Useful Links: JavaScript curriculum, Avatars, Dreamweaver extension makers

Opera adds core competencies in JavaScript to its curriculum, avatars matter, and a search for the perfect Dreamweaver extension maker. More. . .
More . . .

JavaScript in Town! announces new articles in the Opera Web Standards Curriculum with 13 new articles on the core competencies for JavaScript. Opera also announced the final CSS article in the CSS track of their curriculum.

Why Your Avatar Matters from Hivelogic gives you some ideas about the importance of your avatars. Hivelogic didn’t say this, but I must add, don’t change your avatar all the time. Be consistent.

In comments on  the post Dear Adobe, Here’s an idea for you, it was mentioned that the best way to introduce new capabilities like what I suggested for RDFa was via the Dreamweaver extension route. I thought of Project Seven, but learned that they aren’t particularly interested in building a tool for this. I started looking for other Dreamweaver extension makers. I found Hot Dreamweaver and Kaosweaver in a quick search, but I don’t know if this idea would appeal to them. Are there other Dreamweaver extension gurus out there that I don’t know about who might think this is a good idea? If you know of any, please leave a name and a link to the website.

Twitter, ad infinitum

Twitter is proving itself to be infinitely expandable are capable of amazing things. One of the most interesting uses for Twitter is raising money for worthy causes. Could it raise awareness for web standards education? More . . .

Twitter is proving itself to be infinitely expandable and capable of amazing things. Within the last month or two we’ve seen a coal ash disaster in Tennessee and a plane crash in the Hudson River reported first on Twitter. And arguably with better information than the media could get for several hours.

Gez Lemon recently used Twitter to survey people about whether or not alt should be required in HTML5. This is the tweet that started it all:

Should alt be required for img in HTML5? Please use the hashtag #althtml5 if you respond, so I can find the responses.

You can see the responses using a Twitter search for the hashtag #althtml5. (You’ll see several responses from me, since I originally misunderstood the question to mean that an alt attribute could not be emtpy, as in alt=””. With a little hand-holding from Laura Carlson, I finally realized that he was asking if the alt attribute should be required to be there, even if it’s empty. To which I respond: yes, indeed.)

On a small, local level, a couple of web developer friends recently organized a successful Webuquerque meeting with nothing more than a Facebook page and Twitter.

Twitter is now used to raise money for charity. The latest example is Twestival. Twestival is a world wide Tweet Up to raise money for clean water. You can organize a Twestival in your city, attend an event in your city, or participate online. The event will be on Feb. 12. I predict that it will be a landslide success.

Smaller Twitter fund raising projects have been reported by Mommy Gossip Cares in How Is Mom It Forward Changing the World One Mom at a Time? where $1400 for Thanksgiving dinners were raised with Twitter.

Beth Kanter realized the value of Twitter early on. Recently, she did a thorough analysis of using Twitter for charity in Twitter As Charitable Giving Spreader: A Meta Analysis, which reports on a number of events. She’s successfully raised money using Twitter. She tells more micro-fund raising stories in Twestival: Here Comes Everyone to Raise Money on Twitter for Charity: Water.

When millions of people all over the world are interconnected by the same technology, there’s no telling what can be done with it. New and wonderful uses  appear, ad infinitum.

Since Twitter can be harnessed to do good, can it be harnessed to improve education? I’ve been working for months with a group from the Web Standards Project (WaSP) on a standards-based modular curriculum framework for web design education. It’s under discussion in places like A List Apart, The Magazine for People who Make Websites. The curriculum will be released to the public at SXSWi.

I’m wondering if we should release it with a world-wide Tweet Up. The Tweet Up wouldn’t raise money, but it could raise awareness and send educators to the not-yet-public web site housing the first round of completed courses.

Or perhaps an organized Tweet Up isn’t even necessary. What if every person attending the WaSP annual meeting at SXSWi and every person attending the No Web Professional Left Behind: Educating the Next Generation panel at SXSWi sent out a tweet about the curriculum?

Philanthropy 2173’s Give Fast, lists benefits of Twitter for fund raising:

  • Community building (you can identify other donors, everyone blogs about it), instant infrastructure (giving managed by chip-in, Paypal enables the back office);
  • Quick commitment – set a goal, reach it, move on;
  • Little gifts – and lots of them – are the holy grail;
  • Creativity matters – next year you’ll need a new twist;
  • Anyone at an organization might be the leader of your next campaign;

Change those benefits to describe education or any other topic you want, the benefits still apply. The quick commitment – set a goal, reach it, move on item seems particularly relevant.

What could you accomplish with a conference audience of several hundred people if all of them tweeted the same topic at an event? For the attendee, it’s a quick commitment, just 140 characters, yet still a contribution. The results are big, even though the individual effort is small.

Cross posted at BlogHer.

Summary of eHow Articles for January

A list of the thrilling and educational how to articles I wrote at eHow this month. And tulips! More . . .

Yellow Tulips

One of the gifts I received for Christmas was a jar with three tulip bulbs in water. They were sprouting by January and bloomed in a few days. This is the first day they opened, eventually all three bloomed. In addition to watching the flowers grow this January, I wrote these articles at eHow.

Useful Links: real-time web

Examples of the real-time web in action and places to watch during the inauguration for real-time news. More . . .

Sorry, Google, You Missed the Real-Time Web at ReadWriteWeb points out,

In case you missed it, this live streaming mashup of the plane that crashed in the Hudson River yesterday did what no media company could do. It is the future of media — crude, simple, and missing loads of things we would want, yes, but new media always show up that way.

My first glimpse of the plane crash was on Twitter. The mashup ReadWriteWeb mentioned was made using storytir. Storytir will pull in tweets, RSS, Facebook updates and all sorts of content and display it like the example in the story from ReadWriteWeb. Storytir seems worth checking out.

With the inauguration coming, the new experience of a real-time web will hit many people in the face for the first time in a big way tomorrow. A few real-time suggestions from me for the event  include National Public Radio’s (NPR)  already running Inauguration Report which is pulling in #inaug09 and #dctrip09 tagged posts to Twitter, Flickr, and YouTube. The Flickr stream for photos tagged “inauguration” is already available. Great photos.

This is raw, unedited, unpolished reality. It’s one of the ways media is changing.

Watch for my post tomorrow on BlogHer with many more suggestions for watching the inauguration in real time.

The Best Job in the World: Going Viral

Absolutely everybody wants to get paid $100,000 to live for six months on Australia’s Hamilton Island in the Great Barrier Reef and be the island caretaker. It’s the best job in the world. How did the job manage to go viral and become a sensation? More . . .

Absolutely everybody wants to get paid $100,000 to live for six months on Australia’s Hamilton Island in the Great Barrier Reef and be the island caretaker. It’s the best job in the world.

It sounds so easy. Keep an eye on the pool, stroll on the beach, write a weekly blog post, live in a beautiful three bedroom house/office, and make money doing it. You do have to be able to write in English, swim, and be over 18. Not the skills you normally see on a resume, but requirements, nevertheless.

So many people are willing to drop everything and go down under for 6 months that the number of applicants crashed the site. There are only 35 days left to apply at this web site, if you’re interested.

Island Reef Job web page

Finding BonggaMom’s I’ve Found My Dream Job expresses the desire to run away to a beautiful isle with sandy beaches and rolling surf, but tempers it with a dose of reality:

I suppose asking the kids to get themselves to school by themselves for 6 months is a bit unreasonable. Oh, well.

That’s my thought, too. It sounds like heaven, but who can leave everything behind and run away to paradise? Apparently a lot of people. Outnumbered 2 to 1: Fine, I’ll get a J-O-B summarizes the emotional pull of this job quite well.

So, let me get this right. You are going to pay me for something that I currently do now for free? I can live on an island paradise as opposed to the frozen tundra wasteland I currently call home? I can wear flip flops and sarongs as opposed to layers of sweats and college sweatshirts with an outer layer of blanket?

image of Hamilton island from islandreefjob.com

This image of Hamilton Island came from The Best Job in the World web site. Which brings me to the brilliance of the Tourism Queensland team that put this site and this job together. Raise your hands now—had you considered a vacation at Hamilton Island before hearing about this job? No? Well, what about after reading about the job, looking through the web site’s luscious photos of decadent irresponsibility and worry-free living like the one above? Is Hamilton Island on your list of places to visit now? If you said yes, then Tourism Queensland has done its job.

The job went viral. It was a sensation on Twitter, as you can see in this image.

a few tweets about the island caretaker job

The job was world news everywhere like this story from CNN.

I don’t think merely filling the job was the goal. I think the unspoken goal was to bring attention to Hamilton Island as a vacation destination. If the cost of the job and the nicely done website brings returns on the investment with tourist dollars, then the goal is achieved.

How did Tourism Queensland succeed in creating a viral sensation? I think these are some of the reasons:

  • they tapped into a universal desire (get away from it all and bask on a beach)
  • they came up with a hook—the best job in the world—that was guaranteed to grab attention
  • they tied it to a huge paycheck that is very attractive and feels very much like winning a huge sum for doing almost nothing. Something for nothing always attracts interest.
  • they packaged it beautifully in an attractive site with stunning visuals that emphasized the lure of paradise for both the job holder (and the potential tourist to Hamilton Island)
  • they made it easy to apply for the job. More importantly, it’s easy to learn more about the islands of the Great Barrier Reef and to find a vacation package to get you there.

Are you going to apply? Good luck if you do. If you don’t, perhaps you can still profit from a few ideas about what makes an idea worthy of going viral.

Cross posted at BlogHer.

Useful Links: Drive Me Crazy, Community Building, Mobile Design, Best Job

Links to top notch articles about what not to do on the web, how to build community, designing for mobiles, and finding the best job in the world.
More . . .

Drive me Crazy: The Web 15 from Reviewer X is spot on with things that drive user’s crazy. High school kids recognize what’s wrong with the web. Jakob’s been nagging us for years. Why don’t web sites reflect these things? Oh, hell, don’t even answer, I know the stinkin’ answer.

I Can Haz Community? at Think Vitamin is from the I Can Haz Cheeseburger site that has developed such a community and huge following. Tips for building a community around your site.

Mobile Web Design Trends for 2009 at Smashing Magazine is a good guide to designing for mobiles. It says a lot of the same things as my article Make Your Site Mobile Friendly at Think Vitamin, but this new piece at Smashing Magazine contains new ideas and many very helpful screen captures of mobile sites.

Best Job in the World has gone viral. I’m fascinated by this story and will be writing about it in more detail later in the week on BlogHer. It’s interesting because it’s a blogging job, and because of the way it’s gone viral. What is it about this story that captured the imagination and made it the latest viral phenom?

Summary of eHow articles for December

December moon

The bare trees of December reveal a full moon rising over the Sandia Mountains. Happy holidays!

These are the articles I posted at eHow this month.

In the article called How to Have a Website on a Budget, you’ll find a list of every article I’ve posted at eHow up to now that talks about sites that provide free web design and hosting plans.