Some random predictions for 2003…

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1. Verity will dominate enterprise search trailed by Autonomy with Google nipping their heels at the low end. 2. The categorization space will cease to exist other than a few niche players, possibly Stratify and InXight. 3. The enterprise portal space that effectively vaporized with the acquisition of Epicentric and mundane performance of Plumtree will be replaced by EAI vendors. They will raise the portal idea to the next level, linking enterprise applications that have standardized web services based APIs. 4. There will be an inevitable weblog backlash as big players show interest but get it wrong. 5. There will be an XML backlash as people realize that companies have been paying lip service to standards whilst building a colossal Tower of Babel. 6. Telco’s that did not get burnt by 3G licenses such as Italia Telecom will go on shopping sprees and get some good stuff cheap. 7. Japan…

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Closing attribute tags

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Ian from Sweden answers my question as to whether you can close attributes: Is this legal?. Thanks Ian – and damn I hate the fact that you have to count tags to find which one a closing tag relates to. Style sheets might as well consist of curly brackets. “Unfortunately, David, classified span endtag isn’t legal. Not in HTML 4.01, which is the latest standard I stick to, and thus hardly in newer, that tend to be ever more restrictive than previous ones. I created a shell html doc with that item and sent it to validation…. alas, the syntaxnazis have again won this time. Validator So your only legal parsable recourse is this kludge: <span class="foo">bar</span><!–</span class="foo">–> “

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The case for Vlogs

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Jeff is right about Vlogs, in fact blogging will become the de facto standard for any type of online publishing – because its simple and easy. Imagine for example, the effects of digital camera attachments to cellphones and ‘picture messaging’ – currently on free trial in the UK. Now imagine an SMS to blog gateway and a picture weblog posting pictures of celebrities snapped by passers by. Ubiquitous digital cameras and simple publishing will give way to a new type of Bloggerazzi – celebrities beware.

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The latest of the Mohicans

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Aaaanyway, so I was sitting in a ludicrously trendy bar somewhere in the ‘Schmillage‘, feeling mildly inadequate, when it was pointed out that because there were two people with Mohicans, this was clearly the start of a global trend. My first instinct – bollocks, but now I am seeing them everywhere. Conclusion – I have either lost my mind or everyone else has. This time the Mohican is different – it is not the six inch, superglued, punk rebel thing, but a sort of ironic, wear it with designer clothes, look – a post modern Mohican or Pomohawk. The genealogy of this haircut is different too – clearly there has been a progression from 1. the mop-top messy haircut that it now mainstream to 2. the ‘Hoxton fin‘ where the mess is brushed into the middle currently claiming victims all over London, leading finally to 3. shaving the sides off…

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Greenwich Village, East Village, schmillage – its all the same to me

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There are some people that rarely leave Manhattan except to go to the airport, it is as if its island status makes its inhabitants behave like they live in a medieval walled city. A new breed of Manhattanites are even more particular, they rarely leave the districts that comprise the lower rise neighborhoods that are hemmed in between Midtown and Wall St., Greenwich Village, the East Village, Lower East Side, Tribeca, etc. Clearly it needs an all encompassing name, what about the Schmillage, suitably nonchalant?

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Whiskey galore

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Off to Gaby’s place on the Island of Mull, off the West coast of Scotland, for New Year, so will be in ‘blog silence’ for the next few days. However, am taking the avalanche of books I recieved for Christmas, so there will be plenty to rant about when I get back.

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World Trade Center proposals review: Richard Meier et al.

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One liner: “##” Summary: Simplistic, rectilinear shapes created from two groups of three towers at right angles to each other and linked by bridges. In addition to the new towers, there is a proposal for landscaped piers representing shadows form the original towers. Multiple memorials are constructed at ground level and in the new buildings. Plus: The pier proposal is very simple and elegant. Being the same size as the original towers they would allow their scale to be grasped. Minus: The towers are simple without the elegant simplicity of the originals that made them so iconic. The ‘multiple memorials’ idea is pointless. The cantilevered gardens/balconies would be prohibitively expensive, would disappear from the working drawings and would therefore change the design altogether.

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World Trade Center proposals will never get built the way they are

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The designs for the WTC site are out, its taken a day to digest all the proposals. The bad news: they are all either mediocre or unbuildable. The good news: the architects themselves are not all mediocre and the eventual buildings will be nothing like the original competition entries. The favorite appears to be Foster. I have some knowledge of the way the Foster office operates, since I used to work there when I was an architect. If he wins he will change the design entirely, just as he did for the Hong Kong Shanghai Bank’s headquarters in Hong Kong, the skyscraper which made his name. I would guess that the competition entry was largely conceived by others in the office (possibly Ken Shuttleworth), but if it wins Foster will want to get more involved, as it is such a high profile scheme.

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(Not) a royal cockup

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Who’s your daddy? “Prince Charles’ private secretary, was forced to alert the police about an alleged plot to seize hair from Prince Harry for DNA testing, apparently to answer lingering questions about his paternity. It has long been rumored that Princess Diana’s former lover, army officer James Hewitt – and not Prince Charles – is the father of Harry”

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