July 2009

A handy PHP date() checker

July 30th, 2009

A handy site to remember if you’re writing PHP is http://php-date.com/. It provides everything you need to know about the date() function in PHP and has an interactive form for testing your formatting until you get your dates/times just the way you want them.

php-date-function

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WordPress for Blackberry

July 8th, 2009

I'm just testing posting to this blog from my phone, using the new WordPress for the BlackBerry application - now available, in beta: http://bit.ly/6lXcM

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The sad and silent death of Yahoo’s EasyListener

July 7th, 2009    24 Comments

Right now, as I write, there is an ugly gap at the top right of all ITauthor.com pages. It used to be filled by an audio player called EasyListener, provided by Yahoo, that I just embedded in my side panel. It was the best thing of its kind because it was neat enough to fit in a slim side panel and it was simple. It read from an RSS feed, pulled out the MP3 files and listed them in the player. You just clicked on the item you wanted and it played the audio.

But Yahoo quietly choked it and hoped that nobody noticed. I’m not sure why they would do this. I’m sure they could handle the bandwidth of people pulling down the Shockwave file off some server that had been left to serve up the old webjay.org pages. Maybe someone at Yahoo just pulled the plug on that server and not enough people have complained. I wish I’d gone and grabbed the files while they were still there. I looked at archive.org but the URL was never spidered.

So I’m going to have to find another solution, but it won’t be for a while because I know there’s nothing quite like it out there, so I’ll have to do some switching around and PHP-ing to sort it out.

It’s symptomatic of the Web though: it seems like a solid, reliable structure, but it’s really entirely transitory and kept in working order by a lot of people and a lot of effort. It’s a bit like a car: as soon as you fix one thing, something else breaks.

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5 Ways to Make Executives Love the Publications Department

July 7th, 2009

THE CONTENT POOL: 5 Ways to Make Executives Love the Publications Department. Alan J. Porter writes:  If you go around say “I’m only a tech writer,” or “publications never gets any respect,” then people will believe you and act accordingly. Be aware of what you do, what you can offer and be proud of it. Treat your team (even if it’s only you) as if it was your own business. Build brand awareness, market and promote what you have to offer, and sell yourself, your team and the profession.

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Posterous: quick & simple blogging – via email

July 7th, 2009    2 Comments

posterous logo Not everyone wants to prat around setting up a blog and configuring it to look just right. Yes, I know, some of us spend an inordinate amount of time doing just that. But my wife, my kids, my mum – most normal folk in fact – just don’t have the time, patience, reason or inclination.

Nevertheless, lots of people would still like somewhere to share photos (if it was really easy to do), or they might want somewhere to collect stuff they’ve spotted somewhere online, or they might want to keep notes somewhere they can always get to easily, or they might want to share and save conversations with loved ones, or they might want to start podcasting, or they might want to … well, the list goes on.

Posterous allows you to do all this:

  • without signing up for anything
  • without setting up anything or choosing options
  • without having to pay
  • without having to wait for more than about a minute for your new blog to be available

How does it work? Send an email to post@posterous.com.

Then what? No, that’s it. That’s all you do. Just send the email. The subject of the email becomes the title of your first post on your new blog and the content of the email becomes the content of your first post.

Wait a short while and an automated email comes back telling you the address of your new blog. Email post@posterous.com again and you’ve got a new post on your blog. Attach a photo to your email and it appears at the top of your post. Attach several photos and you get a control for seeing them all in the order you attached them. Attach a sound file and you get an audio player embedded in your post. Attach a video, or a PDF, or a Word document and … well, you get the picture – it all just works sensibly without you having to do anything complicated.

Some great features

If you want to choose your own subdomain name (like leoville.posterous.com/) you need to sign up, but it’s painless. You can then manage your blog, add additional email addresses if, for example, you want to post from gmail when you’re at home, Outlook when you’re at work, and using your Blackberry mobile email address when you’re out and about.

You can also set up multiple blogs and use them for different purposes. When you have multiple blogs (e.g. a work one, a family one and a club one) you can choose which one you post to by using the subdomain name (e.g. post@yoursubdomain.posterous.com instead of post@posterous.com).

You can allow other people to email to your site by adding them as contributors.

You can make a blog private so that your need to enter a password before you get to see the blog.

If you trust posterous with your login details for other places (e.g. twitter, Facebook, other blogs, etc.) you can post to multiple places at once. You can choose to post to all your other places (by mailing post@yoursubdomain.posterous.com) or you can select just to mail to selected places (e.g. twitter+facebook+posterous@yoursubdomain.posterous.com). You can even use posterous as a way of posting to an existing blog without posting to posterous, which is useful once you realise how convenient posting by email is, but your existing blog doesn’t have that facility.

You can tag your posts just by adding ((tags: your tag)) at the end of your email subject line.

Easy subscription. The people who will find posterous most useful probably don’t use RSS aggregators – even Google Reader. As a result they may not click the Subscribe to this posterous link when they go visit a posterous blog, and if they’ve ever clicked a Subscribe link before they’ve probably been put off the idea because all they’ll usually get is an RSS page with little clue what to do with it. But if they do click the Subscribe to this posterous, and provided they’re signed in, they’re going to like what happens because all that happens is the link changes to tell them they’re now subscribed. What happens after that is that they get a daily email with updates from all of the blogs they’ve subscribed to. And if you’re a regular email user (and who’s not? – for most people it’s still the killer app) then that’s exactly how you want to get things you subscribe to. You don’t want to have to go away and manually check in another place, like Google Reader, you want stuff to come to you, in your inbox.

The bookmarklet. This is just a smart bookmark that you can add to your browser from your posterous site. Whenever you’re using the browser and you come to something interesting, just pull up the bookmark and you can quickly post it to your blog. The bookmarklet window gives you a choice of all the photos on the page and you can choose one of them to include in your post.

A few example uses of posterous

All day diary writing

If you’ve got email on your phone, posterous is a great way of keeping a diary. You never want to write up a diary last thing at night, but you might want to write up little one-liners or short paragraphs during the day when you’ve got a minute, or you’re waiting for the bus and got nothing better to do.

Create a posterous blog and mark it private. Add the email address to your contact list. Then just post to it every now and again.

Share stuff with friends

Out and about and see something interesting, photograph it with your phone and email the picture to posterous. Add your friends as contributors and get them all to email photos. You then end up with a social site for a group of friends that you might not want all your other Facebook friends to see.

Subject-specific site

Want to collect ideas together in one place, either just you or you and friends, family, work colleagues, club members, etc. Make a little posterous site just for one subject. You could have a family site, a site for your department at work, a site dedicated to one specific event – whatever you want, it doesn’t cost anything so it can be as trivial or short-lived as you want. But it can also be a permanent place to gather photos and videos.

Lifestreaming

Because posterous hooks up to Facebook and twitter and FriendFeed and Flickr and YouTube and so on, it means you can post to one place, with a single email, but update all your online locations. Some people follow you on twitter but don’t use Facebook, others are Facebook fanatics but just don’t get twitter. This way one email and you cover everyone.

And if you want you can keep your photos on Flickr, your videos on YouTube, your in-depth thoughts on your WordPress blog and your fly-away, ephemeral comments on twitter – but aggregate them all in one place on posterous to the complete record of you.

Preserving email conversations

Over the years my wife and I have discussed a ton of things via email. Most of it’s inconsequential, but some of it’s funny, sometimes it’s maybe touching, often it’s just plain silly – but almost all of it is now gone. It’d be really nice to have all of that, both sides of the conversations, preserved in one place and easy to search through. With posterous that’s dead easy.

Set up a private blog that only you two have access to. Each change the other’s email address in your contact lists to the email address of this posterous site. Now when you email each other you still get the emails, but the emails are also collected together in one place, online, as a blog.

Podcasting

Want to be a podcaster? Never bothered because it all seemed too complicated. Now it’s not complicated at all. Just record some audio (e.g. on your iPhone) and post it to posterous. Then put the following in your posterous Profile:

<a href="itpc://yoursubdomain.posterous.com/rss">Get the podcast in iTunes</a>


When someone clicks the link it will open up iTunes and subscribe them to your podcast. Alternatively, just putting /rss on the end of your posterous URL to display the RSS feed with enclosed audio files. People without iTunes can use this feed with an alternative podcast client.

Other stuff

I’ve only been looking at posterous for a couple of days. I’m sure there’s lots more you can do with it. Let me know if you know of any other good ideas.

Want to know more? Go to http://posterous.com/faq/.

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