Only connect…

Buzz and Wave and e-mail, oh my!

How do we communicate when? There are no hard and fast rules, but these are the guidelines in the back of my mind:

Blogs are a great medium to go on at length about a given topic (whether it’s yourself or an arcane area of expertise) without targeting specific people and without expecting a reply. I suspect that with the rising popularity of social networking sites, there is less of a tendency than before for blogs to contain the minutiæ of everyday life.

E-mail is great for conveying any amount of information deliberately and reflectively, without a great sense of urgency. You can craft your message carefully, including all relevant points and making any needed arguments. I use this when I have a lot to say and I can wait for the reply.

Wave is ideal for collaborating on documents. Unlike e-mail, where replies are sequential, with wave you can comment inline and even edit the original post. I think this is great for giving feedback or co-authoring, but it has not yet taken off as a replacement for e-mail in my social and work circles.

Chat (instant messaging) is for those times when you need to interact with someone right now for something time-sensitive (which may be as important as “tell me how to restart the servers” or as trivial as “watcha doin’?”). Chat, by its nature, demands more attention than e-mail, but it is less intrusive than telephoning: your respondents can still ignore you, deal with other things simultaneously, and have their hands comfortably free to keep typing.

Chat status starts getting into social networking. You can advertise information that is not targeted towards a single recipient and for which you do not expect a response. I use it as an FYI to display what I’m doing or feeling or to point out something generally interesting.

Facebook allows you to keep “lightly in touch” with a large number of people. You make available your status or any other information you wish, and do not necessarily expect a reply. Likewise, you can see what other people have published and respond if you like. I use it to get a flavor for what’s going on in my “friends’” lives, and to let them know about mine. Interestingly, the meaning of “friend” has become diluted by this medium, as people that you may superfically know, or know not at all in real life, ask to join your network. You’re still somewhat curious about them (and I think it’s good, on both pragmatic and idealistic grounds, to interact with a broader range of people), and so they become your quote-friends.

LinkedIn is like Facebook, but geared more towards explicitly building a network of professional contacts. As with Facebook, I find pressure to dilute the meaning of a professional contact to someone I know only socially, but since this is a secondary social networking site for me, I have been able to keep my network pure.

Google Buzz, just released this week, is a new social networking medium whose biggest selling points, in my mind, are that it integrates with other Google services like Mail and Maps, and can more easily syndicate content from some other sources like Google Reader and Talk. I use it as I use my chat status, to give a general status message, but also to publish interesting or valuable information and see what replies I get. Buzz also lets you control who sees each Buzz, which is handy at times. At work, it is proving a good forum to non-invasively solicit cooperation and feedback from others.

Of course, the boundaries among these use cases are porous: Facebook has email, you can have your IMs waiting in people’s inboxes, and you can have a conversation with someone using blog comments. Still, I like to have clarity as to what tool I should be using, so I don’t have to think about it every single time.

Mobile blog

If you want to read my blog from your mobile device, just bookmark this link: Critical Exponent(mobile). It is an automatically generated mobile version of the site, thanks to the folks at MoFuse.

There is also a MoFuse plugin for WordPress that is supposed to redirect users automatically if they come from a mobile device, but so far I haven’t gotten it to work: the URL never redirects, and when I disable some of my other plugins, MoFuse-WP generates an error on the page. Cool idea once I/they get it working, though!

I learned about this from AmericaBlog.

Blog upgrade

From the moment I signed up with my previous web-hosting provider, I was disappointed with their speed, their clunky user interface (no SSH access? come on!), and their unresponsive customer support. The last straw was a my blog suddenly not working when I had not made any configuration changes. They were unhelpful and proceeded to touch my files without permission or good cause.

I spent all of New Year’s Day backing up my blog content and transferring it to my new hosting service, HostMonster, which was recommended by a friend. To do the transfer, I followed the directions here. I tested the transferred content by modifying my /etc/hosts file to point my machine to my website’s new IP when fetching the old name. The plan was to initiate the DNS transfer once that was all working.

While transferring the database was simple, making the copied WordPress .php files talk to the database did not work immediately. I suspect it’s a mixture of a complex directory structure, DNS name changes, and server-side redirection going on simulatenously. Or not. I just wound up creating a new WP blog on the site, pointing it at my transferred database, and voilà! I’m good to go.

(Fore future reference, if I had been interested in moving the blog to a new domain name entirely, I would also have followed the steps here or here).

A bonus benefit of having a fresh install is that now I can start my customizations (which weren’t that many) afresh, using the newer widgets and such that were implemented since my blog first went online. Look back to this space as I make my blog visually more interesting! My inspiration comes in large part from what Knox was able to accomplish in a short time as a WordPress newbie, albeit one with a good eye for layout and design.

Blog, uncluttered

If you’re reading my site, you’re most likely using an RSS aggregator. If you’re not, get thee to Google Reader, stat.

Google Reader has a cool feature that lets you share with others items in the feeds that you read (and you can event comment as you share!). It also has a bookmarklet to let you similarly share any page on the web. Within Google Reader, you can easily see you friends’ shared items.

In the event you don’t use Google Reader, you can still access my shared items by subscribing to my automatically-generated Shared Items blog. (The most recently shared items also show up in a gadget in my blog sidebar.)

Why care about my shared items? With shared items, I don’t have to debate whether an interesting site merits a whole entry in my blog or a mass mailing to all of my Internet friends/acquaintances/stale contacts. I can point you to articles that, for some reason or another, I found interesting: maybe I agree with them, maybe I don’t; maybe they opened my eyes, maybe they left me incredulous. At any rate, placing these items in a separate repository allows my own blog to focus on original content about my life and my thoughts—much in keeping with the Slow Blogging article I recently shared.

It cleans things up for me as a blogger, and for you as my audience. Check it out!