Posts FromJuly, 2008

31
Jul 08

GeoToolKit Skipped Stories Can Now Be Brought Back to Life

Ever have GeoToolkit skip over a story you wrote? Wish there were a way you can get it back into our system? Well now you can! GeoToolkit now has a feature that brings skipped posts back for your review. When you notice we’ve skipped a story, you have the option of adding geotags so that it gets picked up. You’ll see a notice that says “Did we miss geographic information in this story? Click here to import the story from our archives.” This will pull an excerpt of the story into the edit window and you can add places and neighborhoods to it.

Why do we skip some stories? Sometimes the Feed Editor in GeoToolkit can’t find a mention of a place or a neighborhood. For example, if there is a photo with no place in the title, or if you use a nickname of an establishment instead of its actual name (Shorty’s place vs. Shorty’s Diner), or if there is no mention of a place or intersection at all in your post.

29
Jul 08

Net Neutrality: Time for the FCC to Step Up

Yesterday, the Washington Post ran an article about the upcoming vote on Net Neutrality, penned by FCC Republican Commissioner Robert McDowell. Here is a repost of my response, which appears in the Comments section:

“Mr McDowell should be applauded for his stance on this issue, and for the vocal encouragement of self-regulation in the market. But even the best self-regulating markets rely on the engagement of a full complement of parties with differing perspectives, and the existence of a well-functioning infrastructure.

“That means ‘regulatory bodies’ (in this case the FCC), and the full compliment of corporations and independent lobby groups. All have a role to play in ensuring that the web remains highly efficient.

“It is difficult to know Comcast’s true motivations for slowing internet speeds in certain parts of its network, but a quick look at similar industries should at least inspire some sympathy for its actions. Most industries support models that require customers to pay more for an improved level of product or service. For example, if you want to fly at peak times across the US, you will pay more for your ticket than those prepared to fly in the middle of the day. As web usage continues to multiple, and in the upcoming proliferation of video streaming you can be sure that it will, the industry will increasingly look to corporations to evolve pricing and supply models to meet the demand of everyone in an equitable manner.

“The same goes for the FCC. It’s all very well to stand back and applaud the pressure groups for highlighting malpractice, but they too must accept the detailed and complex role they have in keeping the web up and running. That means driving infrastructure development and it means effectively supporting the industry players of all types as they each do their bit to drive more efficiency out of what we already have.

“It’s worth remembering that self-regulation does not mean no-regulation.”

29
Jul 08

Radar Alerts: You Can Click ‘Em

Think that you should be able to click on the stories mentioned in your Radar email alerts?

Well, now you can. We just added links in your Radar alerts.

The three links are from the:

  1. Name of the blog or publisher; links to a BuzzMap of the author’s content on outside.in
  2. Headline; links to the full post
  3. Name of the place mentioned; links to a Place page on outside.in that contains archived articles on the place

Not signed up for Radar yet? Take a gander here.
Using Radar and have suggestions to make it better? Let us know.

28
Jul 08

The outside.in Guide to Great Local Blogging

As you know, we are champions of all things local at outside.in and we prize the hyperlocal bloggers and publishers we link to from our site.

We get asked a lot of “how to” questions, so we thought we’d share a summary of our top user tips to help you get the most out of outside.in. Here goes:

1. Go where big media doesn’t. Nothing is too local. People in your neighborhood care about parking issues, little league games, annoying construction, new restaurants — everything happening right nearby. Be as specific as possible when talking about places. Give them accurate names so they are more easily detected by our system and added to the right pages (i.e. “Madison Square Garden” vs. “the Garden”). More about this in #5 below.

2. Connect with your neighbors and other local bloggers. Share ideas with other bloggers and leave comments on their site. If someone else has the scoop, link to them. If you write a post inspired by another blogger, give them a shout out and thanks. People tend to link back, and the more links you receive, the more credible you’ll be as a source. Talk about local places and issues in our discussion boards. Remember, you are part of a larger community — the hyperlocal blogging community — so make friends out there!

3. Post early and often, or at least regularly. Readers like consistency. Give them content to come back for regularly. Come up with a schedule you can stick to, whether it be 5 posts a day or 5 posts a month (but of course, the more the better!). Come up with regular features (like restaurant reviews on Thursdays, or fun facts about your neighborhood on Fridays) so your readers have something to look forward to. You can always schedule posts (on your blogging software’s timestamp) to be published at a later time if you plan to be away from your computer.

4. Be timely. Break stories. You can cover news way before local media sources pick up on stories. In this wave of citizen journalism, larger newspapers and TV stations often look to local bloggers as sources. The sooner you post a story, the more likely you are to get a surge in traffic when word spreads. If you tend to break stories or write about local issues when they are fresh, you’ll be seen as more of an expert and other local blogs and news outlets will start linking to you. Which leads us to…

5. Tag your posts. Use relevant subject, place and (most importantly!) location tags so that your content is easily searchable and identifiable. Subject tagging will allow your posts to show up on outside.in topic pages (like http://outside.in/Brooklyn_NY/tags/events). When you write about local issues, places or people, tag with the most specific geographic information (address is best, but use a zip code or neighborhood name if your post is about a more general area). Remember, tag with the location information that your post is about (not where you are located). For example, hyperlink to the place page like this: White House OR add outside.in “where tags” like this: [where:1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D.C.]. Please refer here to see our supported forms of geotagging content.

6. Use your stats to your advantage. Discover your Stats page in your GeoToolkit, where you can view your neighborhood rankings, see which posts generate the most links, and compare yourself to other bloggers in your area. Knowing where you rank and what gets you links can help you produce better content that will get the most page views.

Keep up the great blogging, and remember, outside.in is a great way to share your content with a wider audience, and to discover what’s around you. Not being picked up by outside.in yet? Submit your blog via GeoToolkit here.

Have your own list of tips? Send ‘em our way. Best tip will receive a limited edition outside.in t-shirt.

14
Jul 08

What’s Inside Your GeoToolkit?

After several months of hard work we’re happy to announce the launch of outside.in’s GeoToolkit—the first and only set of tools designed specifically for local content creators. Since the founding of outside.in, we’ve been focused on celebrating and promoting placebloggers and others who write about neighborhood faces and places. (Feel free to take a celebratory sip of bubbly right…now). We hope that by using GeoToolkit, those publishers will become even better at what they do. We’ve got lots more goodies on the way, so stay tuned.

GeoToolkit helps both publishers who write full and part-time time (the occasional story about a diner, a local policy meeting, new construction, playground moment, or great new local store) get better distribution on our site and our partners’ sites, as well as amazing stats to get more connected to their neighborhoods. Still to come: gnarly widgets and the option to start making some money$.

http://outside.in/toolkit

Here’s a sneak peak of what’s inside:

My Feed optimizes your site for the geoweb. It automatically locates the places and neighborhoods mentioned in your stories, and lets you add new ones to our database. By connecting your posts to places and neighborhoods, links to those stories will appear throughout outside.in, and across our growing list of partner sites.

GeoToolkit My Feed detail



My Stats has unique analytics about your site and its connection to the neighborhood. You can track which neighborhoods you write most about vs. other bloggers, see how you rank on certain places or topics, see which stories generate the most links, and which websites are linking the most to you.

Statistics Dashboard Detail


So if you have a website or blog, check out GeoToolkit. We’d love to hear what you think.

10
Jul 08

Radar Now Open to Non-registered Users

Rejoice, non-registered outside.in users: earlier this week we opened Radar up to everyone who comes to the site, whether they are logged in or not.

The original 1.0 launch of Radar was only viewable to logged in users, because we had built a lot of things into it that required us to remember details about you. Radar remembers your favorite places and topics, it sends you instant alerts about news around you, it lets you broadcast messages to your neighbors – all of those things need a login to work properly.

So to make it available to everyone, we created a version without all of that stuff. The non-logged-in version of Radar is a straight, no-frills news feed of things going on around you right now. Just go to outside.in/radar, enter your address, and see the news around you. No log-in required.

Of course you can get a lot more if you register and log in, and we’re building more into it all the time, so it’s going to get better and better. But if you don’t want to register or log in, now you have that option as well.

7
Jul 08

Ruby Happy Hour July 9th @outside.in

Just a reminder that we’re going to be hosting another Ruby Happy Hour with free beer and pizza at our offices this coming Wednesday evening.  The office Wii just arrived last week, along with our Rock Band equipment, so the theme of this happy hour is Battle of the Bands. Hope to see you there!

See pics from our last Ruby event here.

Where: outside.in’s offices, 20 Jay St Suite 1019 (10th Fl), Brooklyn, NY
When: 7-9pm, July 9th
Who: if you’re a developer who uses Ruby and would like to meet some other Ruby folks, toss around ideas, or just have a few beers, we welcome you with open arms!


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