FriendFeed and Me
Apparently its bad for a blog to be introspective, and always about the author. But I’m unrepentant. What do people write about if not themselves, even indirectly? So here’s another post about me, and about my participation in a small web revolution.
Next week marks 6 months since I registered my account at FriendFeed (and simultaneously, Twitter). Ally posted yesterday about her moment of epiphany with the ‘lifestreaming’ site, and I know other people have blogged about it’s impact on their online lives, and I thought I’d do the same as a bit of a retrospective.
Briefly, FriendFeed is a site that aggregates information from other sites, and shares it with the world. I collate the feeds from this blog, Twitter, CiteULike.org, del.icio.us, Flickr, Google Reader and a few others there. People can subscribe to this amalgamated feed, and get an idea of my interests and what I am upto.
I try to limit my activity on FF (and, consequently, Twitter) to stuff that’s purely work-related (although real life does occasionally creep in), and because of this ‘work-stream’ approach, it has become an increasingly indispensable tool in the pipeline of information discovery and my scientific ‘social life’.
The following are a (direct or indirect) result of my participation at FF:
- I have finally learnt Python, and made it my programming language of choice
- I have adopted Git for version control, and have several repos on GitHub
- I bought this domain, and set up this blog
- Found countless papers and blogs I may have missed
As a more concrete example of the power of FF, I am currently involved in a project looking at co-evolution of bacterial proteins, and am employing Statistical Coupling Analysis to score multiple sequence alignments. This method produced thousands of scores across an alignment, and the best way of viewing them is by constructing a sort of heatmap. I was using Gnuplot to do this, and my maps looked something like this:
This is not terribly useful, because you keep having to check the legend to see whether red is ‘hotter’ or ‘colder’ than yellow, etc. Then, one morning last week, I saw a link on FriendFeed to this blog post, and following the very wise suggestions in that post, I worked out how to redraw my plots so they now look like this:
This makes it much easier to tell at a glance where the hotspots are to be found in the alignment. It is just one blog post, but I would never have found it without FF, and it is a useful illustration of how this new workflow has changed my productivity.
So, for the next six months, and on into the more distant future, what role do I see for FF in my work life? Well, for a start I need to participate more. I am constantly aware that I should comment more, and even just ‘like’ more stuff. Contribution should also take the form of propogating things to FF for others to see. Most of my Feed consists of articles at CiteULike and Tweets. By posting more stuff to FF directly, and by sharing interesting articles on Google Reader, I’ll be providing more grist to the mill of conversation than I currently do. And I want to be an active member of this community, I like the people, I’ve got a lot out of the last 6 months of (relatively) passive interaction, and want that to continue, but I should no longer be a passenger.
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- pymzML - Python module for high throughput bioinformatics on mass spectrometry data. http://t.co/HJRqKHO5 #citeulike
- Return to work being hampered by return to work form, which is impossible to fill in on a Mac.
- Not the ideal end to the week. Blood tests and X-rays all for basically nothing. Still at least I'm home in time to have a proper weekend.
- @d_swan mine too! I assume we got the same email :)
- @jonoble I can't imagine the situation in which you would discover that...
On Fuzzier Logic








Great stuff! I just wish FriendFeed could help me write my thesis…
Hey, glad you found my post useful. Just FYI, the left matrix I used in my post was also from a Statistical Coupling Analysis calculation, in my case, the PDZ family. If you haven’t, you should read some of Edward Tufte’s books on graphing. More beautiful graphs in the world I say!
[...] is a bit of a follow-up to my post about FriendFeed. I registered for Twitter at the same time as FriendFeed, and while I immediately saw the value of [...]
[...] who talk about specific examples, and Simon Cockell who has written about his experiences with FriendFeed and Twitter. I encourage you to have a read of their [...]