Puffbox

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

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  • 6 Jun 2007
    Uncategorised

    BBC adds pseudo-trackbacks to blog template

    There’s a new feature in the sidebar of Nick Robinson’s BBC blog: a list of ‘Blogs linking here’. It’s quite a nice feature, with a couple of extracts from particular blogs (selected and extracted manually), plus links off to Google Search and Technorati searches.

    I’ve done something similar with a couple of projects recently (see here), using this as a proxy to Trackbacks (which are questionable at the best of times). Comment Is Free does likewise, with links to preconstructed Technorati searches for every article it posts… just click the green Technorati logo. It wouldn’t be a huge stretch to pull in the Technorati search results via RSS, and display them automatically on the page… but that becomes a huge risk.

  • 6 Jun 2007
    Uncategorised

    Telegraph launches RSS-reading site for novices

    I confess, I wasn’t expecting this: the Daily Telegraph has just unveiled its own RSS-reading website, an extension of the existing My Telegraph blogging platform. Shane writes:

    First of all we’ve chosen the feeds for our readers. Purists will argue that this goes against the spirit of RSS, which is about choosing whatever you want. However, while the first half of My Telegraph, community, was about bringing blogs to people who had never tried them before, so the second half, personalisation, is about bringing news feeds to novices.

    By limiting choice, we’ve taken most of the hard work out of setting up an RSS reader. My Telegraph members can choose from more than 100 feeds in eight categories and the site will automatically remember their preferences for the next visit.

    The next release of the site will add a customisable category, with fifteen empty slots for any feed you like. We’re holding it back to let people get used to the feed reading concept first.

    Not sure if/when I’ll get time to play with this – besides, I’m definitely a purist on this one. But I tell you what: selling solutions based on RSS to large corporate clients just got an awful lot easier.

  • 5 Jun 2007
    Uncategorised

    Puffbox web app nails murder suspect

    Policeman’s helmet with new Puffbox-inspired badgeLess than a week ago, Puffbox handed over our map-mashup tool for journalists to Sky News. Sky went live with it on Monday, as part of their Crime Uncovered week. Today:

    One of Britain’s most wanted men has been arrested after being featured on the Sky News website. Police had been hunting the 62-year-old man in connection with the murder of a woman in Cannock, Staffordshire. Detectives said that the arrest came from people looking at our interactive map, which forms part of our Crime Uncovered section.

    You don’t mess with Puffbox. Guess we’d better add ‘crimebusting’ to our list of consultancy services. 😉

  • 5 Jun 2007
    e-government

    Miliband guest-blogs at the Telegraph

    David Miliband continues to extend his influence across the web: during his trip to the US this week, he’s going to be writing a ‘daily log’ for the new ‘Earth’ section of the Telegraph website. Not the first time he’s done this: last year he fed content (via audio) from a UN conference in Kenya. Definitely an interesting approach: making use of existing platforms with larger audiences, rather than attempting to build up his own. Precisely the matter being reviewed by Tom Steinberg for the Cabinet Office, with publication (supposedly) imminent.

    The Telegraph’s Earth section itself is really well put together… plenty of substantial content, although it does bear the mark of the Business Development Manager. There’s heavy promotion for its sponsors, without whom I wonder if this would have existed. And they really need to check its cross-browser compatibility: the ‘water efficiency calculator’ on the section home page is yer basic Flash, but it no like Firefox.

  • 4 Jun 2007
    e-government

    Taking the road tax petition one step further

    I’ve had conversations recently with two of the people most closely involved with the Downing Street e-petitions site. A common thread was their belief that the massive response to the road pricing petition was A Good Thing… but that we probably should have had something bigger and better to follow it up.

    With that in mind, it’s interesting to see this ‘debate’ on the Drivers’ Voice website between Peter Roberts, the man who started the petition and Dr Derek Wall of the Green Party. Both are given a few hundred words to state their case; there’s a blog-style comments section; and two great big ‘vote’ buttons. Quite a nice way of taking the debate another step forward. It’ll be v-e-r-y interesting to see if any readers of Drivers’ Voice are swayed by what (by my reading) is a more articulate and more persuasive argument from the Green man.

  • 4 Jun 2007
    Uncategorised

    Crumbs From Your Table

    I’ve put enough money into Bono’s pockets over the years. I might try to get some back. 🙂

    (To my shame, I can’t immediately think of a better U2 pun, based on a better known song. Anyone?)

  • 4 Jun 2007
    Uncategorised

    Puffbox's new SkyMapping function goes live

    I mentioned last week that we’d delivered our Google Map mashup mechanism to Sky News, for use in their Crime Uncovered week. You can see the first output from it here – but as I said last time, bear in mind the really clever stuff is on the back end, as a non-specialist journalist puts all this together.

  • 3 Jun 2007
    e-government

    Directgov under fire

    I really set the cat among the pigeons when I noted the existence of a Directgov internal blog (which subsequently disappeared). I sort of regret mentioning it now; although it was a bit daft of them to hope it would remain a secret, I’m happier for knowing that some of them are experimenting with tools like blogs.

    Beneath one of those posts, Paul Canning wrote a pretty damning comment on Directgov generally. He backs this up today with a review of their efforts (or otherwise) as regards search marketing. With evidence (which mostly holds up, although I’d question some of it), he rightly describes it as ‘not very efficient and either ill-advised or ill-directed’:

    ‘Search is the gatekeeper to Government services online, but in failing to take up Search Marketing with any seriousness government is abandoning citizens to the market for their advice at crucial moments. This is even more important when – as a result of a wider failure around linking – government advice does not show up automatically or with any consistency at the top of organic results.’

    Absolutely. If anyone ever saw the presentations I regularly gave to Government Communications Network staff, you’ll recognise my point here: government finds itself in a competitive information market. It used to have a monopoly in terms of availability and authority. Both of those disappeared several years ago.

    But I will come to Directgov’s defence in one respect. Paul wrote in my comments: ‘Just working with Google to boost eGov PageRanks would do more to send traffic to online services, many times more, than the entire multimillion pound ‘branding’ mess they’re running.’ There’s some merit in his comment, but it misses one important aspect. A key audience for the Directgov branding effort is the Civil Service itself.

    The UK population sees one government, not twenty-odd Whitehall departments. But that didn’t exactly stop those Whitehall departments developing their own web presences, and usually several of them. Creating a content-rich Directgov was entirely the right thing to do. But to survive and thrive, it needs the engagement of the public sector – and to do that, it need profile. If a bit of real-world advertising helps in that regard, I don’t consider it a bad thing. There are better ways to spend public money, true. But without this spend, I hate to think how much more would be spent developing new, unconnected web presences.

  • 1 Jun 2007
    Uncategorised

    Puffbox business cards (1st ed)

    Business cards (1st ed)

    Presenting the first run of official Puffbox business cards. Basically it’s the company logo in all the various palette colours, plus a few ‘special editions’. I’ve got half a mind to ‘open source’ the second run; so get your thinking caps on. 😉

  • 31 May 2007
    Uncategorised

    SkyMapping by Puffbox: map mashup mechanism for journalists

    early concept

    It’s a big day for Puffbox, my own little web consultancy. Today we officially delivered our first ‘built from scratch’ product: SkyMapping, a map-based mashup mechanism we designed and developed for my old mates at Sky News.

    The idea came to me in the wake of the Virginia Tech shootings. It was a major news story confined within a very small geographic area, with lots of eyewitness accounts, some accompanied by photos and even video. But you didn’t really get a sense of how it all pieced together. What happened where, and who saw what? And where exactly is Virginia Tech anyway? The BBC has quite a nice visual treatment of the events, but it’s basically just a static aerial photo with embedded links to content lower down the page – very ‘web 1.0’. I had an idea that we could do more.

    Having lashed together a few things with Google Maps (like a map-based view of MPs’ activity driven by TheyWorkForYou, or this one using BBC football headlines), I knew there were ways we could use the Google Maps API to identify a particular aerial view, mark points on it, and add rich HTML content into the pop-up ‘speech bubbles’. With a bit of extra coding, you could create a notional ‘sequence’ of points, with each one linking to the next, letting you tell a proper flowing narrative. Plus of course, inherent in the Google application, you can click around a bit to ‘get your bearings’, or switch from ‘map’ view to ‘satellite’.

    Any geek could have told you this; many geeks could have built it too. But the really clever bit has been the usability on the ‘back-end’. We’ve made it a doddle for a non-geek journalist to throw a ‘flowing narrative’ mashup together in a matter of minutes. To position a point, there’s a draggable map with a crosshair over the centre: place the crosshair exactly where you want the point (with all the usual Google zoom controls), and press ‘save’. To create the ‘sequence’ of points, it’s a couldn’t-be-simpler drag-and-drop interface.

    The first use of the application will be next week, as part of Sky’s Crime Uncovered week. Viewers are being invited to make their own video clips, and upload them to Sky’s YouTube-style site, SkyCast; the newsroom team will pick them up from there, and plonk them on the map. From the front-end, it won’t look a lot different to Sky’s last foray into Google Maps, for its Green Britain week. The concept doesn’t really lend itself to the ‘flowing narrative’ model, so the more advanced functions probably won’t be used. But this is only the start.

    Since I started on the project, there’s been something nearly every day which lent itself to map-based presentation. Today for example: the trail of Polonium traces round London in the wake of Alexander Litvinenko’s death; the continuing search for Madeleine; Blair’s farewell tour; the daily review of the local evening papers; I could go on. But it’ll really prove its worth next time we have something like the 7/7 bombings. Lots of media which can be plotted to a particular place; and put together ‘live’ by journalists, not designers or developers.

    Dan Gillmor blogged earlier this week: ‘It’s mind-boggling to me that more news organizations aren’t taking advantage of (maps’) possibilities, or, in most cases, even bothering to learn what’s possible.’ I like to think that our SkyMapping app may open some eyes in Osterley. Particular thanks to Hugh and Simon over at Sky; and my boy Gareth, who did most of the hard work. We’re great.

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