Archive for February, 2008

Thinking about writing a Facebook application?

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

Facebook Applications PlatformYou might want to reconsider. Take a look at these confused rules about what you can’t do with your facebook application. Here’s a great example:

Present a user with a subsequent friend invite page if the user has already clicked a Facebook-rendered Skip, Cancel, or Skip This Step button, unless the user explicitly selects to invite friends from a page that offers more than just the friend invite option. If the application presents the user with a friend invite page that does not include a Facebook-rendered Skip, Cancel, or Skip This Step button, the application must offer some navigation option to leave the friend invite process, and the application must never present the user with a subsequent friend invite page unless the user explicitly selects to invite friends from a page that offers more than that single option.

What? What if I make a friend-invite page that has a partly Facebook-rendered Skip button that has no other options other than the option to Cancel via a non-Facebook-rendered Withdraw button, which then leads to a Facebook-rendered Cancel page with and without options to not invite none of your friends provided that you hit the Facebook-rendered Skip this step three times previously? What then?

They might want to ease up on the explicit micro-managing and institute some more general ‘best practices.’ I think making a Facebook app can add value to a service or website if you have users asking for it, or if you can plainly see a benefit. Personally I think Facebook applications have gotten out of control, and I see the need to regulate, but there are better ways to do this.

I’ll let Facebook have the last word on this.

My Support For Obama Has Changed

Monday, February 11th, 2008

I’m sure pretty soon I’ll start writing about something else other than the election. Just this has been consuming my attention. I have been reading, and contributing a little, to comment threads on the New York Time’s political blog, and also I’ve been reading comments others have left on Salon, and on the LA Times, and other places. One thing has really stood out for me:

It’s really bitter out there right now.

And obviously, I haven’t been exactly neutral. It’s led to some self-reflection. About a year ago, actually more than a year now, 2006, is when I began supporting Obama. I liked what he had to say, I think I liked Hillary Clinton ok too, but I just seemed to gravitate toward Obama. I bought an Obama bumper sticker sometime in May of last year. Someone peeled half of it off when I parked on the street. A sign of things to come I suppose. But anyhow, at that time, my support for Obama felt very positive. I saw his candiacy in a very good light. I didn’t feel guilty for saying he inspired me, something if you say now someone or other will mention kool-aid. It’s off limits to say the i word, you don’t want someone to think you’re part of a cult.

So things have changed. I don’t feel positive anymore. I think I’m very disappointed. I think it was silly and naive for me to think that if people would give him a chance they would see what a great president Obama would make. I thought that is what happened in Iowa. But that’s not what happened. Once he became known, everyone didn’t embrace him. About half of us were revolted and clinged to their candidate, which is ok. The meanness isn’t. Maybe, with the way the election went this weekend with all these wins for Obama, things are changing, but I’m not sure. The comments I have read about my candidate, that he’s sleasy and manipulative, that he’s lying, that he’s pulled the race card, that he’s been subversive and underhanded, have left me dumbfounded. I have really tried to step out side of myself and see if I could see those things in Obama too, but I haven’t been able to.

But yet, I don’t feel the same anymore. I don’t think it is Obama’s fault. I don’t want to place blame on anyone else. I’m probably partly responsible, because I have felt so repulsed by Clinton’s campaign.

It just sucks. This thing has turned bitter and ugly and nasty and I’m tired of it.

Hillary Clinton Doesn’t Know How to Lose

Saturday, February 9th, 2008

You know what else bothers me about Hillary Clinton? She doesn’t give concession speeches. She just pretends nothing happened. When Obama lost in New Hampshire he gave a great concession speech, the one that’s been named the ‘Yes We Can’ speech that will.i.am of the Black Eyed Peas turned into a music video that has been viewed over two million times on YouTube. The speech itself has been viewed over 300,000 times. 300,000 times for a speech. Hillary Clinton lost three states in a sweep to Obama today, will she even mention it?

I really want to vote for her if she wins the nomination. I want to vote for her for our future, and for my daughter. But man, she is making it really tough for me. I may not vote for anyone this November…

UPDATE:

From the NYTIMES

Mrs. Clinton said nothing about the day’s results as she spoke to a cheering crowd at the Jefferson-Jackson day dinner shortly after Mr. Obama was named the winner of the Nebraska and Washington caucuses.

Her campaign argued that Mr. Obama had greatly outspent her on television advertisements in all three states.

You know what, I’m tired of this. I’m tired of her. I’m not voting for her if she wins the nomination. I’ll write in Obama or Gore or something.

How many more states does Obama have to win to be considered a legitimate nominee?

Saturday, February 9th, 2008

He’s beating Hillary Clinton by pledged delegates, by states, and still it doesn’t seem like people are giving him the benefit of the doubt. Every one of his wins is spinned into insignficance. Every time he defeats Clinton, there’s some excuse that takes shape in the media, and they’re still waiting for Hillary to come out on top. So tell me, you’re going to discount Iowa? Ok. South Carolina? Sure. Georgia, yeah it’s just one more state. How about Washington, Kansas, Illinois, Colorado Nebraska, Idaho, Lousiana, Delaware, Missouri, Alabama, Alaska, Conneticut, Minnesota, and Utah. Somebody out there got some kind of lame excuse why they don’t matter too? The US is more than just New York and California. And Obama won a share of delegates in those states too. Time to stop doubting. Polls put him over McCain.

Right now Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are at a point where both have a solid base of supporters. It’s split the Democratic party in half, so to speak (many independents vote for Obama). The thing to do now for one of them to win, is to appeal to other’s base of supporters enough to get a majority. Obama is doing that by getting endorsements from prominent politicans that appeal to Clinton’s base. Clinton however is turning just about everything Obama says into some kind of skewed half truth, At every point she’s diminishing Obama and his accomplishments in the primary race thus far. Considering how passionate Obama’s base is, I don’t see how that’s going to get her to break out from just her supporters.

Obama is more likely to draw in Clinton’s base, than vice versa.

But still everyone expects Hillary to win. I don’t get it. What will it take?