Archive for November, 2008

Gravatars, Wavatars, Identicons and the MonsterID

Monday, November 17th, 2008

In the beginning there was avatar. And the avatar was good. But in time it became hard to replicate over and over again across many different blogs and forums and MySpace and Facebook and LinkedIn and lord knows where else you people have been!

Like obedient servants, we did as asked; replicating avatars everywhere we went in a tedious process. Perhaps we picked a new one each time in some random fashion. We scoured the Internet for the latest inane GIFs linking to them and hoping the links stayed valid or pilfering them and uploading the files to Imageshack and the like.

Then, one fine day, the web gods smiled upon us and, taking forth the Book of Armaments, Chapter Two, verses Nine to Twenty-one, were inspired to produce the Gravatar (Globally Recognized Avatar). The Gravatar, unlike its red-neck cousin avatar, is not simply a hyperlinked image from anywhere. Rather, it is a service which uses your encrypted email address to correlate you to a specific image uploaded by you and hosted by Gravatar itself. Yes, it’s free. Any software that supports Gravatar can interface with it so that you never need specify an avatar again so long as you use that email address, buddy.

We’re not out of the Fire Swamp yet, Buttercup. You see, Gravatar images may not necessarily be unique. That is to say, there does not appear to be anything preventing the same image being used for 2 different accounts. The horror! If this is what you’re after, consider them groovy Wavatars, Identicons and the MonsterIDs. Say what?

Wavatars
Identicons
MonsterIDs

Based on your encrypted email address, these automatically generated ‘avatars’ can be considered unique. Each different service claims differing combinations in the billions. Wavatar, for example, notes that in excess of 55 billion different Wavatar icons are possible. The tradeoff? You have no control over what they look like. As Mom would say, “You get what you get and you don’t throw a fit.”

Here at the Untangled Web, we use Gravatars with Identicons as the fallback service. This means that if you have no Gravatar defined, an Identicon will be provided for you. Isn’t that sweet of us? Sign up for a Gravatar now or let us produce an Identicon for you. Then go ahead and comment. Give it a try…

Stockholders in cyberspace

Friday, November 14th, 2008

Herrmann, A. F. (2007). Stockholders in cyberspace: Weick’s sensemaking online. Journal of Business Communication, 44, 13-35.

Abstract

The growth of individuals investing in the stock of publicly traded companies in the late 1990s, coincided with the development of new media outlets for equivocal financial data. Discussion board participants enact an assortment of messages, experience a number of texts simultaneously and therefore are always immersed within a multiplicity of discourses.

In this article, I examined one such cyberspace to investigate participant sensemaking related to their financial holdings. Through the utilization of Weick’s double interact discussion board participants make sense of and organize equivocal messages. For business communication practitioners these sensemaking processes call for the creation of dialogic texts that engage readers on multiple levels. Limitations and future possibilities for research are surveyed.

Available at: http://job.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/44/1/13

NetBeans 6.5 Imminent with PHP

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

At long last, the 6.5 version of NetBeans is due to arrive in 10 days time. It’s been a long 7 months since the last major release of the IDE and application platform. This one, like so many others before it, is worth the wait.

One of the more anticipated features for NetBeans 6.5 is the native PHP support. This will mark the first version that embraces the ever popular interpreted scripting language. It appears that PHP 5+ will be required and that it will support code completion/highlighting, debugging (via xdebug), stubbing out database code and more.

In a recent blog post to the community, the PHP for Netbeans Team wondered aloud what PHP framework support developers wold like to see made available within Netbeans. The question set off something of a firestorm on the NetBeans blogging site resulting in the most highly voted upon issue in NetBeans history. While the voting is still open until the release of 6.5, Symfony , with its 400+ votes, appears to be a shoe-in for eventual support in the IDE. This is great news as Symfony is the most Rails-like framework I’ve ever used for PHP.

Sadly, do not expect to see the arrival of Symfony support very soon. It likely will not make an appearance until the next release. As a consilation, Prado has early support in NetBeans as the Team begins to investigate fleshing out a way to add framework support in a modular manner.


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