Archive

Archive for July, 2009

More Change, More Hassle, More Expense, less productivity.

July 28th, 2009

Whilst I should not be surprised, I am! Who drives ‘innovation’ in today’s software products! To me, the latest version of Microsoft Office is unrecogniseable compared to 2003, everything I want from the menu system has moved or worse, simply does not exist any more. How does a company become so arrogant or out of touch with its users! Functions that I have used everyday for years no longer exist.  My latest realisation is that I cannot save documents to my C:\ drive, apparently it is a security threat. I can copy the file to my desktop and then to my c:\ drive but not to my c:\ drive directly. It’s a bit like saying you cannot buy cigarettes because you are too young, however we will sell you tobacco and cigarette paper separately.

I must be getting old, I used to revel in technology, eagerly awaiting each new release and often feeling let down because the raft of new functions were superficial and of no real significance. Now I feel let down because each function is wrapped in so much ‘cotton wool’ by the time I have managed to get to the function, I have forgotten what I wanted to do in the first place.

Charles Uncategorized ,

Friday Feeling Five

July 10th, 2009

Our 5th Friday Feeling shares some of the things that have given us pause for thought this last week.

So you’d have to have been living on Mars not to have known that Michael Jackson died recently. As with Elvis, John Lennon and Princess Diana, the world has gone crazy with news, gossip, rumour and outright lies. The difference this time is the 24 hour news channels and Social Media-effect. #MichaelJackson content has been widely published on various internet platforms including Facebook, Twitter and MySpace to name but three. Watching Sky News and BBC News Channel stumble through their various “Breaking News” items around his death has been equally uncomfortable. It seems Google were also made to feel uncomfortable with the speed of the spreading of the news around the Internet. Indeed, they saw the sudden queries for Michael Jackson as a possible attack on their extensive infrastructure.

Charlie Hamilton, a fellow regular at the Isle of Man Social Media Club, shared a link she found on Google regarding how a web site may be unwittingly the victim of “black hat SEO”. Search Engine Optimisation is an inexact science and respectable web development companies will always recommend you create well designed, written and promoted web sites as being the best way to achieve a high Page Rank in Google. So-called “black hat” optimisation is where a web site employs tricks and cheats to try and circumvent Google’s checks and balances. It turns out that if a site linking to your site has traits of being “black hat”, your own site may be penalised as being an accessory-to-the-fact. Always a good reason to check people who want to link to your site.

Finally, if you’ve ever wondered what Web 2.0 actually means … or meant, an article by Tim O’Reilly and John Battelle might just clarify it for you. Tim and John look back over the last 5 years of “Web 2.0″ to see how the web recovered from the dotcom-crash to become an essential marketing and networking platform. New data providers such as SmartPhones combine with “crowdsourcing” to produce highly accurate data such as virtual state outlines within Flickr, Google can predict the flu-epidemic within the United States and Microsoft can create 3-dimensional imagery based on users’ photographs of common landmarks.

That last article is a long one, but well worth the read. Will keep you entertained for the weekend.

Nathan Friday Feeling , , , ,