Monthly archive for January 2009

You Can Take it With You – WordPress App for the iPhone

I can’t wait for the next version of the WordPress iPhone application, which will include:

  • comment moderation – including batch edit
  • page editing – creation of new pages as well as changes to existing pages
  • Landscape mode – the wider keyboard is much easier for fat-thumbed typists like me
  • Easier link creation – separate entry of link and title so you don’t have to do the whole <a href="url" > title </a> nonsense while writing

The app already does basic post creation with photos (from library or upload from phone), local draft mode, and scheduled publish.

Here’s a video preview of 1.2:

Best of all, the app itself is open source – and they’re looking for help testing. So go get the SDK, which lets you run the simulator, and check it out.

Welcome to the Empowerment Age

Earlier this week, the Pew Internet and American Life project released a brief report on “voter engagement” in the 2008 election, which argued primarily that:

Voters expect that the level of public engagement they experienced with Barack Obama during the campaign, much of it occurring online, will continue into the early period of his new administration. A majority of Obama voters expect to carry on efforts to support his policies and try to persuade others to back his initiatives in the coming year; a substantial number expect to hear directly from Obama and his team; and a notable cohort say they have followed the transition online.

Photo by Joe Crimmings

Photo by Joe Crimmings

The report resonated well with me since I’ve just finished reading Joe Trippi’s excellent book from 2004, The Revolution Will Not Be Televised. (A second edition is also available, including an author’s note and afterword on the 2008 campaign). (Although I do wonder about the difference between “being engaged” and “support[ing] his policies.” The choice of terms in the PEW report which seems to collapse the two. I’d argue the most important way to be engaged is to continue to examine everyone’s policies critically, not just to support them or ask others to do so. For example, the choice of Rick Warren to deliver the invocation at the inauguration, while mostly symbolic, certainly deserves widespread critical comment).

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