Saturday 28 February 2009

Běijīng a short stop over



It was Mrs Waveys special Birthday in November, (shh don't tell her I told you that), and I decided to take here on a surprise holiday. I'd heard about Harbin and the Ice Festival (more about that later) and thought I'd couple that with Chinese New Year in luxury in Hong Kong.

This is how I packaged it up for the birthday present (photos of the Ice and Snow festival were inside the Ice Sculpture which had melted by Birthday Morning).



Anyway. I couldn't get a direct flight to Harbin so it meant that we had to have a stopover in Beijing. This was a bit frustrating, because we knew we wouldn't be able to do the place justice at all, but we did get a little look around to get the flavour of the place.



You read about the Traffic in Beijing, but it really is amazing. The rules of the road seem to be that you can do anything as long as you beep your horn a lot. If you are a pedestrian or cyclist your job is to ignore the horn. It wasn't uncommon to look out of a taxi window and see a bike driving towards you. It was a good job that the average speed in Beijing was only 15KMH. Talking of Taxis, none of the drivers had done the knowledge. Many times we drove around in circles looking for our hotel. Even with a Taxi Card it wasn't that easy to find.



Whilst walking through the city we saw a number of people were going through a particular door, and being curious, we followed. We found ourselves in the Olympic Souvenir shop and experienced our first taste of Chinese shopping. We selected our item from one Girl who wrote us a multi copy receipt. We were then walked by another person to the payment counter. Having paid the receipts were stamped and then we were give 2 back and were walked back to finally get our present from the original person. There is something to be said for full employment!



Anyway, we didn't see any Olympic Venues, we didn't go to the Great Wall, (but saw it from the plane), and we didn't do a hundred other things, but we did go to Tiananmen Square and walked into the city seeing some good night markets. I only wish we could have stayed a little longer. What came next, however, was well worth leaving Beijing for



To see more photos go to my Beijing Flickr Set

Sunday 22 February 2009

Help - The problems of relying on a service

Those of you that know me probably know that I tend to spend my time in the on-line world on Jaiku. Jaiku appeared around the same time as the much more well known Twitter but whilst Twitter opened up to the general public quickly, Jaiku stayed an invite only service, and therefore Twitter grew quickly and Jaiku, despite the best intentions of users and services like Jaiku Invites became the forgotten service.

However in some ways this was good for Jaiku. Whilst spammers and people who just liked their own voices hit Twitter, Jaiku formed real communities and real conversations formed. This was partly down to jaikus threaded conversations. There were stupid threads, games, heated debates, first dates, marriages and divorces documented on the "ku" alongside hurricanes, product announcements and the perhaps more obvious help with phones, operating systems and the like. These were all easy to follow, no searching was required, no third party trend following applications needed, it just worked.

Then something happened. Google bought Jaiku. Oh how we cheered. There were all sorts of rumours about how Jaiku would change. With the mighty power of Google behind it there was no stopping the service. Not only would it open up and eclipse Twitter, but it was to be an integral part of Android, or become part of Gmail. I began to get nervous that soon Jaiku would just be full of people spamming. Also that the Jaiku Mobile App for Nokia may never get out of beta with Android taking its place. Meanwhile Twitter was going down regularly, the fail whale a regular appearance, lots of Jaiku gloating going on.

Then in August last year Jaiku went down. Most people very patient but nerves started to appear. There was little info on what was going on and for the first time people began to wonder if Google had bought the service or the talent behind it. Having invested most of my time in Jaiku I was just a bit stuck for somewhere to go. I looked at Twitter (still suffering), Identi.ca (the new black) and Rejaw a new application. For me Identi.ca was all concept no substance, and being open source was a haven for those with a far more technical bent than me. Rejaw was the closest thing to Jaiku I could find with threaded conversations and a small but growing community.

I had a problem though, I like many of my Jaiku friends had a Nokia smartphone. One of the great ideas behind micro blogs (which admittedly Rejaw wasn't claiming as its main role) is that it is suited to the mobile phone, by text, application or mini browser. Rejaw had no mobile app (an iPhone app in the making) and didn't work in the Nokia browser. My Jaiku friends were scattering to the 4 winds.

Then Jaiku came back. Still no idea of what was going on but it worked. Calm was restored and although it wasn't quite the same it was good. I stayed with Rejaw as well because I like it, and it was a little easier for me having an iPhone. Many people had second services and had drifted off a bit.

Then come January 2009 it was announced that Jaiku was going open source. Some people thought this the beginning, some the end. I was just disappointed that Google didn't follow the potential of this service.

Then Jaiku failed again. The Robin has been showing up more and more and the service has got very frustrating. Many long standing Jaiku users are jumping ship (to the four winds). At the time of writing Jaiku is back up but it has left me with a horrible feeling.

Where am I going with this disorganised ranting? I don't know. It is more of a where I am going.

I have relied on Jaiku as a central hub for too long. I don't blame the developers who provided me with a FREE service. I don't deny them the opportunity to move on to bigger and better things and get paid to do so by a huge influential company that wants to use there talent. I'm pleased they are still spending time on it.

Whilst I love Jaiku I don't blame those who have got frustrated and gone elsewhere, especially those that use it for more than 'fun' social networking. It's just that I feel a little homeless and I am currently doing the thing I dislike most, spraying my digital scent around the internet territory with no real means of patrolling that territory well. Where do I go, where do I belong?

Rejaw is great, but under used and no good for Nokia users and possibly others outside the Web/iPhone world.

Twitter
- Good for watching Celebrities, if that is your bag, and everyone seems to be on it. Lots of mobile apps to. On the downside it seems full of spammers and nigh on impossible to follow a conversation with any ease. Lots of shouts, little conversation.
Identi.ca - Actually coming on really well (the power of open source). Just a little technical for me, and if more people get using it then it will be as hard to follow a conversation as Twitter. I do believe it could grow and grow though.

So I'm lost. Trying out various things and applications on my phone and PC to try and make sense of the microblog community. I'm trying Tweetdeck, La Twit, Twitterfon and Friendfeed at the moment. I can't rely on Jaiku alone and I'm too lazy to keep up with everything unless it is easy.

Can anyone help me?