blog.aka.me -
November 13, 2009
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| ego | web life |
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One Week At Work

Monday

  • met with Mapion about using TAB API
  • tweeted for TAB
  • sent dimension of TAB ads to a client
  • updated balance sheet of TAB Shop
  • updated GPS of new TAB venue
  • answered emails about TAB upcoming iPhone app
  • relayed new TAB Shop orders to shipping company
  • sent email to advertisers for the 2010 Tokyo Art Maps
  • sent news about the party to our sponsors


Tuesday

  • met about new advertising space ideas for TAB
  • met about a flash animation we're making for a AQ client
  • updated link to Facebook fan pages from top of TAB/NYAB sites
  • met about a logo we're creating for an AQ client
  • sorted out pics of Tokyo Designers Week 2009
  • relayed new TAB Shop orders to shipping company
  • answered emails about TAB upcoming iPhone app
  • sent some advice about MailChimp to a AQ client
  • sent news about the party to our sponsors
  • advised a client on how to design his banner ad for TAB
  • checked out submissions to Mashup Award 5 that used our TAB API
  • tweeted for TAB
  • talked to a TAB staff who's leaving soon
  • sent an email to find a new TAB staff
  • started work on new TAB advertising documents


Wednesday

  • answered emails about new items for TAB store
  • worked on new TAB advertising documents
  • created a sitemap for one of AQ's clients
  • went home early for "Daddy Wednesdays"


Thursday

  • dealt with a spam issue on TAB event comments
  • welcomed new TAB temp staff
  • answered email about our Party
  • tweeted for TAB
  • relayed new TAB Shop orders to shipping company
  • answered email about our TAB API with a new partner
  • helped with a sitemap for one of AQ's clients
  • prepared & sent the latest TAB Newsletter
  • worked on new TAB advertising documents


Friday

  • had a quick meeting about the day's mission.
  • worked on new TAB advertising documents
  • updated team on some AQ-related client work
  • yaritori emails related to a couple AQ projects
  • finished draft version on new TAB advertising documents
  • answered a lot of random emails before the weekend.

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September 8, 2007
Viewed 8547 times
| web life |
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Help Find Steve Fossett

So I've spent the past couple hours helping find Steve Fossett. I have become a Mechanical Turk for Amazon and have been reviewing satellite imagery of the area where Steve is supposed to have disappeared last Monday.
I am not a super fan of Steve but I have followed his record-breaking exploits in the news over the past few years and felt kinda touched by his disappearance; enough to wish that I could help actually, and enough to subscribe to Google Alerts on Monday to receive alerts in my inbox as soon as any news site would update us on him.

When I heard that his buddy Richard Branson was collaborating with Google and their famous maps to help find him I laughed a bit because those satellite photos are not known for being always up-to-date, nor very high-def (for non Pro members at least)...

But then a few things happened today:
- I watched Deja-Vu in which some machine allows to "see" in the past and track people and their whereabouts in the area the movie takes place in.
- It made me wonder what it would take to build a system to review satellite imagery and help find Steve, in the same way that unused computer cycles can be used to help fight cancer, Aids etc via the various grid projects .
- Next thing, I open my mails and see a Google Alerts pointing to this:
You Might Help Find Steve Fossett.

And so I better get back to my tasks.

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November 22, 2006
Viewed 693 times
| Art Beat | just launched! | web life |
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Art & Design Job board on TAB

Taking inspiration from a recent trend in the US IT industry, Tokyo Art Beat has debuted a new section: "TAB Jobs".
TAB Jobs is a new job board that will launch on the 1st of December with job offers specially targeted at the dynamic community of creative professionals living and working in Tokyo, Japan.

Finding the right job in our industries is a difficult endeavor, with too few tools specifically targeted at us. We want to make TAB Jobs this new tool, where companies can advertise directly to a core target of designers and where we can easily find jobs specific to our skills.

- It is bilingual and nationwide, where offers can be posted in Japanese or English only, or both.
- It is easy to post and browse, using the same design that has made TAB so great to use. Categories will include: Art, Print/Photo, Web/IT, Space/Product, Screen/AV, Business, Other.
- It is be affordable: only 20,000 yen for a 30 day job listing. All proceeds support the future of TAB, a non-profit service of GADAGO NPO.

» Visit TAB jobs

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February 1, 2005
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| web life |
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Sorting the mess in tags sorting the mess in the Net

Yet another article (in Wired this time) about tags and folksonomies and yet another article that fails to mention any potential problems associated with a taxonomy uncontrolled by people (a folksonomy).
Tags work very well on a personal basis, you tag the data that's of interest to you, da_way-youWant. But what happens when the sites need to harvest the potential of those tags to empower the users?

The article states: We know that Flickr hosts 23,081 images tagged with "cat" or "cats" and only 17,463 with "dog" or "dogs". and the list of popular tags on del.icio.us reveals, for example, "blog, blogging, blogs" and "photo, photography, photos".

Take an end-user (that might also be using the service to save his bookmarks, but not necessarily) looking to use del.icio.us or flickr to find good links/pics on a given subject (their being-saved-here implying a certain degree usefulness --or prettiness in the case of Flickr-- as opposed to Technorati); he is presented with duplicate keywords... Moreover, he cannot splice (is it the right word?) those keywords to find links tagged by a selection of keywords. He cannot refine his search. Should he go back to Google?

Tagging systems don't seem to be future-proof yet. Aren't sites like Google Suggest (widget that could be reused and enhanced to show, for similarly spelled tags, the recommended spell) and the rudimentary del.icio.us tag stemmer proofs that we already have a big mess and are in the process of creating another one in parallel?
I sure do hope that there is more to tags than pretty weighted lists and a rehash of the meta keywords tag.

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January 24, 2005
Viewed 457 times
| UI | web life |
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The Spread of Weighted Lists

[SvN] All items in a list are not created equally. That’s the idea behind weighted lists that, via font size, emphasize popular items and minimize unpopular ones. The cool thing is that by merely altering font sizes, these lists suddenly gain a dimension; You can still find items alphabetically but you can also use visual weight to find the most requested items. My guess is we’ll be seeing a lot more of these weighted lists.


Indeed, since this post, 2 months ago, Technorati and Metafilter have added tags to their sites and launched their own weighted lists.
And I did too!

I don't really have enough categories for this presentation to feel useful, especially since I already have the number of post for each category printed (next) to the keywords... but in fact, it instantly informs the reader on which are the more popular issues discussed on this site (saving him from comparing the numbers to find it out).

Here is the source code I used on this Movable Type installation 2.6xx. With the help of Tim Lawrenz and Max Paccagnella and Régine of We Make Money Not Art fame. Thank you guys!

<?php
$iMax = -1;
$iMin = 100000;
?>

<!-- first run through all categories to know the smallest and largest number of posts in the categories.
nothing will be printed out here, it's just for calculation. -->

<MTCategories>
<?php
if (<$MTCategoryCount$> > $iMax) { $iMax = <$MTCategoryCount$>; }
if (<$MTCategoryCount$> < $iMin) { $iMin = <$MTCategoryCount$>; }
?>
</MTCategories>

<!-- calculating the relative steps assuming that you want to have 5
different font-sizes. -->

<?php
$fSteps = ($iMax - $iMin) / 5;
?>

<MTCategories>
<?php
if (<$MTCategoryCount$> < $iMin + $fSteps) { $css = 'g1'; }
elseif (<$MTCategoryCount$> >= ($iMin + ($fSteps * 1)) && <$MTCategoryCount$> < ($iMin + ($fSteps * 2))) { $css = 'g2'; }
elseif (<$MTCategoryCount$> >= ($iMin + ($fSteps * 2)) && <$MTCategoryCount$> < ($iMin + ($fSteps * 3))) { $css = 'g3'; }
elseif (<$MTCategoryCount$> >= ($iMin + ($fSteps * 3)) && <$MTCategoryCount$> < ($iMin + ($fSteps * 4))) { $css = 'g4'; }
elseif (<$MTCategoryCount$> >= ($iMin + ($fSteps * 4))) { $css = 'g5'; }
?>

<span class="<?php print($css)?>"> (<$MTCategoryCount$>)</span> |
</MTCategories></div>


and the CSS looks like:

.g1 {
font-size: 10px;
}

.g2 {
font-size: 13px;
}

.g3 {
font-size: 16px;
}

.g4 {
font-size: 19px;
}

.g5 {
font-size: 22px;
}

Let me know what you think?

Find below a list of other weighted lists:
- Near Near Future
- MetaFilter tags
- Craiglist cities
- Flickr tags
- 43 Things
- porn-a-licious
- Everything Burns: Zeitgeist
- extisp.icio.us
- Technorati tags

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November 25, 2004
Viewed 587 times
| Please! | web life |
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Favicon Blogrolls

Someone please make a script to substitute blog links with their related favicon in blogrolls? Something you would give your OPML file to and that would either add the favicon to each link or just replace it with only its favicon? Must take about 10 minutes to spurt out, right?!

Since the favicon.ico file must be at the root level of the server... then again you don't want the script to go and get the favicon from each server everytime someone loads your page full of blogrolls, so the script would have to save locally all the icons on your server... and update automatically when you subscribe to new feeds... and have a default favicon for sites/feeds without a favicon and something that would also work with bloglines feedrolls... and... and... PLEASE?
Cos I want to see a block of 270 favicons on my sidebar... How cool is that?! Mind you Chris would have 500!!

idea inspired by Chris'Weblog Alphabet.

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November 15, 2004
Viewed 770 times
| blogging | FAIL | web life |
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archive digging and posts' updates

Reposted for more discussion + 1 bit added

[purse lip square jaw] I've always found it a shame that the singular format (reverse chronological with archives) seems to homogenise these differences in passion, intimacy and play, at the same time as it privileges the new.

I have actually been thinking about something similar for a while too.
Let's start with a few scenarii.

Q1- You discover a new blog, which has been publishing great content for months now (how could you have missed it!). Well, it's not like you have time to go through the whole archive to dig more good content (even with the help of categories and search), so you just decide to visit it often from now on (or subscribe to its feeds) and catch the next good content...
Q2- Great discussions going on at Kottke.org, which brings the number of individual posts that you are tracking on different blogs to 35. Can you really track them all?
Q3- You post an update to an old post (or one of the blogs you read does), which is not even on the main page of your blog anymore. How can your readers find out about it?


NA1*- Coud we imagine a feature that would automatically re-post some old posts on a random basis; a way to bring a subject back on the table, for another look at it, new readership might have new things to add to it. I am always amazed at the amount of new infos that is uncovered when subject are reposted by mistake onto sites like slashdot, or metafilter. I know there is probably a plugin for MT that does something like show you the post 1 year ago that day but what we need is a way to streamline it in the new posts, maybe even change its post date, while still keeping track of when it was first published? Writing that, I am wondering if that doesn't sound like some of the functionalities offered by wikis...

NA2- Well, you *could* bookmark it as well and go back and back again, or you could just forget about it! or you could push the webmaster to add a subscription script to his blog so you could be alerted by email when a new comment has been added (how many blogs sport this feature? 2% of the ones I read...). But hey, you might not want to received 100 emails per day coming from those sources... It's hard enough to see clearly through all the spam and newsletters and you keep on messing up your filters in your email client... There is a plugin to show which old posts have been recently commented on but again this is a plugin that few people add and even fewer people check. Or luckily there could be a feed available that included all the comments, but what if you have no idea what a feed is and get all this strange code when you click on one of those RSS orange button or simply don't want to have to install yet another software? And what if you are trying to follow 20 posts, you don't want to have to do that forever... What if the discussion goes dead and after 2 months somebody leaves a great comment full of new infos and links after he found the post with Google... And what if you wanted to track trackbacks too, some people might add great value to the discussion on their blog and trackback the post you are tracking?

NA3- Chances are that people who subscribed to your feed will be the only ones able to see this update, forget about the (80-90%?) other? Changing the posted date on the post? Well that would mean mess up your monthly archives, as well as the way you organise your archive URLs (site.com/archive/year/month/day/title) and invalidate all your google referencing! argh... Again, there are plugins to show on your sidebar which posts have been recently updated but how can you be sure your readers will check your sidebar everytime they check your website?

In my case, I do not use monthly archives and do not put date codes in my URLs and am quite happy to change the posted date in the posts I update. But that might not be what most people want to do, however, that sorts number 3... at least...

Are those thoughts mostly non problems? Have they been dealt with in ways I ignore?

Have you noticed how Engadget and Gizmodo have started posting "week round-up" posts that list some of the more interesting posts of each finishing week. Isn't that one more evidence that our weblog format could be inadequate and cumbersome? The Dead In A Week syndrome...

*NA stands for Non Answer
First published 2004-02-04

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August 1, 2004
Viewed 694 times
| blogging | keitai | web life |
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Moblogging... again

I just bought a new mobile phone. AU's Sony Ericsson W21S. It's a WIN phone, so I have unlimited packet transfer. I own the ultimate moblogging tool. I can moblog for ever, for the same price, and at high speed! I can send 640x480 pics straight to my gallery again thanks to Kevin's mfop2 tool. I even have an RSS feed of that. So you can expect a resumed stream of pics of varying qualities (some shots will be very mobloggy, others won't). Having recently passed the bar of 3000 pics, I am looking forward to the next 10000...

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April 13, 2004
Viewed 975 times
| blogging | FAIL | Japan | keitai | Photos | web life |
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Moblogging Uptake Weak, Even in Japan. So?

[TheFeature] A new study shows Japanese aren't moblogging, but they still send snapshots to other handsets. If carriers want people to moblog more, we look at some interface improvement suggestions from around the web.

This kind of somewhat shallow and rushed article makes me wanna speak like Andrew Orlowski. I mean, the title is misleading and the content doesn't deliver. Is Eric Lin really surprised that the moblogging uptake is weak? Even in Japan? I co-organised the First International Moblogging Conference (1IMC) in Tokyo last year and I am NOT surprised.

Why are we even dreaming about moblogs when sending a picture still costs so much?
Moblogs, and moblogging tools are now similar to what the internet experience was 8 years ago. 85% of mobile phones in Japan are NOT 3G, and even if they were, only 500,000 people have flat-fee AU phones at the moment (I am not even talking about the rest of the world...). Moreover, how can one get surprised by the weak uptake of moblogging when 99% of the population doesn't own a website nor know the word blog?

And pardon me but an interface that offers to send the picture will NOT encourage people to send it as long as their phone bills would skyrocket if they did so. In Japan, the next button after taking on pic on a mobile IS send this and look... It didn't work. Do you enjoy a $100+ phone bill? NO, well most people neither.

Creating the tools will not create the demand... Why do you want people to moblog? I mean, do we talk about Picture Book Ordering From Inside Photo Softwares Weak, Even On Apple's Most Amazing iPhoto? Do most people have online photo galleries?

Showing your pics to your friends on your phone is great, why would you send them... Do you send your printed photo albums to your friends by the post? NO, you wait for them to come to your house or just take a few pics in a pocket for your next meetup.

What is exciting is to get people to take those pics and to share them.
We are at the beginning of the movement, and any trip to Japan would prove that the demand is here and that the 2-3 days a month survey data is grossly biased. At the moment it is way too expensive to share them accross the network so we share them on the phones. Let's not get ahead of ourselves.

Let's start by making the screen phones bigger and of better resolution, in Japan we now reach 240x320 on most new phones, and the phone interfaces to view those pics nned to become faster and more friendly (I have seen great improvements in Japan over the past year). The phones could offer to beam those pics to your friends phones (some do). Then, we could improve the mobile phone picture printing station we get in some shops in Japan to offer to create a moblog for you on a server space offered by the maker. Yahoo Japan photo albums have an option to send an invitation to your friends, they can connect through their mobile phone and view your pics, but again how can they expect us to use this costly function, this is premature.
Service provider should continue their effort and create better software packages accompanying the phones and work on a greater compatibility (well, create compatibility first) between the phones and the home PC to make it easy to store our pics in ONE place (not another software) and then offer to create online galleries of our pics, should we want to.
And they should follow the example of KDDI AU's flat-fee option launched last year and soon to be offered by Docomo next June. Then we'll start talking about moblogging. Did you see blogs before ADSL became widespread? And look at blogs now. Still NOT the second superpower, and still NOT MORE than 0.4% of the internet.

Now, does that mean that we shouldn't have a 2IMC? By all means we should. I think that moblogging is first and foremost a label that represents a certain ideal of mobility.
By having a 2IMC, we could analyse what the past year has brought us the users, refocus our expectations and demands, showcase what work has been done, what the next months will bring and what that means for the users. Ideally, the IMCs should be conferences by the users, for the users, with users and providers hand in hand, which would prevent big corporations from hijacking the deal, serving it their own sauce and robbing us from our bit of fun.

Back to Mogi, the cool multiplayer GPS mobile phone game.

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April 4, 2004
Viewed 463 times
| Artists | Japan | web life |
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Japanese Artists

Updated For Japanese contemporary art, take art collection aims to provide great artworks by Japanese contemporary artists, mainly introducing screenprints and photo works. In addition to being on an internet gallery, the art fair called "take art collection" takes place every year at Spiral Garden, 1st floor of Spiral building. At this art fair, various artworks by Yoko Ono, Yayoi Kusama, Tatsuo Miyajima and other young Japanese artists are being exhibited.

Chiharu Nishizawa paints dark humour social comments of Japanese corporation life.

Akira Yamaguchi merges different historical eras in his paintings and drawings, often using a Yamato-e painting style (perspective-less traditional Japanese landscape paintings). He is most known recently for having drawn that wonderful picture of the new Roppongi-Hills complex surrounded by low houses merged with ultra-modern buildings looking like traditional Japanese castles. Some pictures here and there.

YANOBE KENJI ART WORKS at the National Art Museum of Osaka until end of September 2003

Tenmyouya Hisashi
Old-style Japanese block print with amodern urban flavour. I want that in my flat.

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