twitter is a free social messaging utility for staying connected in real-time".

That doesn't really say anything about the content behind the link, so I sugges that the folks at Twitter change the meta line to something more meaningful, depending on what page the user is posting to Facebook:

  • If it's a Twitter profile page, use the "Bio" that the user has written.
  • If it's a single tweet, well, just use the text in the tweet. It's only 140 characters long (at most) - perfect for a meta description.

I could do it in WordPress (you can customize it even further using custom fields). So how hard can it be? :-)

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New in WordPress 2.7 trunk: QuickPress

Just uploaded the recent WordPress trunk version (nightly build) to test it out.

The first thing I discovered is a new feature labeled "QuickPress". It's basically a form which allows you to post (title, body text and tags) directly to your blog from your dashboard.

Click image for larger version:


View photo page on Flickr

I'm not too sure what to think about this. I think I preferred the old dashboard with recent comments, incoming links and so on.

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Jaiku better come up with nothing short of a miracle

Setting up our nest in a new datacenter, after finding an issue with a server on Friday. Sorry for the inconvenience. We're working to get back online soon.

That is what Jaiku.com has to say at the moment.

So what is Jaiku? Or what was Jaiku before it went down?
Jaiku is a microblogging service - basically like Twitter but with the functionality of commenting (below a micro post) and native support for adding feeds to your stream.

But all that hasn't been working since Thursday/Friday last week (today is Wednesday!) when Jaiku.com simply said that the service was closed to a server upgrade.

Now the reason is another: »an issue with a server«

Needless to say that this is no small issue — and needless to say that Jaiku will suffer bad from this. Jaiku has soon been down a week and that's a long, long time.

Ironically, a lot of Jaiku's problem started after the service got acquired by Google. Then it was announced that it would be one of the first projects to switch go the Google App Engine.

But that doesn't appear to have made things a whole lot better.

Fact is: Google and Jaiku have to resurface with nothing short of a miracle. Jaiku just can't return to its normal service and expect forgiveness from the users. And fact is, that while Jaiku is down, people are switching to Twitter.

One wonders whether they will come back again.

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del.icio.us down for two hours - at least

Wow, I guess internet services still can crash with style.

For two hours I haven't been able to get in contact with bookmarking service del.icio.us, which is one of my most used online services. Needless to say, I felt quite handicapped.

It's back online again now, but a very strong reminder, that the performance needs to be in place if you want to rely 100 percent on a service as del.icio.us to keep your booksmarks, like I do.

At this moment nothing regarding the crash has been posted at the del.icio.us blog, so the only information regarding it is an error message, which appeared a few minutes before the service went back online:

Internal Error

Apologies, it seems something is horribly wrong with our code.

If you keep receiving this message, please send us a message with the offending URL.

Apology accepted?

Update @ 17:26:
Another blog post on the downtime on del.icio.us and with a link to a neat service (Summize) which you can use to scan/search Twitter.

Update @ 17:35:
In our Jaiku talk (in Danish) Mark posted a link to the service Down for everyone or just me? — great tool.

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Is Web 2.0 growing up?

According to The Wallstreet Journal more companies are spending more money in the field of "Web 2.0" (we SO need to come up with another term for that) — mostly social networking or blogging.

Also the investments in Web 2.0 companies has started to move outside the San Francisco Bay Arena which is "known for producing some of the most high-profile Internet companies".

In the first half of 2007 New England topped the Bay Arena with $102 million invested dollars, Bay Arena had $90.5 million.

Also companies are becoming better at investing in web companies:

Read the article at WSJ.com

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Upload and discover documents with Scribd

What is Scribd?

Scribd lets you publish and discover documents online. It is like a big online library where anyone can upload. We make use of a custom Flash document viewer that lets you display documents right in your Web browser. There are all sorts of other features that make it easy and fun to publish, convert, embed, analyze, and read documents.

Part of the idea behind Scribd is that everyone has a lot of documents sitting around on their computers that only they can read. With Scribd we hope to unlock this information by putting it on the web.

Sounds like something I should be checking out…

Found via Om Malik.

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Download YouTube videos as…videos

One of my personal heroes, JD Lasinger, has a post with links to how you can download YouTube videos as videos instead of .flv-files.

Check it out.

One is the Spanish site Comunidad UEM and the other is the FLV Converter.

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Media use of web 2.0 increasing

Web 2.0 — I'm really starting to hate that term — is apparently growing in popularity among the mainstream media.

At least, according to article at ReadWriteWeb.

I think it's really nice to see that the big media is incorporating services such as del.icio.us, Digg, RSS and others, instead of forcing some of their own services — which are basically clones of the original ones — down upon us.

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Check this out: AJAX and XUL powered instant messaging

Fancy an instant messaging-client that requires 0 megabyte on your hard disk and doesn't need any installation?

Sys-Con Australia reports that Process-One has created an instant messaging client based on AJAX and Mozilla's XUL. The client's name is OneTeam.

OneTeam handles presence, one-to-one chat, file tranfer, user business card and groupchat in realtime. Based on the XMPP protocol, it enables both secure and private chat inside the company, but can also be opened in a control manner to selected servers in partner organisations.

Sign up for the OneTeam beta list.

What is AJAX? | What is XUL?

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Forbes compiles rather strange list of 25 web celebs

Forbes has created a list entitled "The Web Celeb 25" about — you guessed it — the 25 most known celebrities on the web.

Have a look at it to see what you think — I'm not to crazy about that list.

Although there are some good guys in there (Robert Scoble, Seth Godin, Glenn Reynolds, Michael Arrington and Om Malik) I'm especially startled over the top of that list.

A YouTube girl and a celebrity gossip blogger? What happened to the guys that made this whole internet thing happen in the first place, as Scoble also notes.

Maybe it's just this whole "celebrity" thing I have something against…

Instead you might want to have a look at the People’s choice Web 25 list.

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