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StomperNet Scrutinizer: My new favorite web dev tool


The idea is simple, yet powerful – simulate eye-motion tracking by blurring an entire webpage, save for a small elliptical region (the fovial view).

It forces you to think about web design from the ultimate usability bias – and I think that’s a good thing.

StomperNet Scrutinizer: Get Your Click Fu | StomperNet.com

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When it’s not about the gifts, what is it about?

A very straightforward, honest proposal for a simple holiday season, from a mother of small children. Five non-commercial ways to celebrate the Season, packed to the linefeeds with suggestions, recipes, and handy insights.

read more | digg story

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A Facebook OpenID Provider

Unbelievable, this guy has used an external F8 application to make an openId provider out of Facebook! Sensibly, the login is performed on the facebook.com site itself, so there’s very little security worry. (If you check out his blog post, you’ll see he’s also put together an XFN wrapper for friend data).Todd and I were just talking this morning about writing something like this for bountyup.com, and of course The Buried Life has been wanting something similar as well. Next step – contact Identitude and see how tightly integrated we can get.

read more | digg story

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Ning – taste it again, for the first time

I’ve just built my first social network, and it was seamless. Hop on over to buriedlife.ning.com and check it out. For background, see: http://www.joshspear.com/item/update-the-buried-lifeupdate-the-buried-life/

Wow.

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Chris is a pansy

He’s buying a vacation property. Silly man.

Which gives me a great opportunity to rant about property values in the Pacific NW. Is it me, or does it seem INSANE to be paying four to five times your annual income (minimum) to buy a dinky, 3-bedroom house on the outskirts of town? Talking with my sister (who recently sold her house in Spokane, WA), she paid just over one times her household salary about four years ago, and recently sold for twice that, which still seems reasonable.

Do I think real estate is overpriced on Vancouver Island? You bet. Do I think it’s going to change anytime soon? No, and here’s why: intrinsic fundamentals. Victoria is the seat of Government = guaranteed employment, at least in the public sector. It’s a beautiful place = popular tourist destination, and the majority of the tourists are international, which means any slowdown in the Canadian economy (which would presumably reduce the value of our currency) is likely to make it MORE popular. Finally (and here’s the clincher), Victoria has a fixed landbase, sealed on three sides by the Pacific Ocean. With nowhere for sprawl to go other than Colwood (which has about as much pressure as they’re going to take), steady demand from natural population growth will likely hold prices at their unbelievable level for quite some time to come.

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The newest data standard

Google Data APIs Overview

It’s official – Google has replaced all other standards bodies for XML-based publishing. In a surprise move (not atypical for google), they have released their own answer to ATOM and RSS – and it’s called GData.

At first glance it’s not entirely obvious why this should be better than ATOM – it looks a lot like ATOM meets SOAP and XQUERY, the by-now ubiquitious soup functioning as the backend of today’s AJAX applications.

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