Archive for the 'Wordpress' Category

Moblogging with flickr and the Nokia N800

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The Nokia N93 cell phone, Nokia N800 ultra-mobile PC, and the Nokia bluetooth keyboard SU-8W.

Frequent readers of this blog might know that I am on the road quite a lot. In the last 12 months, I have been to Bay St. Louis, Chicago, Washington D.C., New York, Nashville, Fort Myers x2, Spokane, Cleveland, and Cincinnati. I often blog from the road and usually used my Apple Powerbook. However, that usually involved my carrying the laptop, digital camera, chargers (110 volt & 12 volt), adapter cables, and more. If you have ever walked the distance from the U.S. capitol to Lincoln Memorial in 95 degree heat with a 25 pound bag on your shoulder, you know that this is not something that you’d want to do very often. Well, I’ve done it far too often and therefore am very happy with the current setup:

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The Nokia N93 cell phone, Nokia N800 ultra-mobile PC, and the Nokia bluetooth keyboard SU-8W.

In this how-to, I am showing you how to update your blog when you’re on the move. I am using Wordpress to run my blog, but you can substitute the word ‘Wordpress’ in this how-to with Blogger, Vox, TypePad, Movable Type, and a variety of other engines. So, no worries.

Step 1 Get a blog

You see, I am not sure if you already have a blog, but this would be somewhat necessary for moblogging. I personally use WordPress, I mostly like it. There is also Wordpress.com if you don’t have your own webserver. I have listed some of the other services out there, and most of them should be fine - it all depends on what you really want and how much need for customization you have. Places like wordpress.com, vox, typepad, and blogger offer you limited customizability but get you hooked up with a webspace for cheap. Wordpress, Movable Type, and others give you the blogging engine but you need to have your own webspace and some knowledge of installation procedure (no biggie, though). For the sake of this how-to, I am going to be using my standard installation of Wordpress.

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Step 2Get flickr

What is flickr, you might ask? Flickr is an online photo album, but a cool one. If you’re still using some funky stuff like Yahoo! Photos, go get flickr. The people at Yahoo! must have really hated their own online photo album service because they bought flickr. I’ve been a user since 2004 and love it. Most of my pictures are stored there.
You have a choice between a free account or a $25 a year account. The difference is in the amount you can upload per month. Flickr does not have a limit as to how much you can store on your account but how much you can upload. Once you’ve gotten flickr to do the stuff you want it to do, proceed by setting up your blog inside flickr.

Step 3Setup your blog in flickr

Flickr is pre-configured for a variety of blog types:
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Go through the entire setup process and have flickr post a test post. That way you know that everything works.

Step 4Setup flickr for email uploading

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Once flickr is setup for email uploading you can use your phone’s built-in email function to send the images directly to flickr. As you can see in the image, there are two email addresses for uploading - a long one and a shorter one. The longer one is for upload to flickr and your blog at the same time. The shorter one only uploads to flickr. If you want to upload an image and some text to your blog, just use the longer email and your blog is always up-to-date.

I have also styled my auto-post to the blog from flickr because I didn’t like the way it uploaded the images:


{description}


You might want to consider the same for your blog, especially if your CSS is customized.

Ok, so now that you’ve set up flickr, you can upload images directly from your cell phone or the Nokia N800 (or any device that has email capability). The nice thing here is the fact that the subject line of your email to flickr is going to end up as the title for your blog post, then the image will be displayed and any text that you might have put into your email is also going to appear as the text of your blog entry.

In the real world, a mobile blog post looks like the one on the right - and is completely indistinguishable from a post that you might have written at home on your desktop.

So, how does the Nokia N93 and the Nokia N800 come into play? Easy!

Nokia is marketing these devices as - rightfully so - multimedia computers. I’ve had the N93 for almost a year now, the N800 for about 5 days. My N93 is a 3G (UMTS) phone but doesn’t support the frequencies here in the US, so I am limited to EDGE networking. No big deal usually, but uploading one of the images through my cell phone network takes a few minutes. The N93 also has a built-in 802.11 wireless adapter and can connect to any wireless network in the area. Often, I sent a quick image and some text to my blog just as a brief update. The Nokia N93 also has a built-in flickr application that makes uploading (supposedly) easier. I don’t really like the application, so I’m sticking to the method that I outlined in this post.

The Nokia N800 is a nice complement to the N93 - I am using the N93’s cellular internet by connecting the Nokia N800 to via bluetooth. Now, I can browse the internet using my cell phone data plan and have the added benefit of a larger screen. It makes posting on my blog a snap. The N800 also connects to 802.11 networks and allows me to access my blog’s dashboard through the N800’s browser at much faster speeds than my phone’s EDGE connection. In the long run it might be superfluous to bring both devices with me. It would be nice to see the addition of a high-quality digital camera in the N800’s successor.

I typically only carry my cell phone with me, but since getting the N800, I have often carried both. We’ve been driving a bit here and I was able to browse the web while Sonja was behind the wheel. The same was true for her, when I was driving. Naturally the combination of N93 and N800 also allows me to surf while chilling on the beach or while waiting for Sonja to finish trying on clothes at the department store.

I am still discovering the N800 for myself, but I hope that these posts are giving you an idea of the potential this combination has for bloggers on the move.

The blog turned 1 today . . .

Happy Birthday alexwrege.com

Yes, I know, it is hard to fathom . . . your favorite blog in the whole wide world (= the US) turns one-year-old today. I was inspired by Chris DiClerico changing his blog over from Movable Type to WordPress, so I installed Wordpress too. Despite some ‘behind-the-scenes’ crappa-rio, I am generally happy with it.

And here’s a selection of first comments by regular commenters (in chronological order) . . .

Beth

You’re the hottest man I ever saw.
Bethro
Posted Jun 22, 2005, 3:01 PM

Jason Dunstan

Ah yes, there is a black square ’round the daytime image. You must fix that, my friend.
Posted Jul 23, 2005, 6:04 AM

Sarah Moomey

Great Pictures!!! I had a wonderful time! Especially with Beth’s “issue” ;) Thank you for the birthday cake (it was delicious) and singing “Happy Birthday” to me!
Posted Jun 24, 2005, 3:10 PM

Eli Palmer

OOOH! I know! Beth and Eli! And big brother is watching us all!
Posted Jul 21, 2005, 5:33 PM

Mario Teufel

Hey Alex,
i wuensch dir aelles Guate fuer dei Praesentation und i hoff Du host au viel Spass uff deinem anschliesenda Ausfluegle mit deinem Kumpel Michel.
I hon dacht dass i dir mol a weng uff Schwaebisch schreiba dua damit Du es net so ganz verlerna duasch.
Viele Griass aus god damn Toledo, denn i muss no god damn a Weile weiter schaffa, da dia Wirtschaftspruefa no ebbes vo mir welled.
Good night haet mi gfreit,
Mario
Posted Aug 1, 2005, 5:11 PM

Sabine

Hi Alex!
Du sahst aber echt fertig aus.
Gut, dass du noch gut übergekommen bist.
Wünsche dir viel Spaß bei deinem Vortrag und dann mit deinem Kollegen Michael einen schönen Urlaub.
Posted Aug 2, 2005, 8:21 PM

D.J. (my dad)

H.I.O.B.
Posted Aug 6, 2005, 11:37 AM

Torey

This doesn’t just relate to this specific article but also a few over the last three days. Plus, I’m just writing off the top of my head, so this might be a little unorganized.
Posted Sep 7, 2005, 8:05 PM

Russ

With the results of yesterdays elections…one would wonder if this map will soon become reality. Looks like we displaced liberals will have to find a new spot to relocate now that “Bush Lite” is running Canada.
Posted Jan 24, 2006, 9:55 AM

Thanks y’all!

Changes around here

As you probably already noticed by now, I have made some changes to the website. This recent series of changes was triggered by concerns over the loading speed of the website (thanks, Sarah!) and I therefore reduced the number of entries visible on the front page to two. On average I made 1.5 posts a day, so if you are daily reader, you shouldn’t notice any changes really, except for the fact that the page now loads significantly faster. If you usually don’t stop by every day, the sidebar contains a list of recent posts, so you’ll be able to track changes that way.

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I have added a permanent ‘recent pictures’ album at the bottom of the page which is powered by flickrRSS. If you have a blog, and don’t use flickr . . . go back to 2003. (Lose Yahoo! Photo Albums, buddy. I promise, you’ll love flickr.)

You might have noticed the sweet new wallpaper. It is really starting to grow on me. I hope you like it too.
The header is smaller now, I found it annoying that the old one wasted 40 % of screen real estate. So, I cut it in half.
All right, now there’s one thing you have to do: This blog now (about a year delayed) has Gravatars, which are Globally Recognized Avatars. What’s that? Well, when you comment on blogs (like this one) you typically have to leave your email address for verification purposes. Gravatars use that email address to link you to an image of your Avatar (you get to upload your own image) and it will then show your picture next to your comment on this and about 2 billion other blogs. Oh, and you only have to do the registration process once. So, Eli, Russ, Jason, Sarah, Torey, and everyone else: go to gravatar.com and get your own!

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One final thing, Wednesday and Thursday of this week have been somewhat crazy on the blog, one of my posts (How-To: Cancel AOL) got picked up somewhere on the InterWebs and I have had a worrying increase in traffic on these days. Over 4000 new visitors came to alexwrege.com during these 48 hours. What does that mean for me? Well, the *.mp3 file that is contained in the post was downloaded about 4000 times and at 2 MB in size, I burned 8 GB of bandwidth in two days. Things seem to be returning to normal now and I am hoping that I will have enough bandwidth left to make it through the month. One benefit of this experience was that I now know that WordPress is capable of serving pages in high traffic situations.
My normal readerships is distributed (by country and city) as follows:

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