Web Annotation, what are you annotating today?

About 8 months ago I got hooked on using Diigo as a tool for storing bookmarks online.  It was Diigo’s ability to annotate web pages which got me interested in using the service.  Basically, Diigo lets you either highlight or add comments too pretty much any web page.  It works quite well, and I was hooked.  After a few months of using Diigo religiously though I started to dislike the service.  I think it was because some pages that required me to login didn’t save the annotations correctly or maybe that the amount of ads on the Diigo site increased, I am not really sure what it was, but I stopped "liking" Diigo.

Problem was that I was hooked on the annotation bit.  It is a really amazing thing to read an article, highlight the best parts, and then come back a week or a month later and immediately see what was most important in that article.  I started looking for a replacement. 

Google Notebook is a tool that immediately sprang to mind.  I already clip bits of articles I want to remember in a particular context to specific notebooks.  This works great for that purpose, but if I want to clip three or four paragraphs I end up with that many entries in the notebook.  I also don’t get to see my annotations on the page when I view them in Firefox.

I looked at a few other services (Fleck, Shiftspace), but none of them was replacing the nice features of Diigo.  I finally stumbled upon SharedCopy.  It is a very simple service that captures a copy of the web page you want to annotate, and allows you to highlight, comment and draw on the page.  It has some integration with Ma.gnolia and Delicious (but not currently with Diigo), as well as some other services.  Here is a sample of what the annotations look like, and they even offer this nice little embedded widget as well.

New York Times

President Bush is well on his way to being remembered as the leader who wasted not one but two crises: 9/11 and 4/11. The average price of gasoline in the U.S. last week, according to the Energy Information Administration, was $4.11. link »

We don’t have a "gasoline price problem." We have an addiction problem. We are addicted to dirty fossil fuels, and this addiction is driving a whole set of toxic trends that are harming our nation and world in many different ways. link »

I understand why consumers think we have a gasoline price problem - because they are immediately hurt by higher gas prices and the pump is where most people touch our energy system. They tend not to see the bigger picture. But that is why you have a president: to explain that and lay out a response. link »

read the speech that Al Gore delivered on Thursday to the bipartisan Alliance for Climate Protection. Gore, the alliance’s chairman, called for a 10-year plan - the same amount of time John F. Kennedy set for getting us to the moon - to shift the entire country to "renewable energy and truly clean, carbon-free sources" to power our homes, factories and even transportation. link »

It amazes me how inadequate his response has been. By hectoring the nation to simply drill for more oil, he has profoundly underestimated the challenges we face link »

- from Op-Ed Columnist - 9/11 and 4/11 - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com via sharedcopy.com

You can see that it has links to the exact location in the article where I highlighted the information, which I think is nice.  I actually bookmark the marked up page (as opposed to the original) in Delicious/Ma.gnolia so that I can get back to my annotations.  I am a little worried about the company going away, so I also subscribe to my feed in Google Reader which allows me to keep a copy of my annotations on the Google servers.  It also provides a very nice search of my annotated pages.  For example, I can search my SharedCopy items in Google Reader for Al Gore (which appears in my clipping above) and it finds it no problem.

I am pretty happy with the setup I have right now, using SharedCopy.  I am wondering though, is web annotation that important?  Do you annotate web pages?  There are quite a few services listed on the Web Annotation article in Wikipedia, have you tried any of them?

A tropical storm, 50 cupcakes and a happy birthday

Just finishing up making a bunch of cupcakes for Iain’s birthday party at school and for us to have the rest of the week.    I think Iain had a good birthday today.  He got to talk to everyone in the family, watched a few of his favorite movies, opened up a few presents (more tomorrow), and we went to the Museum.  All in all a good birthday for a 3 year old I think.

Edouard turned out to be nothing for Pearland, and generally nothing got the region.  I did see a number of accidents and a bit of flooding on the news, but it could always be worse.  There seems to be a lot of complaining going on that the media over reacted.  In this case part of Houston closed down, people stocked up on supplies, and for the most part it rained.  I heard a number of people say that it had rained harder last week when some storms blew through.  I am sure these are the same people who would have been on the news complaining about how horrible the city is for not giving enough warning had this storm intensified into a more dangerous hurricane.

Edouard and Iain - Happy Birthday!

UPDATE

Looks like Pearland will be spared anything but rain, and it is unlikely we will even get much of that.  At least Iain and I can still do something for his birthday this afternoon.

Tomorrow is Iain’s third birthday.  He is actually pretty excited.  Problem is, it would appear that Tropical Storm (or maybe Hurricane) Edouard will be paying the Houston area a visit tomorrow.  Melissa is actually out of town on work, so it is just Iain and I here (with the cats) to weather to storm..and celebrate.

Edouard

I think it is still too early to tell how bad things will be.  If the storm drifts a bit more south then we will end up with most of the "dirty side" of the storm on top of us.  I think that we will get a lot of rain (which we need) and see some good 40+ mph wind gusts here regardless.

I will be keeping friends and family up to date on our status using Twitter and Flickr.  Look for regular postings of text, pictures, and video throughout the day.  I will keep the pictures and video coming as long as I have power to post them.  I can update Twitter for as long as my blackberry lasts.  I am assuming that Iain’s day care will be closed tomorrow, and that we will be home.

Here are the links you will need:

Twitter:  http://twitter.com/seananbrady/

Flickr:  http://www.flickr.com/photos/seanabrady/

Facebook:  http://www.new.facebook.com/profile.php?id=502226220

FriendFeed:  http://friendfeed.com/seanabrady

I will change my Facebook settings to reflect what I post on Twitter.  You can follow everything by just looking at my FriendFeed page.

Games I Most Want to be Playing

I have been seriously lacking in any sort of game playing recently.  I have a ton of games thought, and just sat down tonight and started writing down the games I would really like to be playing.  Here is a list, and a quick write up of why.  Live in the Pearland, TX area and want to play one of these games?  Give me a shout.

I notice when I look through this list that the fantasy theme floats to the top quite a lot.  I also see war games floating to the top of the list.  The games that did not make this list were mostly more war or fantasy adventure themed games.

Fantasy Flight Games is the top publisher on this list, which is not a surprise.  Precis Intermedia makes a strong showing, and Two-Fisted Tales would have made the list as well, except I am not as keen on the pulp genre.  I think I own more source books for Warhammer Fantasy than for any other system (except maybe 3rd edition D&D – which is not on the list).

Here is the list.  I would love to hear your comments on these games.

Continued reading >

I like 4th Edition D&D

Background:  I owned the basic D&D set back in the early 80’s and thought it was amazing.  I never really played it “right” but I loved playing all the same.  I used to go to the student center at the University of South Dakota (I was 9 or 10 at the time) and play D&D with my brother and Tony and Jerry Dunham.  We had a good time.  I did buy some AD&D books over the years, but didn’t really realize that the game had changed, and lost interest.

In 1988 I started playing Warhammer Fantasy and a little bit of HARN.  The crowd I was with was fairly anti-d&D and I became that way as well.  I brought Warhammer to college and shunned the D&D crowds there.  About 3 or 4 years ago I bought back into D&D with the 3.0 and 3.5 editions.  I didn’t really like the game.  I found it easier than what I remembered of AD&D, but still it was too much.  Way too many books to purchase, way too many fiddly rules.  However, much like Warhammer Fantasy Battles, you go where the people are if you want to game, and D&D has the crowds.

Fast forward to 2 weeks ago and I got my hands on the core books for 4e D&D.  I had a fairly good idea of what to expect, but I still was not 100% prepared for what I found.  I have not gotten to play the game yet, but I am working on a game.  In my mind this looks to be a great game.  Here is what I like about it the most:

  • It’s a new version.  Nothing I hate worse than a new version of a game that changes 1/2 a dozen rules, cleans up some typos, and calls itself a new version.  Just enough changes to get everyone to re-buy the book (Warhammer 6th- 7th edition).  This is not that kind of book.  4th edition is a brand new game, based on the same concepts and worlds of D&D.  This is a great way to do things.  The people happy with 3.5 are not forced to change, the people not happy with 3.5 have something new to play, and everyone can play 2 games called D&D with very different experiences.
  • The core Mechanic.  Having one very simple mechanic and offering exceptions to that mechanic make the game fairly easy to teach.  Much more so than 3.5 IMHO.  When I read the 4e books the game generally seems to make sense, and relates well back to the one core mechanic in the game.
  • Powers.  This was something I was a bit worried about, but I think it is going to be OK.  It will, no doubt, lead to endless strings of “powers books”, but the concept is fine.  It seems to make characters more heroic in my mind.  It helps them to stand apart from the crowd better than just having a high dexterity or strength.  I read a number of things that made it sound like “regular” attacks were a thing of the past, but I don’t know if that is really the case after reading the rules.
  • Running the Game.  Reading the DM’s Guide has been a real pleasure.  Setting everything up for a game really does seem to be much simpler.  It tends to follow a similar set of rules whether you are talking about traps, hazards, monsters, or skill encounters.  This makes creating encounters quite easy.  I like the right ups on quests as well.

There are other things to like to be sure.  My least favorite things thus far are really the monsters.  The Monster Manual provides a number of very interesting monsters, but it is confusing to find/create the base monster so that you can customize it the way you want.  It’s not the end of the world, but I would lo v to see “base” stats for each monster type in addition to the more customized versions.

I am VERY excited to get my adventure written and get some gaming done.  I will report back when I do.  I am putting together a wiki for the game, which I will link to once it is ready.