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The Dream Phone

I've been in the market for my dream phone for almost a year now. Products have been released left and right, but none of them seem to have the functionality that I am desiring. Okay, I admit - "phone" is a bit misleading. What I'm really looking for is a smartphone... no, not a smartphone, a digital companion.

Things I'm looking for:


  • Phone

  • Camera

  • Media Player

  • Freedom



Phone
I want a mobile phone with what has become industry standards, including the dual-mode functionality of GSM and WiFi connections. I should be able to take this phone to any service provider, and get service using this device, keeping both my number and my contacts.

Camera
I want a decent camera that gets decent lighting. While a 2 megapixel camera is about the range I'm looking for, most important is the quality of the resulting pictures. The functionality of a modern-day camera should be available, including light temperature and balance. I should be able to record video using this, as well.

Media Player
I should be able to play any format of media on this device as I can play using my home Linux box. OGG, MP3, MPEG, AVI...

Freedom
I wish to be able to install software freely, from wherever I may choose. If I choose to install emulators and play me some NES, SNES, and Sega Genesis games, I should be able to do this freely, and have the necessary hardware resources to do this. I want to be able to make changes to my device's software at any point in time. I should be able to sync my calendar, to do list, and contacts with my choice of repositories.


I'll grow and review this as necessary. Until then, the Apple iPhone looks bitterly disgusting, while the Motorola Q's use of Windows continues to push me away.

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Flock Tip: Add Services To Your Sidebar (Sorta)

So, Firefox allows you to open favorites in a sidebar - which is great for things like FriendFeed, Google Talk, Twitter, or even Facebook chat. It lets you use a good web service as what essentially becomes an extension for your browser, so you can browse your regular pages while still participating in the conversation.

I recently switched over to the social browser, Flock - with great success and elation. Flock is built from the Firefox codebase, but they are massively more social in what the browser does - drag and drop images, open media feeds, view your friends in their People and Places sidebar, among many other really cool things.

Then there's Friendfeed - which is a web service that recently took off (but I must say, I've been using long before the hype. :D) because it allows you to combine all of your social media connections (Web 2.5, if you will) and even cross-post responses between them (closer to Web 3.0, minus filtering and duplicate content issues...). After putting in a request to Flock's develpment team to start moving in this direction, I decided to take matters into my own hands.

When you bookmark something in Firefox, you can open the properties of the bookmark and hit a checkbox, "Open this link in the sidebar." However, this option is not available in Flock (by default). So let's open our trusty about:config:

Do a filter on "sidebar", and you'll find a value called "flock.favorites.loadPageInSidebar" - which is set to false by default. Right click this value, and click "toggle".

Bingo. Now you will have the checkbox on all your bookmarks that will allow you to open links in your sidebar!

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Tags: , , , , ,

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Forums Are Social: But We Need Stuff

There's some discussion about how forums are or are not social media, (frankly, I don't think there's any question at all) - and it occurred to me the answer of why there is this rift in perception of forums/message boards.

Message boards haven't changed in almost 25 years. There simply hasn't been any real innovation - and that's why there's so much "real" social media out there that's exploding right now. The stuff is so radically different from traditional mediums such as forums that everyone is missing the core of what social media is: community engagement and interaction

So, here are some of the things I'd like to see in a forum, and some things that I've implemented on some of my own forums (heh, or at least planning to implement):

Trackbacks It'd be awesome to have the same functionality in a blog post that we have on Wordpress or other blog software - did I give credit to someone? Let me hit the trackback API to make sure there's a connection between the two posts in the semantic web.

A forum thread is no different than a blog post. It has a topic, a goal, and a discussion pertaining to the original post. Let's see some of the functionality we found in the current decade put to use!

Native RSS Support There's nothing worse than having to write an RSS extension for your forum, and still not have the functionality you want. Give every URL on my forum a /feed, please. This includes forums, threads, posts, users: the whole shebang.

While you're at it, tell Feedburner to support filtered feeds - a lot of my users don't want every single post. And I sure as hell don't want to burn a new feed for every forum. C'mon, let's meet somewhere in the middle.

Semantic URLs Blogging software does it, why do we still have URLs on forums that use IDs right there in the URL? What benefit does that have to the user?

Social Profiles Alright, we've got friends and foes lists on our forums, now - but where is the option to make this information public? Why aren't we displaying a users' friend list on their profile page by default? What about all their most recent posts and actions, and selected excerpts?

A community can only grow in a stifled manner if interaction between members isn't made as easy as humanly possible. Current forum software is stuck in the 90's, with an XHTML wrapper around it. Let's fix this, and soon - before we all melt.

Real Metrics and Algorithms Stop using post count as a legitimate metric. This only encourages poor post quality. Let's see the ability to easily show Flesch-Kincaid, average word count, or something similar. The amount of posts a user has is not a good valuation of their contributions.

Instead, replace these with something more community-driven. Look at Digg for example. There is a solid (questionably) algorithm in place that measures users based on what they've submitted and the reactions of other users' reaction to that content, whether it be a comment or a submission.

Maybe I'm just whining. Maybe I've got legitimate desires. What do you think?

P.S.: And good god, phpBB! Why didn't you include this stuff in your phpBB3 release?!

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My Top 3 Twitter Tools

I've been using Twitter since pretty early on (and long before @oprah), and I've found it to be a superbly convenient communication tool and notification service. Even though it's still very young on the web (Twitter was founded in March of 2006) It's been the home to great ideas like the #twitterdata proposal and the publicdomain book-via-tweets project. It's also an awesome reputation management platform, and can be used to both to provide effective customer service and help distribute news and updates about your business or product, which is exactly how I use it for my online roleplaying project.

But as with the rest of the social media world, Twitter can become very complex very quickly (but I still contend that there is no social media overload) and as a result, can be difficult to manage. As a result, I use several third-party tools to help me manage and gather information that helps me do my Twitter job much more efficiently and effectively.

Splitweet [caption id="attachment_196" align="alignnone" width="300" caption="Splitweet allows you to post and monitor multiple Twitter accounts and brands."]Splitweet allows you to post and monitor multiple Twitter accounts and brands.[/caption]

For those of us with multiple Twitter accounts (like some people who create a Twitter account for each roleplaying character they use), Splitweet is an absolute savior. This service allows you to tweet to multiple accounts at the same time, as well as combining the "stream" from each account into one page. A lot of desktop Twitter clients offer this kind of functionality, but where Splitweet truly excels is in its ability to track what it calls "brands" (more reputation management terms here): you can specify keywords and phrases that will appear in a separate feed, even if you do not follow those users. This gets us around the disastrous changes Twitter made to the @replies, and helps us keep up to date on any mentions of our site's name and any tweets relating to what it is that we do.

Sherflock [caption id="attachment_195" align="alignnone" width="300" caption="Sherflock provides detailed statistics and summaries of Twitter users you are associated with."]Sherflock provides detailed statistics and summaries of Twitter users you are associated with.[/caption]

Sherflock is an absolutely awesome stat tracking machine that helps weed out the waves of spam that have been coming in since Twitter has gone mainstream. Sherflock gives a large number of statistics about each every account the either follows you or that you are following, and lets you sort and filter users based on these statistics.

Twitterfall [caption id="attachment_194" align="alignnone" width="217" caption="Twitterfall offers a live stream of twitter updates on keywords that you specify."]Twitterfall offers a live stream of twitter updates on keywords that you specify.[/caption]

This tool allows you to specify any number of keywords that you wish to view on a live, moving stream of tweets. This is very useful if you are using a computer that allows you to "pin" a window on top (like Ubuntu Linux), or if you have a multiple-monitor rig, or even if you use multiple computers using the input-sharing app Synergy. You'll get a live feed of updates on any topic of your choice, which can even be updated and changed in real-time.

Using these three tools will help you maximize you Twitter performance and make the most of an already awesome service, preventing you from being inundated with the massive stream of messages that you're surely going to subscribe to.

What are your top three Twitter tools? Feel free to make a comment or write your own post, and I'll gladly append a link to this post to help everyone out!

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Kill your television? Kill all...

Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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When I worked with Cybernetix Media... in reply to

When I worked with Cybernetix Media Corp's Venom Magazine, I got assigned to do an add for one of our issues for them. Very, very cool organization.

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How is social media changing government?...

How is social media changing government? Take a look at Estonia. #IgniteRaleigh

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Google basically going on offensive, they're... in reply to

Google basically going on offensive, they're also making a media player check google music, you're in USA so you can download.

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RT @martindale: Kill your television? ...

RT @martindale: Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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RT @martindale: Kill your television? ...

RT @martindale: Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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RT @martindale: Kill your television? ...

RT @martindale: Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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RT @martindale: Kill your television? ...

RT @martindale: Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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RT @martindale: Kill your television? ...

RT @martindale: Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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RT @martindale: Kill your television? ...

RT @martindale: Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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RT @martindale: Kill your television? ...

RT @martindale: Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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RT @martindale: Kill your television? ...

RT @martindale: Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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RT @martindale: Kill your television? ...

RT @martindale: Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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RT @martindale: Kill your television? ...

RT @martindale: Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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RT @martindale: Kill your television? ...

RT @martindale: Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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RT @martindale: Kill your television? ...

RT @martindale: Kill your television? Kill all your one-way media. #IgniteRaleigh

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RT @martindale: How is social media...

RT @martindale: How is social media changing government? Take a look at Estonia. #IgniteRaleigh

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Want to know the best way...

Want to know the best way to rate media? It's not @IMDb, it's not @RottenTomatoes – it's the number of peers in the swarm. Don't fight it.

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<span class="proflinkWrapper"><span class="proflinkPrefix">+</span><a class="proflink" href="https://plus.google.com/118022081663802896813" oid="118022081663802896813">Daniel... in reply to

+Daniel Stoddart right, and one reason the media stalls is that they think (or hope?) it will fizzle with no coherent direction. Ironically, it could use help from one of the big PR agencies, the same spin doctors who work for what they're opposing. Let's hope a focus is found and a coherent spokesperson to speak about it.

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Today is Programmers' Day, the 256th day of the year. Russia may be the only country in the world that...

Today is Programmers' Day, the 256th day of the year. Russia may be the only country in the world that officially recognizes it, but here's an appropriate early-morning post commemorating all of the hard-working code weavers in the software industry.

Take a moment today and thank your programmer friends for bringing you all kinds of things, from the timer on your microwave to the beautiful filters you have in Photoshop. From the comfortable air conditioning you're enjoying right now, to the wide array of social media sites that you use to share mundane and intellectual topics alike; virtually every industry on Earth is made possible today thanks to programmers of many different types.

So here's to you, [late night] Programmer. Enjoy your day!

Attachments

Programmers' Day - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Programmers' Day. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to: navigation, search. Programmers' Day (Russian: День программи́ста) is an international unofficial professional holiday that is...

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Today is Programmers' Day, the 256th day of the year. Russia may be the only country in the world that...

Today is Programmers' Day, the 256th day of the year. Russia may be the only country in the world that officially recognizes it, but here's an appropriate early-morning post commemorating all of the hard-working code weavers in the software industry.

Take a moment today and thank your programmer friends for bringing you all kinds of things, from the timer on your microwave to the beautiful filters you have in Photoshop. From the comfortable air conditioning you're enjoying right now, to the wide array of social media sites that you use to share mundane and intellectual topics alike; virtually every industry on Earth is made possible today thanks to programmers of many different types.

So here's to you, [late night] Programmer. Enjoy your day!

Attachments

Programmers' Day - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Programmers' Day. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to: navigation, search. Programmers' Day (Russian: День программи́ста) is an international unofficial professional holiday that is...

2 Replies

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Today is Programmers' Day, the 256th day of the year. Russia may be the only country in the world that...

Today is Programmers' Day, the 256th day of the year. Russia may be the only country in the world that officially recognizes it, but here's an appropriate early-morning post commemorating all of the hard-working code weavers in the software industry.

Take a moment today and thank your programmer friends for bringing you all kinds of things, from the timer on your microwave to the beautiful filters you have in Photoshop. From the comfortable air conditioning you're enjoying right now, to the wide array of social media sites that you use to share mundane and intellectual topics alike; virtually every industry on Earth is made possible today thanks to programmers of many different types.

So here's to you, [late night] Programmer. Enjoy your day!

Attachments

Programmers' Day - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Programmers' Day. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to: navigation, search. Programmers' Day (Russian: День программи́ста) is an international unofficial professional holiday that is...

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Today is Programmers' Day, the 256th day of the year. Russia may be the only country in the world that...

Today is Programmers' Day, the 256th day of the year. Russia may be the only country in the world that officially recognizes it, but here's an appropriate early-morning post commemorating all of the hard-working code weavers in the software industry.

Take a moment today and thank your programmer friends for bringing you all kinds of things, from the timer on your microwave to the beautiful filters you have in Photoshop. From the comfortable air conditioning you're enjoying right now, to the wide array of social media sites that you use to share mundane and intellectual topics alike; virtually every industry on Earth is made possible today thanks to programmers of many different types.

So here's to you, [late night] Programmer. Enjoy your day!

Attachments

Programmers' Day - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Programmers' Day. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to: navigation, search. Programmers' Day (Russian: День программи́ста) is an international unofficial professional holiday that is...

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Search Resumes Using Google

Oooh, someone's a clever cat. I was thumbing through Google Analytics today (like I do every day), and I was looking at what keywords people were using to find my site. I came across an interesting one:"social media" "search engine optimization" (inurl:resume | intitle:resume) Either someone is researching competition, or there's someone looking to hire people for a job they could do themselves. My guess is the former. Whoever you were, good job!

I bet you could do a search like, "lead developer" (inurl:resume | intitle:resume) and get some pretty tasty results. Or, perhaps someone wants to develop a custom search engine that utilizes Google to find highly ranked resumes? There's some nice and crunchy ideas.

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Recently at the Black Hat Security Conference, security researcher +Jerome Radcliffe unveiled some research...

Recently at the Black Hat Security Conference, security researcher +Jerome Radcliffe unveiled some research into how malicious crackers could deliver some potentially lethal payloads to certain insulin pumps. +Scott Hanselman wrote up an extraordinary rebuttal to the media's sensationalism on the topic; it's far more worth the read than the news floating around out there, as I'm sure my diabetic friend +Geoffrey Steinman can attest.

Attachments

Hackers can kill Diabetics with Insulin Pumps from a half mile away - Um, no. Facts vs. Journalistic Fear mongering - Scott Hanselman

Scott Hanselman on Programming, User Experience, The Zen of Computers and Life in General

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Recently at the Black Hat Security Conference, security researcher +Jerome Radcliffe unveiled some research...

Recently at the Black Hat Security Conference, security researcher +Jerome Radcliffe unveiled some research into how malicious crackers could deliver some potentially lethal payloads to certain insulin pumps. +Scott Hanselman wrote up an extraordinary rebuttal to the media's sensationalism on the topic; it's far more worth the read than the news floating around out there, as I'm sure my diabetic friend +Geoffrey Steinman can attest.

Attachments

Hackers can kill Diabetics with Insulin Pumps from a half mile away - Um, no. Facts vs. Journalistic Fear mongering - Scott Hanselman

Scott Hanselman on Programming, User Experience, The Zen of Computers and Life in General

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Recently at the Black Hat Security Conference, security researcher +Jerome Radcliffe unveiled some research...

Recently at the Black Hat Security Conference, security researcher +Jerome Radcliffe unveiled some research into how malicious crackers could deliver some potentially lethal payloads to certain insulin pumps. +Scott Hanselman wrote up an extraordinary rebuttal to the media's sensationalism on the topic; it's far more worth the read than the news floating around out there, as I'm sure my diabetic friend +Geoffrey Steinman can attest.

Attachments

Hackers can kill Diabetics with Insulin Pumps from a half mile away - Um, no. Facts vs. Journalistic Fear mongering - Scott Hanselman

Scott Hanselman on Programming, User Experience, The Zen of Computers and Life in General

6 Replies

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Recently at the Black Hat Security Conference, security researcher +Jerome Radcliffe unveiled some research...

Recently at the Black Hat Security Conference, security researcher +Jerome Radcliffe unveiled some research into how malicious crackers could deliver some potentially lethal payloads to certain insulin pumps. +Scott Hanselman wrote up an extraordinary rebuttal to the media's sensationalism on the topic; it's far more worth the read than the news floating around out there, as I'm sure my diabetic friend +Geoffrey Steinman can attest.

Attachments

Hackers can kill Diabetics with Insulin Pumps from a half mile away - Um, no. Facts vs. Journalistic Fear mongering - Scott Hanselman

Scott Hanselman on Programming, User Experience, The Zen of Computers and Life in General

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<span class="proflinkWrapper"><span class="proflinkPrefix">+</span><a class="proflink" href="https://plus.google.com/101988430320304538796" oid="101988430320304538796">robby... in reply to

+robby Woodliff I agree 100%. The biggest problem now is that the movement is too diffuse in its goals. That doesn't work in a media-driven movement. You have to have a platform with well-defined points and achievable goals: small ones first, bigger ones for the more advanced stage of the movement.

E.g. Is this a protest against unemployment? Big banks? Political gridlock? Corporate greed? It can't be all of those things or else it's kind of like throwing spaghetti against the wall and seeing what sticks.

My prediction is that in the next week or two we will all find out whether this has legs or not. I think if it does have legs, it will largely be because of the feeling of a majority of Americans that the System is broken. But that "having legs" part can only happen if we get down to defining a platform.

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Understanding Communities, Still Valid?

I was just reviewing some of my older starred posts in Google Reader, and I came across a great post from ShoeMoney about Understanding Communities. Pam outlines some great approaches to the whole social media market, and how to understand and utilize the communities on which they are build.

Oldie but goodie! Does anyone have any feedback on how relevant this four month old post is? I for one, totally support the ideas that she came up with for usability. I don't think usability will ever become a non-issue, personally. SEO is huge, but as we've always hammered home - your visitors come first.

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I agree somewhat with the basic... in reply to

I agree somewhat with the basic idea that there is no UNIFIED message to the Occupy movement. Most people see this as its downfall. For me I see this differently.

I kind of like the non linear message that Occupy movement is doing as a social experiment that can go anywhere. To me this rivals virtue ethics which I believe to be the best form of ethics as it is based on an individual with a basic system of organization and some loose guidelines. It is based on some general guidelines "peaceful demonstrations, 99%, end corporate greed, bring humanity back to business, ect" , but each Occupy movement is unique. It seems to me that the movement is based on the context of the individual cities and bases of folks. For instance SLC, UT has not had any issues with the police or the media. Everyone has been nice and we have been well received around the city. Tis not like that everywhere. there are so many sociological issues and political issues for each location. I feel this has not been tried before. It is adaptable and changable so it bends before it breaks unlike the tea party which is super rigid. The Occupy movement does not have to alienate anyone, and it is based in cooperation. If any movement wants to get a rigid simple voice all they need to do is vote on it. For me this is suddle and genious. It forces everyone who is interested to think for themselves plus it works as a collective conscious snowball . For me this is the greatest part of the movemnet. What could be more free than "free thought". For me this Occupy movement is "free thought association in action". For me this is a liberating liberty one mind at a time. What do you think about this?

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I'm competing in this event, and I need your vote! We're nearing the final 24 hours of this competition...

I'm competing in this event, and I need your vote! We're nearing the final 24 hours of this competition, and my startup has fallen into fifth place. Go here and vote for LocalSense : http://vator.tv/competition/vator-splash-la-june-2012?for=localsense&vote=1#participants

LocalSense™ was founded by myself, +Robert Rice, +Daniel Barbour, and +John Finocchiaro at the end of last year after seeing an enormous gap between how businesses and consumers use social media. We've spent the past six months building an incredibly powerful geo-aware platform to help bridge this gap and are extremely excited to get it into your hands. While we're in private alpha right now, but we're aiming to open a public beta by mid-June -- and winning this contest will help us get there.

Please vote for LocalSense, and if you want to be a really big help -- share it with your friends in the limited time we've got left!

Attachments

Vote for LocalSense in the competition: Vator Splash LA (June 2012)

Calling all entrepreneurs! Vator Splash is going back to LA for its second year. Like other Splash events and competitions, CEOs and/or founders of 10 companies, chosen by their p

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I'm competing in this event, and I need your vote! We're nearing the final 24 hours of this competition...

I'm competing in this event, and I need your vote! We're nearing the final 24 hours of this competition, and my startup has fallen into fifth place. Go here and vote for LocalSense : http://vator.tv/competition/vator-splash-la-june-2012?for=localsense&vote=1#participants

LocalSense™ was founded by myself, +Robert Rice, +Daniel Barbour, and +John Finocchiaro at the end of last year after seeing an enormous gap between how businesses and consumers use social media. We've spent the past six months building an incredibly powerful geo-aware platform to help bridge this gap and are extremely excited to get it into your hands. While we're in private alpha right now, but we're aiming to open a public beta by mid-June -- and winning this contest will help us get there.

Please vote for LocalSense, and if you want to be a really big help -- share it with your friends in the limited time we've got left!

Attachments

Vote for LocalSense in the competition: Vator Splash LA (June 2012)

Calling all entrepreneurs! Vator Splash is going back to LA for its second year. Like other Splash events and competitions, CEOs and/or founders of 10 companies, chosen by their p

1 Replies

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I'm competing in this event, and I need your vote! We're nearing the final 24 hours of this competition...

I'm competing in this event, and I need your vote! We're nearing the final 24 hours of this competition, and my startup has fallen into fifth place. Go here and vote for LocalSense : http://vator.tv/competition/vator-splash-la-june-2012?for=localsense&vote=1#participants

LocalSense™ was founded by myself, +Robert Rice, +Daniel Barbour, and +John Finocchiaro at the end of last year after seeing an enormous gap between how businesses and consumers use social media. We've spent the past six months building an incredibly powerful geo-aware platform to help bridge this gap and are extremely excited to get it into your hands. While we're in private alpha right now, but we're aiming to open a public beta by mid-June -- and winning this contest will help us get there.

Please vote for LocalSense, and if you want to be a really big help -- share it with your friends in the limited time we've got left!

Attachments

Vote for LocalSense in the competition: Vator Splash LA (June 2012)

Calling all entrepreneurs! Vator Splash is going back to LA for its second year. Like other Splash events and competitions, CEOs and/or founders of 10 companies, chosen by their p

9 Replies

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Making the case for a mass-algorate society, in which we all know how to write code. I wholeheartedly...

Making the case for a mass-algorate society, in which we all know how to write code. I wholeheartedly agree.

Some resources:

Learning to Code
- Codecademy: http://www.codecademy.com/
- Stanford's Online CS101 course with in-browser Javascript exercises: http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs101/
- Learn You a Haskell: http://learnyouahaskell.com/chapters
- Project Euler: http://projecteuler.net/

Media
- +Douglas Rushkoff's Program or Be Programmed: Program or Be Programmed by Douglas Rushkoff
- +Daniel Shiffman on Artful Programming: http://vimeo.com/16140257
- +John Graham-Cumming on Teaching Our Kids to Code: http://blog.jgc.org/2011/09/teach-our-kids-to-code.html

Attachments

Why we should teach our kids to code

There's a petition up on the British Government's e-petitions website, called "teach our kids to code". Despite being plugged by geek luminaries like Ben Goldacre, it's received barely a thousand sign...

6 Replies

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Making the case for a mass-algorate society, in which we all know how to write code. I wholeheartedly...

Making the case for a mass-algorate society, in which we all know how to write code. I wholeheartedly agree.

Some resources:

Learning to Code
- Codecademy: http://www.codecademy.com/
- Stanford's Online CS101 course with in-browser Javascript exercises: http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs101/
- Learn You a Haskell: http://learnyouahaskell.com/chapters
- Project Euler: http://projecteuler.net/

Media
- +Douglas Rushkoff's Program or Be Programmed: Program or Be Programmed by Douglas Rushkoff
- +Daniel Shiffman on Artful Programming: http://vimeo.com/16140257
- +John Graham-Cumming on Teaching Our Kids to Code: http://blog.jgc.org/2011/09/teach-our-kids-to-code.html

Attachments

Why we should teach our kids to code

There's a petition up on the British Government's e-petitions website, called "teach our kids to code". Despite being plugged by geek luminaries like Ben Goldacre, it's received barely a thousand sign...

6 Replies

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Making the case for a mass-algorate society, in which we all know how to write code. I wholeheartedly...

Making the case for a mass-algorate society, in which we all know how to write code. I wholeheartedly agree.

Some resources:

Learning to Code
- Codecademy: http://www.codecademy.com/
- Stanford's Online CS101 course with in-browser Javascript exercises: http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs101/
- Learn You a Haskell: http://learnyouahaskell.com/chapters
- Project Euler: http://projecteuler.net/

Media
- +Douglas Rushkoff's Program or Be Programmed: Program or Be Programmed by Douglas Rushkoff
- +Daniel Shiffman on Artful Programming: http://vimeo.com/16140257
- +John Graham-Cumming on Teaching Our Kids to Code: http://blog.jgc.org/2011/09/teach-our-kids-to-code.html

Attachments

Why we should teach our kids to code

There's a petition up on the British Government's e-petitions website, called "teach our kids to code". Despite being plugged by geek luminaries like Ben Goldacre, it's received barely a thousand sign...

7 Replies

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Mark Zuckerberg's keynote at f8 was interesting. Overall, the changes seem and look pretty solid. Of...

Mark Zuckerberg's keynote at f8 was interesting. Overall, the changes seem and look pretty solid. Of course, we'll see how the masses respond to them over the coming weeks as things roll out.

A few weeks ago, there was a social media discussion hangout. One thing that was brought up in one of several videos that will be up next week, is Facebook making changes and one of the biggest things they need to work on is better educating users how to use new features.

Watch the video below to see our discussion. Thanks to +Amy Schmittauer +Carter Gibson +Eric Martindale +Jeffrey Powers +Lucas Johnson +Shefali Burns +matthew rappaport for participating.

Attachments

6 Replies

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Mark Zuckerberg's keynote at f8 was interesting. Overall, the changes seem and look pretty solid. Of...

Mark Zuckerberg's keynote at f8 was interesting. Overall, the changes seem and look pretty solid. Of course, we'll see how the masses respond to them over the coming weeks as things roll out.

A few weeks ago, there was a social media discussion hangout. One thing that was brought up in one of several videos that will be up next week, is Facebook making changes and one of the biggest things they need to work on is better educating users how to use new features.

Watch the video below to see our discussion. Thanks to +Amy Schmittauer +Carter Gibson +Eric Martindale +Jeffrey Powers +Lucas Johnson +Shefali Burns +matthew rappaport for participating.

Attachments

6 Replies

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Mark Zuckerberg's keynote at f8 was interesting. Overall, the changes seem and look pretty solid. Of...

Mark Zuckerberg's keynote at f8 was interesting. Overall, the changes seem and look pretty solid. Of course, we'll see how the masses respond to them over the coming weeks as things roll out.

A few weeks ago, there was a social media discussion hangout. One thing that was brought up in one of several videos that will be up next week, is Facebook making changes and one of the biggest things they need to work on is better educating users how to use new features.

Watch the video below to see our discussion. Thanks to +Amy Schmittauer +Carter Gibson +Eric Martindale +Jeffrey Powers +Lucas Johnson +Shefali Burns +matthew rappaport for participating.

Attachments

26 Replies

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Mark Zuckerberg's keynote at f8 was interesting. Overall, the changes seem and look pretty solid. Of...

Mark Zuckerberg's keynote at f8 was interesting. Overall, the changes seem and look pretty solid. Of course, we'll see how the masses respond to them over the coming weeks as things roll out.

A few weeks ago, there was a social media discussion hangout. One thing that was brought up in one of several videos that will be up next week, is Facebook making changes and one of the biggest things they need to work on is better educating users how to use new features.

Watch the video below to see our discussion. Thanks to +Amy Schmittauer +Carter Gibson +Eric Martindale +Jeffrey Powers +Lucas Johnson +Shefali Burns +matthew rappaport for participating.

Attachments

7 Replies

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Making the case for a mass-algorate society, in which we all know how to write code. I wholeheartedly...

Making the case for a mass-algorate society, in which we all know how to write code. I wholeheartedly agree.

Some resources:

Learning to Code
- Codecademy: http://www.codecademy.com/
- Stanford's Online CS101 course with in-browser Javascript exercises: http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs101/
- Learn You a Haskell: http://learnyouahaskell.com/chapters
- Project Euler: http://projecteuler.net/

Media
- +Douglas Rushkoff's Program or Be Programmed: Program or Be Programmed by Douglas Rushkoff
- +Daniel Shiffman on Artful Programming: http://vimeo.com/16140257
- +John Graham-Cumming on Teaching Our Kids to Code: http://blog.jgc.org/2011/09/teach-our-kids-to-code.html

Attachments

Why we should teach our kids to code

There's a petition up on the British Government's e-petitions website, called "teach our kids to code". Despite being plugged by geek luminaries like Ben Goldacre, it's received barely a thousand sign...

6 Replies

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Search Engine Roundtable: Why I'm Unsubscribing

Dear Search Engine Roundtable,

Since I subscribed to your feed (in early 2005), I have received and read every post you've made using my RSS reader of choice (Google Reader, currently). Your excerpts have been enticing, with well-written post titles and seemingly interesting topics. The idea was good, to aggregate content and discussions about Search Engines from multiple locations at one central blog.

Unfortunately, I've found that your articles are less informative than I'd have hoped, with frequent referrals to other locations where the conversations are actually taking place. Instead of effective bullet points and topic reviews, I find quick and hastily-written overviews of the content and discussion in question.

Not only that, but you're only providing partial content in your feeds! When I come across your posts in my daily reading of over 500 posts, you've caught my attention with your title - and because you're only giving me the partial article text, you've got me clicking through to your site (hoorah, ad impressions!). Unfortunately, half the time I'm wasting even more time by being forced to click through to yet another page to follow the conversation.

I rarely (if ever) find myself sharing your content, and from what I can tell from a cursory glance - you've never shown up in my shared items feed. (PS, when will I be able to control this page, Google? I hope this link juice means something in the future. Maybe even market that page in a bit more of a controlled fashion. I digress.) I've maybe starred one or two of your articles for future reading, but again - when I do finally read the posts, I find that I'm disappointed by your article quality and content.

What's up with that?! Alright, rabid feedreaders and social media evangelists - tell me if I'm in the wrong here, but I'm going to unsubscribe from Search Engine Roundtable.

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Importing StackOverflow (...et al) into Chryp Using Aggregates

StackOverflow LogoAs I have mentioned before, I'm in a love affair with Chyrp, which is an up-and-coming platform meant to replace WordPress and work a bit like Tumblr, as a microblogging and lifestreaming service.

One of Chyrp's major draws for me is the Aggregator module, which is included in Chryp 2.0 by default. Mike Crittenden of MergeWeb Fame has covered the use of Chyrp's Aggregator previously, but I figured I'd dive in a bit further and help others in configuring their feeds.

You may also be familiar with StackOverflow, a crowd-sourcing social-media head-bashing awesome site that enables users to ask tech-related questions and get awesome community-approved answers. The same group runs several other sites using the same model, including SuperUser and ServerFault, and they are even releasing their codebase as free and open source as the <a href="http://stackexchange.com/>StackExchange project.

But, onward into the goodies: syndicating your activity on StackOverflow (and the other sites) using Chryp.

The first you'll need is your Activity Feed. To acquire this, visit the "Recent" tab of your user profile and look in the bottom right hand corner: you'll see a link to "user recent activity feed". This is the URL for your activity feed, grab that and let's move on to Chyrp.

In Chyrp, you'll want to add a new aggregate in your Admin panel. Paste your Activity Feed into the "Source URL" box, then configure the remaining settings as follows:

Feather: Link Post Attributes: name: "feed[title]" source: "feed[id]" description: "feed[description]"

Now, assign a "Name" and make sure the correct Author is selected, and click "Update". You're all done! You'll see new content from your feed the next time your aggregates update.

Questions? Comments? Lemme have 'em.

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“Do not kill, do not rape, do not steal, these are principles which every man of every faith can embrace...

“Do not kill, do not rape, do not steal, these are principles which every man of every faith can embrace.” -- Murphy, The Boondock Saints

We should not be deluded into thinking that #OccupyWallStreet is a protest against capitalism. It is a protest against the blatant theft perpetrated by the financial and banking systems that has plagued our great nation and its government for at least the past 98 years.

On Capitalism versus Statism:
“[...] If we are to keep the term "capitalism" at all, then, we must distinguish between "free-market capitalism" on the one hand, and "state capitalism" on the other. The two are as different as day and night in their nature and consequences. Free-market capitalism is a network of free and voluntary exchanges in which producers work, produce, and exchange their products for the products of others through prices voluntarily arrived at. State capitalism consists of one or more groups making use of the coercive apparatus of the government — the State — to accumulate capital for themselves by expropriating the production of others by force and violence [...]” -- Murray N. Rothbard, 1972 [1]

While the protests continue to grow in cities around the country [2], Anonymous is warning the NYPD against continued police brutality [3] and even previously trusted news outlets begin to censor [4] if not blatantly ignore [5].

Look through the actual photos [6]. These faces are not those of hippies, bums, or of radicals. These are the faces of your friends and family, of your neighbors and coworkers [7]. It is the majority, the 99% of affected Americans, that are on the streets protesting. It is We the People.

Thanks to +Jeremy Dahl for providing the link and video, +Michael Mozart for livestreaming the protests earlier today, and +Breana Van Den Heuvel for providing a constant stream of photos and news as this evolves.

[1]: http://mises.org/daily/3735
[2]: http://www.occupytogether.org/
[3]: Anonymous WARNING to NYPD on Behalf of Occupy Wall Street.! will not be forgotten or Forgiven.
[4]: http://ampedstatus.org/twittercensorship-blocks-occupywallstreet-from-top-trending-topic-twice/
[5]: Keith Olbermann calls out Media Blackout on 'Occupy Wall Street' Protest
[6]: https://plus.google.com/photos/112353210404102902472/albums/5658628267519370497
[7]: http://wearethe99percent.tumblr.com/

Attachments

What is Capitalism?

Tom Woods explains. What do you think? Full video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BiIbSEjEw3w Young Americans for Liberty at IU brought Dr. Tom Woods to speak at IU. You can keep in touch on facebook here: http://www.facebook.com/YALatIU I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor)

4 Replies

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“Do not kill, do not rape, do not steal, these are principles which every man of every faith can embrace...

“Do not kill, do not rape, do not steal, these are principles which every man of every faith can embrace.” -- Murphy, The Boondock Saints

We should not be deluded into thinking that #OccupyWallStreet is a protest against capitalism. It is a protest against the blatant theft perpetrated by the financial and banking systems that has plagued our great nation and its government for at least the past 98 years.

On Capitalism versus Statism:
“[...] If we are to keep the term "capitalism" at all, then, we must distinguish between "free-market capitalism" on the one hand, and "state capitalism" on the other. The two are as different as day and night in their nature and consequences. Free-market capitalism is a network of free and voluntary exchanges in which producers work, produce, and exchange their products for the products of others through prices voluntarily arrived at. State capitalism consists of one or more groups making use of the coercive apparatus of the government — the State — to accumulate capital for themselves by expropriating the production of others by force and violence [...]” -- Murray N. Rothbard, 1972 [1]

While the protests continue to grow in cities around the country [2], Anonymous is warning the NYPD against continued police brutality [3] and even previously trusted news outlets begin to censor [4] if not blatantly ignore [5].

Look through the actual photos [6]. These faces are not those of hippies, bums, or of radicals. These are the faces of your friends and family, of your neighbors and coworkers [7]. It is the majority, the 99% of affected Americans, that are on the streets protesting. It is We the People.

Thanks to +Jeremy Dahl for providing the link and video, +Michael Mozart for livestreaming the protests earlier today, and +Breana Van Den Heuvel for providing a constant stream of photos and news as this evolves.

[1]: http://mises.org/daily/3735
[2]: http://www.occupytogether.org/
[3]: Anonymous WARNING to NYPD on Behalf of Occupy Wall Street.! will not be forgotten or Forgiven.
[4]: http://ampedstatus.org/twittercensorship-blocks-occupywallstreet-from-top-trending-topic-twice/
[5]: Keith Olbermann calls out Media Blackout on 'Occupy Wall Street' Protest
[6]: https://plus.google.com/photos/112353210404102902472/albums/5658628267519370497
[7]: http://wearethe99percent.tumblr.com/

Attachments

What is Capitalism?

Tom Woods explains. What do you think? Full video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BiIbSEjEw3w Young Americans for Liberty at IU brought Dr. Tom Woods to speak at IU. You can keep in touch on facebook here: http://www.facebook.com/YALatIU I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor)

13 Replies

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“Do not kill, do not rape, do not steal, these are principles which every man of every faith can embrace...

“Do not kill, do not rape, do not steal, these are principles which every man of every faith can embrace.” -- Murphy, The Boondock Saints

We should not be deluded into thinking that #OccupyWallStreet is a protest against capitalism. It is a protest against the blatant theft perpetrated by the financial and banking systems that has plagued our great nation and its government for at least the past 98 years.

On Capitalism versus Statism:
“[...] If we are to keep the term "capitalism" at all, then, we must distinguish between "free-market capitalism" on the one hand, and "state capitalism" on the other. The two are as different as day and night in their nature and consequences. Free-market capitalism is a network of free and voluntary exchanges in which producers work, produce, and exchange their products for the products of others through prices voluntarily arrived at. State capitalism consists of one or more groups making use of the coercive apparatus of the government — the State — to accumulate capital for themselves by expropriating the production of others by force and violence [...]” -- Murray N. Rothbard, 1972 [1]

While the protests continue to grow in cities around the country [2], Anonymous is warning the NYPD against continued police brutality [3] and even previously trusted news outlets begin to censor [4] if not blatantly ignore [5].

Look through the actual photos [6]. These faces are not those of hippies, bums, or of radicals. These are the faces of your friends and family, of your neighbors and coworkers [7]. It is the majority, the 99% of affected Americans, that are on the streets protesting. It is We the People.

Thanks to +Jeremy Dahl for providing the link and video, +Michael Mozart for livestreaming the protests earlier today, and +Breana Van Den Heuvel for providing a constant stream of photos and news as this evolves.

[1]: http://mises.org/daily/3735
[2]: http://www.occupytogether.org/
[3]: Anonymous WARNING to NYPD on Behalf of Occupy Wall Street.! will not be forgotten or Forgiven.
[4]: http://ampedstatus.org/twittercensorship-blocks-occupywallstreet-from-top-trending-topic-twice/
[5]: Keith Olbermann calls out Media Blackout on 'Occupy Wall Street' Protest
[6]: https://plus.google.com/photos/112353210404102902472/albums/5658628267519370497
[7]: http://wearethe99percent.tumblr.com/

Attachments

What is Capitalism?

Tom Woods explains. What do you think? Full video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BiIbSEjEw3w Young Americans for Liberty at IU brought Dr. Tom Woods to speak at IU. You can keep in touch on facebook here: http://www.facebook.com/YALatIU I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor)

4 Replies

Replies are automatically detected from social media, including Twitter, Facebook, and Google+. To add a comment, include a direct link to this post in your message and it'll show up here within a few minutes.

“Do not kill, do not rape, do not steal, these are principles which every man of every faith can embrace...

“Do not kill, do not rape, do not steal, these are principles which every man of every faith can embrace.” -- Murphy, The Boondock Saints

We should not be deluded into thinking that #OccupyWallStreet is a protest against capitalism. It is a protest against the blatant theft perpetrated by the financial and banking systems that has plagued our great nation and its government for at least the past 98 years.

On Capitalism versus Statism:
“[...] If we are to keep the term "capitalism" at all, then, we must distinguish between "free-market capitalism" on the one hand, and "state capitalism" on the other. The two are as different as day and night in their nature and consequences. Free-market capitalism is a network of free and voluntary exchanges in which producers work, produce, and exchange their products for the products of others through prices voluntarily arrived at. State capitalism consists of one or more groups making use of the coercive apparatus of the government — the State — to accumulate capital for themselves by expropriating the production of others by force and violence [...]” -- Murray N. Rothbard, 1972 [1]

While the protests continue to grow in cities around the country [2], Anonymous is warning the NYPD against continued police brutality [3] and even previously trusted news outlets begin to censor [4] if not blatantly ignore [5].

Look through the actual photos [6]. These faces are not those of hippies, bums, or of radicals. These are the faces of your friends and family, of your neighbors and coworkers [7]. It is the majority, the 99% of affected Americans, that are on the streets protesting. It is We the People.

Thanks to +Jeremy Dahl for providing the link and video, +Michael Mozart for livestreaming the protests earlier today, and +Breana Van Den Heuvel for providing a constant stream of photos and news as this evolves.

[1]: http://mises.org/daily/3735
[2]: http://www.occupytogether.org/
[3]: Anonymous WARNING to NYPD on Behalf of Occupy Wall Street.! will not be forgotten or Forgiven.
[4]: http://ampedstatus.org/twittercensorship-blocks-occupywallstreet-from-top-trending-topic-twice/
[5]: Keith Olbermann calls out Media Blackout on 'Occupy Wall Street' Protest
[6]: https://plus.google.com/photos/112353210404102902472/albums/5658628267519370497
[7]: http://wearethe99percent.tumblr.com/

Attachments

What is Capitalism?

Tom Woods explains. What do you think? Full video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BiIbSEjEw3w Young Americans for Liberty at IU brought Dr. Tom Woods to speak at IU. You can keep in touch on facebook here: http://www.facebook.com/YALatIU I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor)

4 Replies

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Why I Don't Use Skype (and why you shouldn't, either)

I often get asked for my Skype address, sometimes in relation to business or casual conversation. I politely decline with some degree of hand-waving about my reasons, and suggest an alternative form of communication (typically either Google Talk or Google Hangouts, depending on the context—both are built right in to Gmail!). I'd like to outline some of the reasons why I've made the decision to avoid Skype, primarily so I have something to link to when someone asks me about it.

First and foremost, we don't really know what Skype actually does. The binary (the actual program you run on your computer) is obfuscated, so attempts at disassembling it [PDF] to verify some of its strange behavior and the information it is transmitting have so far come up with very little. This is an issue, because Skype produces encrypted traffic even when you are not actively using Skype. This means we can only speculate on what information Skype is collecting about you after you've so graciously chosen to install it, and perhaps more importantly who it is sending that information to.

Quoting Salman Baset:

When a Skype client is not in a call and is running on a machine with public IP address, it has on the average 4-8 active TCP connections and atleast one UDP connection.

While connecting to external IP addresses is normal for a server/client architecture and necessary for receiving notifications, the volume of traffic and number of connections is concerning, considering the compounding issues between Skype's peer-to-peer architecture [PDF] and the "reasonable level of detection accuracy" in snooping on voice calls in Skype [PDF], despite the [purportedly] encrypted nature of the Skype protocol.

Speaking in general terms, Skype is "black box" software which has undergone no public review despite very concerning observed behavior. When new Skype malware (like Skype IMBot, of which an analysis is available, or the more recent Skype account hijacking) is released, there are very few options to protect ourselves if we've got Skype installed. On Linux, tools like AppArmor and TOMOYO exist, but without the ability to easily view the source and understand the attack (per perhaps even fix it proactively, before it occurs) we are at the mercy of Skype's new maintainers to provide a timely resolution in a reactive approach.

If you use a proprietary program or somebody else's web server, you're defenceless. You're putty in the hands of whoever developed that software.
— Richard Stallman
In conclusion, while Skype may be convenient, it presents a series of questions that must be asked and implications to be considered before choosing it over other chat, VoIP, and video chat solutions. I can only hope that more people consider these things before doing so.

Asides

Some of the other things I found interesting, more recently than the research I've linked in this post, include Skype's role in the Syrian conflict, in which a claim was made as follows:
A media activist in Idlib named Mohamed said a rebel informant working for the government was killed in Damascus six months ago after sending warnings to the Free Syrian Army on Skype. “I saw this incident right in front of my eyes,” Mohamed said. “We put his info on Skype so he was arrested and killed.”

Skype (Microsoft) has also made other concerning statements after accusations of helping the U.S. Government spy on its own citizens.

Wikipedia also lists a large number of known flaws in Skype, which I've chosen to avoid duplicating in this post.

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