Tag: Interestingly

Slashdotted… by a blogger?

November 29th, 2007

BYU Student Association Poster, on FlickrGone are the days when you got a polite phone call before your company website was to be featured by a major news outlet, giving you a chance to be ready for the crush.

Since the 90s, being slashdotted is now common vernacular among webmasters. Normally seen as a good thing (because of the publicity), it still blasts you off the ‘Net for a while, and most of those denied web visitors will never come back.

Though it was slashdot.org that bestowed the phenomenon a name, it gave rise to a whole new class of potential web traffic hurricanes, with the potential to blow you, literally, off the map for a while. No… not DDOS attacks, but about the same effect…. when a massively popular weblog such as, oh, Dooce (a popular, pithy, utah-based “usta-be-mormon” blog) directs her thousands of web-bound visitors to an unsuspecting website, like the BYU Student Honor Association’s posters on Modesty, high traffic loads are bound to happen.

At the time of this posting, the server sha.byu.edu is still offline. I wonder if they know even where this traffic is coming from?

Interestingly, Dooce, which lost her job thanks to blogging is now somewhat returning the favor by DOOCING servers off the web one-by-one.

Power to the People.

Popularity: 8% [?]

New Google Maps Mobile Knows Your Location

November 28th, 2007

BlackBerry 8830When I bought my Blackberry 8830, the last thing I bought it for was its on-board GPS. I didn’t even know it had one. Turns out, I wasn’t supposed to know about it since Verizon disables the GPS deep in the kernel of the device. Turns out that even Google was talking about how cool the 8800 series Blackberry devices are, and mine was crippled. Grrr.Verizon Wireless

Thankfully, I tempered my suddenly-burning desire to buy a bluetooth GPS puck or something nutty like that so I could absolutely know where I am all the time.

This was good because Google Maps Mobile has recently updated (along with almost all the other Google Mobile apps) to include GPS pseudo-location by triangulating signals from nearby cellular towers.

Adam Ostorow of Mashable says, “Between free Google Maps for Mobile and low cost GPS navigation offerings from many of the wireless carriers, the assault is on the expensive GPS device makers”

I downloaded it and ran it with some trepidation as other services like this have been crippled in Utah because they didn’t have access to know exactly where I am. Navizon, for example, kept saying I was in Ogden, which would surely burn up a lot of gas as I a m 2 hours South of there.

I was happy to discover that it fired up with my location centered in the screen. Zooming in, I found that it wasn’t exact, but very close. In the picture below, there’s a blue-dot in the upper-right corner. I am about exactly one street South of there at the Borders Bookstore in Provo.

New Google Maps Mobile knows where you are... almost. When I fired it up, it said I was a bit North of where I really am. The red arrow points to its location finder (the blue dot). The yellow arrow is where I actually am. Not *exact*, but but its not full GPS either... and for the (FREE) price, it's a great tool.

Popularity: 14% [?]

How @twitter Changes Work (OR, Can You Handle The Truth?)

November 14th, 2007

Twitter@Akula (Brett Nordquist) asked the question last night, “How does your company change if the majority of people use Twitter?” quickly following that up with “Maybe the company doesn’t change. But I think it does.”

I already noted that the evidence of Twitter becoming a mainstream communications tool is abundant, but considering what happens to twitter when it comes into play in your work life is an interesting subject to consider. Brett wrote up some thoughts on this topic at his blog, under a post titled: “Twitter Goes Mainstream at Work” where he noted five specific things that such communications would change in the office:

  1. Employee to employee email is reduced.
  2. Employee to employee instant messaging is reduced.
  3. Those who may be on the outside can suddenly be in the know
  4. The playing field is leveled. Titles don’t mean anything.
  5. Community is fostered.
    (source)

Well, thinking on that overnight, I recall what it was like when email and IM were first taking hold in the workplace. Brett’s points above all happened somewhat there as well. I remember joining a company where I was placed on the “engineering” email list and immediately felt like I was both “plugged in” and contributing to the physical progress of the organization.

You Can’t Handle The Truth!Knowing may be half the battle, the old G.I. Joe PSAs call out, but many organizations sadly seem to revel in not knowing, and even some workplace situations may even demand the kind of innocence that comes from managers and decision-makers being BLIND to their employee’s personal life, tastes and desires. Having the capacity to determine promotions, raises and other benefits based on someone’s work merit and NOT on information they may gather from any other sources is important. In short, old-school managers and yesterdays HR-laden management may not be able to handle the truth of what employees do with their own time.

So, some things to consider, with twitter in your workplace:

  1. Twitter is ALWAYS personal.
    Even if you and people you work with twitter (yes, I used that as a verb), and since you can’t have a “work” and a “personal” twitter account, this places an interesting strain on the work/life balance.
  2. Are bosses and employees mature enough to handle it?
    I haven’t met anyone who says they enjoy so-called Office Politics, unless they’re mocking it on TV. Can your co-workers and managers handle treating others professionally while knowing what happened to Marina’s hair this morning, or wondering if Chris Brogan’s comment about engaging enemies or Sterkworks’ comment about changing commission structures was secretly aimed at them??
  3. Can what happens on twitter stay on twitter?
    If an employee is passed up for a promotion or any other undue indiscretion is given to them because of what they say on twitter, that could be a bad thing.
  4. Where it works, USE IT
    This isn’t intended to be rain on anybody’s parade. Twitter, as an example of syndication oriented architecture (SynOA) works very well in certain circumstances. Phil Windley pointed me to this IT Conversations podcast where Jon Udell and Rohit Khare talk about how twitter can/does work.

Bottom-line: I feel like Twitter at work could be very helpful to an organization–IF THEY CAN HANDLE THE TRUTH.

Popularity: 10% [?]

Ajaxian Hacked or Link-Farming?

November 5th, 2007

Skimming posts in my feedreader today, I noticed something very unusual. I tagged this post on PopBox, a JavaScript image magnifier as something interesting, but when I kept scrolling I saw spam links to various online prescriptions, etc., etc.

I scrolled back up, and unmarked the post, thinking I had run across a spam site in my feed, only to discover that the site in question is AJAXIAN, the well-known repository for all things AJAXy around the web.

Here’s the rub: It’s not visible from the website, but it IS visible in the feed, and in the source code. See photos, below:

Ajaxian Post:

Ajaxian Website

Ajaxian Source Code reveals spam links:

Source Code reveals spam links

Whois results don’t seem to show that Ajaxian and the spammy site are related… but how many layers of this onion are there?

Ajaxian Whois:

Domain Name: AJAXIAN.COM
Registrar: INTERCOSMOS MEDIA GROUP, INC. D/B/A DIRECTNIC.COM
Whois Server: whois.directnic.com
Referral URL: http://www.directnic.com
Name Server: NS.TECHTARGET.COM
Name Server: NS3.TECHTARGET.COM
Status: clientTransferProhibited
Status: clientUpdateProhibited
Status: clientDeleteProhibited
Updated Date: 22-jun-2007
Creation Date: 01-mar-2005
Expiration Date: 01-mar-2009

Spammy Server Whois:

Domain Name: EXPERIENCENEWORLEANS.COM
Registrar: ENOM, INC.
Whois Server: whois.enom.com
Referral URL: http://www.enom.com
Name Server: NS.COMPUCAST.COM
Name Server: NS2.COMPUCAST.COM
Status: clientTransferProhibited
Status: clientDeleteProhibited
Updated Date: 08-aug-2007
Creation Date: 08-sep-1997
Expiration Date: 07-sep-2008

Popularity: 3% [?]