Upgrading the n0tice platform, mobile apps and web site

We’ve just made some big updates to the n0tice mobile apps and the web site. Both the iPhone and Android apps are now available in their respective stores, and you know where to find n0tice.com.

While you may enjoy some of the new features across all these products, the most significant change is in the engine powering what we do.

Some background first…last fall you may have joined one of the campaigns we developed with our marketing partners at LBi.

We tried to raise awareness around the changes and things to celebrate in the local high streets across the UK. We initiated a campaign encouraging people to #keepcycling through the cold and dark months (are they over, yet?). We developed a crowdmap for live music gigs in partnership with Guardian Music. And we developed a similar campaign encouraging people to shop locally at independent retailers.

That effort led to some new partnerships – from marketing (Divine Chocolate) to shopping (BigBarn) to publishing (…coming soon).

We suddenly realized that our original vision for the n0tice platform and partner ecosystem was nearly mature enough to offer commercially. It just needed a little more juice.

n0tice platform architectureSo then in December, Tony McCrae started looking at supporting multiple large scale professional publishing partners like our own friends and colleagues at the Guardian.

For example, while our search index Solr was great at powering the API, we knew it would get expensive and suffer performance problems in about a year’s time. So, Tony used the quiet Christmas period to move the API over to Elastic Search…in a matter of weeks, magically.

We improved our client libraries and also upgraded our testing, deployment and security profile. The user authentication service was completed…we now support OAuth 1.0a. And we’re adding bug and issue tracking, performance monitoring and health checking – the types of things any commercial SLA would expect to us to provide.

We’ve written a Platform Architecture overview if you want to learn more. It’s on a new developer platform web site we’re working on at http://developers.n0tice.org/.

There are also several new tools that our partners wanted which we’ll be able to offer more broadly soon.

So, after all this enterprise-level architectural work, we needed to eat our own dog food.

The n0tice web site, iPhone and Android apps were able to take advantage of this new power (not without a few unfortunate interruptions during the transition, of course) and upgraded the way they interact with the platform.

In the short term, you’ll feel the results as a user in terms of speed, reliability and visual impact. In the long term, more tools and technologies and partners and apps and campaigns and all sorts will be available to you both as a user and as a noticeboard owner.

Whether you’re a publisher, an editor, a broadcaster, a community leader, a local government authority, a campaigner, a marketer, a developer, a platform, etc. we are going to give you some really useful resources to help you with mobile publishing.

If you want to see and share what’s happening nearby, or if you want to give the power to your customers or your local community to see and share what’s happening nearby, then n0tice is there for you.

We haven’t unveiled all the details of what’s available to partners or how to partner with us, yet. But we’re happy to talk to folks who want to learn more.

Contact david@n0tice.com, or have a look at the developer platform web site to see the most current technical documentation.

Meantime, we hope you enjoy the upgraded n0tice web site, iPhone and Android apps. As always, please join the conversation in the n0tice Google Group:
http://groups.google.com/group/n0tice/


Tell people what’s happening near you!

As well as using your online n0ticeboard for updating local reports and news, did you know that you can also tell people about your events?

This is what Vino from Pub Mapping has done.

This Thursday 27th September Vino is organising a n0tice meetup for launching his pub mapping project in London – and you are invited!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Live blog your night out0n n0tice, have a few beers, make new friends and get to know more about pub mapping. Check it out! 

And you and can do the same for your events. It’s really simple.

Pick a location of your event, give it a name, a date and time, description, and add a link and a photograph if you have them. That’s it!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tell everyone about your events and get them n0ticed!

We are on twitter @n0tice and Facebook too.

 


Updated iPhone app with new features

We’ve been working hard behind the scene to bring you version 1.3 of the n0tice iPhone app!

 

A number of key bugs that you have reported to us have been addressed, including;
* The speed of upload has been increased to make it faster to post reports with images
* Uploading when not on WiFi has been made more reliable
* It no longer crashes intermittently when interacting with the side menu
* The pull to refresh bar always tucks back under after a pull down now
* When you move around between uses of the app, your report feed will not refresh automatically to show you new reports near where you now are (if you have current location enabled in the menu).
* You can now adjust the radius for your current location menu entry
* We’ve improved the detecting of web links in the reports, and updates, and pulling them out into links for you to tap
* We’ve fixed a number of small user interface rendering issues
* We’ve also done a number of user interface improvements to make it easier to read and use

Download it today and share what’s going on in your area!

Find n0tice on Twitter: @n0tice


Posts inside a map inside a post inside a noticeboard

n0tice-er extraordinaire EllieNor has been building up her Jubilee noticeboard at http://jubilee.n0tice.com/ in time for the weekend. After trying a few different tactics for crowdmapping she turned to the Google Group for a little help. We helped her but didn’t know what would happen.

Have a look here.

It’s really odd thinking about what’s happening here…it’s a crowdmap of posts from this noticeboard embedded in a report to this noticeboard. Fascinating experiement.


Join the protest against SOPA/PIPA

We’ve decided to join Reddit and many others in protest of the SOPA and PIPA bills.  n0tice.com will be unavailable on the 18th of January.

Should these bills become law a new power structure will form that can decide on our behalf where and how we participate on the Internet.  The n0tice team believes that is anathema to the open Internet and that it should be stopped.

As noted by EFF: “There are already laws and procedures in place for taking down sites that violate the law. These acts would allow the US Attorney General, and even individuals, to create a blacklist to censor sites when no court has found that they have infringed copyright or any other law.”

We think this is bad for people and bad for business.

Open systems like the Internet create space for many different things to happen. The network has changed the way we learn, what we know and how we know it, social structures and who we communicate with, political engagement and awareness, new business models, new economic structures, personal artistic expression, and on and on and on.

And while many of the outcomes of open systems are positive, human nature’s dark side will undoubtedly appear in any space where many people gather, too.

What to do about bad behavior on the Internet?

We believe the role of law and politics in an open environment like the Internet should not be to create weapons for fighting bad behavior but rather to set boundaries and to mediate acceptable behavior.

As Joi Ito of MIT Media Lab stated in a letter SOPA and PIPA would:
- supersede the “notice and takedown” method of policing for copyrighted material on Internet services and require service providers to police content uploaded by users or prevent users from uploading copyrighted content
- require Internet Service Providers to change their DNS servers and block resolution of the domain names of websites in other countries that host illegal copies of content
- require search engines to modify their search results to exclude foreign websites that illegally host copyrighted material
- order payment processors like PayPal and ad services like Google AdSense to cease doing business with foreign websites that illegally host copyrighted content

Our concern is that the powers enabled by these bills will be deployed by governments and commercial interests selfishly and without appropriate checks and balances.

Do you trust the interests behind these requirements to use them fairly? Are you comfortable with the idea that an online service that you use could be removed from the Internet based on a copyright claim that may or may not be legitimate?

Who is policing the police?

We also believe that the arguments used to conceive this solution are poorly formed.

First, we don’t believe that media piracy costs the U.S. economy $200–250 billion per year, which is commonly quoted, or that it has eliminated 750,000 American jobs. These are misleading figures, as Julian Sanchez explains. These numbers were publicized 20 and 30 years ago and have been positioned inappropriately.

Second, nobody is entitled to their place in the global economy.

As Bill Gurley notes, the big media businesses will fight hard to protect the stability of their value chains. For example, affiliate fee revenue at companies like Viacom and Disney is $1.5B and $2.0B respectively. Reductions in affiliate revenue at the corporate level will mean reductions in fees paid out to creative people.  That’s not good.

But government should not be used to protect and enforce those business models at the expense of others.  Nobody is entitled to a market size or position.

Capitalism is an adaptive system, and the TV and music industries will find other ways, perhaps better ways to make money and fund creative works.  There are many models and success stories appearing everywhere including within their own businesses that will help them transition to more network-friendly, digitally sophisticated business models.

They don’t need and shouldn’t have the power to take down an entire web site because of a copyright claim.

The premise of protecting creative people is one we support wholeheartedly at n0tice. We’ve devised a commercial model that we think aims to do precisely that. People create spaces on n0tice where they can share writing, photos and videos with others, and they can support their efforts through the ad revenue sharing model built into those spaces.

As Rachel Botsman explains in her book Collaborative Consumption, there are many models for creative people to get value back for their work. We may in fact be in the midst of a worldwide revolution of creativity where more people can participate in creative activities because there are known and practiced economic models for doing so.

This is a good thing for people. It’s a good thing for business. And it’s a direct result of an open Internet.

And inasmuch as the initial concept for these bills questioned the state of protections for people and businesses on open networks, we are in agreement. We want laws that protect people from harm. We want politicians to raise awareness of threats to civility.

The solution to those problems, as we see it, is about supporting open spaces, protecting open spaces and collectively reinforcing positive behaviors.

- the n0tice team

 

More resources courtesy of Craigslist:

Tell Congress you OPPOSE H.R. 3261 “Stop Online Piracy Act” (SOPA) and S. 968 “Protect IP Act” (PIPA):

Learn more about SOPA, Protect IP (PIPA), and Internet Blacklisting: