You might have read it on the news, or on their blog, but it’s out there at share.ovi.com, and it’s been live for over a week. With support for storing and sharing over 100 media types, unlimited storage and bandwidth and posting not restricted to the PC, we’re very excited indeed, so please send your feedback this way!
We held a Q&A session in Barcelona with selected bloggers (video excrepts below).
"Convergence" is a word I've heard plenty of times in the last 10 years, when mobile phones still had monochromatic screens and Minidisc players were all the rage. Now, with Google and Apple entering the mobile market, it's definitely getting interesting. The IHT has a run on the situation here, and a couple of posts from Mobile Opportunity giving a digest of the most recent moves here and here.
Disclaimer: Yes, I work for one of these companies, but even if it weren't related to my job I find this interesting.
User Tomektore created a very interesting web app to measure how open mided a specific last.fm user is. His Open Mind Index is calculated from the number of different tags the music that a user listens to has. I checked it out and my results are quite obvious: if I listen to Arabic electronica, Japanese punk, Finnish melodic rock, Mexican indie and some other stuff in between it's kind of obvious that I'm more or less open minded.
I have been too busy to tell you guys about this application, now available in Beta labs. Basically, the support for posting to Vox and Flickr just got much better, with better tagging and the possibility to follow the photostreams of others straight from your mobile device. Darla Mack has a good review of the app.
Please give us your feedback (here or, faster, at Tommi's blog).
I heard about this very interesting online game from a friend and have started playing it. Basically it is about creating your own nation and making decisions about how will your society work (more on the FAQ). The results of your decisions are always very exaggerated, which makes for very comic results, not so unlike what happens in real-life politics.
Bought an Apple AirPort Express to connect my laptop with my stereo to listen music and at the same time be able to browse the web. Since I have a Fonera router for using my network and sharing it with others (not that anybody has actually connected as I live in the middle of nowhere), I thought it would be easy to have them talk to each other and to my PC… how wrong I was!
After 3 hours of fiddling with the different settings I got it all working and now I'm happy listening to music without any wires in the way. However, it got me wondering about the good old problem of interoperability. Even when following the same standards, it is ridiculous things wouldn't work because of an arcane problem between WPA/WPA2 implementations in the two routers. I guess there is still plenty of work to be done.
OK, tiedän että joskus en puhu suomea hyvin, mutta kyllä voin hyvin nähdä että tämä nettikauppa on käännetty väärin. Jos todella haluaa nauraa etsii toimitusehdot alhaalta.
Was reading the Groundswell blog and found a series of different online communities for all sorts of different purposes. One that definitely caught my eye was Design your portion of the border fence, where people are invited to submit designs for graffitti that would be placed on the American or Mexican sides of the barrier the U.S. government is building between the U.S. and Mexico.
Definitely a creative way to raise awareness of a current issue.
It might be a good idea to use Dopplr. Interesting, simple concept: write down where are you going to be and share with people that need to know. They even have a Facebook app/plugin.