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As I create my studies map, marking links and technologies to know, practice and get some knowledge, I think about what should I do? What should I create as I study this APIs, languages, etc?

And every now and then one thing comes to my mind: contact management. Today it's so hard to maintain accurate and up-to-date information on your contacts that I sense a real lack of an easy-to-use, complete and extensible application.

This is only me? There's someone out there that feel the same?

My first appointments to the final application, the "app should enable":

1. data grabbing from social networks (as many as possible);

2. control over data modified on these social networks and enable the user to decide if the update should or not be applied;

3. a history of applied updates, easily accessible at contact profile;

4. import and export data in various formats, including to cellphones, smartphones, Palms and the likes;

5. desktop offline option, using AIR, GoogleGears, SilverLight, anything.

Well, someone to weight in with ideas or is this kind of application dead on its conception? There's something out there that really does this?

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UPDATE: TechCrunch reveal that Google will launch their Open Social approach on Thursday. More important, Michael Arrington's post explain better what will be this approach. Right on time!

Today, a co-worker saw my web-site and I felt ashamed about this blog. There's a lot of things to talk about, a lot of insights and readings to share. What a great incentive to come back, not be ashamed of my own employees!

The reality is that work, when done right, gives you the time of your life for (almost) anything you want to do. I have a lot of interests competing for my attention and I'm not a good time-organizer. So, this was to present my excuses about being away for so long and to introduce one of the subjects I want to discuss here.

Although widely discussed, time management and projects management (not work-related only) are still lacking something. Or maybe I have to study harder to understand how can I be more productive. Which is, for what I'm concerned, a great lack of all systems out there: they're not really easy to implement/stick with.

I'm not talking about changing habits - yeah, that's hard. But when you try to read "Getting Things Done" or "The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People" - for instance - you get stuck in an ocean of "why you have to do this", lame examples of how you can succeed and things like that.

Here I have to say that I do not finished "GTD" (nor the "7 habits"); although I really think it's great, I lost the will to apply the method by the first half of the book. I keep saying to myself "I'll try it again, I have to, it works for so many". But the main point is still there. Theres any stupid-proof method to get things done?

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Another thing that keeps annoying me is how my life isn't organized. Well, call me a librarian or a standard nerd, but I like to have my friends addresses just in one place. If this "one place" is somewhere that I can access through my cellphone, my e-mail app, my web-browser (and my web-mail) and from another devices/platforms, or it's something that will sync with then all, I don't care. I just want a simple way to have my data synchronized between apps, gadjets and even computers. And I'm talking about something as trivial as our "address book".

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All of this comes from some thoughts that are burning my head for a some time:

1. I want to use web-apps. Really! I'm connected almost all time. I develop them since 1996.

2. But when I'm not connected, I want to be able to access my data and use my apps, even in a simpler way.

3. My data is MINE. What the HECK? Let me export it, even if it isn't in a perfect way; let me get ALL MY data when I want to. I have to make backups, I have to access it offline - or maybe I have to change service. Yes, face it, your web app maybe isn't as great as you think - or maybe someone just made something better. Or I was in a bad mood when your server was down. So, give me what is already mine.

4. Besides finding old friends, checking possible future employees (or girlfriends ;) and other personnel-related tasks, social network should evolve to allow you to use your friend's information to decide what is relevant to you. I'll extend this in a post sometime latter this week, but imagine a social-relevant Digg. I'm talking about something like that - what matters to my network matters a lot more to me than what matters to a lot of unknown people. Complicated? I hope not.

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There's some technology - which I'm not already familiarized with - such as Adobe AIR (and MS SilverLight, maybe Prism?), Google Gears and the recently announced efforts of Google to build APIs and leverage the data under its hook to developers. This all will be targeted at this weblog now and then, as well as all web-related technologies, ColdFusion, Java and a lot more.

I hope it'll be fun for us all and I'm really glad to come back here. Let's see if I can stick with this.

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I'm a freaky about data, statistics and other issues like that. So IBGE (Brazilian's Geographic and Statistics Institute) was always a web-site that I watched for. They released an awesome new service: statistical data over maps, with links and all the stuff needed. You can reach the "countries" page here and the Brazilian states data here.

And then the "first" "commercial" quantum computer has been launched - lots of talk but no real use right now. It's a great attempt and proof-of-concept, but articles points to scientists saying it could not scale very well. I'm really wandering about what could happen to security systems - hell, with everything - if quantum computers really become useful. It's a topic to watch for, sure.

And soon will be more meaningful articles here, just a few days...

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It's pretty amazing to watch people still discovering the power and the ways the internet is used this days - and what uses people will have for it in the future.

For you to understand what I'm talking about: internet runs today over a "neutral network". What that means? Well, you can access any web-site, webservice, internet service (as e-mail over POP, SMTP or IMAP). Without the provider paying anything for their content to stream over someone else network.

The Forbes article linked above attacks net neutrality with poor arguments, in the bottom line, saying net neutrality makes impossible for network holders to improve their own networks, because they need to maintain the interoperability.

While this is true - interoperability is key concept in net neutrality - there's a lot more in play than that. Let's see:

  • Free services: gone
    When we talk about a net that is neutral, it's simple to provide a free service over that. You have to pay companies to host your application and people to develop it, but you don't have to pay anything to allow other to use it. Without network neutrality, this would not be true and zillions of web-sites, webservices and etc would never existed - or be invented, at all.
  • Universal access: gone
    It's clear that when you're connected to a network that is not neutral, you'll have access to what that network allows you to. You'll not have access to anything that is not paying for them.
  • What more?
    It's quite obvious: services like Skype will work... only if Skype pays something for the network holders. Calls would not be free anymore. The price of other calls would be astonishing.

And we can go over and over it. For me is clear that the talk here is something like "evolution for the consumer" or "evolution for the big companies". There's a lot of other questions related and such few lines like this (or the article I cite) aren't final words nor they even cover all questions. It's legitimate for the network holders to think and question "what they get when people just use their network to pass by". But ending net neutrality is not the answer - I don't even guess one answer at all.

But it seems to me that we're coming back to the days where big [TV|Radio|Journal|Publishing] companies ruled, overwhelming authors AND consumers with THEIR choices or, at least, with the ones who have the money to pay to publish/broadcast. In all cases, who lose? CONSUMER. The user. You, me and everyone who's not a network holder or a someone closely related to then.

Update: it seems like the proposal is to deliver some things faster than others and not to block content. BUT, it don't invalidate any of the above arguments AND it's like opening a hole in a dam - just take one to flood all the valley...

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