Puffbox

Simon Dickson's gov-tech blog, active 2005-14. Because permalinks.

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  • 17 Nov 2006
    Uncategorised

    No10 man attacks hostile blogosphere

    Matthew Taylor, Tony Blair’s chief adviser on political strategy for the next few days at least, reckons it’s all our fault if e-democracy remains a distant dream. The BBC reports that, in comments to an unidentified conference, he said:

    ‘We have a citizenry which can be caricatured as being increasingly unwilling to be governed but not yet capable of self-government… The internet has immense potential but we face a real problem if the main way in which that potential expresses itself is through allowing citizens to participate in a shrill discourse of demands…. At a time at which we need a richer relationship between politicians and citizens than we have ever had, to confront the shared challenges we face, arguably we have a more impoverished relationship between politicians and citizens than we have ever had. It seems to me this is something which is worth calling a crisis.

    ‘What is the big breakthrough, in terms of politics, on the web in the last few years? It’s basically blogs which are, generally speaking, hostile and, generally speaking, basically see their job as every day exposing how venal, stupid, mendacious politicians are.’

    If that isn’t an attack on Guido Fawkes, I don’t know what is. And whilst I agree with the sentiment (and have said as much here in previous weeks), I don’t think it’s at all fair to tar the entire blogosphere with the same brush. There are too many good people out there trying to stimulate good political debate. Yes, it’s embarrassing that Guido remains the #1 most visited UK political blog… but even a quick glance through Iain Dale’s Top 100s would reveal countless more constructive attempts.

  • 17 Nov 2006
    e-government

    Have you seen this offender?

    Britain now has its own ‘Most Wanted’ list of child sex offenders who have failed to comply with notification requirements – although claims that it’s on a ‘nationwide scale’ are rather undermined by the fact that the site lists just five individuals, albeit from different parts of the country.

    If you see someone you recognise (and well done if you do, given the poor image quality), you’re asked to phone Crimestoppers or the local police force in question… or there’s an email contact form which promises that ‘all information is submitted over a encrypted connection’. I’ll take their word for that, but I don’t immediately see any evidence of a secure connection.

    How much use will this be? Well, being realistic, how many members of the public are going to drop by this website every now and again, on the off-chance they might see someone they recognise? And there’s no RSS feed to alert you to new ‘subjects’. I’m getting really depressed by the number of new government websites which don’t feature RSS from day one. Come on, guys – we can do better.

  • 17 Nov 2006
    Uncategorised

    Google owns the internet (continued)

    Further evidence of the power of search engines – and why you should be concentrating on search engine optimisation any time you build a site, or write an article. Heather at Hitwise reveals that Google now has a 78% market share in UK searching… and that figure is rising, up 9% on last year. (Yahoo, MSN and Ask don’t make it beyond a single digit.)

    But even more interesting, she notes that 35-40% of all traffic to sites classified by Hitwise as ‘Travel Agencies, Appliances & Electronics and Insurance’ – all big players when it comes to e-commerce – comes from search engines. And yes, the trend here is upwards too. ‘In the week to 21st October 2006,’ she writes, ‘Travel Agencies received 39% of their upstream visits from search engines, up 7% in the past six months. For such an established category, that is a huge gain.’

    In other words – people are becoming ever more reliant on search engines, and more specifically on Google, to get what they want from the internet. If you’re running a website, and you aren’t giving serious thought to your placement on Google, and how you can improve it – consider yourself warned.

  • 16 Nov 2006
    Uncategorised

    Hello world

    A quick check of my blog stats reveals that my comments on yesterday’s first half hour of Al Jazeera English got picked up by Slate, the Guardian and the BBC’s Arabic website. Even my cynical side gets a bit excited at seeing my name under their mastheads, and so completely unexpectedly. Did nobody else think to blog about it? Hi to anyone following those links, by the way. And if you can tell me what the Arabic page says about me, even better. ๐Ÿ™‚

  • 16 Nov 2006
    Uncategorised

    AlJazeera's new English website disappoints

    I’m really disappointed by AlJazeera’s new English-language website. There are hints that they’re trying to do good things with it… but the actual execution doesn’t really follow through. I have to say, this is in stark contrast to the super-polished nature of the new TV channel.

    They offer both Flash and HTML versions of the homepage, for example: but it only covers the ‘top stories’ area, and it doesn’t do much more than offer a ‘hover’ effect, turning the photos from greyscale to colour. If that’s all they wanted to do, I guess they could have done it using javascript and/or CSS. But having made the decision to go with Flash on the homepage, I’d have hoped for something much more ambitious. I have yet to see a news site really pushing Flash to its limits for homepage (or story) presentation. Someone will do it, eventually, and everyone will love it.

    The rendering of the stories themselves is a bit clunky, but that’s nothing compared to the appalling code markup under the surface. Sites shouldn’t be using TABLEs these days, for example – and they certainly shouldn’t have inline styling (‘font size=’ inside all paragraph tags? are you using FrontPage or something?). There’s also something pretty horrible going on with CMS buttons appearing in the page code. (Try turning off the CSS on a story page to see the true horror.) As promised, there are RSS feeds per channel (Americas, Africa, Europe, Middle East etc), but they haven’t bothered with autodiscovery tags. It looks like they’re using the unpopular Microsoft Content Management System product, but that’s no excuse.

    Jeff Jarvis also notes the curious approach to video streaming: you get 15 minutes of free low-bandwidth video, after which you have to restart the stream. Continuous broadband-quality viewing costs ยฃ11.99 a month.

    They clearly aren’t taking the web anywhere near as seriously as their TV product… and for an operation effectively starting from scratch this week, that’s unforgivable.

  • 15 Nov 2006
    Uncategorised

    Al Jazeera English – instant reaction

    Al Jazeera went live at 12 noon GMT, broadcasting live from Doha, Qatar – and there’s no denying it looks beautiful. It takes the best bits of the Sky News studio set, the best elements of the BBC’s graphics, and adds an extra layer of class on top. You can really see the benefit of the HD signals coming through. Subtle on-screen graphics – with neither ticker nor clock. No advert breaks, and no ‘headlines every five minutes’. A few wobbly camera shots in the first few moments, but nothing unforgivable, certainly not at this stage.

    The top story, a little disappointingly, was itself – a revolution in TV news, or something. From there, almost inevitably, we go to the latest deaths in Israel / Palestine… and the channel starts to show its distinguishing features. Lots of live two-way interviews, including correspondents in Gaza, Jerusalem, a Darfur refugee camp, Tehran (a welcome return for Rageh Omaar), and most interesting of all – Harare, Zimbabwe, apparently the first live TV signal from a foreign broadcaster in seven years.

    Interesting to watch so far – but it all feels a bit worthy. There weren’t really any obvious ‘news’ lines to a lot of the reports. I’m sure conditions in Sudan are terrible, but nothing has obviously happened today to make them any worse than yesterday. Same goes for Zimbabwe. Maybe this is just the channel making an early mark, but it’s going to have to develop a harder news edge… and I wonder if that’s possible when you take such a consciously global remit.

    It’s all happening on Sky Digital channel 514. Look out for an exclusive interview with Tony Blair later in the day (apparently).

  • 15 Nov 2006
    e-government

    Downing St launches e-petitions site

    This really is fantastic. ‘Downing Street is working in partnership with the non-partisan charitable project mySociety to provide a service to allow citizens, charities and campaign groups to set up petitions that are hosted on the Downing Street website, enabling anyone to address and deliver a petition directly to the Prime Minister.’ Don’t underestimate the implications here. This isn’t just government allowing others to comment on its ideas; this is a government website actively encouraging people to tell government what to do.

    (It isn’t unique, of course: the Scots have had a similar system for some time, and of course there are quite a few independent initiatives out there. But this is Downing Street we’re talking about.)

    I’m most interested by the fact that it’s been done by mySociety, an external body who do it for the love of it. Their great work proves that it is possible… and it embarrasses the official e-government channels, who spend millions and don’t even come close to something like theyworkforyou.com. I’m gradually coming to the conclusion that the only way to really deliver change in the public sector is via such guerilla tactics.

  • 14 Nov 2006
    e-government

    Scots trump Miliband's podcast initiative

    First the blog, then the infamous wiki… now David Miliband is getting into the podcasting game. He’s doing a series of short down-the-line interviews with The Guardian, from the UN’s climate change conference in Kenya. As ever, Miliband comes across very well, keen to engage with the general audience (helped, it must be said, by a fairly soft interviewing style). The audio files are MP3s in moderate quality only, fair enough given the poor quality of the phone line from Nairobi.

    I can’t help feeling a bit uncomfortable with the ‘podcast’ label. It’s a series of standard journalist-with-minister interviews, which wouldn’t be the slightest bit remarkable if they were done on a radio programme. But the distribution via MP3 and RSS, through a non-broadcaster (in the traditional sense) gives it some novelty value.

    Ross Finnie, the environment minister in the Scottish Executive, sees his audio and raises him some video, though. Granted, it’s a scripted piece-to-camera, less than two and a half minutes – and filmed before he left. But it’s good to see these early attempts at video nonetheless.

  • 14 Nov 2006
    Uncategorised

    Skype, you need to offer voicemails-by-email. Now.

    There’s a new beta version of the free Skype ‘internet phone calls’ software, but I’m still bitterly disappointed by one glaring omission. Even when you become a paying customer, with an incoming phone number (for normal phones to call) and a voicemail account, there’s no way to get your voicemails emailed to you. Rival product Gizmo Project does this… and it does it free of charge.

    I want to use Skype. It’s the cool tool, with at least some degree of name recognition (although I can count on one hand the number of calls I’ve ever received on it). The video chat is really cute. But it eats system resources, and uses the same port used by a webserver, which is a pain when I’m doing any code testing.

    Listen, Skype: seriously, you need to sort out a way to email me my voicemails, as an MP3 attachment or something. Otherwise there is simply no compelling reason for me to stay with you, and I will switch to Gizmo. Reluctantly.

  • 14 Nov 2006
    Uncategorised

    Al Jazeera to launch on Wednesday lunchtime

    Tomorrow’s going to be one of the most interesting media launches for some time, as Al Jazeera’s long-awaited English language service finally begins broadcasting. The TV channel, with a host of familiar faces, will be backed up by a relaunched website which promises ‘RSS feeds, live streams and downloadable clips from the channel, as well as interactive discussions and polling’.

    If you’re interested, there’s a promo video available for viewing on YouTube…

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EIVikteiQj8]

    … but it was posted by someone with the ID ‘ForeignPolicyMag’, which suggests it hasn’t been put there ‘officially’.

    Can it work? It’s going to be fascinating to see. I’m not sure the general audience is ready for a channel with a foreign-sounding name, let alone a radically different viewpoint… but maybe they aren’t interested in the general audience anyway. It all starts tomorrow lunchtime.

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