Useful Links: Development Tools, the Economy, Mobile Future

15 Helpful In-Browser Web Development Tools from Smashing Magazine summarizes a number of good plug-ins, inspectors, debuggers, evaluators, and other tools that work right in your browser.

Michael Heller and the Gridlock Economy is a book review at World Changing. It talks about ownership. Heller says when too many people own something, gridlock results. Here’s a quote from the review:

The most underused natural resource in America, Heller claims, is electromagnetic spectrum. We’re stuck with a licensing policy put into place under Calvin Coolidge, which doesn’t recognize any of the technological innovation that’s happened between then and now. The system is geographically fragmented and non-transferable, and leads to a system where the US is falling behind other advanced nations in broadband penetration. Spectrum gridlock prevents the emergence of high-speed wireless services, he argues.

There is no future of mobile. Ever hear Kathy Sierra talk about how to make technology kick ass? Well Helen Keegan at Musings of a Mobile Marketer is telling people in the mobile sector how to kick ass in this article. She gives six reasons why the current direction of mobile is not sustainable. I sure hope someone’s listening.

Useful Links: Game Ratings, Naming Conventions, JQuery tutorial

Entertainment Software Ratings Board provides a database of games that can be searched by rating. These are ratings for age-appropriateness and content, rather like movie ratings. If you are buying games for kids this year, it’s a handy resource.

More on developing naming conventions, Microformats and HTML5 Andy Clarke talks about naming conventions in an outside-the-box look at a mashup of microformats and HTML5.

jQuery Tutorial: DOM Manipulation and sorting JQuery is a lightweight JavaScript library that helps you quickly develop events, animations, and AJAX interactions.

Adobe Dreamweaver CS4 Classroom in a Book

get this book at AmazonAdobe Dreamweaver CS4 Classroom in a Book is now available.

This book is officially the product of the Adobe Creative Team, which includes quite a number of people including several editors and other people at both Adobe and Peachpit Press. For this edition of the book, I wrote some new lessons and revised some of the previous lessons. I was under the impression that my name would not be mentioned in the book. So I was pleasantly surprised to see my name in small print on the copyright page as writer.

If you are a Dreamweaver beginner, or want to learn about the latest features in this version of Dreamweaver, consider using this book as your guide. It’s my longest ever Web Teacher Tip.

Useful Links: Change.org, YouTube, Avoid IDs

Change.org launches Blog Network, And They’re Hiring. This article by Britt Bravo explains the amazing collection of information, opportunities to create change, and progressive blogs about some of our most difficult problems you can find at change.org.

YouTube: Skip to the Best Part of a YouTube Clip at Lifehacker tells you how to specify the exact location of a starting point in a video from which you want to show a clip.

An Exercise for Emerging CSS Experts: Avoid IDs and Classes. Jens Meiert has a suggestion to help you retrain your brain for CSS3. Combine that with the information in Rachel Andrew’s article about the CSS property display:table and you’re on your way to grokking CSS3.

Blog Action Day: What is a Social Business?

I want to talk about the concept of social business in this post for Blog Action Day 2008 on the topic of poverty.

I first learned about this in Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future of Capitalism by Muhammad Yunus, the Nobel Prize winning creator of Grameen Bank and the concept of social business. I urge you to read this book for a complete understand of what can be accomplished with social businesses.

A social business does not have profit as its objective. It has a social objective. Social business employs workers and creates goods or service. A social business is not run to create ever increasing profits for the stakeholders. A social business has the goal of creating social benefit for those whose life it touches.

Yes, a social business is a real business and must make money. The money does not go to the investors (except to repay their original investment). The money is used to sustain the business and to achieve the social objectives.

Maybe you’ve heard of the social business run by and for the “telephone ladies” in Bangladesh (where Yunus started, although his work covers the world now). But even in relatively rich countries like the U.S.A., I can envision quite a few social businesses that would help alleviate some of our problems. Two of the social businesses Yunus mentions in his book are small health clinics and small yogurt manufacturing and distribution businesses.

How about a social business that rents inexpensive solar power units to people who can’t afford solar panels, sends someone to install and maintain it, employs people, and lets people disconnect from the grid, save money, and improve the environment?

Our highway infrastructure, especially bridges, needs improvement and updating. How about a toll bridge building social business (or a bunch of such businesses)? It would employ people, improve bridge safety, and save tax money.

How about bikes? All kinds of bikes for rent everywhere, but especially in poor neighborhoods where getting to work is a problem. You could rent them with a credit card for maybe 25 cents a ride. People too poor to have a credit card could purchase prepaid cards that would let them ride for a lesser amount—maybe 10 or 20 cents a ride. I’m talking about all kinds of bikes: electric bikes, bikes with baskets on the handlebars for a purse or a lunch box, bikes with seats in the back for kids, three-wheelers with a big basket for something like a couple of grocery bags and a gallon of milk in the back. Bikes everywhere, just everywhere, so many bikes that NOT riding one would be silly. This would help people get through their day, cut down on air pollution, employ a lot of people who would take care of the bikes or sell prepaid cards, and reduce dependence on foreign oil.

Social business is an idea that every person needs to know more about. You can start by reading the book I mentioned in the beginning, then maybe start a social business and do something concrete to help end poverty.

In a world where the quest for quarterly profit has run a lot of the world’s economy into the cauldrons of hell, I think it’s time to add a new idea to the mix. That idea is social business. Social business is proven to work in the alleviation of poverty.

What can you do in particular? One thing is to help the students in this high poverty American school by donating a few dollars to Journalism Students Need a Computer. Visit Blog Action Day 08 for more ideas and easy ways to participate by setting up a microfinance loan through Kiva or a donation through change.org.

You can read many other Blog Action Day posts by looking at the main site. An example of another such post you may be interested in is 30 Simple Ways to Battle Poverty with Technology. Another way to track the action in the blogosphere on this topic is with Google Blogsearch. Follow BlogActionDay on Twitter.

Women, are you looking for investors?

Y Combinator gives investment money of a few thousand dollars to start ups. Read the page carefully, the business has to move to the Bay Area for the first few months. A group of women from Silicon Valley have created a mentoring group to help women get funded this year. Contact information is on Susan Mermit’s blog if you want the mentoring. Susan said,

If you are a woman who is planning to apply to ycombinator for this cycle and you’d like to have some mentoring and support before you submit your application from an  experienced woman  CEO/executive, there’s a small group of people who are interested in working with you (yes, I am one of them).

Deadline is Oct. 17 ladies. Put the pedal to the metal.

Useful Links: eduStyle, Web Professional Edu, Full Frontal Scrutiny

eduStyle: eduStyle is a web design gallery dedicated to higher education websites and powered by higher education web design professionals. Users submit, review, and comment on sites they like (or don’t like). The aim is for higher ed web professionals to learn from and be inspired by the work of their peers.

Web Professional Education, an interview with Molly Holzschlag, wherein she argues for an end to the split between design tracks and computer science tracks in education.

Full Fontal Scrutiny is a new site from Consumer Reports and The Center for Media and Democracy. Their purpose is to investigate organizations and associations and companies that are front groups. or organizations that state a particular agenda, while hiding or obscuring their identity, membership or sponsorship, or all three.