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Vintage Digital LLC - Step 1 - A Blogging Platform

vindigscreenshotVintage Digital LLC needed a voice. It needed a place for the team members to talk about what we are up to, things we're working on, conferences we're attending, and things we're thinking about. You know the drill. Basically we wanted a place that we could blog together. The team is busy on different client work causing us to suffer from the classic Cobbler's Dilemma. We really needed a pair of shoes, even a modest pair.

We have launched a very simple blogging site for the time being. The intent will be to create a more robust and visually interesting site in the future. For the time being, this gives us a collective voice on the Web. In the near future, you should look out for an interesting article on Ubercart from John Fiala plus many more tidbits as the New Year unfolds.

Your Blog on the Kindle

I've just syndicated this blog on the Amazon Kindle. The Kindle is a wireless reading device that can hold thousands of books, newspapers, and magazines in a light and thin device. I bought my wife one recently-she tried reading on her iPod Touch but found it uncomfortable. That said, all the books she buys for her Kindle, she can also read on her iPod.

iContact Community

What a curious site. iContact Community merges blogs, forums, and voting into a single site. There are two main kinds of users:

1) Publishers
2) Members

It appears being a member is free. The idea is that you can browse through the publisher's blog posts--which are pretty much advertisements. Publishers pay a fee to blog and send newsletters to a mailing list that they create through the site.

Publishers can:

  • Create a list
  • Add a contact
  • Create a message
  • Create a campaign
  • Create a blog

The publishers are broken up into:

Blogvertise

I've signed onto a service called Blogsvertise. The idea is that they email you goods and services to write about. You can use the content any way you please but you need to link back to the good or service that you have been assigned at least three times in your posting.

It looks like another way to monetize a blog--they indicate they pay anywhere from $2.00 a post to $25.00 a post. It will be interesting to see what kinds of assignments that they send and if they will mesh well with my current content.

I'll share my thoughts on Blogsvertise as I dig deeper into who and what they are and what I think of the community.

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Blogging Old School

I'm off in Kansas right now visiting with the Smith clan, Paula's Mother's side of the family.  I don't have access to the Internet on my laptop--DUN isn't working right--so I am blogging old school on Paula's Uncle's computer.  This has given me my first taste of Windows Vista.

  1. It appears many of the new features in Vista have been pretty much embedded in OSX for quite some time.
  2. Many of the old, annoying, warning messages still pop up--all be it in a more attractive way.
  3. I do think that the interface is much more intutitive than XP.

I wish that I had more time to mess around with the software.  I tend to think it is a huge step forward for Windows users.

Qumana Redux

I was asked by a colleague if I would write a "How To" on Qumana.  I've been using Qumana now for several months to post to three different blogs--dogstar.org, imagespace.blogspot.com, and secondlife.techsoup.org.
What is Qumana?

  1. Qumana is a free blog posting package that allows you to craft offline and post once you have completed editing your narrative.
  2. Qumana is a tagging tool that allows you to easily control what tags are used.
  3. Qumana allows you to insert ads if you want.

The software includes a very simple text editing menu bar that allows you to colour text, use bold, italics, underline, and crossout.  You can justify to the left, center, right or full block.  You can use bullets or numbered lists.  You can quote and indent.  It makes embedding pictures simple, will link for you and has spell check.

Tagging Tutorials, Part II Blogs, Nonprofits in SL

Tagging on blogs can have multiple benefits.  The first is, if your blog is searchable, the tags prove to be a way for readers to find like content.  For example, on this blog (built on Drupal), if you click on a single tag it will return all results that match that tag.
Try clicking on "npsl" and see the result.  In Drupal, a function called Taxonomy makes this magic happen.  We could, in fact add navigation to the site that would match a given tag essentially creating navigation to content that will for ever expand.

Rapid City

I am on my way to Rapid City, SD for the annual gathering of Western States Folklorists. Normally this meeting takes place somewhere in the in the West. This year the meeting is in the Midwest and Folklorists form the MidWest have been invited to participate.

WESTAF supports this gathering each year and sends a representative. This year, that person happens to be me. I will be doing a little presentation of The Ties That Bind web site that I've been working on. The site has a few cleanup items, but is for the most part complete. I'll also be doing a workshop on Monday on Web 2.0.

Blogger Reviewed My Site

Apparently at some point in the last 24 hours, Blogger reviewed my site and made the decision that it wasn't a spam risk and unblocked my ability to post via an offline client.  The last posts that I pushed through using Qumana published seamlessly.  They had indicated that they would email me with a decision--no email, but who cares.  I don't suppose I need MORE mail in any of my email boxes.
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Blogger and Qumana, one nit

This isn't a flaw in Qumana.  It isn't a flaw with Blogger either.  When I post to my Drupal site, the process is seamless.  I type in the Qumana screen, edit, spell check, link, embed.  The process is slick and quick.  In many ways it is a better experience than typing into the blog itself.  This morning, when I connected via DUN, and posted my previous entry it was lightning fast even on the Treo 650.  In other words, I think that Qumana will ultimately make me more efficient.  I may well load it onto my iMac at home as well as the portable I carry for work.