Kevin Marsh

BarnRaisr and Knowledge Markets

This idea comes from two separate events at RailsConf: a conversation and a keynote.

A conversation at RailsConf started up between a group sitting at a table, some of which turned out to be pretty knowledgeable on the subject of knowledge markets. The gentleman sitting next to me (forgive me, I didn’t catch your name!) brought up a good point about the idea of collective knowledge markets and the opportunity for people to “game the system” if there was any personal benefit involved.

Another RailsConf extraction, if you will, is BarnRaisr (which is another testament to this community: a call to action was made during Nathaniel Talbott ’s RailsConf 2006 talk Homesteading: A Thriver’s Guide and someone came up with a name and site less than a day later). The basic idea is this: present a project and have members of the community help it along by contributing testing, coding, design, and time to help this idea along.

On the ride home, these two separate ideas came together: when enough code and hours start to be volunteered on projects you suddenly have a decent indicator of the merit of a particular idea. People “game” the system by committing hours and hard work to the project, which I think anyone would agree is a pretty good thing.

RailsConf

Live from RailsConf… no real content to offer, just bragging.

RSS Aggregation

After years and years of manually checking each of my 75 or so favorite websites for updates I’ve decided to give an RSS aggregator a shot.

I’ve tried several in the past, namely NewsFire and NetNewsWire, but I’ve always felt like they robbed me of the ‘experience’ of visiting a website.

A lot of the sites I frequent are design related and naturally have quite exquisite designs (cf. Bartelme Design and Maniacal Rage, among others). Why would I want to forgo this pleasant viewing experience and have all the updates shown to me in a homogenized container? Mostly ‘cause its easier.

I’m currently using NetNewsWire Lite to track about 100 feeds which is, so far, working well. I credit most of my pleasant experience to its NewsGator synchronization (which actually works!), which is a must-have feature for someone with a home and work Mac or desktop and portable Mac.

TextMate and WordPress

TextMate latest new feature, the Blogging bundle, has prompted me to (finally) ditch TextPattern and switch to a blogging package with better XML-RPC support. So here we are: Kevin Marsh on WordPress!

Stuff is still a bit… broken. But on the plus side, comments now work! And we have search.