The Comedy of the Commons

I’m a huge fan of online collaboration, and I particularly love (and try to build) tools that encourage people to create common good while having fun. It’s the exact opposite of the tragedy of the commons: rather than squabbling over limited resources, and destroying them, people improve a shared resource, or create entirely new ones, while having a good time and benefiting themselves.

Many Eyes, from IBM’s Visual Communications Lab, lets you visualize word relationships in literature. It’s tremendous eye candy, and the visualizations are in essence collaborations between the site’s developers (Fernanda and Martin, who I saw give a great talk at this year’s Foo Camp*) and its users, who contribute data for the visualizations.

Self-sacrifice is a beautiful thing, but not the most effective motivator; for getting things done, there’s nothing like aligning the interests of individuals and groups. It’s idealism without the masochism, something Wordie aspires to. Many Eyes is fun, beautiful, and a great example of this mechanism in action.

* Pathetic name dropper: guilty.

Unsocial Sites

Here’s a cautionary tale about how social sites can lose their way, and then their audience. The writer abandoned Digg for Reddit, then Reddit for Fark. Wordie is small and intended for a specific audience, but still, it’s social software, and it’s growing, so it’s good to think about these things. Hopefully we as a community can avoid the kind of mistakes that Digg in particular made. Better to have a smaller community of, you know, brilliant, witty (and very good looking, I’m sure!) people, than appeal to a brazillion trolls. Thanks to npydyuan for the link.

And Now a Word From Our Sponsors

Starting tomorrow, Wordie is going to runs ads. Standard Google text ads (no images), at the top of each page.

But ads will run only on Tuesdays. Kind of like casual Friday, but for ads. And on Tuesday.

I’m curious to see what the Google ad-matching algorithm does with Wordie’s all-over-the-map content. Chained_bear’s Journey of a 300-Year-Old House list is going to bring up ads for roofing and home depot–even I could write that algorithm. But what about lek and waxed paper? And I’m scared, but curious, to see what it does with this.

The decision to run ads is part joke, part curiosity, but mostly it’s economic. I cover Wordie’s costs, and it’s adding up. And as traffic rises, so does the expense.

On other sites I’ve built, like Squirl, the fact that the site carried ads led some people to believe we were minting money. Let me disabuse you of that notion. Here are the numbers.

On a good day Wordie serves around 7,000 page views. You’re doing pretty well to earn $1 per thousand page views from Google, so Wordie might make $7 per Tuesday†, or $28 a month. Wordie is served on a 512MB slice (from the inimitable Slicehost), which costs me $38 a month. So, I’m still in the hole $10 every month, much less paying myself anything (though socializing with you Wordies is, of course, reward enough–*smooch*). These limited ads will defray my costs, that’s it.

I’m a little sad about ending Wordie’s commercial-free phase, but hopefully this won’t be too intrusive. Over time, I hope to refine the way ads are presented so that they’re maybe even a bit amusing–like build a system where, say, Ikea could run furniture ads on all the furniture words. Credenza, brought to you by Ikea. I’d insist on writing all the copy, of course*. Sort of like a 1940s radio soap opera, or Sesame Street: Today’s episode is brought to you by the letter N, and the number 3! Except that the number 3 was getting a free ride.

In any case, this is, as always, a work in progress. Let me know what you think.

† UPDATE: The results are in, and after one Tuesday of ads, I can say that my initial back of the envelope calculations were wildly optimistic. We did indeed get around 7,000 page views. Cut all the rest of the numbers in half. The final take: $3.45.
* Actually, if anyone wants to buy advertising space directly, and is willing to let me write the copy, you should have, you know, your people get in touch with my people**.
** Uh, I don’t have any people. Not those kind of people, at least. Email me: john[at]wordie.org.

Search Term Autocomplete

The search box now automatically fetches the first 10 words that match what you’ve entered, and updates the list as you type.

I’m finding this more useful than I expected it to be, personally. I’ve been using it as a sort of spell-checker. A whoopee-cushion, hand-buzzer sort of spell checker: it shows you how people have spelled things in Wordie, not how they’re actually spelled–and misspellings in Wordie are legion. But it’s interesting to see even the mistakes.

This suggests a slew of possible future features: actual spellcheck, improved search (comments search, in particular), integration with a proper dictionary. Things to looks forward to, someday.

Glossaralia

I’ve been coming across lots of online glossaries lately; here are some of the ones I’ve particularly enjoyed (possibly my fav: the cheese glossary. though maybe I’m just hungry). If you’re creating a Wordie list on a specific topic (scissors and shears, anyone?), these are a goldmine.

Many of these were discovered through the web site of Frank Dietz, a man who clearly loves glossaries. Thanks Frank!

I’ll be updating this list as more gems crop up. If there’s a glossary you’d like to see included, let me know in the comments.

Acroynms, military
Advertising (University of Texas at Austin)
Agriculture (New Mexico State University)
Art (ArtLex)
Aviation (AeroFiles)
Beer (Chowbaby)
Beer (Foster’s Group)
Building Terms (contractorslicense.com)
Business (Foley Hoag)
Business Dictionary (BusinessDictionary.com)
Business (Washington Post)
Cars (AutoSpeak)
Catholic Terms
Catholic Terms (US Conference of Catholic Bishops)
Cheese Terms (Wisconsin Milk Marketing Board)
Cigars (Chowbaby)
Coffee (Chowbaby)
Color (SAP Design Guild)
Computer & Internet (Sharpened.net)
Food (Chowbaby)
Footwear (ShoeGuide.org)
Furniture (TheFurniture.com)
Glossaries (glossarist.com)
Glossaries (Frank Dietz)
Hospital Healthcare (Montevideo Hospital)
Industrial Nuts (Industrial Nut Corp.)
Investing and Finance (investorwords.com)
Islamic Law (Mutma’inaa)
Islamic Terms (University of Southern California)
Jewish Terms (JewishEncyclopedia.com)
Lighting (Lithonia Lighting)
Lighting Design (Schorsch)
Law (NOLO)
Linguistics (SIL)
Nautical Terms (Answers.com)
Online News Terms (USC Annenberg Online Journalism Review)
Pest Management (University of California)
Philosophy (Stanford)
Plastics (American Chemistry Council)
Poetic Terms (University of Toronto)
Publishing (Rainwater Press)
Printmaking Terms (University of Kansas Spencer Museum of Art)
Radio terms (University of Delaware)
Railroad Terms (San Diego Railroad Museum)
Real Estate (Gibbons Realty)
Roofing Terms (pmel.org)
Sailing (SailingLinks)
Scissors and Shears (Claussco)
Sex (sex-lexis.com)
Sikh Terms (Sandeep Singh Brar)
Solar Heating (Go Solar)
Spirits, as in liquor, not ghosts (Chowbaby)
Subtitler’s and Translator’s Tools (transedit.se)
Sushi (Chowbaby)
Tea (Chowbaby)
Telecommunications (CHR Solutions)
Telecommunications (National Telecommunications and Information Administration)
Theater (CalPoly)
TV Advertising (Audience Analytics)
Weather Terms (weather.com)
Wine (Chowbaby)
Wine (Foster’s Group)

Make Your Own Boss Button

Yesterday I added a little featurette to Wordie: a keyboard shortcut (ctl-b) that automatically launches a work-appropriate site. The idea was to help people enjoy Wordie at work, without it being quite so obvious that they weren’t actually working. Silly, but whatever. I think it’s funny.

A few people have asked how to do the same, so here it is: how to implement a Wordie-style boss button.

First, download this open-source javascript library: http://www.openjs.com/scripts/events/keyboard_shortcuts/shortcut.js

Put it in the docroot of your webserver wherever you keep your javascript files (mine are in /javascripts), and add this function to the top of the file:

function bossButton() {
var rand = Math.floor(Math.random()*10);
switch(rand) {
case 0: url = ‘http://www.igra.com/’; break;
case 1: url = ‘http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/housing/hvs/qtr207/q207tab1.html’; break;
case 2: url = ‘http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/STATS/table4c6.html’; break;
case 3: url = ‘http://affiliate.amalgamatedlife.com/hipaa-Privacy_notice-SPA.asp’; break;
case 4: url = ‘http://www.barrymaher.com/’; break;
case 5: url = ‘http://www.batonrougeyogacompany.com/corporate.htm’; break;
case 6: url = ‘http://www.amazon.com/Chicken-Whole-Giannone-Chilled-3-25/dp/B000H4YZM8/’; break;
case 7: url = ‘http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liver’; break;
case 8: url = ‘http://www.cachebeauty.com/wholsale/king.htm#jars’; break;
case 9: url = ‘http://www.thermo.com/com/cda/product/detail/0,1055,10121515,00.html’; break;
}
shortcut.add(“Ctrl+b”,function() {
location.href=url;
});
}

Then add this line to your web pages, inside the <head> tags at the top of the page, ideally in a commonly called template so you only have to do it once for the whole site. Make sure to edit the path so it matches where you actually put shortcuts.js:

<script src=”/javascripts/shortcuts.js” type=”text/javascript”></script></div>

Then, at the bottom of every page (again, ideally in a template), add this:

<script type=”text/javascript”>bossButton();</script>

Now you can hit ‘ctl-b’, and the page will automatically change to one of the 10 urls in the bossButton function. You can change the urls, of course. To use a different keyboard shortcut, change the text in the “shortcut.add(…)” line towards the bottom of the bossButton() function.

Have fun, and don’t work too hard 🙂