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Ben is Vice President of Mobile Engineering at Walmart.com, where he works closely with his long-time friend Dion Almaer.

The Power of Lowered Expectations!

Recently Dion and I gave a talk at O’Reilly’s well-produced Web 2.0 Expo conference.

We messed up. Let me explain.

Last fall, on a lark, we wrote a quick program that would buzz at random intervals. We finished it right before walking on-stage to give a keynote at The Ajax Experience and ran it with the rule that whenever the buzzer sounded, we had to instantly switch speakers. Folks loved it, so on occasion we’ve been repeating the buzzer thing.

We did it at Web 2.0 Expo, but this time, the crowd was not amused. A sampling of the feedback on the conference site:

Thought [the talk] was great…except…hated the random buzzer bit. I can appreciate adding some fun…but…a little silly at first and eventually really irritating.

The the random buzzer was really terrible, distracting and loud. It was funny for about 1 minute. Doing it for the whole presentation just didn’t make sense.

Maybe the volume was higher than it has been in times past? Maybe we had the maximum interval set too high? In any event, I went to apologize in the comment thread when I was presented with… the dreaded login:

Login

Time to create my 501st Internet credential; but wait! They support OpenID!

OpenID

I’ve been hearing lots about how I can use my existing Google credentials to login to websites that support OpenID. I couldn’t wait to take advantage of that here. So I click on the “Use an OpenID to sign up” link and with the magic of a cross-fade technique, I see this:

OpenID Login

I’ve no idea how this stuff works, so I clicked on the “Read more about OpenID” link; a pop-up window opened:

Pop-up

First thing I did was click on “Check against this list” to see if I already had an OpenID as I thought I might. Doh! Error:

Error

No problem, URLs get mangled from time to time. This one seems to have an obvious problem:

http://wiki.openid.net//Public_OpenID_providers#Other_Services_Providing_Identity_Services

I removed the extra forward-flash after “wiki.openid.net” and then got this page:

Login to Login

That’s right; to find out how to avoid creating a login for the O’Reilly site, I have to create a login for the OpenID wiki site. Of course.

The other links on the pop-up were equally useless and/or broken.

At this point I just went ahead and tried my Google login id:

Another error

Rats. I googled around a bit and found this page:

You Have OpenID!

Sweet! I have a wordpress.com account, so I tried that:

You are not you

OpenID, I hate you! Still, perhaps there’s light at the end of the tunnel.

Comments

6 Comments

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  1. Chris Courtright #
    April 7, 2009

    Any chance that you can post the slides you gave from the Web 2.0 Expo talk?

  2. April 7, 2009

    I twittered this to Dion already, but have you looked at foaf+ssl? It seems like a very neat proposal to me, easily fixing a bunch of issues with (bare) OpenID.

Trackbacks & Pingbacks

  1. Who do I trust with my Identity? Erm, how about me? OpenID Weaves into the browser! on Dion Almaer's Blog
  2. Ajaxian » Who do I trust with my Identity? Erm, how about me? OpenID Weaves into the browser!
  3. Who do I trust with my Identity? Erm, how about me? OpenID Weaves into the browser! | Guilda Blog
  4. The Ashes » Blog Archive » Who do I trust with my Identity? Erm, how about me? OpenID Weaves into the browser!

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