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Posts Tagged ‘developers’

Control BitTorrent downloads from Facebook with Morrent

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

So much for Scrabulous being an end-all diversion on Facebook. Try Morrent instead, a simple tie-in to the popular BitTorrent software uTorrent that runs right in Facebook (read: sans software) and lets you monitor your torrent downloads and uploads from wherever.

Aimed mainly at folks who want to check up on their downloads at work or away from their primary machines, Morrent is more than just a convenient status window–it doubles as a remote control. You can pause and re-prioritize downloads. You can also start downloading new torrents by uploading them back to your home machine.

While the same results could be had by accessing your home machine using a remote access service like LogMeIn, I dig the fact that Morrent makes whatever you’ve downloaded, or are in the progress of downloading, available for others to see (privacy nuts can turn this option off too). This can turn your Facebook network into a great way to see which files are hot without relying on a third-party torrent-tracking service.

Note: As always, we do not encourage illegal downloading of files transferred via BitTorrent technology.

(Via TorrentFreak and Lifehacker)

Keep track of BitTorrent downloads in Facebook with Morrent. You can even upload new torrents from wherever you are.

(Credit: Morrent)

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Microsoft’s Live Search scraps book digitization project

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

Microsoft’s Live Search Team is ending its book search efforts, according to a blog post Friday. Its Live Search Books and Live Search Academic sites will be discontinued next week, and books and academic publishings will show up in regular search results rather than separate sites.

“We recognize that this decision comes as disappointing news to our partners, the publishing and academic communities, and Live Search users,” read the blog post by Satya Nadella, senior vice president of search, portal, and advertising.

Prior to its swift end, Microsoft’s book digitization project had indexed the contents of 750,000 books and 80 million scholarly journal articles. Microsoft has said that it will provide publishers with digital copies of books that were already scanned. “Based on our experience, we foresee that the best way for a search engine to make book content available will be by crawling content repositories created by book publishers and libraries,” Nadella wrote.

“With our investments, the technology to create these repositories is now available at lower costs for those with the commercial interest or public mandate to digitize book content. We will continue to track the evolution of the industry and evaluate future opportunities.”

Book digitization, which Google has championed through its Google Books project, has been a tough hurdle for the tech industry. Traditional publishers haven’t been supportive, for the most part.

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One stop photo captions made simple with SuperLame

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

Here’s a fun tool for play around with over the long weekend. It’s called SuperLame, and it’s a simple tool for adding speech bubbles over photos. It’s missing out on some of the special effects found in other similar tools like Comeeko, but what it lacks in versatility it makes up for in flash and user experience. It’s simply a joy to tag up a photo with captions, speech and thought bubbles. Best of all, the end result is total eye candy.

To make your own creation you can upload any old photo from your computer. There are just a few options to add the captions or bubbles to your photo, including small knobs to control the borders, shape and size. Each button pops with a little animation that’s very fluid and organic, making it an experience on it own just to click on something. Kids will love it.

One nice thing about the tool is that it lets you go well outside of the photo if you’ve got a caption or bubble that needs to stick out. It will automatically add more space around the photo and save it with the additional border.

SuperLame is completely free to use, however it adds a small watermark to the bottom right hand corner of your images with a link back. There’s no way to get it off without using additional photo editing soft or Webware, so if you’re not keen on watermarking an image then use a similar tool like Fotoflexer, Picnik or Picbite (review).

SuperLame's image editor does only one thing (comicbook like speech bubbles), but does it well.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

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Popular blogger ignites uproar over Twitter harassment

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

Some Web enthusiasts find microblogging service Twitter to be addictive because you can say absolutely anything you want–as long as it’s 140 characters or less. So what happens when “saying anything” translates into harassment?

One avid Twitter user, Ariel Waldman, posted an entry Thursday on her personal blog, declaring that “Twitter refuses to uphold (its) terms of service.”

She said she started receiving “multiple accounts of harassment” from another user of the microblogging service and that when she petitioned to Twitter’s community manager, he opted to remove the Twitter posts in question from the site’s “public timeline.”

Waldman wasn’t satisfied, especially when the harassment allegedly continued and grew worse into 2008. She wanted to see user account bans of those responsible, and despite insisting that the activity was in violation of Twitter’s terms of service, Twitter executives–including CEO Jack Dorsey–repeatedly said it wasn’t.

Some of the comments at issue were apparently posted through a site that allows users to post anonymous “tweets” to a central account, making it difficult to track them to a specific user.

Blogger Ariel Waldman spurred a lively debate when she claimed that Twitter didn't abide by its own terms of service. She said it refused to take down an account that harassed her.

(Credit: flickr.com/arielwaldman)

Waldman is hardly the average Twitter user. Well-known in geek circles, she’s a “social-media insights consultant” who contributes to tech blog Engadget and runs her own site, Shake Well Before Use, about “art, advertising, sex, and technology.”

In other words, in the bubble-like culture of Web 2.0, Waldman is a sort of celebrity–and with celebrity comes scrutiny and often ugly commentary. If Lindsay Lohan took action every time Perez Hilton and his celebrity gossip brethren scrawled “slut” across pictures of her, her lawyer would be working overtime.

Waldman, who could not immediately be reached for comment, also works as the community manager at Pownce, one of Twitter’s few rivals in the microblogging space, giving her a bit of a conflict of interest in the issue.

Still, Twitter has some ostensible safeguards against abuse. The site’s terms of service say users “must not abuse, harass, threaten, impersonate, or intimidate other Twitter users” and that the company “may, but have no obligation to, remove content and accounts containing content that we determine in our sole discretion are unlawful, offensive, threatening, libelous, defamatory, obscene, or otherwise objectionable or violates any party’s intellectual property, or these terms of use.”

The final response to Waldman’s complaint from Twitter co-founder Biz Stone asserted that “Twitter is a communication utility, not a mediator of content,” and that “Twitter recognizes that it is not skilled at judging content disputes between individuals.

Determining the line between update and insult is not something that Twitter, nor a crowd, would do well. Stone added that Twitter’s team would continue talking about which situations were appropriate for account banning.

As Waldman pointed out, however, other online services, such as Flickr, Digg, and her employer are far less laissez-faire, banning accounts frequently. And she raised a legitimate concern when she said harassing messages are an issue for identity management in the chaotic muck of the Web.

“Anyone can use Twitter to consistently harass you and ruin search results for your identity,” Waldman wrote, “and Twitter won’t execute any means of community management.”

That goes back to whether Twitter is inherently for communication or community. There’s no universal standard for terms of service across social-media sites, and most Web users would likely agree that there probably shouldn’t be one. Different services attract different audiences and demographics, and have created different cultures, in effect.

If Twitter wants to take a more hands-off approach to situations like Waldman’s, allowing some of the dialogue that a Digg or Flickr wouldn’t, it would be putting itself in the league of say-anything forums like MetaFilter.

That would make the service look less wishy-washy with its “we’ll review the situation” response, but at the same time, branding itself as a free-for-all outlet likely wouldn’t help, as Twitter, reportedly having received fresh VC funding, attempts to gain more mainstream traction.

Either way, what Waldman calls “community management” is something that Twitter has to sort out–fast. As Twitter breaks further out of Silicon Valley culture, the service will invariably have to deal with users who cry foul over far tamer situations. Much like its famous outages, which the site finally addressed in full this week, abuse and harassment is something that Twitter can’t simply ignore.

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A new and simple live-blog platform: Scribblelive

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

There’s a new live-blog platform in town: Scribblelive. Like CoverItLive (review), which we’ve used at Webware to cover events in real time (latest: Google press day), it’s free and lets you very quickly set yourself up with a blog that shows your updated posts to readers almost the moment you write them.

It’s clearly a very early-stage product, but I wanted to cover it because of the philosophical differences from CoverItlive. CoverItLive is a writer’s platform with a capable control panel. It lets you create a live blog element you can embed in any other site or blog. Scribblelive is quite the reverse: It lets you contribute to your blog from outside the system, but you can only (so far) view the live blog itself on Scribblelive.com.

The Scribblelive writer's console is simple and clean, and you can edit updates even after they are live (click to enlarge).

I expect that Scribblelive will eventually get an embeddable player, because that’s the thing that will make the platform attractive to bloggers who want to keep readers on their sites. At the moment, it feels like a more live version of Tumblr.

I still prefer the more developed CoverItLive, with its embeddable player, nice blogging console, and fancy features like a polling engine and media library. But there’s a lot to be said for the simple and open design of Scribblelive. Adding a colleague as a co-blogger is as simple as sending them a secret link. And you can post to your live blog via an e-mail address. (You’re supposed to be able to send images in via e-mail, but that didn’t work for me.) Soon to come, according to TechCrunch, is posting via Twitter.

Scribblelive also lets you edit previous posts just by typing over them. CoverItLive lets you edit, but only after a live blog is done and closed out.

Scribblelive has one important feature CoverItLive lacks: it runs advertisements, as interstitial live blog items. The ads are clearly labeled and not disruptive. This ad engine might help the venture make a few bucks in the early days.

If you want to quickly set up live blog, it doesn’t get much easier than Scribblelive. If you already have an established blog and want to set up a post that’s live, though, use CoverItLive.

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