Friday, October 10, 2008

Finally! A Senior Friendly Operating System






If you watched the September 29 episode of Dragon's Den on CBC, you will have met Raul Rupsingh and Stephen Beath and their 83-year-old beta tester, Hazel Brunt from SoftShell Computers. She demolished the resistance of the smart-ass Venture Capitalists when they initially trashed the concept of a senior-friendly operating system. They caved in and ponied up some capital to finance further development.
Based on touch-screen technology and large icons, the new product will make basic computing available to all those seniors who missed the first wave of the computer revolution. The focus is on the four main interests of seniors: Mail, Photos, Internet browsing and Games. No need to learn the complexities of Windows XP or Vista nor will you be distracted by the flood of hyperlinks and pop-up ads that trash the e-mailing experience when using Hotmail or Gmail.
Control is in the hands (or fingers) of the end-user at a pace that accomodates the frailties caused by aging and connects them on-line to the rest of us.
Based in London, Ontario, the company just incorporated last December, but already has several adult facilities as beta testing partners: Chelsey Park Retirement Community, St. Joseph's Healthcare, Windermere on the Mount, Queens Village for Seniors, Parkwood Hospital, and Revera. This is going to be the next big technology success story to come out of Canadian innovation. A computer work station in our Heritage Village Recreation Club would be most appropriate.

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Building our "Virtual Clubhouse" with Joomla!


Some 15 people in Heritage Village expressed interest in building of a website for Heritage Village on our a sign-up sheet posted in the clubhouse in January. Our goal was to seek funding from government programs for Seniors and have the structure of the website built by professionals. But funding takes time and we're hot to trot. Basic websites as marketing "brochures" can be built in hours or days, but a dynamic interactive website that can involve the whole community is a complex effort: FaceBook and MySpace have spent $ millions. Our goal is more modest, but still a daunting task if we want to satisfy the on-line needs of 700 people and post archives as well as daily events.
People are asking me, when I'm going to build their Village website. I'm approaching retirement, so no, I don't want to build it alone - that's no fun. We need to pool the talents of our 700 residents: that's how the best websites on the planet have been built, by collaborative effort. Visit Wikipedia or any software forum to witness the power of "Crowdsourcing" (Economist, Sept.6, 2008).

So how do you build a website, collectively? Back in 1996, when the World-Wide Web was just a baby, I built my first website the hard way, alone, using raw HTML code, and uploading to a university server using FTP (File Transfer Protocol). Then came shrink-wrapped packages such as Microsoft FrontPage to make it easier. But you still needed to know raw code to fix the bugs. I had to buy the software which became obsolete in 2006 when Microsoft stopped supporting it. That's not a friendly task for Seniors. (If you are using Internet Explorer, just go to "View" and then click on "Source" to see what I mean). I had to buy the FrontPage software but it became obsolete in 2006 when Microsoft cancelled further support, putting my second website on life-support. My next website won't be built under the thumb of Microsoft, at my expense.

That's not how most websites are built today. Even professional website designers now use on-line tools called CMS, or Content Management Systems. Once a domain name and host server have been acquired, a website is built by content added in much the same way that you write an article in Microsoft Word, and add pictures. The CMS tool sits on the host server, not on the end-user's computer. Contributors just use their own computers and log on to the website using their regular browser - no new software is needed - no costs but a learning curve. There's still a big difference between a professional site, and what a group of amateurs initially assemble - but that is in the details - and with time, an amateur site also gets better.
The good news for Seniors, is that some CMS software tools are "open source" and thus free! One of the best free on-line CMS tools is called "Joomla!", the Swahili word for "all together". This tool allows people who are not computer programmers, and don't know or care about source code, to contribute to building a site. Joomla! was developed since 2005 by the collaboration of a core of volunteer software programmers assisted by 200,000 forum contributors, world-wide. Such is the power of the Internet. Visit http://www.joomla.org/ to get more information or seach for Joomla! article at http://www.wikipedia.org/ .
I'll have more on how we get started in my next post. Our website will be developed at: http://www.inheritage.ca/ with your help and input. A meeting of interested Village residents will be held shortly.