Madaa – Silwan Community Center

Madaa – Silwan Community Center.

A friend forwarded this:

Dear Friends,

We want to wish you all a happy and beautiful holidays period!

As you know we are volunteering since two years in Madaa Silwan Community Center. 
Madaa believes in empowerment through creative activities. Hundreds of children are involved in the weekly music, art, theater and dance activities. There is now also an Internet room where they can work for school, and a library where the children can read or take books home.
In our attempt and challenge to make the community center sustainable, we put up a new system:
http://gifts.madaasilwan.org

Are you looking for an original present for Christmas, for your best friend’s birthday or your parents’ anniversary? Or maybe you just want to surprise someone you love?

By choosing gifts, you will sponsor activities for the youth of Silwan in the community center. If you wish, you can send the gifts as a present to someone in the form of an electronic greeting card. He or she will receive an email with a link to see the different gifts you have sponsored in their name.

Please share this donation system with your friends and family, so our different projects will continue and grow, and that more children can follow classes.

You are warmly invited to visit the community center, so you can see the activities yourself.

Love,
Fabienne and Danny

Thinking about blogging platforms

I decided to move my self hosted blog back to WordPress.com because of an urge to simplify. It seemed to me more natural that the platform would be identified with the webhost, and take care of the operations I had been neglecting to do, such as updating the software and safeguarding against hackers. I would not be averse to paying something to Auttomatic for this privilege but think that payments should be scaled better according to number of visitors or bandwidth. It seems that in blogging either it’s free or you pay rather a lot. Blogs with many visitors should be able to offset charges with advertising.

Twitter Times and Feedly: interesting to compare the results

Feedly takes all of one’s RSS feeds in Google Reader and produces from them a compelling newspaper. It’s a joy to look at, and a joy to read. Everyone who tries Feedly loves what it can do.

Twitter Times has the harder job of taking one’s twitter stream and producing a news stream. It selects for stories that are capturing the attention of one’s twitter friends, and even friends of friends. The result is that Twitter becomes much more useful as a source of news and stories.

Both are great news readers, depending on the quality of the material they are given to work with. Twitter Times has the advantage that the “newspaper” produced goes public. Mine is here. The Twitter Times homepage has better examples from famous bloggers. Still, Jack Schofield’s Times had at least three separate almost identical stories on the new Google phone, so robotic editors do have their limitations.

Blogging and microblogging are merging

Social media is changing so quickly. I spent a lot of time today tinkering with the theme for my WordPress.com blog because the theme I was using didn’t successfully incorporate a widget for Twitter. Towards evening I had gotten things about where I wanted. A Twitter widget was nicely installed at the side and I was happy with the modifications I’d made. So now I could go back and catch up on the news streaming through Feedly.

So the first story to capture my attention was a Techcrunch article: WordPress Makes Blogging On The Fly Easier, Integrates With Twitter API. It turns out that WordPress.com is seeking to augment the already symbiotic relationship between the two services. Just as I’d felt a need to place that Twitter widget next to my blog, and just as many bloggers have for a long time relied upon Twitter to publicize new blog posts, WordPress has been looking into ways of improving this relationship. They had created an API that would allow the updating of WordPress from third party services like Tweetie2 on the Iphone. There, it is possible to set up WordPress as an account next to Twitter, and post directly to one’s blog (also to subscribe to other WordPress blogs).

To take this a stage further, WordPress suggests a new theme, P2, which combines a microblogging interface with a regular blog. Using this theme, it is possible to update a WordPress blog directly from the page (and, in turn, the post will stream directly to Twitter). So no more need for that Twitter widget I had set up. Longer posts can also be added, through the Dashboard editor, like this one.

There is a real advantage in integrating microblog material directly into WordPress, since the latter will archive this material much more successfully than Twitter – and it’s nice to have a single interface to accomplish both purposes. Furthermore, it is possible to bind additional connections, such as Facebook, to the two services. Since it is possible to add video, photo and other services, a WordPress blog can become a successful lifestreaming service, to compete well with services like TypePad’s Motion.

It’s fascinating to see how all these web services are changing. My personal problem is that I seem to enjoy tinkering with them more than actually using them. My tinkering so far with WordPress.com’s new array, has been to set up the new API account in Tweetie2 (it worked for me only through http rather than https). And to change my WordPress theme to P2 (that’s what you’re seeing here). It was necessary to cancel the Notes import for Facebook, and rely on status blog links instead.

Update

I’ll keep updating this as I try to work with this array of services. First concerning P2: I was rather expecting that posts of up to 140 characters would be dispatched as-is by WP’s Publicize to Twitter (which in my case links with Facebook). That is not so. The message truncates after about half of that, and sends a link back to WordPress. That sort of defeats WordPress as a means to update Twitter – 140 characters is short enough, thank you. I’d like to see a counter on the edit form, just as on Twitter clients, and for WordPress’s Twitter handler to behave properly. Blog titles seem to fare better than status updates when sent to Twitter.

Further update: I notice now that it is possible to customize messages to Twitter on the full post editing interface. In the publish box, there is a place to do it, with a character counter. But this is lacking on the quick post form in the P2 theme. And I still have to test what happens to messages published via the Twitter API from Tweetie2.