I’ve created two manga avatars using the Face Your Manga application. The first one I created was meant to resemble me in the real world, but with the limited options this was difficult to get precise. The other is just a goof! I made one of a software pony-tailed geek, gave him blue hair ( because blue is cool and my favorite color) and added some lime green to complete the web 2.0 color palette.
Because I’m a fan of the democratic processs, I’m letting all you guys and girls vote. Which ever gets the most votes will go on my twitter, brightkite, flickr and facebook profiles. So place your vote in the comments below.
Normal
Web 2.0
Last night I received a tweet from Chris Pirillo. In the tweet, he offered a contest. Send him an email and tell him why you should get the free ticket to Gnomedex. So I wrote an email. Here’s an explanation about the contest from Chris. I’ve posted the email in it’s entirety below. If I win, I won’t be able to tell you until they say it’s ok.
Chris,
Last week I was a regular seattleite – living in the city, working on the eastside doing php development, and with a healthy interest in social networking sites and microblogging. Then I learned about Gnomedex and my world changed. I suddenly wanted to be great. I needed to surround myself with the thought leaders of new media. I wanted to do great things.
Gnomedex can enable me to do them. I know all things are possible. However, desire is not enough, and I’m going to need to take drastic measures to pay my bills _and_ go to Gnomedex. I may need to solicit myself on the streets. I fear this could lead to my imprisonment by a Jabba the Hut like entity and be forced to wear the gold bikini. I’m not in the best of shape, so trust when i tell you that no one needs to see that! Save me from the gold bikini!
So in my best holographic voice “Please Chris Pirillo – you’re my only hope”
-Andrew
Update: I’m going to Gnomedex!
I’ve been using Brightkite for a while now. If you’re not familiar with it, Brightkite is a location-based mobile social networking site. What does that mean? you ask. It’s like Twitter, but it keeps track of where you posted from. If you haven’t tried it yet, I suggest you try it. I’d love to hear your thoughts. For now, I’ll give you mine.
The great thing about Brightkite is that you can meet people based on where you are. Someone that you might have never met is now within reach just because you both use the same service. This is the advantage is has over Twitter. However, the userbase needs to be increased dramatically to enhance the interestingness. If they can accomplish this, then you’ll meet others who are currently checked in nearby, as opposed to a few days later. This happens to me quite a bit – where I’ll see someone of interest who posted, but the post is dated from several days ago.
The folks at BrightKite have done some great things with their web application .
- Map view of your friends. They display where your friends are checked in on a google map. This is great when you don’t recognize the street names and when you want to get a quick sense of where they are in relation to each other.
- Privacy Control. You may not want everyone on the internet to know where you are all the time. Brightkite has built-in some controls to manage your privacy. They let you mark which friends are trusted. Those are the people who can see your exact location all the time. There are also just normal friends. Below your menu, is a privacy switch. When set to public, everyone can see your location and posts at full accuracy. When set to private, strangers see your checkins at the city level but no posts, your normal friends can see your checkins and posts at the city level, and your trusted friends get to see your checkins and posts at full accuracy.
- Sharing with other sites. Under “Account Settings” there is a sharing tab. It identifies other sites that you can send your brightkite information to. Currently they support Twitter and Fire Eagle. I’ve never looked at Fire Eagle, but I’m actively using the Twitter sharing. Brightkite sends my info to Twitter when I post a note or photo. I did for a while also send my check-ins but that has zero value to a Twitter user, imho.
There are some things that I would change. Lets call them opportunities for improvement.
- Email interface for photo uploads. Brightkite assigns a unique email address to you. They instruct you to send your photo to that unique address. A simple as email is , sending photos to brightkite doesn’t work for me. the mobile version of gmail doesn’t allow you to send attachments. It’s just not available. You can make the argument that this is a gmail problem. Never the less, I’m still not able to post photos from my mobile. If Brightkite had a file upload on their site for uploading photos, this would be a non-issue.
- Placemark names not utilized fully. Placemarks are used to identify places that you go to often, and allows you to assign a nickname to it. The nick names are not used when you check into a place that doesn’t already have a name, like an intersection. For example I might have an address of “9th & Pine, Seattle, WA, 98101″ with a nickname of “Bus stop at Paramount”. When I write a post from that location you will only see the address. I think it would improve the user experience to use the nickname as well.
- Streamline the interface. Do a place search and enter a business name. If you want to check in at one of the places, you need to click the name. On the new page click the “Check In Here” button. It would be great though if I were able to click “check in here” from the search result. The “visited places” and “place marks” both have that functionality. So why I cant I have it here too. Another thing that bugs me is all have very different looking listings. If they could bring them in line with one another, it’d reduce the time it takes the learn the web app.
- Symbols. One symbol that you see alot of brightkite is an orange circle icon with a white ‘X’ in the middle. Other applications, outside of brightkite, have taught us that an ‘X’ in a icon means close or delete. So when I see that icon in the placemarks listing, I’m thinking that I can delete the item by clicking the orange circle icon. It will actually bring you to the place stream for the location. That’s confusing to me, and probably to others too. I’d like to see brightkite use the lime green trapezoid in their logo, as that is the placemark icon. It would have a couple of benefits – the ‘kite’ icon doesn’t have any external meanings like the ‘circle with an x’ icon, and it strengthen the association of your location with BrightKite.
- Editing Placemarks. There is no way to edit a placemark. Many placemark redisplay the address as the name. So, when you checkin and post a note from that location, the address is written out twice. People like names, computers like addresses. That’s a lesson we’ve already learned with DNS. So, I’d like to be able edit the placemark name so that everybody can benefit from it. Also, people make mistakes and there’s no way on brightkite currently to correct them. This alone should be enough to add in the ability to edit.
I’d love to hear what you think.
Well, July is now over. I wanted to give you all my weekly update, as well as my monthly summary.
On the nutrition side of things, I’ve been getting more protein. This is mostly chicken that I’ve cooked, and some beef. Speaking of which, a burger on whole wheat toast is awesome! way better than just a white bun. I’ve also been drinking a ton of water at work. I haven’t done as well with the fruits and vegetable however.
The exercise has also suffered a little. I didn’t meet my goal of 16km for the week, although i did run 4 miles on Saturday morning without much trouble. So I’m getting better at it. I’m wondering if 16km was too ambitious. I’m usually sore the day after a run, so it’s not so easy to run 2 days in a row. That can be problematic if I don’t plan the week ahead of time. The takeaway here is that i need to stay on top of it. So I need to be mindful of when I last ran. I’ve been taking the bus this past week, so I walk around more. I doubt it had any significant impact, but it feels good. By the way, if you live in Seattle I suggest that you try out the bus system – it’s pretty good.
I am happy with my overall progress this month. I’m 10 pounds lighter than when I started. While I’d like to think “I’ll just do exactly the same thing for the next 3 months and I’m done” – something tells me it’s not going to be that easy. So, what have I learned? A few things actually. The biggest thing is don’t eat a lot at one sitting – space things out. By doing this, I don’t get super tired in the afternoon like i used to. Nowaday if I’m tired, its because I didn’t sleep well the night before and not because I’m in the midst of a food coma. Another thing is time matters. When you eat something, seems to matter. There were several nights where I hungry at 10pm or 11pm. Usually I’d just go to sleep. The metabolism is gonna slow down as soon as I go to sleep, so it’s best not to give it additional food to digest. It probably wont get to it anyway and just store it as fat. If the hunger pangs are just too much, drink some water. This will let you feel full, without the additional calories. This will just tide you over until you can eat something good in the morning. Also, progress comes from modifying your diet and exercise. Doing just one only maintains what you have.
I had started with the idea of twittering my daily status. I did do it for a few days, but it quickly fell by the way side. I think I just needed something to keep me mindful of the goal. Now I’m thinking that writing this blog weekly was enough to accomplish that. Once I got into it, it was easier. I kept the commitment to myself. Just like the life lesson that we learn from Back to the Future – you can accomplish anything if you put your mind to it
Weight: 262 ( delta from last week is -3 )