Turner's Perspective

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PLEASE STOP USING ALL CAPS!

THIS QUALIFIES AS A RANT.

ALL CAPS

I SEE THIS PRACTICE ALL THE TIME, AND I CAN'T TAKE IT ANYMORE.

YOU'VE SEEN IT TOO... AN MLS OR REALTOR.COM LISTING, A POST OR A DESCRIPTION IN A REAL ESTATE SHOW, AND THE ENTIRE TEXT IS IN CAPS.... LIKE THIS. HELLO? THIS SEEMS SO BASIC TO ME.

IT'S OBVIOUSLY NOT BASIC. I JUST FINISHED VIEWING A SHOW WITH A DESCRIPTION JUST LIKE THIS AND IT SENT ME OVER THE EDGE... AND THERE WERE NO PARAGRAPH BREAKS. THE STARTLING PART WAS THAT IT WAS PRODUCED BY A VERY GOOD REALTOR WHO OTHERWISE CREATES EXCELLENT SHOWS. SHE IS NOT ALONE. THIS HAPPENS WAY TOO OFTEN.

WHY? ARE PEOPLE COPYING AND PASTING FROM SOMEWHERE ELSE THAT AUTOMATICALLY PUTS EVERY WORD IN CAPS? ARE CAPS AND USING ARCHAIC ABBREVIATIONS A HOLDOVER FROM THE MLS?

WHATEVER THE REASON... PLEASE STOP. YOU'RE KILLING YOUR READERS. AND ME.

 

87 commentsJeff Turner • July 30 2007 09:21AM

AR Tutorials: Embedding Anything In Your ActiveRain Blog Posts

Several clients have emailed me in the past two weeks asking how to embed Real Estate Shows into their ActiveRain blog posts.

It works just like any other embed code, so I thought it was time to do a how to video on this subject. I'm going to use RealEstateShows.com embed code for this example, but, again, it works the same way for any HTML code.

I'm going to insert the embedded Show here:

And I'm going to insert the embedded video that illustrates how I did it here:

IT'S IMPORTANT TO SAVE TO DRAFT BEFORE SWITCHING BETWEEN WYSIWYG AND HTML!

As you can see from the video, you can't see either the video or the Show when you are editing your post. This is the most confusing part of how ActiveRain has implemented this. And, if you move from HTML to WYSIWYG or from WYSIWYG to HTML without first saving to draft, you'll lose your changes.

Note: Show was created on our trip to West Virginia. That's our creek... my favorite place in the world.

Other posts on this topic:

A Video On How To Embed A YouTube Video - 03/01/2007 02:29 PM

7 Steps to You Tube in your Posts - NEW! FREE! RUN! - 06/06/2007 08:39 PM

Putting Video in Your post or comments from You Tube.. - 03/01/2007 04:56 PM

Embedding videos into a WordPress blogging platform - 02/24/2007 06:33 PM

Video Service Comparison - Veoh, Brightcove, Photobucket, VideoEgg and YouTube - 07/09/2007 09:25 AM

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83 commentsJeff Turner • July 28 2007 04:55PM

A New Way To Browse For Content - Fichey

Disclaimer: This is not going to be for everyone.

But if you like finding information in a non-linear way and understanding what's "hot" right now, Fichey may be for you.

fichey.comFichey.com launched yesterday [ TechCrunch ]. It has a new approach to the growing trend of web surfing that has been popularized by sites like  Del.icio.us, Digg, Downfly, Reddit and StumbleUpon. What makes Fichey unique is its simplicity and beauty. It's 100% flash based, so the controller is ridiculously simple to use... two buttons gives you control over the flow of content. You can select which of the social bookmarking sites you want to surf through and it serves up the most popular content in snapshot format. Double clicking any image takes you to the original page for detailed review. It will be a regular stop for me each morning. I may find something I missed. I like that.

Step back in time as well.  

What I like about most about this is the ability to go back in time to see what was popular on any given day. Right now the history only goes back to July 5th, when Fichey began archiving, but in Internet time, that's an eternity.

jeff signature

17 commentsJeff Turner • July 27 2007 05:27PM

The Best Of Julie Ferenzi - This Is Not The End

I STARTED WRITING THIS POST WEEKS AGO.

best of julie ferenziI started Right after Julie Ferenzi emailed me early one evening to say she was contacted by a Wall Street Journal writer to be interviewed because of her blogs.

She was giddy. You could see the smiles in every word of her email. Later we were instant messaging and every three or four messages she'd throw in, "Wall Street Journal :)" So, as a way of celebrating her joy, I thought I'd do a best of Julie Ferenzi post.

I was going to post it that day, but I decided to wait until the end of the competition. I'm proud of this "stay at home Mom" and all she's accomplished in spite of her time crunches. My goal was to prove blogging could work for a brand new agent. And it did.

This only includes the posts she wrote for this competition. It's fitting that her final post of the competition here on AR is a listing. But she also spent a great deal of time during the competition starting a charity with my wife. They are at it every single day, often collaborating on posts the other is writing. The world will be a better place because of the two of them. I listen to their calls and marvel at their passion. You can read her posts on Mothers Fighting For Others here.

Julie, it has been a pleasure to work with you and to become your friend. I won my prize in this competition a long time ago. Meeting you and being able to stay in your home has been one of the highlights of our vacation. Both Rocky and I are proud to know you and your family.

This is not the end. It is only the beginning!

1103 Bromley Ct. | Aurora, IL

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32 commentsJeff Turner • July 14 2007 01:04PM

It's Not About The Technology - An iPhone Review

IT'S ABOUT THE EXPERIENCE. ALWAYS.

iphone in handI've had my iPhone for two weeks now. I got it in Des Moines, Iowa, halfway on our journey to west virginia. My wife suggested that there would be fewer people clamoring for it in the heartland than on the coasts. She was right. less than 18 hours after it's launched it only took two phone calls to find a store in Des Moines that had one in stock. And it was right off of I-80. No muss. No Fuss. No waiting in line. So far so good. :) So let's talk a bit about my experience with it.

The apple side of it is actually brilliant. The online process was flawless. The idea that you can activate your phone at home, or in my case, on the road, is very cool. Unfortunately, the complexities of switching my current phone number from Sprint, to my AT&T account, which was a data card account was too much for the folks at AT&T. The phone activated in minutes, so I've been able to call out and use all of it's features from day 1. However, when they switched my phone number, they switched it to the data card. Why? Even they can't answer that. Let's just say that this is a bad thing. It invalidated both Sim cards and I was forced to spend hours on the phone with AT&T trying to figure out why it happened and then drive 71 miles to the closest AT&T store in Washington, PA to get two new SIM cards. (I could go into details that would curl your hair.) As a result, I was four days without anyone being able to call my cell phone. I've not been alone in activation woes. I have to believe some of it was simply overload.

Set up was a breeze.

How easy was it? I don't remember doing it. That's how easy it was. The sync is done via iTunes and all of my Mail apps just configured themselves without me doing anything but selecting them. I didn't have to mess with my information at all, it all just ported perfectly first time. I was up and running in literally minutes.

It's a lot tougher than it looks.

If any of you remember the flack Apple got over some of their iPod models being easy to scatch, you wont' have to worry about that with the iPhone. From my own personal experience, it feels tough and seems very tough. I've put it in my pocket with keys and it comes out without a hint of a scratch. But don't take my word for it. I'm a Mac lover. PCWorld has tried its own stress tests on the iPhone (Video). They put the iPhone through some rigorous Scratch Tests and Drop Tests and even the PC guys were impressed. So, I'm happy about it's toughness.

Photo quality is pretty darn good... for a phone.

Unless you're in low light or the subject is moving. In general, the camera is good. You need good light and you have to hold it still. It's more subject to blurring from movement of your hand than a standard digital camera today. But I've been getting good results. I've taken over 200 photos with it so far and most of them have been acceptable. Some of them have been excellent. I could talk on about it, but it's best to show you some examples.

Here's are two photos of my breakfast at Jerry's in Grafton, West Virginia. Both were taken without flash, with just the restaurant's indoor lighting. The one on the left is taken with the Kodak v705, the one on the right is the iPhone. There is noticeable color cast in the iPhone photo. This can be removed in Photoshop or at Picnik.com.

jerrys kodak jerrys iphone

However, I have noticed some random color inconsistency from photo to photo. Here's an example. Both photos were taken using the iphone. They were taken within 10 minutes of each other. They are of the same home at Prickett's Fort in Fairmont, West Virginia. Notice the color difference. The one of the right is more accurate. So I would doulbe check photos against each other before moving on, if you're using this to shoot a property.

prickett house a iphone photo prickett house b iphone photo

But I have made some great panos with it.

pricketts fort pano 600 pixels

Why you shouldn't buy it.

  • AT&T’s EDGE data network. Let's just say it's slow and not go into adjective overload. This wouldn't be so obvious on this phone if it weren't for the fact that the Safari browser allows you to see the "real internet." So, you get everything... even people's poorly sized photos. (Yeah, I'm talking to you Ferenzi!)
  • Can’t record video. I can actually live without this in a cell phone, but why leave it out? It has a huge hard drive and the camera is giving you live preview of what you're seeing anyway. Just capture it for goodness sake.
  • Can't photo blog with it. Why? No MMS. Why no MMS support? There are some good reasons posted here, but I'm missing the point. Teresa Boardman does some great photo blogging at All T All Day. But she couldn't do it with the iPhone, because Blogger requires MMS. I consider this a major oversight. There should at least be the option to send via MMS when you wish.

Why you should buy it.

  • It's the real Internet. Despite everything I said above about AT&T's slow cellular network, you can still use a wifi connection most places you'd be sitting long enough to surf the web. You're not surfing the web while driving. And with this phone, you can actually surf the web. In addition, this will be the integration point for third-party applications.
  • The software. It's running a version of OSX. Why is this important? Because most of the issues I point out that would be reasons NOT to buy it can be fixed with software upgrades. And they're going to happen. Flash support is a perfect example. Adobe will have a flash plugin for this phone. Guaranteed. When they do... wow! is all I can say.
  • Visual voicemail. I hate wading through voicemail. The ability to see who called and go directly to what I think is most urgent, without listening to 5 or 6 other calls first... that's worth the price of admission for me. Right now the iPhone is the only phone that comes with this fully integrated. There is a solution for non iPhone users, however. It's called SimulSays.
  • WIFI. This is not a common feature on cell phones. Only three or four phones support WIFI, so it's a benefit that can't be overlooked. For me, this nullifies the AT&T Edge speed issue. As I said above, if I'm in a place where I have time to be surfing the web a great deal, I'm likely near a WIFI connection. And the iPhone makes connecting to a WIFI hotspot ridiculously simple.
  • It's a joy to use. It's rare when something looks and acts just like the commercials you see, but this one does. The animations, quick response to touch, fast screen redraw... it's all just part of a unique experience that can't be explained. You have to touch it. But be careful, it's hard not to like it once you do.

Things that just bug me.

  • No voice recognition or voice dialing. I consider this one a minor issue, but I just don't understand why it's not there. This is arguably the most robust cell phone operating system in existence and it doesn't do voice dialing?
  • No way to copy/paste text. I'm just going to say, "are you kidding?" Why give me the real Internet if you're not going to allow me to copy and paste? This is one of those simple things that simply can't be an oversight. So, I'm left to believe they made a conscious decision to leave it out. I just can't figure out why.
  • No Adobe Flash support. OK, so most phones don't have it, what's the big deal. Well, it almost defeats purpose of “real internet in your pocket” if there is no flash support. Flash is ubiquitous. Leaving it out is just stupid.
  • Screen doesn't rotate in SMS and Email. The fact that the screen can sense when you rotate is great. It's particularly handy when you need to type, because the keyboard is larger and it fits in two hands better. But when do you need that most? When you're typing an email or text message! They gotta fix that one.

Things that I love for no good reason.

  • The way things animate into the trash. It made me smile the first time I saw it and it still does.
  • Flipping through photos and other stuff with a swipe of my finger. Yeah, arrow keys work fine, but this is way more fun.
  • Resizing everything with my fingers. It's just intuitive and simple. And it's incredibly responsive.

Would I buy it again?

You bet I would. I'd do it without hesitation. Even if I had to go through the activation pain again. Why? Because of the user experience.  It's easy and fun to use. And because it's easy and fun to use, I will actually use it.

I'm not afraid of technology and I didn't use half the features on my last phone because it was just too hard. And it wasn't even a "smart" phone. The iPhone is about the experience, not the technology. If you compare feature sets, it will often come up short. I don't care. What good are more features if you won't use them because they're too hard? 

My recommendation?

Wait. Unless you're at or near the end of your cell phone contract, then don't wait. If you're at or near the end of your current cell phone contract and you need a new phone... go to an AT&T store or an Apple Store and play with it yourself. Pick it up, touch it, make a phone call, take a photo. Surf the web. Check out your ActiveRain page. See for yourself how simple and elegant it is to use. Easy is better. 

Now... for the most exhaustive, detailed, step-by-step review of the iPhone you're going to find anywhere, check out this iPhone review at ARS Technica.

 

43 commentsJeff Turner • July 14 2007 08:41AM

I'm Writing This From My iPhone

I love thunderstorms.

iphoneI am sitting on my deck in WV. It's pouring down rain and my wife is on my laptop. I have decided to take this opportunity to use one of the best features of the new iPhone, a true web browser. So, I can just write a post right from the iPhone.

Of course ActiveRain does not support wysiwyg editing in the Safari browser, so I have to use the HTML editor. That is a bit of a pain, but it does give me a chance to practice my two thumb typing. :)

I have a comprehensive review of the iPhone coming

It is partially written, but I want to test it more before publishing. I could just say it's great, but that wouldn't serve anyone well. This is the first chance I've had to try typing with both thumbs and already, after just these few sentences, it is coming very quickly.

My wife has been using this feature more than me. When I've been on the laptop, has been on the iPhone updating her CafeMom comments. She has become quite proficient already, and now I can see why. The keys are very sensitive, but predictable. And it guessed I was spelling predictable before I completed the word, so that helps as well.

If I could use the wysiwyg features right now, this would actually be very easy to use. Even as it is, my biggest issues right now are shifting to get HTML tags and these darned Mosquitos! I think they are attracted to the iPhone light. And the ithch of the poison oak on my legs and arms.

Would I do this again?

Yes. Even without the wysiwyg editor. But with it, I wouldn't hesitate for a second. The iPhone gives me a full browser, not a watered down .mobi version. I've saved this to draft a couple of times already to check my coding. I can see exactly how it's going to look. I have also entered my tags and chosen the groups. I love the dial the iPhone gives you for pull down menus.

It's been a night of testing for me. Earlier I tested the new blog editing features of the Flock browser update. I was able to publish to our self-hosted blog at RealEstateShows.com, but not to my CA2WV blog on Blogger. I considered it a failed test.

I consider this one a success.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

EDIT: I've come back to add this video to answer the comments about typing speed. This is video I shot of my wife the other night. She's actually faster now. It took me only a few sentences to get to this speed as well. (And this should deal with Bob's "wall of words" issue.) :) And I added a photo... in case you've been living under a rock and haven't seen the iPhone yet.


Online Videos by Veoh.com
73 commentsJeff Turner • July 10 2007 11:51PM

Alternative Power - Water?

Turning Water Into Fuel

I posted earlier today about some different video upload services. As part of the research process I took a quick look around the sites and found the following video. Obviously, the potential of this technology, if it truly works, is revolutionary. I'm always skeptical when I see things that seem too good to be true. This one certainly falls into that category. It is already being sold as a gas generator,  so the hope of a reliable, stable alternative fuel strategy forces me to post about this.

It truly blew me away.

 

 

 

40 commentsJeff Turner • July 09 2007 01:30PM

Video Service Comparison - Veoh, Brightcove, Photobucket, VideoEgg and YouTube

I shot some video of our hike to Flat Rocks yesterday.

I've been wanting to show a comparison of a few video services and this is the right video to use.

Video sharing reviews are good, but most don't give you a common video to compare them. I wanted you to be able to see the quality differences. This video is a good test example because it has a great deal of detail in the trees, light reflecting off of water in the creek and some jittery movement. It was shot with the Kodak v705. So, you'll be able to see the difference in video compression quality.

Veoh, Brightcove, Photobucket, VideoEgg and YouTube

I love how quickly YouTube compresses video once you've uploaded your videos, but not the end result. The compression is weak. I'm a big fan of Brightcove, which we use for all of our How To Videos at RealEstateShows.com. The best for pure speed is VideoEgg. Because it uses a downloaded video plugin to manage the upload, your videos are ready the moment they are uploaded to their site.  Veoh delivers a great end result, but the compression can take a long time to complete. So, if you're wanting to get a video up and post it quickly, it can be a bit frustrating. But if you're not in a hurry... Veoh is good opton. Photobucket is a good all-around tool for storing photos and video, so there may be some added benefit to using this service. Flickr doesn't have video upload. But depending on traffic, the upload time can take exceptionally long. Facebook also has a good video upload engine, but you can't embed the video in your blog posts. You can share Veoh, YouTube and Photobucket videos on Facebook. If you'd like to see the Facebook quality, and you are a Facebook member, you can see a version of the video here.

These are all shown in their default embed codes sizes. If you turn off your sound, you can click on all three in succession to judge the quality yourself. To reduce upload time, the original video was saved as 640 x 480 VGA MP4 at 15 frames per second with a data rate of 1000 kbit/sec. You may get better results by uploading higher quality video. This is especially true for VideoEgg, since there is no upload time penalty.

Here is the Veoh version:

Here is the Brightcove version:

Here is the VideoEgg version:

Here is the Photobucket version:

Here is the YouTube version:

58 commentsJeff Turner • July 09 2007 09:25AM

Grand Central Acquired By Google

A while back I wrote about a product that I really like, GrandCentral.

I received this notification from GrandCentral this morning:

"We wanted to let you know that GrandCentral has been acquired by Google! We're particularly excited about this because it ensures that not only will we have the resources to continue to bring you even more innovative communications features down the road, but that we will be able to continue to offer you the service, with many features for free, for a long time to come." 

grand central image

I think this is very good news.

GrandCentral has worked flawlessly for me and my GrandCentral phone number is the one I now use on all of my communications. It allows me to have each of my phones ring at once, or none of them ring at all, based on my parameters. Family members who use it get all of my phones, including the home. Some people only get my cell phone. Others my cell and my office.

The site has changed dramatically since my last post and I can only imagine their service will grow further as a result of this acquisition. 

27 commentsJeff Turner • July 04 2007 09:31AM