May 12

It’s been a while since I’ve posted, but I’ve been busier than ever. In a totally good way, though. There’s amazing amazing things coming up over at Propeller that I can’t talk about just yet, but we’re about to have the AOL spotlight shown on us in a way that we’ve been working towards for well over a year. I consider myself extremely lucky to lead up the Scout team over there. They’re such an awesome group, and they continue to astound me with their passion, experience and knowledge everyday.

On top of the Propeller stuff though I’ve started a project on the side that while I can’t share just yet, will absolutely blow people’s minds. It’s something that is very personal and that I am so so proud of, it’s hard to put into words. I can’t wait to show it off to the world.

So this all means that I’m pretty much working around the clock. Luckily it’s work that I really enjoy. Til next time.

Jun 26

I love Digg, I work for Netscape, but I still love Digg. Although there’s a lot of information overlap, and I see stuff on Digg that I’ve already found elsewhere, I always seem to find that random little nugget there that I don’t find anywhere else. That said, my use of Digg is very passive. I read the links, but that’s it. I’ve long since given up on commenting, and today I stumbled across a perfect example of why.

This submission appeared on Digg’s front page earlier today: Gorgeous close-up wasp in flight picture [pic]. I’m a sucker for nature pictures and programs, and Digg’s userbase as been drumming up more and more great pictures recently, so, like a sucker, I clicked on it. I was pleasantly surprised for a split second when I saw that the page loading up was a Flickr page, but just for a split second. This is the picture I was greeted with:

I can’t say for sure, but I can probably give you a play by play on what happened here: The story was submitted to Digg. The story became popular on Digg and made it to the front page, thus exponentially increasing the Digg users visiting the photo. Someone noticed that they could post a note on the picture, and posted a note. Others noticed this too. There were probably a few interesting notes on the photos (This is the thorax), a huge amount of moronic ones (This is the sky) and a ton of redundant ones that could have gone in the comments (Great photo! or Have you noticed all the notes on this photo? L0Lcatz!!11!!! ). The reason I can’t say for sure on how to do this? Well some jackass took it one step further and made the entire picture a note so that even the other notes can’t be read:

Digg long ago turned into a mob mentality who’s costs are now starting to tip and not be worth the benefit you would get from their traffic. This latest piece of web graffiti is just the most recent poignant example. Imagine going to here a professor speak on a subject you’re earnestly interested in at a college campus. Now imagine that since their were flyers handed out everywhere, more people start showing up, again, this would probably be a good thing since more discussions would be provoked. Finally, imagine that there happen to be about 10 frats walking around that night, they all got handed flyers as well, and guess where they’re going?

Trying to read or participate in comments at Digg, or anywhere the pack travels, is an absolute mess, and I’m not talking about the mess with the threaded comments either (much love Jay). It’s like standing in a lecture hall with 200 frat boys screaming “I WANNA HEAR MY VOICE!” It’s a matter of being respectful, and that’s something that the large majority of Digg users don’t seem to, and may not ever, grasp.

Oh, and here’s the original photo for reference, it really is an amazing shot:

May 15

I saw Pirates of the Caribbean 3: At World’s End. I’m not allowed to post a review for another week and a half, but I had a blast.

Mar 23

One of the biggest stigmata that Netscape encounters is that we’re old. An old company, an old site, old technology. It’s days like today that I live for.

As Tom put it: We came, we saw, we OpenIDed

Big congratulations to our Development team, those guys are awesome, and amaze me everyday. Oh, and this is just the tip of the iceberg.

Mar 23

Well, this is now the third time in a year that I’ve completely lost my blog and am starting over from scratch. No problem though, it’s something I was planning on doing anyways. I’m going to try and post a little bit more often, and have looked into doing something with a Tumblr blog since that’s a little more my style and quick and random. I was using Twitter… but I’m over that (opinions to come later).

So for those of you that don’t know, I recently moved to LA. There’s lots of opportunities for Netscape with me being out here. Speaking of which, the team is on fire over there recently, make sure you check out the amazing new My.Netscape and prepare yourselves for the awesomeness that will be the new Netscape browser. This is going to be a huge year and I could not be happier with the team I’m on. But again, more to come on that soon.