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What this rainy evening needs is a new episode of Doctor Who. Might watch Time Bandits or Brazil instead. That's almost the same, right?

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Of course, taking issue with his *words* is another thing entirely. That's fine. Just leave his haircut out of it.

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All the hate on @shingy's appearance on TV is pretty conservative bullshit, folks. Or do we have a uniform now?

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@xor ofc, if it really is that ineffective, it's a giant waste of taxpayer money, & could be painted that way.

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@xor The cynic in me warns to question new reports about ineffectiveness. "Hey, there's nothing to worry about .."

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Although it still performed better in the marketplace than the Tofu-Tang Clan

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In the grand scheme of hip hop merchandising tie-ins, British vegan offering Tinie Tempeh was not an overwhelming success

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I always think there's something freakish about people whose relationship dynamic includes "you must shave for me". I mean, wtf.

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@wiilassie Interesting! Has it evolved any since its heyday?

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@scribacious Ha! That's incredible.

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Ha, that's right! Amazing. Hacking MySpace. Those were the days.

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I was just thinking about the MySpace imagemap. Crazy town. Them were the days - although if I could have done it all again, I would have done a Flash embed, for Pete's sake. (Not literally for Pete's sake. He didn't join us until later.)

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Btw, if you're waiting for email from me: some of our customers are sending footage from Sochi, & I am a broken shell of a man. Will be on top of it again soon.

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If you're in the UK and in need of a back-end developer, you'd be INSANE to not consider @tef. Take it from me. http://programmingisterrible.com/post/75911060220/hello-i-am-tef-i-am-available-for-hire

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Blogs were a kind of social web in themselves. I'm really hoping that the tech we're all developing now brings some of that back.

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Someone is very regularly reading my site from Netvibes. If it's you, I'd love to know how you're using it these days.

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Getting tired of xenophobic anti-Russian jokes. Criticisms of their barbaric social policy otoh ...

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Congratulations to @FutureGov - £1m funding to help modernize local government. Much needed! http://techcitynews.com/2014/02/07/futuregov-raises-1m-from-nesta-and-surrey-council/

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This showed the promise of the social web to an aspiring academic. Could it happen today?

Rereading the Guardian article about Elgg, I'd forgotten this detail, which is true:

The idea was conceived in late 2003, when Ben Werdmuller and Tosh were working at Edinburgh University developing e-learning and e-portfolio systems. Werdmuller (an avid blogger) persuaded Tosh (who had just started a PhD in e-portfolios) to start a blog of his own to support his studies. Within a week, Tosh had received comments on his blog from people pointing him to relevant resources and others bloggers had begun to link to him.

Dave and I shared an office at the University of Edinburgh. He was skeptical about blogging at that point, so what I told him was this: start a blog, post every day, and leave a meaningful comment on someone else's blog every day.

I wasn't sure that it would work, but thought that it probably would. Sure enough, within a week or two, he was part of the global elearning community, and was participating in conversations with its thought leaders. It was through this medium that we put out the initial white papers (completely unofficially) that provided the basis for Elgg, which went viral in the elearning community.

Could that happen today? I'm not sure.

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Look Out MyBlogLog - Here Comes Explode (or, how everything changed one Friday afternoon)

The turning point for my first startup came one rainy Friday afternoon, in February 2007.

As TechCrunch reported:

A new open source cross-site social networking service called Explode launched today and looks like a very appealing alternative to the now Yahoo! owned MyBlogLog. Built by UK open-source social network provider Curverider (whose primary product, Elgg, is similar to PeopleAggregator), Explode offers an embeddable widget that links out to users’ respective profile pages on any social network but allows commenting and befriending in one aggregated location. I found Explode via Steve O’Hear’s The Social Web, one of my new favorite blogs.

Steve O'Hear had written:

Although comparisons with Yahoo's MyBlogLog are inevitable, Explode isn't primarily intended as a way to turn an existing blog into a social network, nor as a way to monitor traffic. Instead, think of it as a loosely joined network that works on top of existing social networking sites and blogs, to allow a user of one site to 'befriend' and communicate with a user from another.

Curverider co-founder, Ben Werdmuller, says that Explode is very much a 'work in progress', and that they are already working on an API, and also have plans to add support for OpenID.

Dave Tosh and I had been working on Elgg for three or four years at that point, and had obtained a two-person office above a bookstore in Summertown, an affluent area in North Oxford, awash with coffee shops and restaurants. Our startup was fully bootstrapped; not a single penny of investment had been put in, except for our own work, and the non-monetary support of the people around us.

As Februaries in England can sometimes be, it was a cold, overcast day, with nothing to recommend it. Because we were bootstrapping, we had been working hard, as always, and we were exhausted. Also because we were bootstrapping, our waistlines had seen the effects of long hours in front of the computer sustained only by relatively cheap food, so we'd decided to buy ourselves gym memberships and try to go regularly. (I think we managed eight or nine times.)

As we worked out, we decided that, screw it, we weren't going to work on Elgg for the rest of the day. There was nothing to be gained, we were feeling kind of burned out, and surely there had to be something more fun we could do.

Elgg was a full-blown social networking engine, and although we later completely rewrote it, it was still a pretty powerful piece of software used by companies and institutions all over the world. And I had a simple idea.

When we got back, I got to work widgetizing all of Elgg's functionality: writing templates that would take pieces of its output - the friends list, for example - and embed it in JavaScript such that it could be made to display on any website. This was back when people still had websites where people could embed HTML and JavaScript, and the effect would be that any website could be part of a larger social network. That wasn't a small idea: it captured questions people were already having about siloed sites, and would later be tackled by projects like Google Friend Connect. (Of course, the IndieWeb movement is answering those questions today.)

search_three.gif

Dave created a template for the site so people could sign up and get their widgets. At the last minute, we created a logo. I made it in about 5 minutes in MS Paint, which seemed appropriate for a hacky site, and we both agreed that a ridiculously bad logo was probably good: it captured the scrappy ethos of the whole afternoon project.

explode.png

After four hours of work in total, we made it live, and pinged some people we knew, like Marshall Kirkpatrick, who at the time was a TechCrunch writer (now the CEO of the excellent Little Bird), and Steve O'Hear, who had previously written about us in the Guardian. For us, it was a bit of a lighthearted thing we'd put together at the end of the week, and we didn't really expect anyone to cover it. To his credit, Dave proactively got in touch with everyone anyway.

Boom. Steve wrote about us, and then Marshall wrote the story on TechCrunch. This was more coverage than the tech press had ever given us.

The fact that we had executed quickly on our idea, which in turn had developed out of having worked on social networking platforms for years, mattered. The fact that we didn't try and make it perfect, or spend ages putting it through careful design cycles or product feedback loops, was unimportant. We had a working first version, and we put it in front of people, who thought it was compelling. This directly led to many more customers for Curverider, as well as our first investors, who got in touch because they had seen the coverage.

Those four hours of work - and the quick decision to muck about, be creative, and follow our whims for an afternoon - literally changed the fate of our company, and both of our careers.

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@ProdNichelle Hi Nichelle! Did you get your problem resolved?

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I'm not sure the Twitter account definition of "parody" would hold up in a court of law.

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@jadekurian Going to assume it means she knows how to handle an alien super-villain. @griffyndorkk

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