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Wikipedia rolls out “semi-protection” feature

Wikipedia Semi-Protection Begins via Slashdot

Wikipedia, the popular online encyclopedia that anyone can edit (or used to be able to) has recently introduced a Semi-protection policy that prevents unregistered and newly-registered users from editing certain articles. According to Wikipedia, it’s only being used to protect pages that have already been vandalised on several occassions, rather than a pre-emptive measure to reduce editing on a page that might be vandalised.

I don’t blame the site administrators for taking this step , as I feel it’s a reasonable compromise between allowing freedom to correct/improve articles and stopping people posting incorrect or defamatory material. I’ve seen lots of wikis, even small ones (who are perhaps more susceptible, not having the legion of volunteers that Wikimedia has to spot and fix things), being overwhelmed by spam and misleading information. I’m a little bit disappointed by the decision though, as it takes away somewhat from the fact that anyone can edit Wikipedia articles, regardless of whether they have an account or not.

On a side note, I’ve been faced with a similar decision on my blogs of whether or not to allow anonymous commenting. Comment spam never used to be a problem, but recently, especially on Rogue Tory, it’s becoming a real problem. I know that requiring users to register in order to post comments would stop 99% of the spam in its tracks, but then I’d almost certainly lose a lot of useful comments left by people who don’t want to sign up for an account just to say something about one of my posts. I don’t think I’ll ever take the step of protecting articles completely, but I might have to think about possibly disabling or moderating comments on older entries (say over a month old, because for some reason new entries don’t get any spam) in the future, which is a shame as it feels as if the spammers are winning.

New design for Wordpress

The official site of WordPress appears to have been redesigned. I’m a little surprised at this, because usually I’d expect something to appear in the RSS feed for the site (I’m subscribed to that, and it shows up in my admin panel on all my WordPress blogs), or a mention on Photo Matt.

Anyway, the new design looks good, although I never had any major gripes with the old one. I suspect the design is a work in progress, as some of the links don’t lead anywhere yet, but I like the fact that there are a couple of screenshots displaying the admin panel on the front page, as well as prominent links to articles supporting new or potential WordPress users. No doubt there will be a few glitches here and there that need ironing out, but so far I’m very impressed with the new look.

Business Logs 2006 predictions

One of the sites that I read on a regular basis, Business Logs, has just posted a list of predictions for 2006. Here’s my commentary on what I think of the predictions and what I believe will be happening in 2006.

Apple comes out with widescreen & Intel-powered iBooks in Q1, Mac minis and Powerbooks in Q2, and Powermacs (named G5 still) in Q3.

Whilst it’s fairly obvious that Apple is planning on moving its product lines to Intel processors instead of the IBM-supplied Power PC ones, I think Mike’s timescale here is a little optimistic. I don’t think we’ll see any Intel-powered Apple devices until the spring at the earliest, as I don’t think Apple will have got to the stage where the new offerings are ready for general release, although having said that I am wondering if they’ve been working behind the scenes in order to get something ready for Macworld in January. Perhaps we’ll see a new iBook model then, but personally I doubt it will have a widescreen – that feature will be left to the Powerbooks.

Pricing for iTunes Music Store songs will change based on the popularity of the song.

I’m not entirely sure about this one, as the $0.99 model for iTunes seems to have worked very well for Apple so far, and it’s much easier to charge one price for every song than to start varying based on popularity – it makes the payment system that bit more complicated and a lot of iTunes customers will be used to the “one price fits all” model by now. I suspect that if Apple does change its pricing policy, it will probably be more down to pressure from the music industry, who really are pushing for variable pricing, than a independent decision by the iTunes management.

The major purchaser of budding companies will be C|Net, and they will make a purchase of a 1-2 well-known “web 2.0” companies prior to the start of Q3.

I’ve never been quite sure what to make of C|Net over the past few years, as they haven’t really made much of a name for themselves. I think they’ve been largely overshadowed by the likes of Google and Yahoo, but also when I look at their sites with large Flash ads, lots of nested tables interleaved with absolute positioning using CSS and the sheer amount of material on their home page, I feel that they haven’t really kept up with the way things are going on the web. Looking at their past press releases, they don’t seem to be buying everyone in sight like Yahoo has been doing, and they haven’t made any big name acquisitions recently. I can’t see them buying any “web 2.0” (I hate that phrase) sites in the near future, unless they feel compelled to in order to remain competitive with other large portal/search sites.

Digg will be purchased by C|Net for $5-8M.

As I’ve already explained, I don’t expect C|Net to make any major purchases in the next year, and $5-8 million seems a rather large price tag for Digg. On the other hand, if C|Net turns out to be in the acquistion market then I can see Digg being fairly high on its hit list. I’m not quite sure how it would integrate with the rest of C|Net’s news and services though.

Meebo will not be purchased by anyone this year

I think I agree with Mike and Om on this one – I honestly don’t see Meebo being bought out any time soon. For starters, it brings together the services of four of the biggest web companies (Google, Yahoo, AOL and Microsoft/MSN), and none of those are likely to want to buy a site that promotes their competitors as much as it does them. Not only that, but if one of the big four was to purchase Meebo, the others could easily block users from connecting to their services via the site, rendering it useless. Meebo has also received a fair amount of venture capital recently, so it looks like the site owners are looking to develop and expand rather than aim for a quick sell.

37signals will come out with 3-4 new web applications, effectively doubling their current revenues but only expanding their user base by 25% since current 37s customers are more likely to use future 37s products.

I think 37signals will certainly have another killer web application for us in 2006, although I don’t believe they’ll release 3-4 brand new applications. My prediction is that there will be one genuinely new and innovative application, and an abundance of new features for the existing applications, with perhaps a better version of Writeboard that requires a subscription.

A brand-new web publishing application will launch, take on MovableType and Wordpress, and will be successful. Wordpress will continue its rise, and will eventually be used on all major weblogs that used to use MovableType.

Given that the vast majority of blogs run either MT or WP, and there’s already Textpattern creeping up behind both of those, I can’t see another brand-new application arriving and being successful. It would have to offer features that the existing ones don’t, and an easy method of converting all your comments, posts etc. otherwise who is going to switch to using it? With regards to the rise of Wordpress, I think it will continue to do well and take market share from MovableType, especially if version 2 (which I expect to see some time in the new year) lives up to expectations. I don’t think it will necessarily be used on all major weblogs that currently use MT - that might be a little bit too optimistic – but I expect several of the well known ones to convert at some point in 2006.

Skype’s popularity doesn’t grow as sharply as in 2005, the user base graph flattens off. eBay uses Skype to introduce new auction and community-based services to connect buyers to sellers.

Given how the fuss and publicity surrounding Skype has died down over the past couple of months, I suspect that growth in 2006 won’t be quite as rosy as it has been this year. A lot of people who want Skype accounts now have one, and I imagine that this will mean a much slower rate of signups over the next twelve months.

Skype’s continuing growth also depends in part on how well the new Jabber VoIP(Voice over IP) protocol is received. Google Talk already has support for this protocol, and Google has already released some source code to enable third party clients to interact with users of their software. I suspect that this will encourage a lot of developers (hopefully including the people working on Gaim) to add such functionality to their software and, depending on how hard Google pushes this and how fast take up grows at, this could provide a large base of competition to Skype.

A new weblog advertising model and platform is introduced, but not by any of the current players (WIN, FM Pub, Gawker, etc.). It will take on BlogAds and AdBrite and beat both at their own game.

I suspect, but don’t know for sure, that this is perhaps a plan for 9rules in 2006. If so, I expect Mike to talk it up somewhat, as he’s obviously got a vested interest in its success. I don’t know about beating existing competitors, but if 9rules did launch some form of advertising model/platform for blogs then I suspect it would do well, especially as it would probably have a “cool” factor associated with it. Personally I’ve never really gone in for that sort of stuff (I run Adsense on some of my blogs but don’t make much from it) and I’m not really a believer in what’s cool, hip and happening in the “blogosphere” (I hate that phrase as well). I’ll be keeping a close eye on how things develop in that area though, because even if I don’t jump into all the new stuff at the deep end I do like to keep my finger on the pulse.

Official FreeBSD web site gets a makeover

(N.B. I wrote this article a while ago, when the FreeBSD site was first updated, but have only just got around to finishing it and hitting the ‘publish’ button).

The official FreeBSD web site has recently received a makeover as part of Google’s Summer of Code programme. As with most redesigns nowadays, the old site was a hideous collection of tables and HTML that lacked any form of semantics, whereas the new site uses CSS for the layout and styling (although I should point out that the old site did validate as XHTML, so it wasn’t as bad as some people might think).

As someone who has been using FreeBSD for some time, I’ve been a regular visitor to the web site so here’s what I think of the new design compared to the old one. First of all, the front page looks a lot cleaner, there’s less clutter and more whitespace. A lot of the marketing blurb about “what is FreeBSD, what is it good for etc.” has been moved off the home page and now the central content is dominated by news, events and media stories. Personally I think this is a big improvement, because when I go to the home page of any web site I’m generally looking for something specific, so I’d rather be greeted by some well organised links that point me to where I want to go rather than a page of text that doesn’t contain anything of interest.

Overall, I think the new design is a lot better, although I still feel a certain fondness for the old one, which always looked somewhat old school – a bit like FreeBSD.

Microsoft finally kills off IE on the Mac

End nears for Mac version of IE via BBC News – Technology

Microsoft appears to be finally killing off Internet Explorer for the Macintosh platform, two years after it stopped development on what was then the most popular browser for Mac users. Not only will security updates cease, but the download links for the software will be removed in January 2006 so even if you want to get hold of the browser (there are some reasons for wanting to – for example parts of the web interface for my router don’t work in other browsers on OS X) you won’t be able to, at least not officially. Microsoft actually suggests that: “Macintosh users migrate to more recent web browsing technologies such as Apple’s Safari”, although there is no link to Apple’s site or even a mention of Firefox.

In my opinion, it’s a decision that’s long overdue and it’s about time that the final nail was put into the coffin of IE on the Mac. There was once was a time, several years ago, when it was one of the better browsers out there and included features – such as better CSS support – that you couldn’t get anywhere else. However, it has now fallen by the wayside compared to its Windows counterpart, and with other browsers such as Safari, Firefox and Opera now available for the Mac, there really was no point in Microsoft continuing to support a piece of software that wasn’t maintaining a large chunk of market share or helping to tighten its grip on the desktop.

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WordPress 2 release candidate

WordPress 2.0 Release Candidate via Photo Matt

WordPress, the popular blog software that powers this site and most of the others on the network that I’m building (with the exception of Rogue Tory, which uses a custom blogging system that I wrote from scratch), has reached the third release candidate in preparation for version 2.0. A lot of WordPress users seem to think that this may be the final RC before 2.0 is officially marked as “stable”, although I’ve not yet plucked up the courage to upgrade any of my main sites yet for fear of losing data or having to reverse the process or restore from a backup if things goes wrong. However, I am planning to give the latest version a whirl tonight when I install it on one of the domains that I’m not currently using, so expect a post later on about how 2.0 stands up to the 1.5.x release line.

WordPress.com Open Without Invites

WordPress.com Open via Photo Matt

If you’ve ever wanted a quick and easy way to set up a blog with a relatively catchy URL, no advertisements (at the moment anyway, though I don’t know how long that’s going to be the case) and a fair simple user interface, then WordPress.com is probably the best place to go. You used to need an invite to get an account – I managed to get pwaring.wordpress.com fairly early on – but now sign ups are available to everyone, though personally I expect them to close at some point once the demand for accounts becomes too much.

Having said that, WordPress is ridiculously easy to set up on your own server, as all you need to know are the database connection details. I run several sites powered by WP and it takes me no more than fifteen minutes to set up each one, and that includes creating a new database user for each site (yes I’m paranoid like that), plus tweaking a few configuration options and installing the themes that I like to use. So if you’ve got your own server, even a shared one, you might want to try installing the code yourself in order to get more flexibility and a better URL than myname.wordpress.com, but for beginners just starting out in blogging WordPress.com is great news.

If Only I’d Thought of this First

I’m sure a lot of people by now have heard of The Million Dollar home page. For those of you who haven’t, it’s a simple idea from a university student, Alex Tew, which involves selling advertising space on his web site. “Hang on”, you say, “that doesn’t sound awfully original!”. This advertising is different though, instead of paying for a given slot on a rotating banner, which is how most online advertising still works, the advertisters instead get a given number of pixels on the screen to show off their wares. Space costs $1 per pixel, but must be purchased in 100 pixel blocks so effectively the minimum investment is actually $100.

When Chris first told me about the site, I laughed it off as another gimmick that might get five minutes of fame if it was lucky and then fade away into the distance. How wrong I was. Not only have papers as esteemed as the Guardian picked up the story, but Mr Tew is also being invited to appear on US television to talk about his idea. Already he has made over half a million dollars, and is no doubt raking in further cash from selling the story to the media. That’s a pretty serious amount of money for someone who is still at university, especially from such a simple idea that costs Tew virtually no time or effort now that he has three staff handling the site for him.

Damn I wish I’d thought of this first, but hats off to Alex for coming up with the idea.

Gmail now Google Mail in the UK

Due to a dispute with London-based Independent International Investment Research, who claim to have been using the Gmail name before Google launched their service on April 1st, 2004, the Google email service has now been rebranded as Google Mail for the foreseeable future. Users signing up as of this Wednesday 19th October will be offered a @googlemail.com address, although Google has said that existing @gmail.com addresses will continue to work for the time being. This only affects users in the UK, which presumably Google determines by IP address blocks.

A lot of Google fans have been raving about how unfair this is and how IIIR are pulling a fast one by trying to register Gmail as a trademark everywhere, but in this case I have no sympathy for either side. Google’s lawyers should have done a proper search for the trademark before launching the service, and they only have themselves to blame if they failed to notice that someone else had already applied for a trademark on the name. As for IIIR, it does look as if they’re trying to capitalise somewhat on the success of Gmail and one wonders whether or not they would have made the same amount of fuss had a smaller company infringed their intellectual property.

I’m not too bothered myself about this, because I don’t really use my Gmail account and it’s still working for the moment anyway, but I can see how it would really annoy all the people in the UK who have switched to using their Gmail account from other free email providers because of the huge mailbox capacity and the lack of intrusive advertising.

Update: We’ve been picked up by CNET as part of the blog community response to the Gmail name change. Unfortunately they’ve gone through our quote and replaced the words with American spellings. :(

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