Dinarius = digital interest
31 August 2006

Nifty Little Pics

EDIT It’s a year later and here I am revamping the entire site once again. I’m using a blogging software called Textpattern which has a very shallow learning curve and is easy for anyone already familiar with HTML code.

The funny thing is that I find myself revamping the site in 2007 trying very hard to approach a design I made up in the beginning of 2006. The icons below were actually designed for a blog-like Dinarius.com at the beginning of 2006 when the first CSS-like design turned out to be too tough for me to keep up in HTML.

So whatever the outcome (this is the first transferred article) the info may still pertain to what you’re searching for and if you too are a graphic designer turned webmaster, I feel your pain. All “Articles About This Site” may interest you; so check that category! – BryanA.

8.31 – In a new attempt to not type too much and conserve some energy for fixing computers and getting stuck in traffic, brevity is paramount. “Favicon” That’s the little thing that appears when a page is, “Added To Favorites.” With the arrival of Internet Explorer 7 (IE7) many file types will be valid. Currently, the file extension is .ico

In refurbishing our own icons, we got a surprise. DIGG.com is the foremost authority on popular recommendations. A search in ‘All Digg’ for ‘favicon’ revealed one tiny result. Ironically, searching for icons revealed a DIGG competitor still in BETA. Oddly, BlinkList acts a lot like your Favorites list. You can save sites you’ve seen in the blink of an eye but have no time for.


Our refurbished icons.
Searching favicons at Google turned up Joe’s BlinkList. Go figure. More popular gets more blinks: An HTML kit gets top rank – we saw it, but didn’t bite; No.2 is HTMLbasix delivering generic information and mean-spirited popups hence, no link; No.3 actually just refers to FavIcon.co.UK which turns out to add another goodie.

Favicons can be 16×16 pixels and 32×32 pixels depending on their use. The Header Tag will contain two “link ref” elements as follows:

<link rel="shortcut icon" href="http://example.com/favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon">

<link rel="icon" href="http://example.com/favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon">
(Sorry if that shows up strangely.) WIKI has a bunch to say about it all.

Drum roll… Best icon maker at the push of a button. Could it be that easy? Sure; Dynamic Drive even allows you to put the maker on your site. Good idea, eh? ;) Thanks for reading while we revamped our catagories.

Fresh neat stuff. Tell everyone.

30 August 2006

Is DIGG The Whole Story?

8.30 – Despite its popularity, there’s plenty of people who don’t know of the news rating site, www.digg.com The concept is quite clever. You read a story, you like it, you ‘dig’ it like a 1970’s roller derby loving 60’s throw-back pothead. You dig?


Can you DIGG it?


Stories with big ‘diggs’ get popular enough to jump to the front page. I joined Digg in the hopes of continuing to deliver good news stories regardless of Diggs up or down. Submitting a story involves a screen name, a link to the news story and your summary or opinion of the news at the link. This simple process caught fire within the community of folks who get news and share news via the Internet.

This story is disregarding the validity of any original story that’s linked to and instead focusing on the race to be Dugg. Case in Point, Google and eBay just joined forces to ad advertising a la Google to auctions a la eBay. You discover on searching eBay that a 1971 Mustang convertible is for auction. Thanks to Google, advertising for matching floor matts or Edlebrock carbs will appear discreetly in the margins.


Mustang on eBay


The real story is the monstrously large companies merging and bringing advances into popularity faster than ever before. Although e-mail has been around for thirteen years, it’s only lately that the understanding has become common-place. Although Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP) is struggling with FCC mandates like proper 911 calls, the Internet-based telephone system has been adopted strongly by early users.

VOIP’s success is eminent, you just don’t know it yet. The progression is logical from the Pony Express to teletype to faxes and telephones to e-mails to instant messages to video mail and telephones (again, but over the Internet wires). The progression of time will stamp out all the good arguments against VOIP just as time stamped out all the good arguments against the Pony Express (really).

Just as the Pony Express was replaced with something better, so too will VOIP be replaced or revolutionized of upgraded. The sooner everyone jumps on the VOIP bandwagon, like not waiting thirteen years to finally try it, the sooner we get to more good toys! And Google combining with eBay to deliver advertising to auctions gets better. If a seller from an advertisment provides a telephone number, current VOIP users can press Click-To-Call.

DEPLOY THE FUTURE

So the real story in Google’s team-up with eBay is the immediate advancement and promotion of VOIP via eBay. With such an easy shopping, auction and communication system that’s so high profile and in such common use is sure to do for VOIP what Howard Stern did for Sirius Satellite radio. And THIS is the point I happily wished to get Dugg. VOIP will blow in faster and stronger and its next of kin will ALSO blow in faster and stronger as a result.



When I tried to submit the article, I was told that all the links I was selecting as my “source” were already in use. The summaries that other Digg users had written had no bearing on the lofty boost VOIP, Google’s Click-To-Call and the Tech-loving public could possibly get from this merger. So this story right here, as far as I can tell, is the sole story hailing the advancement of VOIP through Google’s use of it within the confines of eBay.

One story about the likelihood of Google’s Click-To-Talk being a failure is from BloggingStocks.com. They site the eBay culture as one of anonymity and the ability of talking to actual people not fitting in anytime soon. It’s a good counter-point. Additionally, the idea of “ deploy[ing] the future,” is one that Yahoo isn’t ready to commit to. Yahoo’s decision to delay re-designs and postpone techno-role outs to keep stride with Google sent Yahoo stocks downward recently reports, TheStreet.com

Some initial news of Google’s crossover advertising with eBay auctions, like InformationWeek.com article, were snapped up by ‘diggers.’ A search at DIGG.com for “Google and eBay” reveal five pages of results where members are actively looking for your digg. It’s not a bad way to bombard yourself with tons of news. You just have to hope that the summaries are accurate enough to get you where you want to go.

By the way, visit the five pages and DIGG the “Click-To-Talk flop within eBay’s anonymity?” story that I did manage to finally get diggable after a day of rejection….