Month: July 2009

Kill IE6 but let it die slowly

Kill the internet’s 800 pound gorilla:

IE6 was fine enough for use in 2001, but for web apps to evolve and grow into tools that run just as seamlessly as desktop apps, the browser that requires the most hacks, time, and energy to make things work must be set aside. The only way at this point that people will upgrade is if their favorite web tools don’t work in IE6 and for new technologies to look forward to HTML 5, and not backwards to outdated technologies.

In short, we’re at a crossroads, and for us to get past them, IE6 must go away as a browser and as a concern for developers and users everywhere.

IE6 definitely needs to die in order for the web as a whole to progress but I think some campaigns like that on Twibbon are misplaced. Just let IE6 die a slow, quiet death by cutting support. It doesn’t need to made into a huge issue where users are feeling pressured into switching. Like Mashable says, if their favourite web apps stop working they’ll switch soon enough.

Another Walter Cronkite?

Harsh words from the Daily Kos about the news media’s coverage of Cronkite’s death:

And with that in mind, perhaps members of the media could pause and consider why a journalist who instilled trust in his viewers by simply reporting the news is “someone whose like we will never see again.” And maybe they’ll even take a moment to think about what it says about them.

Stay still and use a big shovel

Seth Godin on the business advantage to staying still and using a big shovel:

The important thing to remember is that separate events are often separate. If you use the same ineffective approach on one thousand people, it’s not going to start working better just because you use it more often.

Connected events, on the other hand, often benefit from frequency and trust.

Which leads to two viable strategies:

1. If you can stay still, stay still. Earn the trust, earn the sale by repeatedly demonstrating value and authority.

2. If you can’t stay still, get a bigger shovel. Your marketing and your sales pitch has to be so refined and focused that it works the first time, because you don’t get a second time.

SOFA – Writing for the web

Jens Hollander on writing for the web from the SOFA blog:

I know it’s a cliche, but that’s only because it’s true. Rewriting is the only real thing that sets the professional apart from the amateur. A professional is simply an amateur who didn’t give up.

Good advice no matter how cliche it may sound.

Oregon’s Painted Hills

Fever, RSS, Twitter, and solidifying online communities

Today seemed to be the day to publish insightful pieces on Shaun Inman’s brilliant RSS reader Fever. Both Kyle Baxter of Tightwind fame and Pat Dryburgh wrote pieces about the change in mindset that Fever stimulates concerning reading RSS feeds as well as the communities that build around focused sites like Tightwind.1

Toward the end of Kyle’s piece he writes that:

More interestingly, though, it reveals communities which may not be immediately obvious. By seeing what people are linking to, you are also seeing what they are reading. But by using Fever, you are also seeing each link in the context of links made to the same content by others, rather than seeing it on its own. It is that context which is important. Since communities are nothing more than people interested in the same things, and Fever shows precisely this, it means what you are seeing is the underlying structure of a community. The structure was always there to see, but because past feed readers conceptualize feeds as individual and distinct, existing in their own world, rather than as connected — the full community structure was difficult to see.

This is something monumentally powerful that is just in its infancy. I can imagine an application which finds the community structure from what publishers link to, who readers subscribe to, and what they read, and utilizing this data, creates a visual look at how people are connected on the web. Using this, you could not only identify communities, but identify community leaders and individuals rising to become leaders.

For me this is the biggest promise that Fever holds as an RSS reader and as a concept. Sure, the ability to filter out just the hot and popular items can save you from having to skim through thousands of items, but it’s the way that the Fever allows you to see the community among your feeds that’s potentially revolutionary. Kyle nails it when he writes that, “The structure was always there to see, but…the full community structure was difficult to see.”

Now what would be truly great is if this mindset toward revealing the relationships among posts carried over into other online publishing systems. Having it reside in an RSS reader is a good first step but it ought to become something that is inherently a part of publishing platforms in general.2

Imagine how great this kind of software and mindset would be to a news organization looking to present its community with not just its own stories but also with a curated list of articles that are of interest to community members. By digging into the links within blog posts a whole new level of community interest and relevance could be opened up.

  1. This piece claims to be nowhere near their level, but it also extends their discussion of Fever to the broader online publishing community []
  2. I think it’s similar to the argument about groups on Twitter: easy for a client to do, but ought to be done server-side []