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Bulletpoint StarImulus® is a technology focused design + interactive agency.

In addition to our client services we also have a few products in the works. Our office is always filled with chatter and this blog is an outlet for our creative energy, rants and ideas.

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Dec31

Top 5 Twitter Toys

twitter-logoNow that I have Twitter and Facebook hooked together I seem to be making more updates on a daily basis, and I’ve been using a variety of tools to help me better engage with the Twitterverse. Here are a few of the jewels which I’ve learned to love.

  • Qwitter: Tracks which followers have decided to abandon ship and which Tweet pushed them over the edge.
  • Twollow: Auto-follow Tweets which contain keywords which you are interested in. You can track up to 5 phrases. For me, I auto-follow those with words like “small business” “entrepreneur” and “interactive agency”. However, I would very much like a frequency setting to help qualify people who Tweet about these topics from those who make passing mention of a phrase.
  • FB2Twitter: For those of you who want to keep the World of Facebook separate from Twitter, this is obviously not for you. For those who want to reduce your number of status update locations, this is a dream.
  • Twist by Flaptor: A great application for tracking the trends on Twitter. It’s more of a pulse check for various terms, likely not something which is going to be useful on a daily basis.
  • Greasemonkey Nested Reply Script: This is a beauty for viewing which replies are in context to which Tweets. You’ll need Greasmonkey and Firefox to make this work. One note however: the nesting is in reverse which feels a bit counter intuitive.
    picture-2-26

I hope you enjoy these nuggets of goodness as much as I do. They have made my Twitter experience very enjoyable.

Oh, and Happy New Year! See you on Twitter @gmorris

Dec23

A quick review of Sweetcron for lifestreaming

A few weeks ago I decided to set up a new service on my personal website to track all the social services that I’m a part of. Basically I wanted a central place where people could go to find out what I was up to, what pictures I was posting, and where I’d been. Now, I know there are services like FriendFeed and Socialthing! that do this on a larger scale but I don’t foresee many of my family members signing up for those just to see what I’m up to.

Sweetcron logo. Enter Sweetcron, a free Wordpress like PHP and MySQL content system specifically built to handle lifestreaming. I heard about Sweetcron from my buddy Ryan and decided to give it a try for my new site. To my excitement it was exactly what I was looking for. Below I’ll cover the installation, interface, and end result of my Sweetcron experience.

Installation

Sweetcron is the easiest content system I’ve set up in quite some time. You download the compressed files and upload them to your server, create a MySQL database, and edit a few lines of a configuration file with the info. Once this is done the script has a built in installer that runs to finish the installation. By the time you’ve gone through this process you’ll have a username and password through which you can login to your Sweetcron administration section.

Interface and Use

Once you’ve logged into the back-end of Sweetcron you’ll see a few pretty basic options. Write: for posting quick notes, items: a list of your imported (published or unpublished) feed items, feeds: a list of the feeds you’re importing, and options: which contains basic account settings. Setting up your feeds to be imported into your lifestream is a piece of cake. Grab RSS from your favorite social networks and add them into your feed list1.

sweetcron-add-feed
Adding a Feed
sweetcron-feeds
Feed List
sweetcron-items
Imported Items

Sweetcron will automatically format and grab the necessary items related to the feeds. From there you can select from a few different themes of how you want your information to be displayed. If you’re ambitious you can set up your own theme by using the Sweetcron documentation.

Pulling Results via Cron

As the name suggests Sweetcron is reliant on pulling information from your RSS feeds at a regular interval in order to update your database. To do this Sweetcron works in one of two ways. First, you can use a pseudo method that will have Sweetcron update itself if the last update is older than 30 minutes. This method waits for someone to hit the site and then has that visit trigger the fetch. This may work for people without cron hosting access but I found the normal cron method to work better. To set this up I logged into my hosting administration and had the following cron job run every fifteen minutes:

/usr/bin/curl -s http://your-url.com/cron/link Note that sweetcron uses curl and this program may be located at different locations on different hosting providers, for instance:

curl -s http://your-url.com/cron/link

End Result

The end is a great looking lifestream that stores all of your information into a MySQL database that you host. The benefits are awesome. First, you own look and feel of the information output. Second, you don’t have to rely on a 3rd party service. And last, the whole setup is opensource, free, and easy to set up.

1. If you have issues with a particular feed’s RSS being supported I’d suggest routing it through Feedburner first and then importing it into Sweetcron. I had to do this with Brightkite.

Dec21

No lo hablo

Design comes in many different forms. Interior Design, Graphic Design, Fashion Design… you get the idea. Something that has always bothered me is when someone takes one figure drawing class and assumes they know all there is to know about my job. Therefore, in the effort to not be a hypocrite, I would like to state for the record that just because I am a “designer” does not mean I automatically know all there is to know about the facets of design.

A year ago while I was applying for graphic design jobs, I came across an article that recommended how people should dress for different jobs. The author of the article recommended that as a graphic designer, I should wear something sassy but respectable to highlight my creativity. I wore a black and white business suit. I got the job.

What am I getting at here? Only this: I am a GRAPHIC designer. I don’t find it fair to assume that I would be able to pair pants and shirts and jewelry to be “sassy and professional” because I am in a creative line of work. I understand that as designers we have an eye for color, creativity, and layout but we are talking about two completely different genres. People don’t expect a painter to be an expert at sculpting. The painter may have dabbled in sculpting and enjoyed it, but there is a reason her expertise is painting and not sculpting. Don’t expect the same for designers.

Dec17

The Twitter Follow & Tweet Thresholds

I’m a firm believer that Twitter has both a follow & tweet threshold which after crossed starts to diminish the effectiveness of the service. I believe it’s impossible for a user to adequately follow 300 plus Twitterers. If follows are posting a minimum of 4 tweets per day, that is over 1200 messages in one 24 hour period, far too many to create social dialog.

I smell fish anytime I see any Twitterer who is following 300+ users. Those individuals are likely “phishing for follows,” essentially following with the hopes to be followed. Arbitrarily, I believe a Twitterer starts to loose their ability to follow a community of users at around 150 follows, and it fully breaks down around 300 follows.

In just an informal survey of those I follow and respect, this number holds true.

@jasonfried – Following 55 / Followers 4643
@kevinrose – Following 122 / Followers 79,693
@randfish – Following 13 / Followers 3,213
@simplebits – Following 234 / Followers 9,781
@bfled – Following 172 / Followers 2,869
@copyblogger – Following 216 / Followers 9,532
@gruber – Following 252 / Followers 17,462
@davetaylor – Following 167 / Followers 3,656

While I’m having a hard time gathering numbers, I believe there is a certain number of Tweets which a follower will tolerate during the day. I’d love to see someone write an app to display the Tweets/Day on any user over a 30 day period. Anyone want to write that?

Speaking from my own personal experience if any of those I follow post more then 25 updates in one day, then I drop them like a bad habit. Not so much because I’m not interested but more to the fact that their constant updates begin to push down and out the others that I am following.

Regardless, I’m loving Twitter!

Dec15

Gift ideas for your graphic designer

Okay, I will admit it: graphic designers can be picky. I like to blame it on our artistic soul reaching for perfection… or maybe we’re just shallow (just kidding! Please no angry letters). Well, if you’re looking for the perfect gift for your perfect designer I have some suggestions.

Gift Ideas Shirt1. T-shirts. More often than not designers work in a pretty laid back work environment. This means that there really isn’t a strict dress code, and I know from experience that designers love parading around in good design. I recommend:
Shirts from Snorg Tees
Shirts from Busted Tees
Shirts from Threadless

Gift Ideas Book2. Sketch book. We run out of them fast and we love having our great looking sketches go into great looking books. I recommend:
Hand-bound books from erinzam
Paper products from MATTERIAL
Stationary from Brigada Creativa

Gift Ideas Illustration3. Illustrations. As much as we would love to take credit for all the great works on our walls, it’s nice to display other great works for inspiration and diversity. I recommend:
Illustrations from Veer
Illustrations from erinzam
Illustrations from benben