Ecampaigning Forum panel discussion: How do we campaign around elections?

For the next couple of days I’m at the ecampaigning forum in Oxford and am going to attempt to live blog the main sessions as far as possible. These notes are largely unedited, so they’re likely to be a bit sketchy. For context, feel free to post a comment and I’ll catch up with them when I can. Glen Tarman, Bond, Chair how have elections played out around the world? what lessons can we learn for our ecampaigns and other activities? elections focus mostly on domestic issues but that is changing around climate change, immigration, etc. our focus is primarily on global issues. two elections coming up: ...

April 10, 2008

Ecampaigning Forum: Karina Brisby (Oxfam)

For the next couple of days I’m at the ecampaigning forum in Oxford and am going to attempt to live blog the main sessions as far as possible. These notes are largely unedited, so they’re likely to be a bit sketchy. For context, feel free to post a comment and I’ll catch up with them when I can. Karina Brisby - Interactive Campaigns Manager - Oxfam ...

April 10, 2008

Ecampaigning Forum: Ben Brandzel

For the next couple of days I’m at the ecampaigning forum in Oxford and am going to attempt to live blog the main sessions as far as possible. These notes are largely unedited, so they’re likely to be a bit sketchy. For context, feel free to post a comment and I’ll catch up with them when I can. ...

April 10, 2008

Book Review: Practical Reporting with Ruby and Rails

Practical Reporting with Ruby and Rails is primarily a book about the presentation of reports. Having gone in expecting a mixture of presentation and production techniques I was a little surprised to find that the vast majority of the reader’s time is spent looking at various GUI and graphing toolkits, export to MS Office and the like, and there’s not much space given to managing large volumes of data, warehousing, and other such topics. ...

April 7, 2008

links for 2008-04-07

Report backs freer use of data | Technology | The Guardian “work is under way on a government “information incubator” to encourage experiments with “mashups” and other innovative uses of government data” (tags: forblog freedata government uk web2.0) Using SimpleDB and Rails in No Time with ActiveResource (tags: activeresource amazon databases simpledb thecloud) Should I be worried about piracy? | New Music Strategies “The overwhelming cry from the independent musician twenty years ago was ‘How can I just get my music out there?’ Problem solved. Now what are you going to do?” ...

April 7, 2008

links for 2008-04-07

Aid to developing world falls for second year | Business | guardian.co.uk “At the 2005 Gleneagles summit, G8 countries committed to pledge an additional $50bn in aid by 2010. Three years on, this target now looks to be missed by as much as $30bn, said Oxfam, enough to save 5 million lives.” (tags: aid debt g8 internationaldevelopment poverty) Open veins: Crude reflections Nick’s article on Ecuador from the latest Red Pepper. “We need a vision of growing qualitatively not quantitively.” ...

April 7, 2008

Guest Post: Inline CSS Using a TextMate Command

A few months back I posted a series of entries about the process of producing HTML emails. Those posts generated a number of comments and emails, including some from Christopher White who has been working with the TamTam library in TextMate to clean up his workflow. He offered me this article which I present below. ...

April 1, 2008

Book Review: Design Patterns In Ruby

For many the idea of bringing design patterns to ruby is a terrifying one. Having taken refuge from over-engineered java projects (or for that matter, attempts to apply java engineering approaches to a somewhat dynamic language like PHP) the baggage that often goes along with design patterns isn’t what a recent convert is looking for. But as I mentioned in my last review of a design patterns volume, and series editor Obie Fernandez highlights in his foreword, design patterns don’t have to be used that way and maintain merit when used as a source of collective experience and shared language. ...

March 28, 2008

The Wire and the web

With its complex yet penetrating arcs and careful unravelling of a fictionalised but well-rooted version of Baltimore, The Wire quickly became my favourite television show of recent years. So following its recent conclusion I’ve naturally been devouring every article I can find, not quite ready to let go. The following paragraphs from a piece by executive producer David Simon struck me as an unintended example of why newspapers (his previous profession) have generally fared so poorly over the past few years, and a reminder of how easy it can be to miss the possibilities new technologies : ...

March 24, 2008

links for 2008-03-10

BBC NEWS | World | Americas | US names ‘9/11 steel’ warship Steel salvaged from the World Trade Center site has been used to build a warship. Terribly symbolic, and terribly sad. (tags: militarism revenge symbolism worldtradecenter) John McCain’s Charitable Contributions For a while I held onto a belief that John McCain somewhat resembled his chosen persona. Then he decided that maybe torture was okay after all, and a whole lot more crept out of the woodwork along with that. ...

March 10, 2008