update

Drupal Basics--Applying a Security Patch

Over the last three or four days, I have had several people ask me about upgrading Drupal to the most recent versions of the software. At this point version 4 is up to 4.7.10 and version 5 is up to 5.5

Upgrading a Drupal site is pretty easy. It is always a good idea to grab a backup of your database and your Drupal files before starting the process. Upgrading from 4.x to 5.x is a little tougher than 5.x to a higher version of 5.x. This tutorial will focus on upgrading from a lower version of 5 to a higher version of 5. The most current version of Drupal is 5.5.

UK Photos Up-To-Date

Thanks to a good broadband connection the last two nights thanks to uncles and aunts, I am pretty much caught up on our UK photos for the first six days. Unfortunately, the flickr uploadr tool has been giving me grief on and off and so it seems like my photos in the flickr stream are not in proper order and I may have some duplicates. Please forgive anything that seems strange in that regard.

A Photo Recap So Far

Day 1

We did nearly nothing--but did experience the largest fish and chips ever.

largest fish for fish and chips ever

Exporting Contacts From Plaxo

I was playing with the export features in Plaxo. I was looking to invite/link from my address book to Facebook. The export was simple. I downloaded a vCard from Plaxo and then imported the contacts in the vCard directly to FB.

Then the import tool in Facebook made exceedingly simple to check who I know that was already on FB and send invites to everybody who wasn't. It was slick and easy.

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An Update on the Second Life/Congress Post

I got a note from Kiwini Oe on my other blog. He cleared up some mis-information that I had/have posted. I thought I would repost his information here.

Hi, Matthew -

The Democratic party did not spend $60,000 or any money for that matter on the Captiol Hill in Second Life. That was the estimated value that Clear Ink gave for the hours they spent creating the virtual Capitol Hill and managing the event. Some additional underwriting was provided by Sun Microsystems, without any condition of sponsorship.

The Democrats didn't create the space - that was also done entirely by Clear Ink. Conversations between Rep. Miller and John Gage of Sun were the original impetus for doing this, but after that Clear Ink picked it up and ran with it (plus a pair of scissors).

The opening event featured the Democratic representative because it coincided with the opening of the 110th Congress under new control of the Democrats. It all came together very quickly, and Clear Ink decided to keep the virtual Capitol Hill area open indefinitely for ongoing, bipartisan participation and debate. All involved, including the Democrats, thought that was a good idea.

Given the practical nature of the schedules, experience, and so on, I think you'll see more staffers visiting the space on an ongoing and regular basis, but as their own avatars, not ghosting their Representative. But I would also expect the occasional visit from an avatar managed by the actual members of congress.

Will this be used heavily, then fade (apart from whether that will happen to Second Life, too)? I don't know - it's an experiment. I've already chatted with an avatar at the virtual Capitol who was with a federal agency that was trying to do serious demonstration and education using Second Life as a platform. He said that getting any traction or support was difficult because people had never heard of or didn't understand what it was about. He said this one event will open doors for more use of Second Life as an educational platform.

I think we all have a lot to learn from this start.

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