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software

Disqus vs IntenseDebate: wrap up

I’ve had each of these commenting systems installed in various places in my network of blogs. Additionally, I’ve used the blogs of other people using these services to get a feel for the user side of it. I’ve also tested a handful of other systems brought to my attention, none of which were as personally useful as these two.

After all this, which system do I like best?

The short version: Discus. Read on for the longer version.

The product offerings are very similar and function in much the same way. For most uses, I feel that either is a vast improvement over standard comments. Intense Debate has a couple of features that best Disqus. However, it also has one flaw that Disqus gets absolutely perfect and that was the deciding factor.

First, what’s better about IntenseDebate? To start, it looks nicer. I prefer the clean interface of  Disqus admin interface, but, for the appearance on the weblog that it’s being used in, IntenseDebate wins my vote. Of course, this is a matter of taste, but I’d bet most people would agree with me.

Secondly, are the importing features. IntenseDebate has an import feature, Disqus currently does not. Of course this is really only half a point because the standard importer version doesn’t work all that great and actually failed to import my comments in full. I was offered a beta version to test, but, I don’t really feel like undoing everything just to turn around and redo it to get a feel for how the systems work so I didn’t bother. From what I was told about the beta version, it probably works better though, it does so in a fairly strange manner that may not be the greatest for everyone.

Finally, there’s OpenID support. IntenseDebate has it, Disqus does not.

So what’s so great about Disqus and so flawed with IntenseDebate that it would trump these two things? Ease of use in regard to comment responses.

If you have a weblog with a very active comment board, just scrolling through the comments to find what you’re looking for can be difficult. There are two ways to solve this. One is to provide a link in the notification that takes you back to that specific comment on the blog. Then finding the comment you are replying to is easy and replying is a snap. The second way is to allow the actual comment notification to be replied to directly. Disqus does BOTH of these things. IntenseDebate does neither.

Without a simple feature like this, it makes replying to a comment on an active comment board a real chore, and most certainly deters users from participating in discussion. It’s this small thing that makes all the difference to me.

For the future, IntenseDebate says they are adding reply-by-email features. Before then, adding a more proper comment link in the notification email would be drop-dead-simple. So it’s not like they have a long way to go to catch up. Of course Disqus says they are adding OpenID support and importing. What’s really going to seal the deal on these systems tomorrow is their ability to import as well as their ability to innovate additional features in this young market niche.

I’m signing on Disqus’ dotted line for now and hoping that, in the end, they prove to be the most innovative.  But I’ll be watching IntenseDebate very closely as well.

I’ve got a lot of ideas that would make either one of these services really stand out and I certainly understand the value of being the first as well as the most popular. After all, I’ve got years of experience doing those very things. Based on this, depending on who does what first, it’s still anyone’s game. And, I’m sure there’s enough room in the market for a close second.

JS-Kit: a hosted commenting system

(ed note: I’m writing these words to you at 4am as I am unable to sleep due to a sort throat, sick stomach, and terrible headache. I apologize in advance if they are utterly unreadable, deviate greatly from the topic at hand, or turn out to have nothing to do with JS-Kit or external commenting systems at all.)

As the fight for the highly coveted comment space here at revjim.net (a member of the Jim Reverend  family of sites) rages on, another contender raises it’s head from above the crowd: JS-Kit. I’ve taken a few moments to look over their offerings and give it a good test.

I really only have one criticism to offer, but it’s a big one, so I’ll start with it. The service and it’s feature set takes the same approach that was taken in developing a name for their service: JS-Kit is straight and to the point with little in the way of frills, user interface, or design. Some examples, perhaps, are due.

Adding comments to a page is as easy as dropping in two lines of code into your page template. With this process you can add comments to any page, anywhere, at any time. You can even add the same set of comments on two different pages with little to no trouble. The flexibility offered by this straight-forward no-nonsense approach is staggering. The same type of simplicity is available for adding ratings, reviews, and even polls to your site.  You can even customize the look and feel of this, giving you the ultimate in flexibility.

The downside to this is in the backend features. The dashboard and moderation panes are ugly, cluttered, and difficult to navigate. As a discussion participant, if I commented on more than 30 JS-Kit enabled sites, following this using JS-Kit’s dashborad would be cumbersome at best. There seems to be no sense of community or a social aspect to the service they offer. But, then again, I don’t think that’s what JS-Kit was building.

Another example of this utter simplicity: JS-Kit knows what sites you manage by a cookie present in your browser. Lose the cookie and you have to reauthenticate via email. This isn’t really that big of a deal, but it points  out even further just how plain their system is.

But you know what? Plain isn’t always a bad thing. From the site owner standpoint, even though the data presented isn’t pretty, it’s in one spot and seems to be easy to read. The simplicity of this system is incredible. If you’re looking to add comments to a site without any hassle and aren’t interested in the social aspects of commenting outside of your own site, JS-Kit is probably the easiest way to do that.

For revjim.net, however, and my other sites, the point of using centralized comments is not to get a working comments systems — I have that already. The point is to improve that system, add functionality and flexibility, and make it easier for users to not only comment here, but to comment all over these world wide webs. To this end, JS-Kit isn’t the best fit. However, I intend to keep it in my bag of tricks to be used for many other more suitable situations.

Now… that ratings and polls module they offer… well… you might just be seeing that here in the weeks to come.

Thanks, JS-Kit, for helping to make the good ole WWW more diverse, more interesting, and more feature filled.

Google Calendar Now Syncs to Blackberry

Yes. That’s right Google Calendar Now Syncs to Blackberry.

I’ve only synced once, but it works great! Even asked me if I wanted to clear out my current handheld calendar first so I didn’t have to delete everything by hand.

Yes, this is big enough news to warrant it’s own post. I’ve been waiting for this for a while now.

GMail and IMAP at last

Yes. Oh Yes. GMail has IMAP now.

…..

Ok… you can breathe again.

Backup Drives: Part DeuxDoo

After fiddling with EVMS for most of the night I finally managed to rearrange the drives and restore all of my data from the backup drive and still make it to bed at a moderately reasonably hour (though my wife was well asleep by then).

Except I forgot one thing: my backup software was still running.

Yes. I’m still using SyncBackSE for my backups even after I told you it was the spawn of Satan himself. This is because they implemented some more sanity checks and versioning of files which just made life really easy and instilled a sense of safety in me once again.

Well, I can’t even begin to determine the timing of it all so I’m not even going to try to guess. But, some how, SyncBackSE saw all the files missing on the drive I was restoring to (which is where it backs up to) and therefore, deleted those same files on the local copy. Then, when the files were restored and it ran again, it felt that its deleted version was “newer” than the version on the newly restored disk and proceeded to delete it from the restore disk. Ugh.

This would, of course, be the perfect time to use that new versioning feature and just tell SyncBackSE to restore all the files as they were last night regardless of what is on the restore drive. What’s really nice is that it can do this. What’s not so nice is you have to ask for it one file at a time. I’m talking about over 12,000 files here. I’m not clicking on every one of them three times. And no, you can’t highlight a whole bunch and pick. Believe me, I tried. So, at this point, I’m still not sure what I’m going to do.

does it get worse?

I don’t think today could get much worse.

On top of everything else, I got a bad disk. But I’m a good techno-weenie so I had a nice tasty backup nearby. I even had a spare disk in the closet. Unfortunately, Linux Volume Manager is not happy about the fact that I have a Physical Volume that no longer exists. So I had to install and learn EVMS just to be able to remove it.

Welcome to the 21st century, Jim.

So now it’s building an EXT3 file system on my replacement drive… I think.

If that goes well, I’ll restore the backup to the new drive.

We’ll see.

New Email Setup

In order to get the most flexibility out of my Blackberry, I’ve decided to move my mail over to Yahoo.com since they are currently the only non-corporate email system that works in flawless two-way synchronization with the Blackberry.

So my personal account is on Yahoo while my Web account is still on the server. This way I can test both and see which I like more. If I stick with Yahoo, I’ll pay the $20/yr for Yahoo! Plus Mail to remove the ads from outgoing email and all that. Until then, you’ll have to ignore the taglines at the bottom of my personal emails.

If Yahoo! Plus Mail just included IMAP service as well, it’d be a no-brainer. Silly Yahoo, POP is for kids.

What sucks even more is that Yahoo can do IMAP. They do it for the special iPhone service. But the iPhone has some magic in it that figures out the right user name to use over IMAP, and that magic has not been made known to me.

So send lots of email to my personal account (daniel AT inklog DOT net) and my web account (jim AT revjim DOT net) so that I can really play with it.

Me: 0; Big Bad Blackberry Pearl: 1

So yeah. Yesterday, I broke down and bought a Blackberry Pearl which came highly recommended by more people than I can count. While there, I was very tempted by the new Blackberry Curve, which was just released that day. However, the few features it offered didn’t warrant the $100 difference in price and I was anxious to try a smaller phone for a change.

So far, I like the Pearl. It’s fast, and, after a brief introduction in the way of the Berry, quite easy to use.

My only problem with it, oddly enough, is in the way it handles email, which is, of course, it’s most highly regarded feature. Here is my gripe:

In the corporate world, supposedly, this works as I want it to. So, if I was willing to pay an extra $10/mo in service charges, pay for a Blackberry Enterprise Service license, find a server to host it on, and pay for and maintain one of the expensive mail solutions that works with this, I’d have exactly what I want. But, even in the best of circumstance, that works out to an extra $40/mo on top of the existing Blackberry fees just to get features that seem like no-brainers to me.

Basically, if you aren’t a corporate user, your new email is pushed to you and if you delete a message on the handheld, that action is pushed back. But that’s it. It doesn’t synchronize two ways. This may not seem like too big of a deal until you imagine a typical scenario for me (and lots of other people):

I check my email from the blackberry before work. I delete the unimportant messages from the handheld and, when I get to the office and check my email on my computer, those messages are deleted there as well, which is great. Then I start my day. I get a whole bunch of email all day long. I answer them. I delete them. I get new ones. This goes on for 8 (or 10 or 15) hours until I’m ready to go home. I leave the day having saved two of those messages from the day that I need to reference tomorrow. On the way to my car I check my blackberry and what do I see? 532 unread messages. In actuality all of them are read and all but two of them are deleted. I could just delete them all, but then I wouldn’t have the two that I saved and the handheld would also delete them out of my actual Inbox as well causing me to not have them at all any more. Or, I can go through them one by one and figure out which ones I need to save. Or, I can just leave them there, therefore, limiting the usefulness of the Blackberry.

What’s funny is that it’s OBVIOUS that the Blackberry knows how to do this right, because it does so in the corporate world. In fact, if you use a Yahoo! email account, it’ll handle all of this just fine too. But with GMail or any other email account, you basically get one way push and the other way delete and that’s it. I can understand it being this way with POP3 because of the inherent nature of the protocol. But an IMAP message store could certainly be more well behaved.

Because Yahoo! does work as intended, using some trickery, it is possible to sort of make this work. First, buy a Yahoo! Plus account so that you don’t have to deal with ad puke all over the mail pages and ad puke at the bottom of every message you send. Then, set up all your email accounts to forward to your Yahoo! account and add all of your addresses into the Yahoo! interface. Now, when you get new mail it forwards to Yahoo! which in turns pushes immediately to your handheld. When you read or delete messages in either place (handheld or online) every is synchronized in perfect two-way bliss. Except! As desired, if you reply to any of these emails from your Yahoo! account online they appear to be coming from your real email address. However, when you reply from your Yahoo! account on the Blackberry, the message will appear to be from your Yahoo! address and not from your real email address. As best as I can tell there’s no way to fix this.

Dear RIM (Research In Motion — creator of the Blackberry)–

This is just plain silly. With all of your programmers and supposed expertise in this field, there has to be a way to offer two-way synchronization with IMAP servers. There are hundreds of examples of software out there that do just this that you can use as inspiration. Your own software is doing it for corporate users already. Yahoo! has it implemented and working perfectly with you. Given all that, why can’t you get it working with something like IMAP? What exactly does my $20/mo go toward if not features like this?

Yours,
Jim Reverend

Pownced

I now have a Pownce. As I said in one of my first notes on Pownce ”This thing is like Twitter on crack. I like crack.” But it’s lacking all of Twitter’s mobile features — which I love — and in turn gains a lot of security and privacy functionality, which can be quite useful. And, of course, you can send more than just text, which is awesome. I can see a purpose for both.

Most of the things I would put on Twitter I would put on Pownce. But the opposite is certainly not true. I’d, ideally, like my Twitter to flow freely into Pownce therefore allowing me to update Pownce from just about anywhere and not have to update both services individually with the same content.

What goes on Flickr?

My desire to organize my life tends to ebb and flow. Lately, I’ve been trying to straighten out the growing collection of photographs that I have, both at home, and that I share online. The methods I’m employing at home are probably of more interest to my Shrink than they are to you, but, you might be curious about what I’m up to in the online world, and, I’d like your opinion regarding what I’ve done.

As I see it, there are several different classifications of photographs. Let’s go over them briefly.

First, there is the collection of my very best work potentially divided into various styles of work and only updated when another rare spectacular image is created. This is often called the “portfolio”.

Secondly, there is the regular display of new images that can highlight unseen images from the past, great images from recent sessions and excursions, or highlight new and experimental techniques and ideas. This is often considered the “photoblog”.

Then, there is the dumping of the good images (usually left raw or mostly unedited) from each days edits. This is more like what you’d get from me if you were to book a session with me, or if I were to create a photo album of my trip to Canada last winter. They aren’t bad images, by any means, but there are certainly a lot more of them and each image hasn’t necessarily been edited to its fullest potential. I call these “session edits”.

Finally, there are those images that, while still done with an artists mind set, have a goal outside of “art”. This may include photographs of wildlife, geographic features, insects, plant life, and sculptures. While these images can often serve double duty with one of the above categories, sometimes, a photograph of two grasshoppers doing it is just a photograph of two grasshoppers doing it. I call these “demonstrative images”.

I’ve experimented with sharing each of these classifications of photography and doing so in varying forums and communities. I just haven’t quite found an equilibrium that I’m happy with yet.

At one point, I only had a “portfolio”. Then I started using my weblog as a every-now-and-then “photoblog”. Eventually, I became a Flickr user and starting using it as a “photoblog”. Then I started Arranging Light and started weaning away from using my weblog as a “photoblog”. For the most part, Arranging Light and my Flickr account had the same content until recently.

Recently, I’ve started uploading “session edits” into Flickr. On the 3rd of this month I uploaded 9 images from a recent excursion to the Forth Worth Nature Center. On the 5th I uploaded 7 images from a recent photo session with Rachelle. Today I uploaded 26 images from an outing to Lake Ray Roberts over a year ago.

I get a lot more visitors to my Flickr account than I do to my photoblog and my weblog combined. I also tend to get a lot more feedback there than I get any place else. Many Flickr users treat it as a photoblog of sorts and use it as their primary means of seeking out new work from other photographers. Therefore, I’m reluctant to place my unpolished images in a forum that is being used by many others for more refined work.

I was once told, in person, by someone who had only seen my photography through the eyes of Flickr that I had some fantastic photography but that another Flickr user, T-Glow, had nothing but amazing images. This observation troubled me. Maybe it shouldn’t have.

I’ll admit that T-Glow has some fantastic photography, and I don’t claim to be better or worse than him in any way. However, our individual uses of Flickr differs quite greatly. T-Glow posts an image every day. One image each day. However, it’s not always a new image. It’s rarely ever anything unique or experimental. It’s not always even an image that’s never been on Flickr before. Sometimes he re-edits an already published image. It is consistently an incredible image and I don’t mean to belittle his work at all because it’s certainly worthy of note. But, to compare my Flickr account and his is like comparing a long standing photo gallery to the string of negatives hanging on the clothesline over my bath tub.

It is the fact that someone would jump to this conclusion that leaves me thinking that maybe I shouldn’t be so candid with what I share there. However, at the same time, using Flickr as a testing ground for the success of certain images seems to work quite well.

What do you think? Do you like seeing the more candid versions of my work? Should I continue posting “session edits” to Flickr, restrict it to only “photoblog” images as I have in the past, or take it one step further and showcase only “portfolio” worthy images there? If I don’t post them to Flickr, should I put them somewhere else?