Originally uploaded by jamfan2
Kilis
Field Post
Today we slept in, waking at 9:00 after a solid 9 hours of sleep – much needed after getting 3 hours the previous night. We quickly packed up our gear, Kirk and I had a quick internet cafe session, and then we had a quick morning tea with the Ak Otel (hotel) staff.
Before hopping on the bus to Atakya, we stopped quickly in a cafe for more tea and some greasy pastries.
The Dolmush to Antakya was somewhat standard, with the usual random stops on the side of the road and sudden switches of busses, with frantic grabbing our gear from one bus and sprinting to the next bus, hopping on as it pulls away.
When we arrived in Antakya, it was still raining, but everyone in town seemed upbeat and fine with it.
We found a good and cheap hotel, dropped our gear, and set off around town to find a place to eat. We finally found in the rain Antakya Evi, a cozy family restaurant where they served us an amazing amount of home cooked Turkish food, and we discussed with the restaurant owner about his wind farm.
Dinner ended, and we slogged through more rain, looking for a Nargile cafe. Unsuccessful, we headed back to the room to relax, dry off and plan out the next day.
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Sent via mobile.
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Sabiha Gokcen Airport, Istanbul
Originally uploaded by jamfan2
Waiting to board our flight from Istanbul to Adana
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Sent via mobile.
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Originally uploaded by jamfan2
Dourte pouring tea, Kirk looking on. Sunday evening dinner.
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Sent via mobile.
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Linking WordPress w/ Twitter to enable field blogging via cellular SMS
I’m testing posting to the blog by emailing a specially created email inbox, which WordPress is set to automatically check, invoked by a server cron job. This will provide an additional means of posting to the blog from the field, where I may not have access to a full web browser with which to load up the main WordPress admin interface. Additionally, being able to post via email should allow me to blog from cell phones, email kiosks, and other devices and situations.
This function can also serve as a blog bridge to posting automatic updates and notification from services which do not integrate directly with the WordPress XML-RPC. Say, for example, there’s a service that tracks every time I use a frequent shopper card at a store, and I want to blog each time I use that card. Most likely, such a service would, if anything, support emailing me every time a selected action is performed (making a purchase, in this case). However it would be very unlikely that the service would natively support direct posting to a wordpress blog. By directing the autogenerated emails from the service at the specially created “blog via email” address, I can effectively bridge this gap. Here’s a potential real world example – Orbitz, the online travel tickets website, offers a weather and delays notification service. If there’s any special circumstances regarding my travel booked through them, I can set up my account to be automatically emailed about possible upcoming situations. If I know people are following my travels, and there could be potential safety and logistic considerations for getting out word of my status out to multiple people, having these travel advisories from Orbitz automatically blogged could be useful. With the email to WordPress feature, that’s now possible.
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Sent via Email+Cron+Wordpress
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Dinosaurs Roam the East Village
Originally uploaded by jamfan2
Seen painted on the side of a building, SW corner of 13th Street and 3rd Avenue, NYC.
Sent via Blackberry Curve 8300