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Welcome to my weblog, which I use for keeping track of interesting stuff. It serves as my basecamp for the exploration of the Internet, the "Blogosphere" and life in general.


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Some books I enjoyed!



Great book on wiki adoption!



A classic on corporate blogging!



The most interesting biography of Billy Joel to date!



New York Times Bestseller!



The Book on My Blogging Platform!



Start your own "revolution" and lead it!



The history of Google and Internet Search!




An interesting and addictive device!

Postman delivers my highly anticipated packages

Yesterday I finally received some of the stuff I ordered for the holiday’s. Two packages:



Three books:

If fully intend to review these books out here as part of providing more structure to my book consumption.

I am still awaiting one book that I ordered and actually I am looking forward reading first: Wikipatterns from Stewart Mader.



Two CD’s by Matthew Ebel:

  • Goodbye Planet Earth (2007)
  • Beer and Coffee (2005)

I “discovered” Matthew Ebel via CC Chapman’s excellent podcast Accident Hash. A couple of weeks ago, after witnessing Matthew live on his channel on Ustream TV, I decided to buy the two CD’s and his special Virtual Hot Wings release.

Matthew writes great and funny lyrics and combines those with great piano tunes.

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comments image Comment [3] | post image posted Dec 30, 10:16 pm on Dec 30, 2007 | category image category: Books / Music

Learning about all things miscellaneous

Just saw a great video of David Weinberger in which he explains the thoughts displayed in his new book Everything is Miscellaneous. Generally very good stuff on how we have been treating and ordering information and knowledge for ages and how that is started to change in the digital age. And by the way David Weinberger is a really enthusiastic presenter!

I was triggered to the subject by this nice slideshow about “Everything is Miscellaneous” created by Robbert Homburg:

By the way, David Weinberger is coming to Amsterdam next week and I am really trying to get into the “invitation-only” event. Let’s see how it will work out…

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comments image Comment | post image posted Sep 21, 11:29 pm on Sep 21, 2007 | category image category: Books / Knowledge Management

My Review of MediaWiki Administrators' Tutorial Guide

So finally here it is, my review of MediaWiki Administrators’ Tutorial Guide announced three months ago. I received my review copy of the book end of March and have been reading and even applying the content for the last two months.

<review>

Before we start…
To start of this review I would like to point out first of all where am I coming from with this. I have about 3 years of practical MediaWiki experience as a user of my companies multiple wiki installations. Prior to reading the book I had little knowledge of the technical background of the software, although I am very interested in customising MediaWiki and writing special pages. I am a PHP newbie.

The book: look and feel
The book is printed in black-and-white (so no colour) and the quality of the print is very decent. The book is rather light (good thing for me commuting).

The book’s accessories
There is no CD delivered with the book, but all code snippets can be downloaded from the book support page at the publishers website.
What I learned from my interview with the author Mizanur Rahman, is that he is quite willing to answer additional questions via his weblog Boolean Dreams and that he is working on a dedicated wiki (haven’t found it to date).

The contents
Please find the names of the eleven chapters of the book (I was not able to find a linkable page of contents):

1. About MediaWiki
2. Installing MediaWiki
3. Starting MediaWiki
4. Advanced Formatting
5. Organising Content
6. MediaWiki in a Multi-User Environment
7. Administrating MediaWiki
8. Customising MediaWiki
9. Hacking MediaWiki
10. MidiaWiki Maintenance
11. Cool Hacks

Overall conclusion
Although a comparison cannot be made, because of the lack of competition (discarding the online help at MediaWiki.org) the MediaWiki Administrators’ Tutorial Guide is a good and must have reference for anyone working with MediaWiki as administrator but also as user, offering almost anything one would want to know to start off with, to maintain and to customise and even hack a wiki installation. For those wanting to go a bit further with writing real PHP code for creating extensions, custom wiki markup and special pages, the book offers some nice code examples to work with and to modify to one’s needs.
The book could have benefited from somewhat richer content, such as more references to additional sources on the Internet and especially something like break-out boxes presenting experiences from admins of major wiki real life implementations. Next to that it appears that some more time should have been spend on a better index, correcting language, typos and structuring in general.

Book rating: 8

To summarise: the pros and cons

Pros:

  • Almost everything you will need for a basic MediaWiki installation, its maintenance and some customisation is available in this book. It is a complete reference for admins but certainly also for users, that would like some basic understanding of MediaWiki.
  • Very nice and easy to grasp examples of skin customisation and creation (I am no PHP expert!).
  • Good example on creating an article rating system extension and accompanying special page. With this knowledge and some additional PHP you will be able to try out a couple of your extension idea’s quite easily I guess.
  • There is a nice bonus chapter (11) presenting 7 extensions and some support on how to install them.
  • A book is so much easier than an online source! Of course this is not a pro for this book per se, but for others as well.

Cons:

  • Missing 1: some practical case studies of real life MediaWiki implementations and preferably interviews with the admins of the practise of maintaining a wiki
  • Missing 2: More attention to anti-vandalism tools out there, dedicated to preventing rather than cleaning-up.
  • Missing 3: A good index: the index at the end of the book is way too brief to be of real value for someone trying to find something back in the book.
  • Missing 4: Too little in-text references and no references section in the book, for further reading or information, like most important forums for those looking for help (like the MediaWiki Mailing List Archive and MWusers.com).
  • Sometimes the English used suggests a lack of some decent editorial oversight (or shall I call it charming?)
  • Chapter 1, describing wiki’s in relation to weblogs, forums and CMS systems and the position in Web 2.0 is not really convincing. Furthermore, although alternative wiki systems are briefly mentioned, no real and “honest” comparison is made.
  • Images and tables are not numbered, which is not good for readability.
  • The typographical distinction between paragraph and sub-paragraph could have been better

Final words

  • If I find the time, I will e-mail all errors found to the publisher.
  • Disclaimer: I did not personally test all code in the book.

</review>

Related: my interview with the author Mizanur Rahman

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Interview with Mizanur Rahman, author of MediaWiki Administrators' Tutorial Guide

While waiting for the publication of the first book fully dedicated to MediaWiki, I came up with the idea of asking the author of the book, Mizanur Rahman, for an interview over e-mail. Not being able to find his e-mail address, I posted the question to his weblog to which he promptly reacted as being very happy to cooperate.

So here we are, only two weeks later, proud to present some more insight into the author’s background and of course the upcoming book MediaWiki Administrators’ Tutorial Guide, to be published by the end of this month.

<interview>

Who is Mizanur Rahman? Can you please share us something about your age, where you live, how you were educated and your current profession?
I am Mizanur Rahman, a software engineer living in Bangladesh. I am 26 years old. I have completed my graduation in Computer Science from North South University. For last 7 years I have been working with different web technologies and it has been my core focus area since then. Currently I am working as a Senior Software Engineer at ReliSource Technologies (www.relisource.com), a USA based software outsourcing company.

Is “MediaWiki Administrators’ Tutorial Guide” your first book or did you write others? Any other notable publications like in magazines? Also on the subject of MediaWiki?
“MediaWiki administrators’ tutorial guide” is my first book. I have been working with Packt Publishing as Technical reviewer for almost a year and half. I have reviewed two of their previous books and the books are vBulletin and Smarty. I am also a moderator of PHPXperts, largest PHP user group in Bangladesh. Other than Packt work I don’t have any other publication available at this moment.

How did you come up with the idea of writing this book on Mediawiki?
I was planning to write a book on different open source projects and during that time the idea of a book on MediaWiki came up. I have wiki experience for more than 2 years and David Barnes, Packt development editor was aware of it. So we started working on the book proposal. After that I wrote a detail outline of the content of the book and the target audience. Packt Publishing approved the outline and we started working on the MediaWiki book.

I personally think this book will fill an important void in the MediaWiki documentation, that a lot of people have been looking for quite some time. Good structured information is actually quite fragmented on the Internet. Considering that we are dealing with a wiki platform, meant in part to do documentation, this appears a bit contradictory. What are your thoughts about this?
Yes you are right. I tried to fill the gaps that we have in MediaWiki documentation and lack of structured resources online. When I started using MediaWiki I felt the necessity of a good tutorial or even a book to learn more about the wiki technology and MediaWiki detail. It is true that there is not a very well structured documentation or tutorial. But it is not that far yet. Wikimedia has already taken the steps to produce a more structured manual for MediaWiki. I believe it will be more structured this time.

Why a book about MediaWiki and not another wiki platform?
MediaWiki is the best wiki engine available. I have evaluated a few but so far MediaWiki looked best to me. If the world’s largest online resource (Wikipedia) runs on the same piece of software, it gives you the idea of stability of the software. Also MediaWiki is used by most wiki users, which other wiki’s do not have.

Was it hard to find a publisher?
Not really. Packt publishing loves to work with young and promising people. They publish books on new technologies especially open source projects and target a particular audience group. I am lucky that I got the opportunity to work with Packt and to write for them. They are all great people with unending enthusiasm for new technology.

How much experience do you have with MediaWiki? In terms of years of use, wiki implementations and dept of usage (like real development)?
I have more than 2 years of experience to work with wiki. I have used almost every available feature of wiki from simple editing to use of templates and writing hacks and extensions for myself.

Do you currently manage public or closed wiki’s?
No. Right now I don’t manage any public wiki. But I would like to start a public wiki very soon.

Do you use wiki’s in your work? Can you please explain for what kind of tasks?
I use wiki at my work to keep things together and structured. I am trying to promote wiki to people in my workplace so that they can have interest of using wiki as a media to communicate with others and content management system. My first target is to build a knowledgebase for our company using MediaWiki.

Are you or have you been involved in the development of MediaWiki software?
I have not been involved in official development of MediaWiki software. But I have built different extensions and hacks as freelancer developer. If opportunity arises I would love to get involved in the core development of MediaWiki.

Can you share some of your experiences with writing the book, in terms of duration of the project, choosing the concept (tutorial based on fun example) and the level of difficulty? Where there any though decisions to make on the content?
The total project took 9 months to finish. As I was very busy with my job, it took a little bit more time to finish the book than anticipated. The example wiki site we built on the book was a really fun to work with. The concept and the ideas to work around the examples were really enjoying. We built a “haunted wiki site” for ghost hunters and enthusiast all around the world. We showed how to publish new content and manage it and how to communicate with other users. The book is written for very beginners to advance level users. We kept the flow of the book such a way that a non wiki user can read the book and start working on the wiki site in no time at all. For advance level users we have kept hacking, customizing and maintenance wiki features. So it’s a complete book for all.

What were your main sources of information?
Wikipedia, official MediaWiki site and also searching different forums, blogs.

Did you use a wiki for writing the book, for example in cooperation with the technical editor?
No, I did not. Every one has their own working principle. Packt Publishing also has a defined format to write a book and all the communication such as comments, remarks, change requests, discussion are done according to their way. So I actually followed the standard procedure of Packt rather than having a new way of doing things.

Who reviewed or proof-read the book? Did you ask any of the current MediaWiki developers to review the book?
There were 2 technical reviewers for this book. Nikhil and Peter De Decker. Both of them supported me very well and I must thank them for their excellent work. I am not sure about the review request of the current MediaWiki developers for the book. I think we didn’t ask anyone of them.

Can we expect a special foreword/intro from Mr. Wikipedia Jimmy Wales or the prominent developer Brion Vibber?
No, we don’t have any special forward/intro from them for this version of the book.

Reading from the publisher’s introduction, the book appears to be offering quite a complete solution for the average MediaWiki administrator. Still, were there pieces of content you would have liked to add but, for some practical reason, could not? Do you feel you could write Part II?
Yes there is always a scope for part II but I don’t think it will be happening very soon. MediaWiki is coming with new features in every release and if we feel that the changes are getting really big then we might come up with the second version of the book. Let’s see how it goes in future. The missing bits and pieces in the book will be published on my blog and I will try to keep readers updated about the changes.

What is the concept / style of the book (is it a glossary/dictionary style or different, please explain)?
The book is narrative and example oriented. We tried to maintain the flow of the learning smooth as well as interesting so that readers are always on the content of the book.

Will the book describe a bunch of the extensions that are available today?
We have a separate chapter at the end of the book to discuss a few cool extensions available online.

And will it also teach the basics of writing a custom extension?
Yes it does. It also teaches how to write new skins.

Does the book come with some programming code? Is there a CD included?
Yes, the hacks and extensions of this book can be downloaded from the Packt site. We do not have any CD included with the book.

Will there be a complementary website, weblog or … a wiki?
Yes. Packt has the facility to download all the codes from their support site. Beside that my blog will be kept to help any wiki user. I will try to publish my wiki very soon.

Will you answer readers’ questions on your weblog?
I always welcome questions from everyone on my blog. I will definitely try to answer reader’s questions but I can not provide any assurance.

On what MediaWiki-version is the book based on?
We tried to keep it up-to-date and the book is focused on 1.9.0.

How many MediaWiki administrators are out there do you think?
This one is a very tricky question. There are thousands of public and private wiki site. I will not be surprised if there are few thousands MediaWiki administrators.

When will the book be published?
I think it’s around 25th March, 2007.

At the end I would like to thank you Marcel for this interview and also hope to hear readers about the book and about wiki technology. I would love to hear your comments about the book.

</interview>

Mizan, it has been a pleasure to work with you on this interview and I very much look forward to reading and reviewing your book and implementing the contents in my next wiki projects. I hope the book will be well received!

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More books on Second Life coming

SLNN.com posted a nice overview of a four upcoming books on Second Life. When looking through the Amazon.com catalog, I spotted another one.

Listing them all below:

Related: all my Second Life articles

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Wikinomics

Somehow, I guess via Techmeme or so, I found out about a book that I find quite appealing and which I have just ordered.

Why is it so appealing? Well first of all: the term Wiki is in the title and I am very much into wiki’s. But that is obviously not really a convincing reason. No, what has struck me most about the book, was the presentation of it’s author to which I listened to in the train this week.

In more than 1 hour the author presented a very convincing and interesting picture of a couple of disruptive global trends with the common denominator mass collaboration to “harness knowledge and the capability to innovate and create value”.

If you want to learn more I advice you to check out the dedicated website at Wikinomics.com.

I am going to read the free first chapter of the book and than re-listen to that excellent presentation, while awaiting the delivery of the book.

By the way during the presentation the author of the book Don Tapscott mentions a video of a interesting panel discussion with four young adults at the World Congress on Information Technology 2006 (see page 8). According to Tapscott the panel offers an in dept insight into the technology preferences of the new generation entering the workplace soon.
It was a bit hard to find the presentation, but judging by the first 15 minute I seems very worthwhile: the video

Finally, Tapscott has an interesting presentation on what he calls the Net-generation. I particularly like the slide below which provides an insight with what kind of ethics the Net-genaration will enter the workplace:

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Upcoming: review of book on Mediawiki

I was quite happy to learn about a new book on Mediawiki called MediaWiki Administrators’ Tutorial Guide. I wonder if it is the first book on Mediawiki? Anyone? Update: see comments!

Mediawiki is the open source software backbone of Wikipedia and a very popular choice for many other wiki’s as well.

Mid March I plan to be reviewing the book here, which I very much look forward to considering a few wiki initiatives I have in mind. Having an up-to-date dedicated book is so much better that trying to surf you way though often fragmented information on the Internet. And of course, I can read a book on the train!

A brief overview of what to expect:

  • Installing MediaWiki and getting started quickly
  • Using special pages and domains
  • Running multiple wikis from a single installation
  • Incorporating images, multimedia, and advanced formatting
  • Structuring your wiki from the start for easy navigation as it grows
  • Managing users and protecting pages from vandalism
  • Creating new MediaWiki templates

Update: please find my interview with the author

Update: here is the review

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Kids Translation Small Pieces Well Received

On the 31st of January I blogged about my publication of the Dutch translation of the kids version of Small Pieces Loosely Joint by David Weinberger.

Well, 20 days after the event I must say that the work on the translation and special website have certainly “paid off” in terms of the attention the publication got in the blogosphere. Although I stopped counting, at one point in time I think around 10-15 blogs had picked up the story and spread the word. It was also nice to see so much coverage on blogs related to Education, which of course is the prime target of the effort.

In terms of visit statistics, which I am tracking of course: to date around 1100 unique visitors and around 50 per day.

Last but not least, I was interviewed about the translation over e-mail by a small Dutch Newspaper called Friesch Dagblad (20.000 readers). The result was an half-page article! Please find a scan of the article (in Dutch; 2MB). I have no direct link because the article is not on the Internet.

Link: The Dutch translation of the kids version of David Weinberger’s Small Pieces Loosely Joint

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Giving something back: Dutch Translation of the kids version of Small Pieces Loosely Joint

In an effort to do something back to the World Internet Community, me and my dad created a Dutch translation of the kids version of David Weinberger’s Small Pieces Loosely Joint.

How this came about? Well a few months ago, I visited the weblog of David Weinberger (via JP Rangaswami’s wonderful blog) and followed a link to one of his most famous books called Small Pieces Loosely Joint (next to his co-authorship for Cluetrain of course).

There I read David’s “kiddified” version of his book in which he tries to explain “What the internet is for”. Being a dad myself, and Internet geek of course, I really connected to the text. Then I spotted that the text was already translated in Norwegian, Italian, French and Portuguese, but not yet in Dutch. That is when the idea was born.

I asked my dad (having more time… :-) ) to do the first round of the translation, after which I did the proof reading. The next step was building the web pages, copying David’s own layout. In order to really create a Dutch experience for the potential online readers, I searched for some nice links in Dutch that would relate to the text, just like in the original piece of David. I even re-created some of the graphics. Finally I created an additional PDF format of the text. As always, it takes more time than you think…

The files itself are hosted on my own account at Textdrive.

By the way, David already posted about this happy event!

Other links (all in Dutch):

Link: The Dutch translation of the kids version of David Weinberger’s Small Pieces Loosely Joint

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FIR's review of Second Life: the Official Guide

Although I have retreated from Second Life a little bit to refind some balance in my first life, I still try to keep track of SL experiences and developments.

And one of the things that were still lying around was the first book dedicated to Second Life: Second Life: the Official Guide. I really was planning to read it through page-by-page and then review it, but the guys at For Immediate Release (my favourite podcast) beat me to it and did a wonderful job on the review.

So if you want to know if the book is any good, head over to FIR and listen to their 30 minutes podcast review of Second Life: the Official Guide.

Related: all my Second Life articles

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