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Sunday 16 May 2010

FOWA Dublin 2010 – Notes

FOWA DublinSome notes scribbled down during the talks.

Twitter and Geolocation

Raffi Krikorian (twitter, blog)

  • Yaketee: very simple web app that automatically detects your location and allows you to create chat groups with people in the same location.

What makes a place?

  • longitude, latitude. Sometimes this is a bit too precise.
  • A polygon (area rather than exact location). According to Raffi defining locations with polygons is currently what Twitter does for named areas.
  • Area name / town / country
  • WOEID: Where on Earth Identifier, defined by Yahoo.
  • TwID (?)
  • IP-based location
  • w3c location
  • brokered location: redistributes location info to other apps. Example: Yahoo’s fire eagle.
  • location databases
    • Yahoo (WOE db)
    • Twitter

Cloud Computing: Innovation vs Commodity

Simon Wardley (twitter, blog)

Simon based his talk on a graph showing the relationship between ubiquity and certainty (slides). It’s an asymptotic curve. On one end of the curve innovative technologies have low ubiquity and low certainty. At the other end of the graph, commoditized technologies have infinite certainty (no more change) and a capped ubiquity.

How can a technology move from the innovation stage to the commodity stage and become a service? Four requirements:

  • concept
  • attitude (willingness to see IT as a commodity)
  • suitability
  • technology

Hierarchy and componentisation: stable components act as building blocks and accelerate innovation.

Any technical progress that makes something more efficient increases the demand for its use.

Risks associated with move from innovation to service:

  • highly disruptive transition, how do you manage the new supplier?
  • outsourcing risks: lock-in, second sourcing…

Myths around cloud computing:

  • You have a choice (actually you don’t).
  • It will reduce IT spending. It doesn’t because you’ll end-up spending the same amount of money, you’ll simply do more stuff with it.
  • Cloud is an innovation. It’s not, it’s a commodity.

Accessibility

Robin Christopherson (twitter, blog)

  • Flash is really bad for accessibility: nothing can be done with the keyboard.
  • Internet Explorer has a function to bring up all links of a page inside a dialog. Not all browsers support that.
  • Chrome not accessible.

Robin did his talk and demos without being able to see the screen. He used keyboard shortcuts and text-to-speech. When he scrolls a list of items the system enunciates the links at very high speed (much too fast for me to understand, but I guess if it’s the only way you can use a PC you must end up getting pretty good at it).

  • Automated caption and automated timing. Youtube makes it easier to produce videos with captions: you upload the video and the transcript. Youtube uses voice recognition to associate time markers with captions (so you don’t have to do it yourself). It sort of works, enough to be useful.
  • Internet TV: projectcanvas.info: joint venture between the BBC, ITV, C4 and Five to build an internet TV platform with accessibility as a prime requirement.
  • Avoid horizontal scrolling: Opera mini can force single column browsing.
  • Siruna: can crunch down a website for any mobile platform.
  • Textcaptcha.com. Accessible CAPTCHAs. The distorted pictures of random words are not usable by blind people! This site suggests an alternative using logic questions. They even provide a REST web service.
  • Accessibility testing budget encompasses usability testing. i.e. if you test an app for accessibility for the blind you will spot usability issues affecting everyone else.

Saturday 15 May 2010

FOWA Dublin 2010 – Overall Impressions

Guinness Storehouse

The Irish edition of FOWA in Dublin lasts only one day. But because the presentations are short (about 20 minutes) you end-up seeing a lot of talks. And as usual what makes FOWA different is the opportunities you get for casual conversations with the speakers.

The venue was a building in the grassy campus of University College Dublin. Everyone could sit outside in the sun for lunch.

The talks that stood out for me were those by Raffi Krikorian (Twitter) and Christian Heilmann (Yahoo), both dealing with geolocation. When it’s about geo I always think of Google Latitude and Bing Maps but Yahoo actually does a lot too, especially in the area of APIs and web services.

IPv6: we’ve been hearing about the exhaustion of IPv4 addresses for a long time. I remember my teachers talking about this at school back in 1996. Well Owen Delong explained that this is now less than two years away. More info on the ARIN site. You can even get counter badges that give the current estimate for the exhaustion date.

I was sitting next to the CEO of TicTacDo, a collaborative how-to site that looks very useful. You could think of it as a Stack Overflow where each question would get a single answer in the form of an actionable TODO list. The app has been live for a while and the enterprise version will launch soon.

Databases: there are many alternatives to the classic relational database. Chris Lea described the NoSQL approach (slides): a range of tools (CouchDB, MongoDB, JackRabbit) should be considered before jumping on MySQL, SQL Server or Oracle.

Some excellent non technical talks by professional speakers: Alex Hunter about taking care of your brand and the lovely Relly Annett-Baker about content creation.

The after conference party at Solas was great: free bar from 7.30pm to midnight (you can never go wrong with that), very good atmosphere and good crowd.

One thing I noticed: during the last FOWA I attended there was an army of bloggers taking notes live on their laptops and posting as the conference was progressing (I could find the posts in Google 30 min after a presentation was finished). Not this time! I think I know why: three years ago people were using blogs to post live information, now they use Twitter, which is better suited for this kind of thing. Somehow Twitter has made blogs more quiet.

Sunday 9 May 2010

Maps at the British Library

The Jubilee line is working this Sunday. I’ll make the most of this exceptional event by going to the new maps expo at the British Library.

In September there will be a talk by Ed Parsons geospatial technologist at Google Maps and Steve Chilton from OpenStreetMap.