Yearly Archives: 2008

Elgg – Build Your Own Social Network

Social networking sites like Facebook are being used by a huge amount of people (by huge, I mean huge). A problem they seem to be plagued by is that anyone and everyone can use them. They’re full of people with completely different interests, they’re mainly used to play silly games and “poke” people, and overall they’re big time wasters. Their root use has been overshadowed by everything else. What is a social networking site for? Connecting and communicating with people.

What we need are more topical social networking sites. Sites that are intended to be used by people with a given set of interests. I’m not saying large-scale sites like Facebook are a bad idea, but I think niche sites are a good idea as well.

That’s where Elgg.org comes in.

Elgg is an open, flexible social networking engine, designed to run at the heart of any socially-aware application. Building on Elgg is easy, and because the engine handles common web application and social functionality for you, you can concentrate on developing your idea.

Overall it’s got a Facebook-like feel to it, offering users profiles and dashboards, blogging, bookmarking, forums, OpenSocial applications, etc. It even has APIs.

I’ve yet to try out an install of it yet, but it looks like a great open-source script.

BlogBuzz October 4, 2008

Browsershots

BrowserShots.org is a service that, as the name suggests, can show you screenshots of what a website looks like in a multitude of browsers and conputer configurations. (If you’ve already heard of the service, sorry I’m boring you to death. ) You can select…

ProBlogger: Secrets Blogging Your Way to a Six-Figure Income

I was at a Barnes & Noble store a couple days ago, and I saw a few copies Darren Rowse and Chris Garrett’s book ProBlogger: Secrets Blogging Your Way to a Six-Figure Income sitting on the shelf in the Computers and Internet section (the…

Spammers Get Trickier

Now that automatic comment spam is becoming less effective, thanks to tools like Akismet, the miscreant marketters are addding a new few tricks to their their arsenal. According to Mark Ghosh of Weblog Tools Collection, spammers are paying people to write long and intelligent…

The Mobile Web Part 6: 7 Useful Mobile Site Resources

Over the past five days we have covered quite a few bases in the mobile website area. In case you missed them, you can find the posts here: Part 1: Why Go Mobile? Part 2: Mobilize Your Site the Easy Way Part 3: iPhonitizing…

The Mobile Web Part 5: iPhoneMicrosites.com

While I was looking for some extra iPhone-formatted websites to round out yesterday’s list, I came across iPhone Microsites. The site caught my attention, so I figured I’d make it part of the Mobile Web series. iPhone Microsites is based entirely around the “iPhone…

The Mobile Web Part 4: 14 iPhone-Formatted Websites

Welcome to day four of The Mobile Web. We’ve previously covered a lot of ground on the subject of mobile websites over the last few days. Today will be lighter reading though. Who’s up for a design roundup of mobile websites? What are some…

BlogBuzz September 27, 2008

The Mobile Web Part 3: iPhonitizing Your Site Sans MoFuse

In part two of the “The Mobile Web” series, I covered MoFuse, a service that automatically generates (and hosts) iPhone and WML versions of websites for you. Today we will be doing something a little more interesting. Today we will be putting together iPhone-formatted…