New Dog

Ho ho ho.  We got a new dog.  It doesn't have a name yet, but here he is.  Oops.  I forgot to ask whether it's a he or she.  As to what, I think it is a new breed created by mixing poodle and something else to minimize hair shedding and smell.

It's not like I care whether a dog smells and sheds hair or not.  I love all animals, especially dogs.  Having him/her in the house makes me so happy that I might start barking any minute now.

Future of Blogs: Small Businesses

Business market, particularly the small business market, is where most of the action and the money will be in the future, not personal blogs.  Benefits of blogging technologies, such as ease of update, content syndication, moblogging, audblogging, fotologging, and social networking, will allow small business owners to explode into the web like never before and propell blogging into a day-to-day necessity for survival. 

For proper perspective, think about how little hole-in-the-wall stores so common in Asia might use blogging technologies to improve their business.  Then scale it up and expand across the globe across language boundaries.

Copyrights and Blogs

We are about to enter the marshland of copyrights, a wet land of confusion that lies between the land and the sea.  On land, things are on firm ground of fair use.  In the sea, what sinks and what doesn't is clear cut.  In the marshland, nothing is certain.

As I mentioned before, value-added blogs and feeds are coming our way.  But copyright issues could sink it before it gets here.  Last night, I asked "Dave" how he would feel if I created an RSS feed of his posts I liked.  His answer was no, and I suspect majority of bloggers will feel the same way.

Imagine a newspaper of blog posts delivered to 100 million readers three times a day.  While some might think this is impossible, I have walked though most of the serious technical and business issues and have concluded that such newspaper is not only possible, but potentially very profitable.

Biggest unknowns are the copyright issues.  It's not just the bloggers and how they feel about commercial syndication of their posts, but owners of the material bloggers frequently refer to or embed into their post either partially or as a whole.  It's a big iceberg that could turn any ship into Titanic.

PDF: Unfit for Human Consumption

Jakob Nielsen rants on PDF (thx to Dan Gillmor).  Jakob is absolutely right on this.  It is not just PDF.  Viewing PDF via Acrobat is as pleasing as watching My Dinner with Andre in slow motion.  The mystery I need to solve is how the hell Adobe manages to keep selling this monstrosity effortlessly.  They just some how popup in the Fortune 500 IT grocery list.

Another reason why I read Jakob's article with interest is that newspaper UIs have potential for having similar problems.  Orphaned location, in particular, is a serious one that is difficult to workaround.  I don't know why I am so fatally attracted to tough problems.  Must be the ego thing.

Harry Potter Heads South

I started reading Harry Potter books when the second book of the series came out.  It was when the series started to become a phenomenon among kids and I wanted to find out what made it different from other children's books.  I smelled magic sauce.

After four books, I still haven't figured it out fully.  One thing I am sure of is that components of Harry Potter stories are what kids want: special powers, secret places, close friends, payback, mythical creatures, and fast yet smooth pace.  Harry Potter is fun to read and made kids happy.

But the most recent volume, Order of Phoenix, seems different from the previous four volumes.  It goes deeper into Harry Potter's mind and tries to teach something to the kids.  While I breezed through other volumes in matter of hours, I struggled over several days to read few chapters of the latest volume.

My son had similar problems so he skipped through most of the book.  When I asked him his opinion about the book, he said it was fun.  I didn't probe deeper because he was obviously faking it.  Kids are innocent, but not always truthful, particularly when they want to please you.

Harry Potter series is going down hill from here on.  What a shame.

Blogrolls for Breakfast

Thanks to Tim Oren for adding me to his blogroll and recommending my blog to others.  I visit his blog everyday because VCs' perspective is unique and very valuable.  IMHO, VC is not a profession nor skill, it is an orientation, not unlike being magnetised.  I value their opinions like I might a compass.  Two problems:

  1. there are more than two poles and they move around.
  2. relationship is mutual, like a confusing dance of compasses.

I don't know how many blogrolls I am on, but I do appreciate everyone of them because I enjoy deluding myself that blogrolls are friendships.

Confusion and delusion can useful when self-prescribed appropriately.  Confusion helps when ego overflows.  Delusion helps in the darkest hours.  Think of emotions like drugs that can help as well as be abused.

Jing Jing Tommorrow

I am planning to have dinner at Jing Jing tommorrow at 7pm.  Be there if you feel like yelling at me with your mouth full of spicy noodles, have me punch holes in your ideas, receive lessons on the virtues of Selfish Pig in person, or just to enjoy my irresistable charm with soy sauce.

Not so permanent permalink

Joi stepped on an interesting blog-related problem when he was preparing to migrate his blog to TypePad.  It is a common problem, but it took me by surprise too.  Duh.  The problem is, as I call it, not-really-permalinks.  When you change blogging service provider/software or domain, your permalinks no longer points to your old posts, causing links from all the posts that reference your posts to be broken.

While most engineers would reach for a solution by reflex, I am busy thinking about how effective it is as a barrier-to-entry.  Opposite side is just as important: how effective an incentive is zero hassle migration?  So far, my answer for personal blogs is "important only to a small fraction of the market", meaning it is a serious problem only for blogging elites.  For business blogs, my answer is "important but less important than price."

Note that marketing can inflate the seriousness of the problem or the solution.