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Feb
27

Something magical happened tonight

u2_live_london_gig.jpgI don't usually get particularly emotional on my blog but something happened this evening that has fundamentally changed my outlook and enthusiasm for the future.

From a chance phone call with a friend, through a chance Tweet from someone in Australia, a sequence of events unfolded this evening that resulted in the most thrilling and exciting experience I've had in as long as I can remember.

Tonight on WorldTV we broadcast the only live Internet video coverage of U2's secret rooftop gig in London, to an audience around the world.

It wasn't planned, it wasn't scripted, it... just... happened.

Through the power of Twitter and the serendipitous events that followed, I was able, from my office in West London, to be swept along in a chain of events that resulted in something thrilling, a little anarchic, and tremendously exciting.

It all kicked off late this afternoon with a phone call from a friend of mine who works in the music business. He told me about a surprise U2 gig that was about to take place at the BBC building on Regent Street.

Ironically my friend was at the very venue where another live broadcast event we're involved in will be taking place next Friday. He'd got his dates mixed up and thought I was calling to apologize for being late.

A silly conversation ensued with him saying "where are you?" and me replying "where are you?" which continued repeatedly until we realized he was 7 days ahead of himself.

But I digress...

I'd heard rumblings about this U2 gig a week ago but hadn't paid much attention. I decided to tweet the confirmed information since it seemed nobody else was doing so. Later I learned that even the major U2 fan websites weren't 100% sure this gig was going on.

A few moments later a guy from Australia asked if I knew whether it was being streamed live on the Internet. I didn't. But his tweet, and the fact I'd spent all week experimenting with live broadcasting in preparation for next week's event, got me thinking I might be able to do something for him. Rebroadcasting stuff to friends live over the Internet has been something I've been doing since the mid 90's.

Common sense told me that if the gig was supposed to be on the rooftop of the BBC Radio building, then, probably, it would be broadcast on BBC radio. With the setup I'd built this week, it was a cinch for me to rebroadcast any of the BBC radio stations. Previous discussions with the BBC had indicated this would probably be ok to do. I worked out it was the Chris Evans show on Radio 2 and I began rebroadcasting it at worldtv.com/live.

I tweeted this back to the guy in Australia and sent a couple of other messages to people who seemed interested in the subject, including a U2 blogger. For the best part of an hour Chris Evans interviewed the band, and although I don't consider myself a U2 fan, I found the interview pretty interesting. Interesting enough that I remember thinking that if I was a U2 fan I'd be sharing this high and low with friends. But for nearly an hour less than 10 people were tuning in. Frankly I was a little disappointed and went back to what I was doing before, keeping the radio on at half volume.

Quite by chance I caught a mention by Chris Evans that there would be some video of the event on the hardly ever used BBC interactive channel. This is a channel where you have to go through a series of menus on your TV to get to.

By this time maybe 16 people were tuning in (it was now just a couple of minutes before the actual gig) and the video could have been on any number of BBC channels. I didn't know which.

I didn't want to lose the audio for the people tuning in, but decided to take a chance just seconds before the gig was due to start. I struck gold first time and in just 15 seconds a live audio broadcast became a live global video broadcast. And what a broadcast it turned out to be.

The effect on numbers was immediate.

Within seconds, the number of people watching quickly began rising. It didn't stop. Within two minutes there were 100 people watching and this quickly hit 150... 200... 250 without me able to blink. I was transfixed. At its peak (the gig was 15 mins long) there were over 500 people watching the event live on WorldTV. This might not sound like many for those outside of the business, but for a live internet broadcast with zero planning or publicity, just a couple of tweets, and on a previously unknown URL, this was pretty astonishing.

It's hard to convey the feelings I had during all this. In so many ways what happened tonight was the realization of a 25 year dream. As a young lad I often fantasized about running my own pirate TV station. Tonight that dream happened and in the most beautifully serendipitous way.

I'm not sure where it's all going to lead but my creative energies are running rampant right now, which as anyone who knows me would be serious cause for concern. I'm locking back into ideas I had two decades ago, and they're getting spun, mashed up and remixed like crazy. Watch this space...

If you like food or drink, you should definitely tune in next Friday afternoon to the same URL, for our first ever scheduled live broadcast event on WorldTV. There's details in this PDF here and if you'd like a reminder on the day, simply follow me on Twitter. It's a great venue (another rooftop!) and there's some great people involved. Should be fun...

I shall now return to the original scheduled programming.

Feb
20

Secret of the Congestion Charge

congestionzone.jpgTwo days ago I had a meeting in central London, on Park Lane. This meant driving in from Queen's Park which is in Northish London and into the £8 a day Congestion Zone.

Now it's fairly well known that there is one road that goes right through the Congestion Zone which you don't have to pay for - this is a north-south route taking in Edgware Road, Park Lane, down through Victoria to Vauxhall Bridge. This is deliberate by the Government and is there to allow people a way to get from North to South London or vice-versa without having to go round the congestion zone. So long as you stay on that road, don't veer off in any direction, you're fine.

What I discovered though (and this is the brilliant bit) is that the underground Car Park on Park Lane, the one underneath Hyde Park and opposite the Dorcester Hotel is not in the congestion zone. There are no cameras on the approaches and the car park attendants confirmed this. So rather than using the north-south route as a through-way, you can use it to get to this Car Park, park your car and wander off into Central London without paying the charge. Providing of course you exit in the same way up or down the north-south route.

The Park Lane car park is actually superbly situated for many parts of Central London including Oxford Street, Piccadilly, Mayfair and Hyde Park itself and compared to many of the parking options in London is actually quite reasonable - £6 for 2 hours.

I'm going to be parking there much more often!

Feb
11

How to turn Twitter into your RSS Reader

Twitter-Bird-RSS.jpgHave you ever wished you could get all your favourite blogs and RSS feeds coming in via Twitter? I don't know about you but I'm increasingly getting the information I need from Twitter and turning less and less to RSS. There are still a few blogs that I would like to receive updates from though, and if I could get those coming in via Twitter, I could ditch my RSS reader once and for all.

I set about a way to bring all my favourite RSS feeds and blogs into my Twitter stream. Here's how I did it...

Using Twitter as an RSS Reader

You will need (all free to obtain):

  1. A Google Reader account
  2. A 2nd Twitter Account
  3. An account with Twitterfeed
  4. About 20-30 mins

The basic idea is this...

  • Get all your RSS feeds into Google Reader
  • Create an RSS feed out of Google Reader aggregating all your feeds (this is not obvious how to do this - see below)
  • Use Twitterfeed to take the combined feed and post it to a 2nd Twitter account
  • Follow the 2nd Twitter account from your main Twitter account

Before you dive in, you should know...

  • Since all your RSS feeds will effectively be coming to you from a single Twitter account (the 2nd one), it will not be possible to readily distinguish the individual source of the RSS feed when you see it on Twitter. This doesn't bother me but it might bother you.
  • TwitterFeed currently only checks your RSS feed at maximum (or is that minimum?) every 30 mins. If you have a lot of feeds you'll get several items (up to 5) coming in at once every half an hour.

What does it look like? Here's the 2nd Twitter account I set up.

smashingfeedtwitter.jpg


Step 1 - Bring all your RSS feeds into Google Reader


If you already use Google Reader then you're one step ahead. If not, get yourself a Google Reader account and input (or import) all your favourite RSS feeds into Google Reader. TIP - You can do this via OPML which is a way of moving around entire lists of RSS feeds at once. Google has instructions for this.


Step 2 - Output an aggregated RSS feed from Google Reader

Now configure Google Reader to output all your feeds as a single RSS feed. Google doesn't make this easy. For example there is no RSS feed of your main Google Reader home page.

It is possible however to create an RSS feed for any 'folder of feeds' in Google Reader. You create a folder for all the feeds you wish to track via Twitter, and then create an 'output' RSS feed for that particular folder.

Start by clicking the 'Manage Subscriptions' link down the bottom of your Google Reader page (all instructions and labels correct as of early 2009).

On the 'Subscriptions' tab you can see your list of incoming RSS feeds. Choose any ONE feed and use the 'Change Folders' drop-down menu on the right to create a new folder. It's baffling why this is the only place to do it but it is. Call your new folder 'Track via Twitter' (it can be anything but that's the example I'll use through the remainder of this tutorial).

Now switch to the 'Folders and Tags' tab to see your new folder. When I did it at first, I couldn't see the folder immediately. I had to go back to my main Google Reader page and then back into 'Manage Subscriptions' to see the new folder I'd created.

Once you can see your new Track via Twitter folder, you want to change the sharing option for the folder so that it is 'public'. You do this by selecting the checkbox for your folder and use the 'Change sharing' drop down menu at the top.

At this point you have a choice. Either go ahead and move all your RSS feeds into this folder (this can be done by drag and drop on the main Google Reader page) or proceed with the next step and come back to this job later. I think it's easier to do it now but it's up to you.

I'll assume you've done it now, for the purposes of this guide.

From the 'Folders and Tags' tab in Google Reader click the 'view public page' link for your folder. You should see all your RSS feeds on a clean looking HTML page hosted by Google. This page has its own unique RSS feed and this is what you will use to get everything over to Twitter. The page should look something like this...

allmyfeeds.jpg

Step 3 - Use Twitterfeed to take your aggregated RSS feed and post it to Twitter

Looking at your Google public page (above) showing all your RSS feeds you now need to grab the RSS feed from this page. This step will be obvious to some people and completely new to others. Skip this next bit if you know how to do it.

How to find an RSS feed from a web page?
The best and most universal way to do this is to view the source code of the HTML page.

In your browser find the option to View Source (instructions vary by browser). If you have Firefox you can hit CTRL-U (or CMD-U on a Mac) or select 'View Source' from the 'View' menu.

Looking at the source code, search for the line which specifies the URL for the RSS feed for the page. In this case it will have the word 'atom' in it so you can (in Firefox) search for the word 'atom' using CTRL-F (CMD-F) on Mac.

The line you need will start out something like this....

<link rel="alternate" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.google.com/reader/public/atom/user%2F176... with more gobbledegook after it.

The part you want is the URL bit, the bit that starts http:// and ends with the the first set of " quotes after http://. It will be a long URL. Mine is...

http://www.google.com/reader/public/atom/user%2F17653283328189908888%2Flabel%2FAll%20my%20feeds

Yours will probably have the words 'Track via Twitter' at the end.

Copy this URL carefully to the clipboard and paste it into a temporary text file somewhere. You'll need it in the next step.

If you want reassurance, paste the same URL into a new browser window or tab and hit enter to see what comes back. You can see what mine looks like here for comparison. N.B. If you are logged into Google Reader at this point you might get a popup message or similar. Ignore and continue.

Moving the RSS feed into Twitterfeed
Twitterfeed is a standalone web application not developed by Twitter that takes any RSS feed and posts the items it contains to the Twitter account of your choosing (you will need to know the username and password for the Twitter account you plan to use and the RSS feed gathered above).

I will not go into a big explanation of how to do this step as it is fairly intuitive. Suffice to say you sign up for a free Twitterfeed account (which requires OpenID - a frankly painful extra step if you don't have one already), and you configure TwitterFeed to take the RSS URL you carefully found above, and post it to the Twitter account of your choosing (the 2nd account).

WARNING - DO NOT USE YOUR PRIMARY TWITTER ACCOUNT USERNAME AND PASSWORD WITHIN TWITTERFEED

If you do, all your RSS feeds will be posted to your primary Twitter stream and confuse and potentially annoy all your followers.

Instead, create a 2nd Twitter account (which will require a 2nd email address), give it a name that makes sense to you (My primary Twitter account is @smashing so I made my 2nd account @smashingfeed. Then use the username and password of the 2nd account within Twitterfeed.

There's some options within Twitterfeed you can set but the defaults are fine.

Step 4 - Follow the 2nd Twitter account from your main Twitter account

This is the easy bit but do be a little careful. Make sure you are logged in from your primary Twitter account and then follow the 2nd account. It's easy to do this the wrong way round. Give your 2nd Twitter account its own logo so you will recognize it when it pops up in your primary Twitter stream.

That's it! Now you can follow all your RSS feeds via Twitter and if you've found this helpful maybe you can follow me on Twitter too.

One last thing... Don't be surprised if other people start following your 2nd account as well. If you don't like this idea you can 'protect the updates' of the 2nd account and only grant access to your primary account.

Feb
5

The Top 10 Web 2.0 Drupal Themes

abeesparadise.pngYou can spend a lot of time going through ThemeGarden looking for Drupal Themes. Many are just not very good, old fashioned or amateurish.

Here's my list of the top 10 professional looking, contemporary, web 2.0 style Drupal themes - in alphabetical order. (Drupal is a popular content management system for building websites)

  1. aBeesParadise
  2. Celju
  3. Colorpaper
  4. Drupify
  5. Freestyle
  6. Fresh Media
  7. Oxidation
  8. Sandtiger (borderline)
  9. Scruffy
  10. Superclean

If I have time later I'll add thumbnails but in the meantime you can hover over the little orange SnapShot icon to get a preview.

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