English-language version of Luistxo Fernandez's blog
Multiple languages and more novelties at Tagzania
A big step for Tagzania today. We are multilingual from now on.
Four languages as a beginning. English, Spanish, Polish and Basque. Go to the settings page, and choose your interface language. We have currently published the translations, the .po files, at Tumatxa. We hope to add new language versions, with the help of users. A mailing list (information - archive) has been set up, and we hope to develop a closer relationship with users of all over the world through that.
- List info
- The archives (also there to subscribe)
There are more settings available as well. Measurements, distance between locations, are now shown in the units of your choice, metric (kilometers) or anglo-american (miles).
We have also created a page to show our gratefulness to some propagandists of Tagzania. Users that have tested our tool, promoted it in their website, provided ideas and valuable feedback... There have been many of them, but, well, the Supreme Council of Tagzania, applying esoteric designation procedures, has designated just a handful of them as ambassadors, and there they are, at our Diplomatic Service page and a map specially dedicated to these people. Tagzania is proud of you!
Desperately seeking contact with Naobasque
This fascinating japanese blog, Naobasque, written from the Basque Country! Right now he has a post about the Basque flag, and the author comments some wikipedia entries about the Basque Country!
I would like so much to leave a comment there... but I cannot. Google's translation service (BETA), tells me that in Naobasque's comment dialog box there is a field for password and I cannot guess which one it is... And the trackback feature is only for registered users (and that's a barrier I cannot trespass). No trace of an email that I can detect as well.
Will pingback or some Technorati-like tool make him aware of me?
Naobasque! Hear my desperare cry! I want to contact you by email!
Open EU geodata, say no to Inspire
Please sign the petition for Public Geographical Data and against Inspire.
INSPIRE is a UE Directive on European "spatial data infrastructure" and it just began its second reading in the European Parliament. Read in a mailing list: Within a few weeks or months it may entrench a policy of charging European citizens to access public information they've already paid to collect.
Europeans need open data. Open maps, open postal address geocoding.
Doing our bit, I just signed, and contributed with translations into Basque and Spanish.
Streetplans, Platial and other things
The Winter Olympics event was used by Google to bring roadmaps to continental Europe: to the Piedmont region around Torino as a beginning. Probably they'll expand to the whole of Italy, and perhaps to coincide with the Football World Cup, to Germany and other countries (France and Spain, I would predict, after reading comments on this screen capture ).
Mashups and geo-social-sites were fast to use the novelty, to publish Torino-related maps. So we did at Tagzania, and rival site Platial noted it on their blog. They're elegant, at Platial, mentioning us, and maintaining a creative website. Tagzania seems to have more traffic (according to Alexa), but I suppose that Platial are better located (on the west coast of the US), have better connections (Tim O'Reilly on their board) and now they have money.
The Platial-blogger mentions the great advantages that detailed mapping brings for place-bookmarking or geo-tagging. Or, to put the other way, the chances you have to wrongly locate a given place.
Certainly streetplans and roadmaps increase the chance to bookmark locations, but even without that or hi-resolution imagery, wherever users are active, an interesting amount of locative information can be added. Tagzania's been sort of popular around our home base, so a city like Donostia, with no imagery of quality, looks quite well mapped
BTW, Tagzania's home page looks different today. We've changed the text-only delicious-like interface that we had since July 2005, and will include now an example map. We've added another Bitakora-based blog to Tagzania, as well. Maps to be displayed as examples, will be permalinked in that blog.
Blogak.com, sort of Blogger in Basque
The first users of the blogging software that we released, Bitakora, are on the FFF categories: Friends, Family, Fools... I suppose that's what has to be expected. But, at least we, and some friends around, are using this new tool happily. There's the first english Bitakora of the planet, as the newsroom for Tagzania. Also a Bitakora-based site for a Spanish opinion-writer, Javier Ortiz and the first open Bitakora website: Blogak.com , sort of Blogger in Basque, a platform to create a blog in 3 easy steps., which we launched yesterday.
FON maps for the US
FON reaches the US, and now has maps for that country created by the Tagzania crew, altogether with coleagues of another Basque company, Alianzo.
FON is a start-up created by serial entrepreneur Martin Varsavsky.
The idea is a long-tail-like connectivity network. Wi-fi access points that users provide thru their wi-fi routers, each one re-distributing their broadband share from their particular source. You enter the network, share your broadband around your home, but get your share returned when you approach other people's windows. Others, not members of the network, may get cheap broadband paying for a connection if they happen to be around those points, and the network members may get benefits from that as well.
New imagery at Google Local, but not yet thru the API
Any area of great Google Earth resolution that has no counterpart in Google Maps, has now been updated: at Google Local, but not thru the API.
Examples at the Hierro island, in the Canary Islands, off the coast of western Africa. Looks cloudy at Tagzania, and as a matter of fact, those are the very same clouds appearing at Virtual Earth or Windows Live Local, the Microsoft counterpart to Google.
This happens in many places. Tallinn, for instance, in Estonia.
We're eager to see these things in the API, obviously. Streetplans will arrive hopefully. I guess Germany's map vistas will be earlier than the World Cup: just a guess.
Tag-based blogs in Zope with Bitakora
Today my company CodeSyntax has released a new Zope blogging product.
It is called Bitakora or Bitakora Blog Community.
This is a product for managing multiblog communities. It is multilingual, with varios language versions right now (english, spanish, basque). Blogs managed thru this system are based on a tag-based archive. And other features, as well (ePoz based wysiwyg editor, pingback system...). There must be bugs, of course. This is the release 0.1.
We have created a mailing list for the product, as well.
Some screenshots here and the .po files and translations made so far also downladable.
Moshzilla meets the Spanish royals
Some days ago, The Spanish Royal Family published in their official website a Chritsmas picture so badly photoshopped that it would seem like a joke. They even offered apologies: no time to reunite all the grandchildren around Juan Carlos and Sofia, so they turned to copy & paste. Lots of work, for these parasites of public budget, it seems.
However, that kitsch collage has ignited a wave of mockery that feels like fresh air. The king of Spain has become Spain's ideal Moshzilla model for dozens of picture mash-ups.
Now, they've met online, as well.
That's a picture a friend sent me. Not yet in the pseudo-official Family gallery. Great artwork there. There's the Constant Plumber from Bloglines even, or a Basque motive.
My personal favorite is the Republican version.
Happy Christmas!
That's what Lili and Peru have to say to you:
My wife took this picture back in october. Love and peace. Now, we'll go on vacation. Bye!