Not Yet Flickr Favorites

Every once in a while I come up with what I think would be a totally cool idea. Maybe one out of twenty of those times do I actually spring for it.

Flickr is amazing. It’s API is moderately impressive, too. I thought: “What if I could go through all the tags of all my favorite photos up on flickr, ordered them by popularity, then did a search for photos that matched the top X tags in that list?”

I expected to discover some incredible art that would be right in line with what I already enjoyed. BTW – what is it that I enjoyed?

First, I discovered that flickr can only handle searches up to 20 tags. Any more than that and you get back zip – zilch – nada. Doesn’t matter if any photo in their database actually contains all 21 tags – you get nothing back.

Second, I discovered that some people out there have over 150 tags on the photos of which only 2 tags might apply. As a result, when searching by relevance you get these over-tagged photos in the list along with the worthy ones.

Blame the upload tools. They don’t ask the user to tag each photo, but rather to list out all the tags used for the batch of photos being uploaded. Non-savvy users might batch upload a photograph of a donkey and another of a stop sign. Given only one box for all photos to list their tags they would enter something that places stop-sign related tags on the donkey and vice-versa.

All the same – try the tool out, it actually does a shot-gun result of what I hoped for. Try sorting by “interestingness, descending” for the most polished works first, then try the others for works that are “sleepers” (fantastic photos that are uploaded while people are dozing off, and therefore rarely discovered).

Not Yet Flickr Favorites

allez-oop

It’s no secret that sitting in front of a monitor and keyboard for eight to twelve hours a day, six days a week causes a myriad of health risks.

Some of the obvious ones are:

Exercise hasn’t been so lacking in our nation’s 240 years.

Simply standing up, stretching and walking around periodically throughout the day could prevent so many of these issues. A recent study showed the difference between an unhealthy and obese worker and a healthy and fit worker is two hours a day more walking – even if it’s only one mile an hour.

Schools are built to train kids to stay seated. This sedentary society is bound to fall apart, and it’s predictably going to happen right at the overstretched seams. Several schools have installed DDR games to help kids drop the weight.

My brother found a good open-source application called WorkRave that aims to help people prevent cubicle lethargy from causing many of the diseases mentioned above.

Amoré

It’s that time of year again. Many years ago I thought this holiday to be rubbish because of some serious Linus-like frustration straight from a Peanuts cartoon.

17 years later I met someone who thankfully put an end to my envy-spite-bitter-blahtitude towards the day of the cupid. Even so much as to produce one of the web’s first sites dedicated to romance – even before Godek put out his. It got awards, I got my fifteen minutes of international fame and the university pulled it (grumble grumble). Ignorantly, I didn’t cash in on the deal even though it provided an amazing opportunity to do so. I was more starry eyed and open sourced back then than I am now. But again, I didn’t have a family to care for and college funds to save up.

In reflection to the interesting gifts that people have suggested, I decided to be more traditional and spring for that special valentines day card that’s sure to bring a hallmark tear to that special someone’s eye… all the same, here are some geeky-nerd-love ideas for the years ahead:

Glow-In-The-Dark Bubble Bath
Chocolate Ape
A Sterling Silver Puzzle Ring
A Magic Bean to Watch Love Grow
Amber trapped Insect Pendant