What good is a content disposal system- June 23, 2002 Robert Boyton nails it, and uses log data to back up his claim (which is the right way to do it!) Radio as Content Disposal System: Splitting the archived content by day is terrible. Only a desparado will search for content by clicking the calendar. john robert boynton: UsabilityUsability humor I wrote about this in "hypertext in the blogdom". Addendum: Radio also promotes useless hyperlinking between repeats of the same content. I'll flesh out this issue later, but it's a big...http://surfmind.com/musings/categories/radioNotes/2002/06/23.cfm#a191 (Untitled)- June 4, 2002 Welcome to the neighborhood ehhttp://surfmind.com/musings/categories/radioNotes/2002/06/03.cfm#a163 (Untitled)- June 3, 2002 I'm poondering a mozilla sidebar for intelligent quote abstracting from the page your currently. It could work based upon text selection or click (and drag perhaps) and would post the quote to Radio. I could abstract permalinks out of many Radio blogs. Ideally, this should be done in a more principaled way. My container approach (nested divs) to structural markup in this blog would be much easier to DOM walk than the default Radio html. Radio's strength in ease of use.http://surfmind.com/musings/categories/radioNotes/2002/06/02.cfm#a162 (Untitled)- June 2, 2002 There's some serious community impetus behind incoporating the LINK tag for RSS in weblogs. Mozilla has a link toolbar that's not quite complete. Alas, Google did not add the LINK tag to their site during the last 4 or so months of it being deployed in Mozilla -- if it had, the "site navigation bar" as it's called might be in 1.0 (note, nextprev links are in one of the experimental google toolbars). In any event, job well done! In less than a week, support for a new form of metadata was added...http://surfmind.com/musings/categories/radioNotes/2002/06/02.cfm#a158 |