BlogSoft is a Scandinavia situated blogware provider. Based in Oslo, Norway this company provides the backend for the free blogtools of such websites as ABC Startsiden, Spray (TV2 (Norway)) Nettavisen (TV2 (Norway)), blogg.no, and blogg.se. They also provide solutions for moblogging, vlogging, and podcasting. In 2005 they created the Norwegian ping service Bloggrevyen.
moblog
Mob Log
BlogSoft
TextAmerica (or TA for short) was one of the first online photo album or moblog sites that allowed users to upload pictures directly from a digital camera or camera phone or images manipulated with photo editing software to a personal page. Originally a free site, TextAmerica began charging membership fees in July 2006, deleting content uploaded to old free accounts some months after that. It closed in December 2007. The domain name is now being used by a different company & service.
TextAmerica
Alfie Dennen is a British creative technologist, Artist, and founder of several prominent websites based around mobile blogging. Dennen co founded the mobile blogging platform Moblog, formerly MoblogUK, in November 2003. Commercial users of the service have included Ronan Keating, Bloc Party, Greenpeace, Elbow, Imogen Heap, Channel 4, Oxfam, Amnesty International and Comic Relief. The service gained prominence in 2005 when Eliot Ward uploaded a photo to the site from one of the London
Alfie Dennen
Adam Greenfield is Nokia's head of design direction for user interface and services. An American writer and consultant, he was formerly well known as an information architect, though (as of mid October 2006) he no longer describes himself as such. He was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1968. Greenfield graduated from New York University in 1989, earning a Bachelor of the Arts degree in Cultural Studies. In 1995, he enlisted in the United States Army's reserve component Special Operations
Adam Greenfield
A geoglyph is a drawing on the ground, or a large motif, (generally greater than 4 metres) or design produced on the ground, either by arranging clasts (stones, stone fragments, gravel or earth) to create a positive geoglyph (stone arrangement/alignment, petroform, earth mound) or by removing patinated clasts to expose unpatinated ground (negative geoglyph). Recently some geoglyphs have been discovered in the Amazonia Jungle, in Brazil, which led to claims about unknown civilizations that may
Geoglyph
A photoblog (or photolog, or phlog) is a form of photo sharing and publishing in the format of a blog. It differs from a blog through the predominant use of and focus on photographs rather than text. Photoblogging (the action of posting photos to a photoblog) gained momentum in the early 2000s with the advent of the moblog and cameraphones. There are three basic types of photoblogs. Photoblogs on individual domains, photoblogs on blogging services such as Blogger that were designed primarily
Photoblog
Geotagging is the process of adding geographical identification metadata to various media such as photographs, video, websites, or RSS feeds and is a form of geospatial metadata. These data usually consist of latitude and longitude coordinates, though they can also include altitude, bearing, distance, accuracy data, and place names. Geotagging can help users find a wide variety of location specific information. For instance, one can find images taken near a given location by entering latitude
GeoTagging
A geocoded photograph is a photograph which is associated with a geographical location. A geocoded image can be associated to geographical coordinates such as latitude, longitude and altitude, or to a street address. In theory, every part of a picture can be tied to a geographic location, but in the most typical application, only the position of the photographer is associated with the entire digital image. This has implications for search and retrieval. For example, photos of a mountain summit
Geocoded photo
Lifeloggers (also known as lifebloggers or lifegloggers) typically wear computers in order to capture their entire lives, or large portions of their lives. In this context, the first person to do lifelogging, i.e., to capture continuous physiological data together with live first person video from a wearable camera, was Steve Mann whose experiments with wearable computing and streaming video in the early 1980s led to Wearable Wireless Webcam. Starting in 1994, Mann continuously transmitted his