Archive for the ‘irishblogs’ Category

Dublin meetup: Mulligan’s – Sat 13th @ 2000 hours

Friday, May 12th, 2006

As dictated by the In Factahnistas. See post title.

InFactahnistas

Map:
Mulligan pub Dublin

Exams are over. Yes I got your email No I’m not going to reply

Friday, May 12th, 2006

I have 1500 emails to sort through. Eugh. If it was urgent or life changing, it’s pointless me replying now isn’t it? *hits the delete button* If it wasn’t important you wouldn’t be bothered if I answered or not. *hits delete button again* Win win for me. That’s getting things done. Who needs a book? ๐Ÿ™‚

Should IrishBlogs.ie and Journals.ie stop/start indexing blog posts?

Thursday, May 11th, 2006

Dermod has an interesting post on search engines and Irish Blog aggregators. It seems his posts are found in Google under the IrishBlogs copy/cache of his post and not via his own website. Dermod asks whether blog aggregators should block search engine spiders from looking at blog caches? Leave a comment on his blog.

Edit: Amended title.

Google Trends: Jesus bigger than Lennon

Wednesday, May 10th, 2006

John Lennon Jesus

Message from God: “Who’s bigger now hippy?”

Google Trends – Create your own Zeitgeist

Wednesday, May 10th, 2006

Google Trends. You can check the search trends for countries and regions. For Ireland it breaks it down by City!

Google Trend search for broadband.

Google Trend search for Podge and Rodge.

Google Trend comparing Bebo to mySpace. Look at the bloody massive rise for Bebo!

But as Dave says in the comments, worldwide Bebo is mauled by mySpace.

Compare UCC to TCD to UCD

Oh I could be here for hours!

I’m glad you don’t trust me – Bloggers and trust

Wednesday, May 10th, 2006

Richard mentions a BBC and Reuters survey on blogs and whether people trust them compared to traditional news sources. Details of media trust survey.

The results:

National TV was the most trusted news source overall (trusted by 82%, with 16% not trusting it) – followed by national/regional newspapers (75% vs 19%), local newspapers (69% vs 23%), public radio (67% vs 18%), and international satellite TV (56% vs 19%). Internet blogs were the least trusted source (25% vs 23%) รขโ‚ฌโ€œ with one in two unable to say whether they trusted them.

TV was also seen as the most ‘important’ news source (56%) followed by Newspapers (21%), internet (9%) and radio (9%).

Richard said:

I think this is more reason still to see blogs as supplementing, rather than supplanting, established media.

I’d agree with Richard on this. I think some get too excited that us bloggers will take down O’Reilly Corp and Thomas Crosbie Media. Not a chance. However I’m quite upbeat about these figures and I said as much in the comments on Richard’s post. Blogging is just a baby at the moment especially when you compare it to the age of the printing press. 50% of people couldn’t give an opinion on blogs with 25% saying they’d trust them and 23% saying they’d mistrust them. The same level of mistrust they have with local papers. They mistrust public radio and satellite TV more! That’s fairly interesting.

More importantly though to me, I think everyone should have a healthy level of mistrust of all news sources so that they’d check more than one source and on perspective on the news. This to me would make the news more fair and balanced. Also if blogging has a long way to catch up to be as trusted as TV news then good because if blogs ever reach that level I think the blog quality will be much better than TV news. You won’t get much credibility or trust from other bloggers unless you back everything you say with a few links to other sources. Bloggers in a way provide you with their raw newsfeeds whereas TV and radio do not.

I’d be disappointed if everyone that read this blog took what I said as gospel. DO NOT (fully) TRUST THIS MAN

Damien Mulley

Am I damaging Ireland’s international reputation?

Wednesday, May 10th, 2006

“I am concerned that some commentators overplay the so-called ‘broadband failure’ in Ireland. They risk unnecessarily damaging Ireland’s international reputation.”

(from Noel Dempsey’s speech ‘Our Future: Living and Learning with Technology’ at the broadband conference, Galway, 26th April 2006)

Louis le Brocquy at Irish Museum of Modern Art

Wednesday, May 10th, 2006

Louis le Brocquy at IMMA. That’s where I’m spending my saturday afternoon.

Photographers and the Law

Tuesday, May 9th, 2006

Very good piece from Digital Rights Ireland on the legal rights of photographers. Good to see you can’t be made turn over your film for taking pics in a public place.

Broadband coverage map was in the Sunday Tribune

Sunday, May 7th, 2006

The broadband coverage map of Ireland that John Handelaar created was mentioned in the Sunday Tribune today. When you have the Minister’s office, eircom and eircom apologists complaining about it, as Bernie said, you’re doing something right. John was not credited with creating the map in the Tribune which is a shame as he did an awful lot of good work to make it work. Still, us bloggers know!