• Home
  • About
  • Webdancers
  • Contact

GregFalken.com

Thoughts on humanizing technology

  • Technology
  • At Home
  • Music and the Arts
  • Education
  • Notes

New Late Show Host

April 10, 2014 By Greg Falken Leave a Comment

Now I’d watch that.

#CBS Announces Stephen Colbert As The Next Host
Of "THE LATE SHOW” http://t.co/ZBsYkV4pK3

— CBS Tweet (@CBSTweet) April 10, 2014

Update:

Let's see…what to tweet about, what to tweet about? I got nothing. What's new with you?

— Stephen Colbert (@StephenAtHome) April 10, 2014

Notes

Mariposa Business Summit

April 9, 2014 By Greg Falken 2 Comments

I will be presenting at the Spring Training Business Summit, in Mariposa, CA on Wednesday, April 16th. Tentative topics are “Online Presence for Local Business” and “Google Tools for Business”. If you’re in the area, hope you can make it. Registration is free at http://www.eventbrite.com/e/spring-training-business-summit-tickets-11120873833

Notes

In Beta Podcast

April 8, 2014 By Greg Falken Leave a Comment

In BetaA smart yet not toally geeky technology podcast, hosted by Kevin Purdy and Kristi Koehler. http://5by5.tv/inbeta

Notes

Show your business info to Google

April 8, 2014 By Greg Falken Leave a Comment

The Google Webmaster Central Blog has advice for website owners about Surfacing your business’ contact and local info in Google.

Every day, searchers use Google to find information about businesses. Common queries include finding the phone number for customer service, the location of a business, and opening hours.

This information is typically found in a business’s location page or a “contact us” section of a company’s website. When Google correctly identifies these pages and is able to extract the relevant information from them, it is more likely to surface that information to searchers looking for the business.

Today we would like to share our recommendations for helping Google identify and surface this information.

Notes

Escape From the Walled Garden

Escape From the Walled Garden

April 7, 2014 By Greg Falken 6 Comments

I’ve started a little experiment here on gregfalken.com, in an attempt to gain some independence from the Facebook and Twitter data silos. This work is inspired by the folks at IndieWebCamp.com, who are building tools that allow website owners to host their own data, while also sharing it on other social media networks. The goal, as stated on their website:

Your content is yours
When you post something on the web, it should belong to you, not a corporation. Too many companies have gone out of business and lost all of their users’ data. By joining the IndieWeb, your content stays yours and in your control.

You are better connected
Your articles and status messages can go to all services, not just one, allowing you to engage with everyone. Even replies and likes on other services can come back to your site so they’re all in one place.

You are in control
You can post anything you want, in any format you want, with no one monitoring you. In addition, you share simple readable links such as mywebsite.com/ideas. These links are permanent and will always work.

You’ll see that the top menu now has a “Notes” item. Posts in this category contain items that I would normally put on Facebook or Twitter. By posting them here, I can both maintain ownership of my content and better control what it looks like. I’m using the Social plugin by MailChimp, to publish these posts on Facebook and/or Twitter too.

Other IndieWeb enhancements to the site that aren’t visible include IndieAuth, Microformats, and Webmention (thanks to Andy Sylvester for the helpful Webmentions video). I’ll report more on these as I gain more experience with them.

I have kept the Notes posts separate from more fully formed posts like this one, by excluding them from the “Blog” page and the main RSS feed of the site. They also will not trigger an automatic email to people who have subscribed to my mailing list. They are meant to be an online collection of tidbits that I find of interest.

How my Notes posts appear on Twitter and Facebook is still something of a work in progress. If you see anything there that looks odd, please leave me a comment here. Speaking of comments, you can still leave them anonymously or you can sign in using your Twitter or Facebook account, thanks to the aforementioned Social plugin. Let me know how if you find this feature useful too.

Technology Tagged: IndieWeb, microformats, social media, webmention

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Stay in touch

Sign up to receive occasional email updates, including new blog posts.

As a web developer since 1995, I find my attention increasingly drawn to the intersection of computers, the Internet, communication and education. On this blog, I indulge my interest in these and several other topics. I hope you find them interesting too. Read More…

  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Recent Posts

3 Words for 2021

January 1, 2021 by Greg Falken Leave a Comment

The message we should be hearing about masks: An aviation parable

October 24, 2020 by Greg Falken Leave a Comment

3 Words for 2020

January 1, 2020 by Greg Falken Leave a Comment

3 Words for 2019

January 1, 2019 by Greg Falken Leave a Comment

3 Words for 2018

January 1, 2018 by Greg Falken Leave a Comment

Latest Tweets

  • Just now
  • More on Twitter

Search

Tag Cloud

3 Words Aardvark audio bluetooth Chris Brogan Chrome computer contract Crazy Ivan education FCC flying Google google nexus home hyperlocal IndieWeb learning mobile mp3 music mvno net neutrality Network Sierra paleo phone politics posse primal programming QR code Rick Foster Sharon Crost sim skellie social media sonora Strawberry three words Tom Maguire Tuolumne twitter video WordPress writing

Return to top of page
Copyright © 2009–2026 · Website by Webdancers · Log in