Interestingness at Flickr, Hot Donkey, Very Very Very Hot Donkey

Flickr: Explore interesting photos around Flickr The Flickr Blog just reported, among other things, on a new feature that they’ve recently added called “interestingness.” Basically based on favorites, views, relationships between commenters, plus a whole bunch of secret sauce they are now ranking each day the most interesting photos uploaded to Flickr. And I just have to say again, hot donkey. These are some of the best of what I’ve seen on Flickr and it’s nice that they have built this tool to filter out some of the very best. It makes my favoriting job even easier than it was before. Nice work guys. It’s amazing how Flickr just continually manages to please and delight me daily.

Joe Reifer Night Photography Show


Laughing Squid ? Joe Reifer Photography Show Night photography is my favorite photography of all. Bay Area photographer Joe Reifer is having a show of his photos in Alameda at The Lucky Ju Ju Pinball Art Gallery. His show opens this Friday from 6:00 p.m. to midnight and according to the Laughing Squid not only can you check out Joe’s photos but you can play pinball on 20 vintage pinball machines. Hey, the machines themselves sound like some great photography material. Nighthawks also posted on this show as well.

Five Advertisers Sign Up With TiVo

PVR Wire TiVo the ad zapper is quickly becoming TiVo the advertising giant. Five new companies have signed up for TiVo’s new advertising program which will allow advertisers to include a “call to action” feature tied in with their message. Ameriquest, E*Trade Financial, Nautilus, Novartis and Tylenol are now on board.

TiVo Falls Slightly on Downgrade

PVR Wire PVRWire is reporting on a TiVo downgrade today from Sanders Morris Harris. In what one might expect as a positive day for the stock given the new cable deal announced earlier today instead the stock turned down on the Sanders Morris Harris news.

FlickrBlog Says I Have a Good Eye

FlickrBlog Cool. The FlickrBlog has I have a good eye. What they are referencing of course is my growing list of Flickr favorites. I’ve got almost 6,000 photos marked as favorites at this point on Flickr. Flickr allows you to mark any photo that you see as a favorite and then saves it for you to look back at later. Each day I seem to become more and more addicted to Flickr and one of my favorite things to do is to find amazing photography on there and then catalog it in my favorites group.

Without a doubt some of the best photographers in the world are publishing on Flickr today.

I’m assuming (hoping?) that someday I’ll be able to run my Flickr favorites through my Media Center PC in my living room and have one heck of a slide show. I can run my favorites now in a slide show but not taking up the entire screen like I’d like.

I find my favorites from a lot of different places. Three groups that seem to have consistently good photos are Fav/View>=5% Utata and The Safe.

The Safe is kind of an interesting concept from something of a controversial group on Flickr. The group is called deleteme and basically they invite you to submit photos and then have people honestly and sometimes savagely critique them. This is not the place that you want to publish nice photos of your kids or your cat. This is photos where you invite the abuse and sometimes praise of your peers. Each member of deleteme provides a “saveme” or a “deleteme” vote to your photo. If you get 10 deleteme votes your are thrown out with most likely a bunch of criticism on your photo. Some of the criticism is constructive, some of the criticism is vicious, and sometimes a vote is provided with no substantive criticism at all. Photos that receive 10 save me votes before 10 delete me votes end up in the above mentioned group “the safe,” and there is some pretty good photography in there.

I know that I’ve learned more about my work from the deleteme group. Fortunately I’ve got a pretty thick skin.

Other places that I find favorites are from my growing list of Flickr contacts. As I find super photographers I’ll frequently add them as a contact. Then I’m regularly kept appraised of their work and can add their best as favorites when I see them. Some of my favorite photographers on Flickr at the moment include Ropeboy (Sam Bloomberg Rissman), Aqui-Ali (Eddy Joaquim), .lush, _rebekka. Lately John Curley has also been doing some really terrific work. (John is speaking at the Flickr meetup at the Apple store tomorrow night by the way).

I also frequently browse other people’s favorites. Here you can also find some pretty amazing work as well.

Why IPTV is DOA

Web Edition – NewsGator Online: “I’ve had a few conversations with folks at different companies servicing the IPTV space over the past few weeks. These conversations have hardened my prior opinion. IPTV is nothing more than cable in sheep’s clothing and cable isn’t going to be the wolf much longer.

IPTV has a major problem (and lots of smaller ones); it is a closed proprietary delivery mechanism.”

Interesting thoughts from Alex Rowland

More on Orlowski’s Emailgate

Scobleizer: Microsoft Geek Blogger Last week I published an article “Andrew Orlowski, Sloppy Journalist or Bold Faced Liar,” and the story has drawn a bit of criticism. I thought today I’d examine some of the criticism.

To give a bit of background, thus far the story goes like this: An allegation is made by Andrew Orlowski and his publication The Register that an IE7 beta (yes beta) does not allow Yahoo! or Google Toolbars to work. Robert Scoble, Microsoft employee and blogger, calls the Register on this and says that in fact it does work. Orlowski publishes an alleged email from Scoble where Scoble allegedly writes that it doesn’t work. The problem? According to Robert Scoble the email was never sent by him as published by the Register. I’ve also personally seen the email in question and it is clear that it has been modified, tampered with, and that extra text not in the original has been added.

Orlowski published this email (from an anonymous source no less) and offered it up as proof that Scoble was lying and then went on to disparage Scoble’s character publicly in print saying, “But one ethic should hardly need to be spelled out. You try and tell the truth. Is this the end of the road for Scoble’s Redmond adventure?”

Now I’m no fan of Orlowski’s. The basis for my original article was a piece that Orlowski had written back in January of 2004 when mere days before Microsoft was set to launch the largest marketing push for their Media Center PC at that time to date, Orlowski had come out saying that Microsoft was going to shelve the Media Center PC entirely (once again citing more of his anonymous sources). Orlowski got the story wrong in a big way and neither the Register nor Mr. Orlowski ever bothered to explain how they could have gotten things so backwards.

My own personal view is that as a journalist when you choose to use anonymous sources you bear an added degree of responsibility for getting your story right. And if you get it wrong (as in the case when CBS and Dan Rather got some rather famous memos wrong recently) you come out afterwards and admit that you got it wrong and hopefully provide some kind of explanation.

So my backdrop on the whole recent Orlowski Emailgate thing is that my previous experience with this journalist was bad — that I found him to be unprofessional and I stopped reading his publication, The Register.

But the more recent allegations that Orlowski published a fraudulent email go beyond even the tenets of bad journalism. This is simply about as low as a journalist can go.

Now let’s address the criticism that I’ve recently received over my coverage of this situation. First off, an anonymous commenter writes, “Media Center WAS going to be canned. But the OEM outcry forced it back out. Haven’t you ever heard of backtracking? You don’t know the full story there. So don’t assume you do. Blogs makes mistakes too, but journalists have tend to have tons of sources that aren’t just echoing blog rumors.”

Ok, yeah right. So Microsoft was going to completely can Media Center and then (all due to the supreme power of The Register) they decided to do a 180 mere days later and change course and give the product line a huge push including a $20 million “Digital Joy” marketing campaign and having this product be the lead product at CES for them.

I don’t think so. Jeremy Wright, who was working on the Media Center team at the time, also denies that the product was going to be shelved.

Next we have someone named “kuri” who suggests that my article is “probably libelous.” Uh, ok. First the truth is always the best defense against libel, but secondly I have been careful to choose my words when it comes to Mr. Orlowski. “Possibly” “Maybe” etc. Is it “possible” that Orlowski made up a story out of thin air when the events that he suggested were going to take place never took place? Sure it’s possible. It’s not libel to suggest it’s possible. Orlowski has not even denied that he made up the story. He certainly has never provided us an explanation on how he got his original story so wrong? In order to prove libel, Mr. Orlowski would need to prove that it was in fact impossible that he made up the story and that I knew this. Unlikely to happen.

Kuri then takes issue with the following quote: “So MAYBE Orlowski was played or MAYBE he makes things up or MAYBE he is actually a nefarious tool being used to spread lies and propaganda, or who knows, MAYBE he just likes to load up a big bong full of bud before sitting down at the keyboard.” Note the word “maybe” Kuri. I did not say that Orlowski loads up a big bong full of bud before writing. I said MAYBE he loads up a big bong full of bud before writing. There’s a difference. The point is that obviously I’m using inflammatory language because I feel strongly about the case and obviously I’m taking a bit of literary license here. Still not libel though. And I don’t even know if Orlowski composes his stories at a keyboard. For all I know he still may compose his writing on an old manual typewriter.

Here’s what I do know. I know that Orlowski got a story wrong in the past and never offered any explanation why. I do know that Orlowski published a private email and never bothered to confirm the accuracy of the email with the alleged author who has denied the email. I do know that Orlowski himself has turned his missteps into personal attacks on someone else’s character in print. And I do know that all of the above included so called “anonymous sources.” I think if there is a libel case to be had here it’s by Scoble against Orlowski. And if Orlowski feels that I’ve libeled him I’d love to hear it. I’d love to see this guy defend himself as a journalist.

I also wrote to Orlowski’s editor Joe Fay voicing my concerns and have yet to hear back from either him, Orlowski or The Register. Making up an email is a serious charge as is publishing fraudulent emails. Rather lost his job over it. I’d hope that this issue would not go ignored by the Register and I would hope that the rest of the tech journalist community also would not let The Register off so easily on this one.

I’d encourage anyone else to contact Joe Fay as well and ask for more clarification on this issue on behalf of The Register.

Hey at least my article “Andrew Orlowski, Sloppy Journalist or Bold Faced Liar” shows up on the first page of Google results for both Orlowski and “Andrew Orlowski.”

Update: It’s been pointed out to me that Rather did not actually lose his job over his now famous memos. Four other people at CBS did though and Rather “retired” volutarily a few months later. Fair point.