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Times Square Ads and "No Photos" Policies

Back during the Christmas season of 1998, I'd been the owner of a digital my camera — my first — for about a month. Naturally, I took it with me everywhere and snapped pictures of anything I found even vaguely interesting. While shopping for gifts at the downtown Toronto Urban Outfitters, I put on a hat reminiscent of the one worn by the lead singer of Jamiroquai, held the camera at arm's length and took a self-portrait, much like the ones you see on just about every MySpace page these days.

Not one, but two Urban Outfitters staffers descended on me and made it clear that the store had a “no photographs” policy.

“Sorry,” I said, “I didn't know. Did I miss the 'no photographs' sign when I came in?”

“Uh, no…” said one of the staffers, sheepishly. “It's not…really…posted anywhere.”

The other staffer leapt to her defense: “Okay, there's no sign, but it's a rule, okay?”

Urban Outfitters wasn't the only place who had a semi-secret “no photos” policy; Starbucks is notorious for this, despite the statement from the head office that they had no policy on photos being taken in their cafes.

Tourists taking photos in Times Square.

The “no photos” policy madness may be coming to an end soon, however; this New York Times piece reports that thanks to tourists digital cameras and photo-sharing sites and blogs, the advertisements in Times Square are being shown to a much larger audience than originally anticipated. Perhaps in light of the article, places like Starbucks, Urban Outfitters and even PF Chang's will scrap their “no photos” policies and think of photos on the premises as “free product placement”.

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Question: besides the Times, what other MSM matrons have had a social news makeover?

It is both a measure of the sheer prestige of this blog, and the natural tendency of Canadians to stick together, that we get comments from respectable, professional journalists like Mathew "Geekwatch, mathewingram.com" Ingram.

Well, perhaps it's just the Canadians sticking together thing. Either way, we'll take it.

Matthew, without being boastful, notes that his very own mainstream media meal ticket, Canada's Globe and Mail, has sported social news widgets at the foot of their stories for six months now:

Which raises the question, how many other MSM dowagers have gone in for a discreet social news/web 2.0 nip-and-tuck? A quick scan of four of the other five-widest circulation dailies in the US says:

  • USA Today: Nope.
  • Wall Street Journal: Nope, although they do get points for Technorati cosmos widgets at the bottom of their articles.
  • LA Times:  Nope. The Technorati widgets on their pages don't appear to be article-specific, either, so they offer very limited blogospherical context
  • Washington Post: Yep. There's a little sidebar widget that lets readers share stories with del.icio.us, Reddit, Digg, Google, Yahoo!, and Facebook.

That's two of the top five papers in America (and the Globe) doing the social news thing.

Who else?

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xkcd's Map of the Internet

Here's an interesting way of visualizing the IPv4 address space, courtesy of the geek-centric webcomic xkcd. In the map, the address space is mapped using a fractal pattern that “preserves grouping — any consecutive string of IPs wil translate to a single compact, contiguous region on the map”…

'Map of the Internet', from the webcomic 'xkcd'.
Click the picture to see the original at full size.

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The Grey Lady sports some "social news" tattoos

I love it when blogs cover media covering media adapting to new media (like blogs). By the time I arrive, the scene is so thick with meta I can barely move my mouse.

Today we have the Seattle Post-Intelligencer reporting on the New York Times' adoption of social news widgets on their article pages, allowing users to share news stories via Digg, Newsvine, and Facebook.

The New York Times unveiled a new service today that allows readers to quickly post stories that they find on the newspaper's Web site to Digg, Facebook and Newsvine.

It marks the first time that the country's third-largest newspaper has added a news-sharing tool to its Web site, allowing readers to develop conversations and post comments about specific stories. Readers will be able to add headlines and a small portion of text to the social media sites by clicking on the logos of Digg, Facebook and Newsvine. Those logos began appearing next to The Times' stories this morning in the same box as the print and e-mail tools, although they're initially hidden until users click the "Share" link.

The Times has always been smart about joining in the online conversation, so I'm not suprised to see them do this. The Times did, after all, arrive early at the RSS game through a partnership with UserLand.

The addition of these sharing tools works in the Times' favor, after all: it makes it even easier for their readers to take the Times' content into places (and in front of audiences) it might not otherwise go, and making things easier for users is goodness. It allows the Times some insight into social news activity—they can see what stories get shared, when, and follow the comment stream.Without these widgets, users would have been sharing Times stories anyway, but the newspaper wouldn't have had a convenient method of tracking it.

Of course, if you don't buy the whole "social news is the future" thing, then this might appear to be one of those embarrasing instances of an old media matron dressing a little young for its age. Personally, I think she looks good in this outfit.

One small aside; I'm surprised at the lack of support for del.icio.us, what I still consider to be the grandaddy of social news.

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Gift Idea: PlayStation…2?

Playstation 2 black and silver edition consoles.

That's right, you didn't misread that: I'm recommending the PlayStation 2, not the 3.

I'm not recommending the PS2 if you're looking for a gift idea for the must-have-the-latest thing sort of person; chances are, he or she probably offloaded their PS2 months ago on eBay or at the local used games shop and is jamming on a Wii, XBox 360 or PS3 (possibly all 3) and doing so on an HD-capable TV set to boot.

I'm recommending it if you think about it in these terms…

  • If your Christmas budget is limited, or if the budget of the person getting the gift is limited.
  • If you do have money to burn, think of it as a “stocking stuffer”, or drop one in a Christmas charity box.
  • As a safe choice for someone who's curious about console gaming and who's been meaning to try it out. I know a lot of designer types who fall into this category; they don't own consoles, and since they tend to use Macs, their gaming options are rather limited.
  • If you're looking for something cheap and fun to liven up the coffee break room/frat house/RV/arctic research station
  • If you think of it as a DVD player/CD player/MP3 disc player that does more than just play movies.
  • If you think of it as a second console (after all, it's no longer unusual to have more than one computer in a household).

…then the PlayStation 2, currently listed on Best Buy's U.S. site at US$129.99 and at their Canadian site for CDN$129.99 (just under US$114) — and possibly less at other shops — is a cheap and cheerful Christmas gift.

Now consider the edges that the PS2 has over the third-gen consoles that are getting all the press attention these days:

It's Old.

It's a weird selling point, but for consoles, a little age is a good thing. In fact, from this point comes all the other selling points for the PS2.

Unlike computers, there isn't much of an upgrade path for consoles, if any; once released, console developers can't count on the user upgrading the motherboard, RAM or video card the way PC game developers do. This constraint forces console developers to come up with clever ways to eke every last cycle out of the machine.

When a console first comes out, the developers for that console may have had a year's worth of experience developing for that console; oftentimes, it's less. That means that they've got the basics of programming the machine down, but haven't yet had time to fully explore all the capabilities of the machine. That's why “release titles” — games released right at the debut of a new console — aren't as good as titles that come out later on in the machine's lifecycle.

As a machine released in early 2001, there's about 7 years' worth of development knowledge for the PS2 out there. This means that development teams should have a very good idea of the PS2's capabilities, limits and workarounds for any constraints. This, more often than not, translates into good games.

It Has a Big Library of Games

As an established console, having been on the market for 6 years and having moved over 111 million units (according to this Sony site), the PS2 has a library of titles in the thousands. According to Wikipedia, there were 8,181 PS2 titles released worldwide in September 2006 (4,554 in Asia, 1,319 in North America, and 2,308 in Europe). The library becomes even larger if you count original PlayStation games, since the PS2 is capable of playing them.

Better still, many of the top titles for the PS2 are currently available as “Greatest Hits” re-releases at half their original price, which is less than half the price of a typical third-gen console game. You can save even more by buying them used; stores that carry used PS2 games abound.

A big library means more than just a good market for new and used games, it also means that someone near you also rents them out.

And In That Big Library, Some Great Games!

Not only is the library big, but there are a lot of great titles in it to, from sports titles like Madden Football and the NHL series to shootin'-and-killin' series like the Grand Theft Auto, Medal of Honor, Metal Gear and the Tom Clancy series, to music games like Dance Dance Revolution and Karaoke Revolution, to name only a few.

Even Now, There are Some Must-Have Titles You Can Only Get on the PS2

Among them are:

Don't Forget Hardware

There are all manner of peripherals for the PS2, made by Sony and third parties, from controllers to cables to memory cards to dance pads and even decorative appliques, should you be the sort of person who like dressing up their machines.

It Goes Anywhere

It's a minor point, but it's still a point: the second-gen version of the PS2 (the currently-available slimline one) is small and light. If you travel with it, it travels well. If you don't travel with it, it's unobtrusive.

And Finally: It's in Stock!

With all the attention being focused on the XBox 360, Wii and PS3, you won't be locked in a Tom Arnold-vs-Arnie Jingle All the Way-style fight for a PS2. That's one less shopping headache.

In Conclusion…

Amidst the hype for the latest, greatest electronic doo-dad, don't pass up the PlayStation 2 as a gift possibility. Under the right circumstances and for the right person, it just might be the perfect gift.

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Gift idea: open source geek gift list, courtesy of Red Hat

The theme is geeky DIY over at Red Hat Magazine's holiday gift list. Better still, they're running a contest where the prize is everything on the list. 'Tis better to give and receive.

[W]e want to hear from you. Enter to win the gadgets in this gift guide by telling us what you'd like to see in Red Hat Magazine in the upcoming year. The best ideas will win the loot, and good entries will win something cool, too. Here's the fine print.

So, in the best spirit of free and open source, I'm redistributing somebody else's list of gift ideas!

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If (youCanReadThisAd) You.get(job);

Man holding up 'HELP WANTED' sign.

There's a funny Craiglist New York ad for a web developer. Written in language that is very close to “legal” C# (I gave it a quick peek, and even put it into Visual Studio just to be double-sure; it won't compile), it lists these details:

  • The successful candidate will get a fast machine with dual monitors
  • The job is located in midtown Manhattan
  • The application will be implemented in C# and ASP.NET
  • They would prefer it if you had experience with the following:
    • Microsoft CMS
    • SQL Server
    • XSLT
    • JavaScript
    • Design Patterns
    • Technical Architecture
    • UX Design

What the ad doesn't reveal is the name of the company — at least not directly anyway. You have to figure out the company name by writing a program to decrypt perqvgfvtugf using the ROT13 algorithm, and then submit the code for your decryption program to the company.

It's a cute way to promote the position, and the “make the ad look like code” tactic seems to have worked: it's already near the top of the list at Reddit.

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