More thinking of mobile blogging

So I have been giving more thought to mobile blogging and have realized some big gaps.

Blogging via email stinks. You can’t really control what you are posting. But, let’s not get some über-client that is too cumbersome. So far, the basics for a moblog client would be:

  • simple text entry with minor formatting (main, extended, and excerpt text entry available thorough menu, not on main screen)
  • in-line posting of images (going to image gallery to upload an image, but also inserting image link to better position)
  • offline mode, to prepare multiple article and then upload all at once
  • firing up Opera after post
  • list of posting (like Ecto) for better managing
  • categories!

Zempt is a good example of a simple yet thorough PC client. I see many of these features being the basic ones to be folded into a mobile blogging client.

With a client on the phone, some of the headaches I have now – no category selection, no automatic browser feedback loop, and emailing issues – would fall by the wayside.

Of course, being a Series 60 junkie, I want a Series 60 client – especially for my Nokia 6600. Any takers? I’d be willing to consult. 😉

Requisite child art photo

Here’s a picture of a neat collage in a box top that my daughter made at day care.

image028.jpg

While day care may look like parents can’t take care of their kids, I keep reminding myself that my daughter is surrounded by really creative people who love to teach children new things.

My role is to teach things as well, but at day care at least, I know her time is well spent – not just an ‘in loco parentis’ situation.

Hey, taking care of kids is work. Unfortunately, somewhere in the Industrial Revolution, we became isolated families, instead of this large social network of sharing the responsibilities of raising the children. While not living in some sort of commune, I am fortunate to have friends and family with whom at various times have split care of the children, freely giving time to one family to give them a break or help them out. Sure, we don’t take the other children in for days at a time, but a night here or a day there, sure make the difference.

It’s this support network that has made parenting less challenging and more rewarding.

Sunny view

View from our old offices, overlooking the working harbour Länsisatama in Helsinki. This photo doesn’t do justice to the sunny, expansive view with ships and islands and cranes.image103.jpg

Boston Globe Magazine – The Science of Her Art

I am a scientist-turned-writer. While writing gives me joy, the learning, discovering, and research into neat new subjects is what gives me joy in science. I came across this article on Andrea Barrett who not ony intensely researches her books, but folds into her works the details and feelings of scientific discovery.

I need to go out now and read some of her stuff, both for the thrill (they sound exciting) and for the technique.

Boston.com / News / Boston Globe / Magazine / The Science of Her Art

In person, Andrea Barrett does not seem like the kind of woman who has slept in a tent on an Arctic ice sheet in 30-degree weather — though she did just that in 1997 to research her novel The Voyage of the Narwhal, plunking down the entire sum of a Guggenheim grant to travel for six weeks with her husband, biophysicist and photographer Barry Goldstein, to the northern edge of Canada’s Baffin Island in Nunavut.

Article on Richard Florida

Here’s an interesting article on Richard Florida and the thoughts on what make a city thrive and grow. I think this is particularly relevant to bloggers, who clearly fall into Florida’s ‘creative’ crowd and whom many view as a source of growth. But, I think this also ties into community and issues of only talking to ourselves, since many of the criticisms of Florida revolve around Latte-class elitism, similar to criticisms of bloggers and their impact on the society and economy at large.

Boston.com / News / Boston Globe / Ideas / The road to riches?

THE ECONOMY MAY have been flat for the last two years, but Richard Florida is soaring. The Carnegie Mellon business professor’s 2002 book “The Rise of the Creative Class” connected with something in the public psyche. It heralded the arrival of a new breed of American worker: educated, ambitious, hip, probably a mountain biker, ready to dump a job whenever hit with the slightest urge for a “life shift.” These workers differ from the old Organization Man in many ways, but this difference is crucial: Creative-class members want not just decent jobs and good schools but “authentic” neighborhoods, Thai food, a happening arts scene, and — most importantly — proximity to other “creatives.”

Victims of the Content Explosion – Unite!

It goes without saying that blogging from a mobile phone, with it’s smaller screen, T9 text input, and mostly offline existence, is not the same experience as blogging from a PC (or Mac) with a large screen, full sized keyboard, and usually full-time online connection.

What I really miss is a simple app for my phone that would help me get the stuff off my phone and published online, kinda like ecto. Our team at work has been thinking long and hard about the realtionship of blogging, content creation on the phone, mobilitiy, and so on (see this link for a neat Series 60 blogging app). We see that there are a few things that a mobile can do that an untethered laptop cannot compete with, such as portability, handiness, availability, integrated connection to camera (I use a Nokia 6600).

We’ve been looking into especially the issue of the content explosion – where the user has a device with them all the time, collecting their life through messages and images – and what are the best ways to handle, browse, store, and share that content. We find that folks always say “So this phone is nifty, enabling me to communicate through text and images. But how do I save it all and get it off my phone? I can’t bear to delete it!”

Having accumulated thousands of digital photos and videos, both from my digital (way unconnected) camera and my (quite connected) mobile, I too have become a victim of the content explosion.

More musings on this later…