I'm happy to point to the announcement that Wikitravel Press now has a guide to Paris. Paris has long been a targeted city for Wikitravel Press, and I'm really happy we were able to get this book out. Bonus: the Wikitravel Guide to Paris includes maps from OpenStreetMap, the Open Content geo database and mapping system. We've got some new software to overlay Wikitravel listings onto the maps, and it's working really well. Thanks to OSM, editor Mark Jaroski, and managing editor Jani Patokallio for getting this great book out... just in time for Paris spring! tags: wikitravel wikitravelpress paris guidebook opencontent openstreetmap Podcasts I asked a couple of days ago (Journal/30 Germinal CCXVI) about podcasts on the subject of Open Source and Open Content. I wanted to summarize a few that came in through comments on my blog: The iCommons Podcast, which (like many podcasts) seems to be running a little slow -- no updates in about a year. Still, an interesting project to be watching. (thanks Brianna) Wikipedia Weekly, the really great show by Andrew Lih and Liam Wyatt. I should have thought of WW before -- I was interviewed for the show last year! (thanks Padraic) Also worth noting is Not the Wikipedia Weekly, which is, uh, not the Wikipedia Weekly. I got this one from an episode of WW! LUG Radio, which I found from another podcast, LQ Radio. This has turned into a pretty decent list, but I'd love to see some more diverse discussion of Open Content and Open Source in general. Please, feel free to send more tips. tags: podcast linux opensource opencontent Vinismo For some reason Vinismo went over some tipping point with StumbleUpon this weekend, and we had a real flood of users from that bookmarking site. I can't say why that happens; I find SU to be a totally opaque Web site and service. In other news, Stevey likes our business cards. Me too! I think they look great. M-C Doyon, the Montreal graphic designer who laid out our Web site, also did our paper branding, and I think she did a great job. tags: vinismo stevey marieclaudedoyon cards Yay Firefox 3.0 I don't know when it happened, but Firefox 3.0 beta does non-ASCII characters in the address bar correctly. So, if you're reading this entry on my site with FF3, you'll see the é in "Floréal" rather than the URL-encoded "Floréal". I also like seeing Japanese Wikipedia pages in the address bar showing up correctly. Nice job, FF3 team. tags: firefox firefox3 utf8 url Planet software should preserve categories So, apparently there's once again rising problems with content drift on Planet Debian. Personally, I think this is a problem with a technical solution. All three main flavours of RSS support post categorization. Many, many kinds of feed software provide categories (see, for example, this feed). If the Planet software would preserve these categories and pass them through to the output RSS feeds, then people who really only want to read about Debian could filter the output feeds for category "debian". People who wanted to know about other parts of their fellow Debianistas' lives would just leave the feeds unfiltered. I'm not sure if the Planet software doesn't support categories in output at all, or if it's just an option that's turned off on Planet Debian. If nobody else wants to take a look, I can look into making this work. It seems like a pretty simple fix. tags: planet planetdebian rss categories
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I posted to evan.prodromou.name
3 Floréal CCXVI
http://evan.prodromou.name/Journal/3_Flor%C3%A9al_CCXVI
- Tags:
- opensource
- podcast
- wikitravel
- wikitravelpress
- paris
- guidebook
- opencontent
- openstreetmap
- linux
- vinismo
- stevey
- marieclaudedoyon
- cards
- firefox
- firefox3
- utf8
- url
- planet
- planetdebian
- rss
- categories
April 22 2008, 4:12pm | Comments »
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I posted to evan.prodromou.name
24 Germinal CCXVI
http://evan.prodromou.name/Journal/24_Germinal_CCXVI
I'm pretty impressed with the new Geotag Icon Project. The well-known feed icon has become ubiquitous, and it makes sense to have a free-to-use icon for geographically-tagged information. I can see it being very useful for hcard and geo microformats, for example. tags: geotagicon geo microformats Relayed for your review without comment For all those who think Open Content guidebooks like Wikitravel are by definition less reliable than proprietary ones: "Travel writer tells newspaper he plagiarized, dealt drugs". "A Lonely Planet author says he plagiarized or made up portions of the popular travel guidebooks and dealt drugs to supplement poor pay. [...] He didn't travel to Colombia to write the guidebook on the country because 'they didn't pay me enough. I wrote the book in San Francisco. I got the information from a chick I was dating.'" Cough, cough. tags: lonelyplanet travel guidebook plagiarism
April 12 2008, 10:14pm | Comments »
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