Feb 25
TiddlyWiki - The Future?
icon1 Gubbi | icon2 Blogs | icon4 02 25th, 2006| icon32 Comments »

Wiki came. Blogs came. Podcasts came. Vodcasts are almost here. Now this old Wiki thing is all set to become the next new thing.

TiddlyWiki is the Wiki flavor of the season. Why? ’cause it’s got a funny name :-) Well, it’s really fun using and building it too. It’s built on a very powerful but simple concept. “Human minds are a lot better at taking information in little tiny chunks.” They call a chunk of information a Tiddler :-)

Several Tiddlers make up for a topic. There are many other power packed features. The interface is great. The tags support is very much an integral part….This interface reminds me of moo.fx. We can selectively keep some Tiddlers on display, while closing the others. Which means, we only see as much as we want to see.

There is this another great story telling site built on TW. Gimcrack’d has got a small list of stories right now. The story proceeds in tiny tiny chunks and the interesting part is, it is revealed differently to different users, based on the order in which they open the Tiddlers. Everyone has their own tale to tell !!
Reminds me of those Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew combined mystery stories. Go to page xyz if you’d like Hardy Boys to solve the mystery or goto page abc if Nancy Drew has to solve it. We used to read both of them anyway ;-) But here, it’s a truly different story, as we can track all the previous chunks read and decide on which chunk to serve next.

One thing that strikes me is, all these so called _powerful_ concepts are all so simple and makes me ask like, “This is so very simple. Wasn’t this thought of before itself? basic common sense!!”.

Here’s my 2 cents on where this could lead to:

First, there is this inclination towards bringing programming language like fundas into our natural representation of ideas. Information is broken up into chunks and modularized. A small piece of information can be reused again and again. So, instead of links to external manuals for more information, we can get that information chunk into our document itself. Saves much efforts in redocumenting things as per the context.

Second, the DRM concerns have peaked up now. There are people ready to let go of the stringent copyrights and share their works under more relaxed Creative Commons licenses. Richard Stallman decries CC and tells GPL can be extended beyond software to cover _content_ also. I think, we can expect more and more publicly modifiable and reusable _content_. We’ll soon see different flavors of a novel, all legally valid. ;-)
Or given a set of chunks, which can all fit into a particular part as alternatives, generate a random sequence of chunks and get a new novel generated !!

Or may be, feed and make the computers understand very small chunks of data, and slowly plug/load them with extra chunks to _teach_ them new things….

Before I start rumbling more crazy things, GOOD BYE.

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Feb 25
50 Tools For Writing.
icon1 Gubbi | icon2 Blogs | icon4 02 25th, 2006| icon3No Comments »

I Stumble!d upon lifehack.org today. Great tips on writing technique. Quoting some snippets.

Tool 1: Branch to the Right

Begin sentences with subjects and verbs, letting subordinate elements branch to the right. Even a long, long sentence can be clear and powerful when the subject and verb make meaning early. Now imagine this: A reporter writes a lead sentence with subject and verb at the beginning, followed by other subordinate elements, creating what scholars call a “right-branching sentence.”

Here’s a right-branching sentence, from a news story in The New York Times:

Rebels seized control of Cap Haitien, Haiti’s second largest city, on Sunday, meeting little resistance as hundreds of residents cheered, burned the police station, plundered food from port warehouses and looted the airport, which was quickly closed. Police officers and armed supporters of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide fled.

That first sentence is 37 words long and rippling with action. The sentence is so full, in fact, that it threatens to fly apart like some overheated engine. But the writer keeps control by creating meaning in the first three words: “Rebels seized control…” Think of that main clause as the locomotive that pulls all the cars that follow.

Contrast this with the sentence below :

A bill that would exclude tax income from the assessed value of new homes from the state education funding formula could mean a loss of revenue for Chesapeake County schools.

Eighteen words separate the subject “bill” from its weak verb “could mean,”. A fatal flaw that turns what could be an important civic story into gibberish.

If the writer wants to create suspense, or build tension, or make the reader wait and wonder, or join a journey of discovery, or hold on for dear life, she can save the verb until the end.

Writer's Toolbox

This is the only tip I looked into. Rest are marked for _future-leisure-reading_ :-)

Well, following this tip, I’ll rephrase as below:

I looked only into this tip. Marking the rest for _future-leisure-reading_

I know, it doesn’t make much sence for short sentences :-)

What do u think?

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Feb 25
The First Trail
icon1 Gubbi | icon2 Blogs | icon4 02 25th, 2006| icon32 Comments »

Flock has been around for some time now. A plethora of web browsers exist, each catering to almost all normal needs. Hence I didn’t bother myself to try out this new browser. Firefox worked great. A host of extensions made browsing needs almost complete. It was like, there could be nothing better. Two days ago, after a lot of lazing around, I decided to try Flock.

Doesn’t look much different from Firefox. Of course, it’s a sister project. The important thing is about this social browsing concept being _in-built_ into the browser. Social browsing is becoming more of a normal affair. And extending browser through extensions doesn’t somehow give that power and robustness. A more important point is, as the browsers evolve, Flock will naturally adapt to social browsing than would Firefox. As the global village emerges, social browsing becomes a _necessity_.

Some Features of Flock I Liked Most:

  1. The sharing of favorites and synchronizing with my online profiles. So, I don’t loose out on any of my bookmarked links. Adds the powerful tag based bookmarking.
  2. Blogging tools like Shelf, Photo Uploader, My Blogs. These are indispensable tools for some serious blogging [ especially for some kinds of blogs as this one].
  3. Tagging My blog posts.
  4. Support for del.icio.us, Flickr, Shadows, Blogger, WordPress, TypePad.
  5. Supports most of the _can’t-live-without_ firefox extensions.

This doesn’t mean that Flock is an absolute bliss. It’s not even completely beta yet. It crashes nearly 4-5 times everyday [which means I loose my ongoing sessions ]. Very Very Annoying. Some extensions don’t work well. No extra themes yet…. But they’ll anyway get better.

This is not my first blog. Once in a full moon I did write something at my _very-scattered_ blogs and forums. Later, I got my domain. After another half year, I got a free web hosting provider with no-ads at 50webs. Sufficient for blogging activities.

Now as I browse, I can put my notes, interesting web snippets, links, etc., on to the shelf. Start posting my day’s blog. Retrieve from shelf, things relevant for that post using simple drag-n-drop. Publish the post.

Now blogging no more becomes a separate _task_ but a _way_ of my online presence.

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Jan 1
Lights give Shadows
icon1 Gubbi | icon2 Blogs | icon4 01 1st, 1970| icon3No Comments »

standShadow

Cat and Mouse: Game of the lights and shadows.   — Snayya.

Blogged with Flock

Jan 1
The New Media.
icon1 Gubbi | icon2 Blogs | icon4 01 1st, 1970| icon3No Comments »

I was looking at YouTube 2007 video awards. Lots of cool content. Way better than traditional TV made by the “professionals”. Well these are professionals too, but different. The content connects more than TV. It sort of exists in the same environment / context as we do. Not just the content/topics they are concerned with, but the medium, tools, people, etc.

My favorites from the pick:

The Guild - Episode 1: Wake-Up Call

[Good premise for a serial. I know I’ll enjoy it.]

How to solve a Rubik’s Cube (Part One)

[Ummm. Gotta lay my hands on one now.]

my name is lisa

[Away From Her inspiration.]

The Original Human TETRIS Performance by Guillaume Reymond

[The background music is crazy :P ]

Potter Puppet Pals in “The Mysterious Ticking Noise”

[Dumbledore’s gone nuts :D ]

Battle at Kruger

[Awwesome once-in-a-time video. Have seen it lots of times with someone or the other.]

Stop the Clash of Civilizations

[Can this be realized? I think yes.]

Laughing Baby

[:)) :) ) :) ) :) )]

balloon bowl

[Wish I could do that!!]

Lots of cool videos in the nominations too. Check them out here: http://www.youtube.com/ytawards07winners

Blogged with the Flock Browser

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