So, What Do You Do?

Paul, Rich and Chet are big fans of Jason Fried, the founder of 37 Signals. Although I’ve happily used several of their apps (Basecamp, Highrise, Campfire), until recently, I had never read their company blog, Signal vs. Noise, which frequently has interesting observations from Friend, DHH and others. Today’s installment by Fried, called “I’m a… Read More

On Dragons

Since last week’s post on the interwebs and fear, a couple other un-related posts have come across my reader that have me pondering the future of our beloved intertubes. First was Chris (#mrhashtag) Messina on “The death of the URL“, followed by Tim “What is Web 2.0” O’Reilly on “The War For the Web“. Both… Read More

Want to Test Drive WebCenter 11g?

Here’s another installment in the “we’re-a-for-reals-product-team” series. If you’re interested in WebCenter, but don’t have the time or resources to download, install and configure it on your own to kick the tires, you should sign up for a WebCenter Test Drive. Basically, the test drive will give you a hosted sandbox environment where you’ll have… Read More

Is Walk up and Use a Myth?

Eric Burke published this cartoon back in early 2008, and it’s stuck with me for a long time as something that is simultaneously hilarious, sad and maddening. I started my career in development building those eye-chart apps with fields and labels all over the place, complete with the obligatory button bar. Enterprise apps are complicated. Whether… Read More

The iPhone Game Economy

I mentioned a while back that I’m using my iPhone more frequently as a game console, and I know I’m not the only one. The iPhone makes a perfect gaming device for me because it’s portable, to entertain me wherever I go, and it’s already another device, meaning I don’t have to lug extra gear.… Read More

WebCenter 11g Patch Set 1 Released

From the “we’re-a-for-reals-product-team” department, comes an announcement: WebCenter 11g Patch Set 1 has just been released. Peter Moskovits has a rundown of all the new features over on his blog, and there are plenty, including the introduction of the People Connection service, which adds the social networking layer to WebCenter. This service was at least… Read More

Web of Fear

There’s a very scary story floating (h/t Gizmodo) around about a man framed by a virus that compromised his computer, then downloaded child porn and acted as a server, all unbeknownst to him. Let that sink in for a minute. The man was eventually able to clear his name, after spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on… Read More

Augmented Reality Win

Augmented Reality (AR) is a phrase you’ve probably heard lately, and you’ll probably get tired of hearing over the next few months. For the uninitiated, AR apps install to your mobile phone and layer content to views of your, erm, regular reality. Sounds weird, right? There have been several iPhone apps released over the past few months… Read More

Critical Social Mass

The release of Twitter lists and the new “listed” metric has me thinking about reputation and how its applied to people in consumer web examples. I had an interesting chat with my pal Kelly (@verso) about the listed metric Friday. She doesn’t see it as immediately useful since there’s no way to determine the impact… Read More

More Fun with Twitter Lists

Right, wrong or indifferent, we all use the following and followers metrics to make quick judgements about a person’s reputation, and now, Twitter has provided another dimension, the listed metric. This added dimension provides a much needed, albeit flawed, way to determine a user’s mojo. I use mojo here loosely to represent a user’s authority,… Read More