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Showing posts with label tutorials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tutorials. Show all posts

Saturday, 5 March 2011

How to connect PC to TV to watch online videos, movies etc






This is a basic introductory tutorial guide for non-technical beginners on how to connect your computer to your TV and watch shows from the internet on your TV - eg BBC iPlayer, 4od (4 on demand) and other TV programme episodes and films - whether you stream them in real time over the internet (which means you have to maintain your internet connection to watch it), or you download the file to your PC and later play back your downloaded video (which means you can watch the downloaded video while you're not connected to the internet). This is Windows only, sorry, I don't do Macs; some parts of this post may work for Macs though.

What kind of TV? These instructions should work perfectly well even with older non-digital TVs, as long as it has the right connectors (see below). You don't need to have a high definition HDTV, though the quality will probably be better if you do.

Why do all this? Well, watching internet video on demand, like movies or TV programmes, is much more comfy and sociable (and maybe better for the eyes?) if you watch them on your big screen TV, leaning back on your sofa, rather than huddling around a computer monitor screen. Better still if you have a high def TV.

What's there to watch? You're likely to want to do this more and more, now that we in the UK have BBC iPlayer, 4od (4 on demand), Demand Five, ITV Player, SkyPlayer and the like, so that you can catch up on missed TV episodes or even see new series online.

Services consolidating different TV channels include SeeSaw (on demand TV programmes from the BBC, Channel 4, Five and more, both free and paid). Outfits like LoveFilm, recently acquired by Amazon, are increasingly allowing online renting of downloaded movies (the lucky Americans have NetFlix). 4od also allow you to rent some films online.

YouTube can also be fun on a television, and there's also free internet TV like FreeTube and other online TV sites.

1. Basic outline

The basic steps are:

  1. connect your PC to your TV - this depends on what connections you have on your PC and what you have on your TV. You need to get the right cable to hook 'em up; and you may need more than one cable
  2. set up your PC to let you watch video from your computer on your TV set
  3. switch your TV to the right inputs so it'll show stuff from your computer, and start the video playing on your computer
  4. (optional but recommended) get something to control your PC remotely so you can pause, rewind etc from your couch!

Monitor vs TV. Your Windows computer (sorry, I'm not a Mac fan) can output video images to more than one screen at the same time. So you can leave your PC connected to both your regular monitor and your TV. You don't need to switch between them. (In fact, if your video card has several video output ports, you can use more than one monitor at the same time too.)

Sound. You probably want your TV both to show pics and play sounds from your online or downloaded video. What you need in order to do that depends on the connection between TV and PC. There's a veritable alphabet soup of possible connector types, from DVI and VGA to HDMI, component video, S-Video and for older TVs composite video.

Only HDMI to HDMI connections carry both video and audio signals in the same cable. Other types of connections (eg S-Video out to composite video in) will require you to get, and hook up, two sets of cables, one for the video, and a separate cable to carry the audio. (Unless of course you're happy for the sound to come out of your computer speakers only. But, you'll still need to get at least one cable for the video image signals.)

What you need. The PC you use for this has to be physically close enough to your TV that you can connect them with cables without causing you or others in your home to trip over them! In my home they're in the same room, but one of the cables I use is 5 m long, just to skirt the walls.

You also need the right cables, discussed below.

There are wireless options which let you watch video from your PC on your TV, but they're expensive. We're talking hundreds of pounds. I won't cover those here.

2. How to connect PC to TV

I was going to do a guide on how to hook up the output (video and audio) from your computer to the inputs on your TV, but others have already done it well, so links are included below.

Microsoft have a basic guide - expand the options for the full info. There's a more detailed guide with photos of the connectors too, for 2 monitors rather than a TV but the principles are the same.

Even better, Lovefilm UK have produced a nice tool to check the outputs on your PC and inputs on your TV, with pics of what the different types of connectors should look like.

Take a look at what's at the back of your computer and back of your TV (check out the side of the TV too, in the case of some older types of connectors). On the Lovefilm page, scroll down till you see their Step 1 and Step 2. Under their Step 1, first click on the diagram representing what the spare connector/port on your computer looks like (you may have more than one, eg both DVI and S-Video, in which case you could try each one separately), and then under Step 2 click on the pic which looks like the connector you have on your TV. Their guide will suggest (under Step 3) what type of cable(s) and adapter(s) and/or converters you need to buy. It even shows if you need to get separate cables for both audio and video. Here's an example where DVI was selected for the computer, and VGA for the TV.

Be warned though, their "Buy it now" buttons just do basic searches on Amazon, and you should doublecheck the search results for yourself just to make sure that eg it's an "A out" to "B in" cable, and not a "B out" to "A in" cable (where A is the connector on your PC, and B is the one on your TV). Directionality can matter.

If you don't have any of the connectors shown, eg because you have a very old TV, then, sorry, you're out of luck. See Alternatives, at the end of this post.

Audio splitter. If you need a separate audio cable to connect your computer's audio out (eg from your PC's speaker socket) to your TV, you may want to buy a splitter (like this 3.5mm speaker and headphone Splitter). You don't want to keep unplugging and swapping cables, believe me - wear and tear, inconvenience - and splitters aren't expensive.

With most computers, the kind of splitter you'll need is a splitter for a stereo mini-jack socket, so a headphone or speaker splitter will do. Splitter goes into your PC audio out, plug your speakers into one part of the splitter, your new audio cable into the other part, and then you can get sound to both your normal computer speakers and TV.

My guide to connecting set-top boxes or other AV kit to your TV may also be of general use to those unfamiliar with hooking up gear to TV sets.

3. How to set up your Windows computer to see online video

Once you've bought the right cables, hook everything up. Best do that after switching off both PC and TV, just in case.

Now, you have to set up your computer to handle both your normal monitor and your TV properly. So turn 'em both back on.

Display settings. Open up your display settings. Depending on your version of Windows, there are different ways to get to your display settings (see Microsoft's instructions for XP and for Windows 7 and Vista (or for the latter rightclick a blank area on your desktop, click Personalize and then Display Settings).

My display settings on Vista look like this:

What the two rectangles represent are your normal monitor and your TV. Probably your usual monitor will be labelled no. 1, and your TV no. 2. You can check which is which by clicking the "Identify monitors" button, which will display a big 1 on the screen that's represented as no. 1, and a big 2 on the other screen.

Positioning. You can click on either rectangle labelled 1 or 2, and drag it sideways to swap positions. I recommend that you position 1 and 2 to reflect the physical location of your monitor and TV in real life, otherwise things could get confusing. So, if in your room your monitor is on the left and your TV is to the right of the monitor (even if it's a long way off to the right), it's best have no. 1 (your PC monitor) on the left of the display settings view, and no. 2 on the right.

You next have to set things up on your PC so that it deals correctly with your TV, which is treated as an extra monitor as you can see.

Extend your desktop. In the display settings, click on the rectangle that represents your TV, ie no. 2. Make sure that "Extend the desktop onto this monitor" is ticked, then click OK.

After you've done this, you'll be able to use both monitor and TV at the same time. If you move your mouse over to the right (in my case - it may be left depending on your setup), you'll find that it disappears off your computer monitor and (provided you've switched your TV to display what's on your computer, covered below) reappears on your TV. Even if your TV is switched off or you've not set it to display your computer video, your mouse can disappear off the edge of your normal monitor. Just move it back. You have been warned!

Colours. If the colours look all weird on your TV, in your Display Settings click on the rectangle for your TV first, then try setting the Colors dropdown to Medium (16 bit) instead of Highest (32 bit). Or vice versa. Then OK it. And see if that improves things. Depending on your TV set, medium can actually be better than Highest.

Other tweaks. Having selected no. 2 for your TV, you can also:

  • click Advanced Settings (bottom right), then the Monitor tab, then under Monitor Settings click the Screen refresh rate dropdown and see if a higher setting is available. The bigger the number for the refresh rate, the less the flicker, and the better for your eyes - so you want to pick the highest refresh rate your TV can provide. The example below isn't much!


  • experiment with changing the Resolution slider to see if it makes a difference. On my TV, I got the best results from Low.

If you have problems, try the Microsoft suggestions for troubleshooting multiple monitors etc, for Vista and Windows 7 (audio/video issues, black screen).

4. How to watch video from your PC on your TV

Now that you've set everything up, you can play videos or movies on your computer, and watch and hear it on your TV.

The steps, in summary, are:

  1. set your TV to display the right input (ie what's coming out from your PC, rather than from your set-top box or DVD player etc)
  2. find the video you want to watch in your browser or Windows Media Player window
  3. move that window to your TV
  4. (recommended) put the player on Full Screen setting
  5. click the Play button!

4.1 Input

To do this, switch your TV to the correct input (see further my post on connecting AV equipment to your TV) so that your TV will display what's on your computer. Basically, just keep pressing and releasing the AV button on your remote control until you can see your computer's desktop background on your TV - it's the button you might use to cycle between TV and DVD or VHS, etc. (To get your normal TV back, just keep pressing and releasing the AV button again till you get to what you want.)

4.2 Find your video

Now, either you'll stream video live over the internet, as with YouTube, or you'll download a movie or video (eg from BBC iPlayer) and then play it in (probably) BBC iPlayer or other media player software. (With iPlayer you have choice, you can either watch it online, or download it - which takes a while - and watch it later.)

With online streaming video, you'd normally use your web browser (eg Internet Explorer, Firefox) to go to the site you want, then find and click on the programme you want to play, and watch it in your browser.

With a previously downloaded show, as with iPlayer, you'd launch the iPlayer programme, or (as with some other video) you'd launch Windows Media Player or other video player, and watch the video in there; so go ahead and open the downloaded movie or video that you want to watch.

4.3 Move the window to your TV screen

You now need to drag the window in which the video is to play (whether it's Internet Explorer or Windows Media Player etc), sideways from your monitor to your TV. This surprised a non-technical friend, so I am spelling it out.

You literally move the window of your browser or Windows Media Player etc (click in the window's top blue title bar, hold down the mouse, and drag it) - sideways, until you can see the window on your TV. I drag it to the right in my case, because my no. 2 screen is set up to be on the right in my Display Settings; if your no. 2 is on the left, then drag it to the left.

You may not see the window on your monitor anymore, as it'll go off that screen, but at some point the window will appear on your TV.

What if your window won't move? Make sure that the window has not been maximised. The top right hand bit of the window should look like this, with a single square in the middle button:

If instead it shows two overlapping squares in the middle button, like this:

- then you need to click that button (with the overlapping squares) to "Restore" the window (so it shows the single square), and then you should be able to move the window. It'll probably shrink a bit too - just drag the bottom right corner to resize it.

Now, you'll find that what fits on your monitor screen may not fit on your TV screen, depending on what TV and monitor you have. So you need to resize the window to the size that fits best on your TV.

Once you've figured out and set the right size for (say) your browser window, if you click on the Restore button in future, it should automatically remember the size you set it to last time. I normally use my browser maximised for the web, and for playing iPlayer I hit the Restore button.

Tip: you don't need to resize the window so that it fits exactly on your TV screen, as long as you use full screen (covered below). You can actually make the window bigger (so you can see stuff within the window better), in fact you could even have the window partway across, so that part of the window is displayed on your monitor, and part of it on your TV screen. As long as more of the window is on the TV screen than on your monitor, you'll be OK.

4.5 Go full screen!

After you've got most of your browser or player window showing on your TV, I highly recommend that you to click the Full Screen button, usually at the far right of the controls underneath the video. Hover over that icon and it should popup with a "Full screen" label - see the BBC iPlayer example at the top of this post, and the 5 Demand example below. (If you can't see the controls, try moving your mouse over the video.)

You may have to scroll in the window down and sideways in order to be able to see that icon, as things which fit on your monitor may not fit as well on your TV, depending on what TV you have. But that doesn't matter - once you've clicked the Full Screen button the picture should automatically expand to fill the whole of your TV screen, even if only part of the window was visible on your TV before. (If your window isn't far over enough on your TV, it will fill the monitor screen rather than TV, which is why I said before that you need to have more of the window showing on the TV than the monitor.)

So, before you move your browser or player window sideways to your TV, the trick is to scroll the window down and sideways in advance, so that the full screen icon is visible on the left (in my case) of the browser window, before you move the window across. Obviously, you want it positioned so you can see it and click on it on the TV screen.

Can't see the full screen icon? With some channels, eg Demand 5, even the controls themselves aren't visible initially - you first need to click the big Play icon (large right arrow, at the bottom left of the video), and perhaps confirm you're over 16, before you can see the controls and click the full screen icon. You could do that before you start moving the window across to your TV, it's fine to have the video playing as you move the window. Even with the other channels, you could start the video playing before you move the window.

Nothing happens when you click the full screen icon? With other channels eg BBC iPlayer, you may find that the full screen icon is greyed out and nothing happens when you click on it. You have to start playing the video first, before the full screen button becomes clickable.

Bottom line, if you can't see the full screen icon, just start the video playing first by clicking on it (or at the bottom left of it, for Demand 5 - not a good idea in my view, for all the others you just click on the video picture itself). If you can't see the controls, waggle your mouse over the playing video.

4.6 Miscellaneous

Controls. As mentioned before, if you move your mouse over the picture, the controls will become visible so that you can click to pause, rewind etc. Personally, after starting the video playing, I then park the mouse pointer at the bottom right corner of the TV screen so I can find it again easily to pause etc.

Pop-out? Some channels offer a pop-out button which you can click to play the video in a separate window. This is not the same as full screen view, and in my experience isn't as good, but try it if you want - whatever works for your own setup.

Screensaver. If you have a screensaver on your PC or set it to turn off your monitor after X minutes, remember to disable it before you start watching, or else your TV screen may suddenly go blank or screensavery! Wiggling the mouse sorts that, of course, but still… And remember to enable your screensaver or power saver again after you've finished watching.

ITV Player issue - ITV is the only one of the main UK channels whose full screen view just doesn't work properly, on my TV at least. Whatever settings I try, part of the picture always gets cut off on the TV in "full screen" view. So, with ITV Player, I have to grit my teeth, tweak the browser window to make the video as big as possible while still fitting completely within my TV screen, and then watch it NOT in full screen view.

Lost your window? When you've finished, don't forget to drag the window back to your normal monitor before you turn off your TV.

If you forgot to do that, you can still get your browser or player window back onto your monitor. In your taskbar at the bottom of your monitor screen, there should still be an icon or rectangle representing that window (and other open programs). Just rightclick it that icon the taskbar, click Move, then hold down your left arrow key on your keyboard (in my case, it might be right in yours) to move the window back to your monitor! Hit the Esc key when it's back to where you want it.

Subtitles. The S button in the BBC iPlayer controls turns on subtitling. Not all programmes have subtitles though.

And most non-BBC channels don't provide subtitles yet. They should.

5. How to control videos on your PC remotely

You can use your computer keyboard and mouse to start, pause, rewind, etc an online or downloaded video or film, but it can be a pain getting up from your sofa just to do that.

I'll be posting reviews in future of relatively inexpensive kit you can get to control your video from the comfort of your couch - basically, wireless ways to control your computer.

The sound can be controlled using the volume controls on your TV remote in the usual way.

6. Bandwidth!

Downloading movies or watching them live eats up a lot of bandwith. If there's a monthly maximum cap on your broadband internet plan, you may find you hit it and it may get expensive for you to be charged for the extra. You may even want to change plans.

Just to give you an idea, before I started using iPlayer, Demand 5 etc in earnest, I used a total of maybe 7 GB max a month, and that's including both uploads and downloads. Now, I average about 50 or 60 GB a month in total! (I use the excellent free Netmeter to keep track of my broadband usage, by the way.)

7. Alternatives?

You can get dedicated set-top boxes to show videos or movies from the internet on your TV, whether streamed in real time over the internet to watch online, or downloaded and saved on the box for watching offline. These might just need a connection to your router (which could be over wi-fi) and of course to your TV.

Lots of companies are getting in on the act here, if they haven't already, eg the D-Link Boxee Box Digital Media Player, or Apple TV (including film rentals over the internet), with related things like Google TV

There's also the Western Digital WD TV Live Hub Media Center 1TB, which stores as well as plays music, video and other media - I'll be posting a review about it soon.

Or some might want to wait for the YouView Freeview box (formerly Project Canvas) which the BBC and others are working on, called "a new subscription-free internet-connected TV service for the UK", including old programmes, with the ability to record too. It's set for an early 2012 consumer launch, so the latest news goes.

Friday, 4 April 2008

OpenID: intro & howto for non-techies






This is an introductory guide / tutorial on the OpenID online identity management system, which is increasingly topical - e.g. internet giant Yahoo! recently announced its official support for OpenID, on 17 January 2008, and started a public beta trial of its "Yahoo ID" service at the end of January. OpenID is also one of the main planks of the DataPortability movement (see this short video on DataPortability, and this longer DataPortability video, and DataPortability discussion).

As with my other intros and howtos this post is aimed at the curious consumer rather than hardcore geeks (who probably already know all this!) and it has a practical bent, with suggestions on how to use OpenID as well as a bit about how it works. This post is my little contribution to hopefully help dispel OpenID's image as user-unfriendly and encourage more non-techies to use it.

WHAT'S OPENID, IN OUTLINE?

What's OpenID? Many websites make you register your details with them and then login before you can view all their pages or use their full services. OpenID lets you use just one username and password combo to register for and sign in to all participating websites (e.g. to post a comment on a Livejournal blog), so that you don't have to remember a mass of different usernames and passwords. Hence, it's known as a "single sign on" (SSO) system - you just register once, for an OpenID, then you can use the same login on multiple sites without having to register for them all over again.

Perhaps it's better called a single registration system for your internet identity, as via a Simple Registration Extension it can even get rid of the tedium of manually filling in your "identity information" details on those pesky Website registration forms - in particular your full name, nickname, gender, email address, date of birth, postcode, country, and time zone. (And now there's OpenID Attribute Exchange 1.0).

On web sites that support OpenID, you won't have to register with them afresh in order to sign in. If you have an OpenID, you can just login to those sites with a URL (web address) as your username, and your OpenID password as the password; you can even pass on certain personal details (email address, gender etc) direct to the site if you wish, like with a semi-automated registration form filler. (Yes, you can get that on your computer, but only if you are using that computer - with OpenID, whatever computer you're using, anywhere, you have access to this form filler.)

Hardcore geeks can set up their own OpenID servers but the rest of us would get an OpenID by getting an account with an OpenID provider,
a site that provides OpenID identity services (like Yahoo did from the end of January).

You register with the provider under a username
of your choice, if not already taken, and password of your choice. The provider site will assign you a unique URL which you then use as your OpenID login username (or in some cases you can even use their URL for the login as with Yahoo). But you can alternatively, with a few tweaks, set things up so that you can use your own URL as your OpenID login (e.g. in my case it's www.consumingexperience.com) - and I think that's much better, because if you later switch to a different OpenID identity provider you won't have to change your login URL.

Main benefits of OpenID. Obviously, to be able to log on to all OpenID-supporting Websites or Web services with just one user ID and password combination is convenient as a single combo is easier than having to register and remember different user names and passwords for different websites. And it's better than using the same user / password for several sites to save having to remember multiple passwords, which is not uncommon but which can expose you to the security risk that bad guys who get hold of your password for one site could then login as you and access your account at other sites.

Your URL is your logon. As mentioned, a key feature of Open ID is that, for your OpenID username (logon ID) or identifier, effectively you just use a URL (i.e. Web address) unique to you, that you control. So, a blog URL could be used as your OpenID username or ID - e.g. in the case of this blog, I can use www.consumingexperience.com as my OpenID identity or URL identifier.

Alternatively, you can use for your OpenID identifier the URL assigned to you by the OpenID provider that you signed up with (you may already, unbeknownst to you, have an account with a site that is an OpenID provider). This provider is technically separate from the sites that you can sign in to using your OpenID. OpenID providers are not necessarily the same as the websites which accept OpenID for logons.

So, if you have a Yahoo account, and you want to sign in to another site which supports OpenID (version 2.0 only) like Plaxo, then in Plaxo's sign-in box you'd enter just "yahoo.com" as the URL, and then you'd be taken to Yahoo's site where you'd sign in with your usual Yahoo! ID and Yahoo password. Alternatively you can get a long unique URL identifier from Yahoo, or use https://me.yahoo.com/yourYahooID or http://www.flickr.com/photos/yourYahooID as your OpenID URL:


Again as I mentioned above it's best to use your own URL for your OpenID if you can: domain names are so cheap to buy (or rather rent) these days, that there's no reason not to. I'll explain the tweaks for that later.

I like OpenID not only for the "single registration" concept, but also because OpenID is a non-proprietary open source technology - an open "identity protocol" which is free to providers as well as users. I hope that more sites will support it and more people will start to use it. There are encouraging signs that it's becoming more popular (e.g. it's one of the planks of data portability as mentioned earlier), but there may be a while to go yet before its widespread adoption.

Cons. So far, too few sites let users use their OpenID as their login. I hope this changes, as OpenID will never take off properly if in practice you can't actually use it anywhere you want to go!

Even the sites that provide OpenID identities, e.g. AOL and Yahoo, mostly still don't accept OpenID logins generally - a bit one-sided, isn't it? They want their users to be able to login to other sites that take OpenID logins, but they don't want to let non-AOL or Yahoo etc users sign in to use their sites and services in full! I suspect they're mainly being protectionist about their customers and customer data and trying to get people to register with them for OpenIDs, on which more later.

Another disadvantage is that the biggest pro of OpenID - the convenience of a single sign-on system - carries with it what's probably one of the biggest cons - security. If you have a single sign on for loads of sites, and bad guys get hold of your OpenID and password, then they can get into your account on every one of the sites you use (and maybe some you don't) which supports OpenID, masquerading as you. So you're very dependent on how well your OpenID provider maintains security, in an operational as well as technological sense. OpenID is also more vulnerable to phishing (for more on phishing see this post of a very helpful session on internet security etc, which even non-geeks should be able to follow).

You're also dependent on your provider for keeping your personal details secure and private too (if you decide to give those details to your OpenID provider), not just your password. And obviously you'll be reliant on your provider not to go down or crash or go out of business.

So it's very important to think carefully about which identity provider you'll use: some may be better and more trustworthy than others. And it's also a good idea to get your own domain name and use your own URL for your OpenID. I'll explain how below.

(For good summaries of OpenID pros and cons see this post, this post and the bottom of this diagram.)

THE QUICKIE - PRACTICAL STUFF

  1. Getting an OpenID. You can get your own OpenID from an OpenID provider (identity provider or identity server) by signing up with a provider for an OpenID username and password. The provider stores your OpenID login and password or other "authentication" credentials, and also (if you want to provide them) registration details commonly requested by websites: your nickname, gender, email address, country etc.

    • You may already have an OpenID if you have an account with certain services like AOL or AIM and, more latterly, Blogger or Yahoo: you just need to find out what URL to use for your OpenID (more details are given below e.g. with Blogger, who are now an OpenID provider, you can just use your blog's URL). I wouldn't use Yahoo though, for now - their system only works with OpenID-enabled sites that support a newer version of OpenID which was only released in December 2007, so it won't work with many sites yet.

    • Many identity providers will provide OpenID IDs for free. See later for the links.

    • You can have more than one OpenID identity if you wish. And you probably should, if you want to be careful about your privacy.

    • You can store various registration details associated with your OpenID identity such as nickname, gender, email address etc - then choose which details you want to give the site you're logging in to, and have the details automatically filled in without your having to re-type them. (Not all identity providers support this "simple registration" feature).


    • You can use your own blog or Website URL for your OpenID ID, if you know how (covered below). A plus - you can keep that same URL to use as your OpenID, even if you later change identity providers.

    • You can even set up and use an OpenID provider on your own computer server, if you know how (not covered below!)

  2. Using your OpenID. Once you have an OpenID, you the "end user" can just use your OpenID username to login to all sites that accept OpenID (these supporting sites, or OpenID-enabled sites, are known as "relying parties" or, in my view confusingly, sometimes they're called "consumers", because they're "consumers" of your identity).

    There's no need to register or sign up afresh with OpenID-enabled sites, because you prove your identity via your OpenID login.

    Mechanics: the "relying party" site that you want to log in to - e.g. Plaxo - contacts the identity provider's servers - e.g. Yahoo's - to verify your identity when you try to login on the site, so you'll be diverted temporarily to your identity provider's site to enter your password with the identity provider (if you're not already signed in with the provider at the time you try to login to the relying party site). That way, you confirm direct with your identity provider (and only with your identity provider, not the relying party) that you are who you say you are, and the provider tells the relying party that you're OK, and youo're sent back to the relying party's site. And you can also choose which (if any) personal details e.g. email address you want to give the site you're trying to access. Don't ever enter your OpenID password on any page that isn't on your OpenID provider's site (in this example Yahoo) - the whole idea is that you only need give your OpenID password to your identity provider, not the relying party site or any other site.

  3. Note: providers vs relying parties. Note that the identity provider need not be the same company as the accepting site, and in fact usually it isn't - which is part of the point of OpenID, separating the two. An identity provider which offers OpenID identities to its users may also decide to accept OpenID logins from others for its services generally - but it doesn't have to. E.g. AOL provided OpenID identities to its users a while back, so that AOL users could login to other sites which accept OpenID logins, but AOL itself is still only gradually allowing non-AOL users to access AOL services via OpenID login. In other words, not all providers are relying parties, and vice versa. So, just because people can now comment on Blogger blogs using their OpenID logins, it didn't mean that you could use your Blogger URL to login on other sites, even if they generally accepted OpenID - the latter only became easy when Blogger became an OpenID provider itself in January 2008.

  4. Tip: get your own URL (domain). Then you can use it for your OpenID identifier, using any identity provider you wish, and keep the same URL as your OpenID even if you later switch identity providers.

  5. In a way, OpenID isn't really "identity" or even an "account". Using OpenID just means that the identity provider will confirm to the relying party that you are the person who controls the website whose URL you enter for the login username. The relying party gets no guarantee that you really are who you say you are (or indeed that the identity provider is telling it the truth!). So you can use OpenID and still be anonymous, or in my case pseudonymous. For me its main advantage is the convenience factor of a single login and password. And believe it or not, it positively helps me to stay anonymous and maintain my privacy, because I can have several different OpenID identities, one for each of the different aspects of my life.

  6. More details. For those who want to know more even about Open ID, below I'll cover:

    1. the increasing adoption of OpenID

    2. how to find out which sites accept OpenID

    3. what your OpenID identifier is, if you already have one through having an account with AOL, Blogger etc

    4. how to get yourself a free OpenID identity if you don't already have one, including finding out about identity providers, some things to look out for when choosing one, signing up for an OpenID, how to use your own URL as an OpenID identifier, some useful features of OpenID, and checking your OpenID works

    5. a walkthrough the process of signing in to a relying party site with OpenID

    6. Blogger blogs and OpenID

    7. some OpenID tools for users

    8. risks and issues with OpenID

    9. links to some resources (I'm not going to cover how to set up an OpenID provider or relying party server, but I'll include some links to some webpages that do)

    10. thoughts on possible future developments.

THE LONG AND SLOW

OpenID - a bandwagon?

Open ID is not the only digital identity management service or digital identity network around - but it is gaining momentum, gathering support from more and more of the big boys and continuing to develop further too, recently finalising various enhancement specifications in December 2007: OpenID Authentication 2.0 (and also the related OpenID Attribute Exchange 1.0).

OpenID got a big boost last year in February 2007 when Microsoft, Verisign, Sxip and JanRain announced their intention to collaborate on interoperability between Microsoft's Windows CardSpace and OpenID, and around the same time the over 63 million AOL users also got a free OpenID service from AOL. AOL have also since started allowing people to login to AOL websites and services using OpenIDs provided by certain companies other than AOL. The first telecomms company to embrace OpenID was Orange France, which began providing OpenIDs for all their over 40 million subscribers in September 2007. As mentioned earlier, Yahoo! decided at the start of this year to be an OpenID provider, and Microsoft started an experimental OpenID provider Inkblot in December 2007.

On the blogging front, OpenID was originally developed at LiveJournal so not surprisingly it was supported by that blogging platform from early on. In March 2007 WordPress.com began providing OpenIDs to their users. From September 2007, with Movable Type 4, Movable Type included OpenID authentication built in, so commenters on Movable Type blogs can sign in using OpenID. And in December 2007, Google's Blogger began accepting OpenID sign ins from people logging in to post comments on Blogger / Blogspot blogs, at first just via their test bed Blogger in Draft, but that feature was soon rolled out to all Blogger blogs, after they'd fixed some teething issues too. Blogger began acting as an OpenID provider in January 2008, with users of Blogger being able to use their Blogspot URLs as OpenID logins on other sites which support OpenID, and then even allowing Blogger users to use their own domain URLs instead of their blogspot.com URLs for their OpenID logins. For those who write or read Blogger blogs I'll be covering OpenID in more detail below, after a general overview.

Dave Recordon was a winner of the 2007 Google-O'Reilly Open Source Award for best strategist for his role in, as they put it, "pushing Identity into the open source space", and Google and Yahoo have modelled their OpenSocial Foundation after the OpenID Foundation, so clearly it's all been developing very well.

On which sites can you use OpenID?

There seems to be no totally comprehensive, constantly-updated list of all the sites that accept OpenID logins - if anyone knows of one do please let me have the URL. The fullest lists of OpenID-enabled sites are probably these:

As you'll see from those lists, quite a few sites already let you sign in with your OpenID ID. Some examples:

But beware of a twist: not all OpenID-enabled sites will accept OpenIDs from all OpenID identity providers. For instance, AOL Developer Network have a whitelist of accepted OpenID providers; if a provider is not on that list, you can't sign in to that site with an ID from that provider. So if you're signing up for an OpenID, best opt for a well known one.

And as I keep emphasising, not all OpenID providers will accept OpenID logins from other sources, e.g. Yahoo doesn't.

How do you get an OpenID identity? Have you got one already? What's your OpenID login ID?

You may already have an OpenID identity if you've previously registered with certain websites or services - particularly some popular blogging platforms.

OpenID have a fuller list of what your OpenID URL would be if you already have an account with services like WordPress.com; below I give the format for your OpenID URL if you have an account with the most popular sites, such as:
  • AOL or AIM - use openid.aol.com/YOURAOLSCREENNAME. Note: If you have an AOL blog, then you can also use its URL, i.e. http://journals.aol.com/YOURSCREENNAME/YOURBLOGNAME, for your OpenID login. Yes, if you have more than one AOL journal, you can use any of their URLs

  • Blogger - use your blog URL as your OpenID logon. Go to your Dashboard, Settings, and the OpenID tab will state what your OpenID URL with Blogger is. (Note: the OpenID site says you can use yourusername.blogger.com but that didn't work for me)

  • LiveJournal -use YOURLIVEJOURNALUSERNAME.livejournal.com

  • Technorati - use technorati.com/people/technorati/YOURTECHNORATIUSERNAME - see further instructions on how to use your Technorati profile URL as an OpenID login, both generally, and in order to comment on a Blogger blog even if you don't have a Blogger account.

  • Vox - use YOURMEMBERNAME.vox.com.

  • WordPress.com (see the WordPress.com OpenID FAQ) - use YOURBLOGNAME.wordpress.com

  • See the list for a few others. You can alternatively use your existing TypeKey or TypePad account, if you have one. (I don't use TypeKey myself, but it seems the OpenID URL for those who do would be: profile.typekey.com/YOURTYPEKEYUSERNAME).

For instance, if your WordPress.com URL is http://yourblogname.wordpress.com, you can use that URL as your OpenID logon.

Got a Yahoo account? As mentioned, Yahoo are now a provider - go to Yahoo's OpenID page to customise your OpenID URL. Previously you could have an OpenID using your Yahoo login by signing up for Simon Willison's idproxy.net which is "unofficial but sanctioned", and it's still in operation. (Simon ran a very helpful session on JQuery at BarCampLondon3 in November, totally by the by.)

But what if you don't want an account with one of those websites, or what if you don't want to use a URL with "aol.com" or "WordPress.com" etc in it as your OpenID login?

You may well want to use a completely separate dedicated URL for your OpenID logins. Or you may already have your own domain name, or your own blog, and you might prefer to use that URL as your OpenID instead.

The good news is, you can use a different URL as your OpenID. But first, you'll need to have an account with an OpenID identity provider. And then, if you want to use your own URL instead of a URL assigned to you by the provider, you'll need to take some further steps which I'll cover below.

Alternatively, you can set up and run your own OpenID identity server - but that's way beyond the scope of this post.

Signing up with an OpenID provider

When you open an OpenID account with an OpenID identity provider, you'll have to choose an OpenID username and password. Obviously try to pick a strong, long password with a mix of letters, numbers, maybe symbols, and both uppercase and lowercase, as this will be your "single password". Then, after sign up, you should be able to use the same ID and password across all "relying party" sites which accept OpenIDs provided by that provider.

Note that although you'll use a URL to login to OpenID-supporting web sites after you've signed up for OpenID, you don't actually have to use a URL as your username when you're signing up for OpenID with an OpenID identity provider. You can just pick a name that's not already taken. I use "Improbulus" (surprise, surprise).

Normally, after you sign up with an identity provider it will assign you a special URL on its own site which you can then use as your OpenID username / identifier. For example, I signed up for a VeriSign Personal Identity Provider account with the user name Improbulus, and they gave me a "Personal Identity Provider Access URL" of "improbulus.pip.verisignlabs.com". So I can sign in to OpenID-enabled sites by entering "improbulus.pip.verisignlabs.com" (without the quotes) into the username box. That "access URL" is what I'll call my basic OpenID identifier with VeriSign (identity endpoint). With providers like Yahoo!, which use OpenId 2.0, you can even use just "yahoo.com" as your login username on the relying party site, then sign in to Yahoo with your usual Yahoo details.

But you're not stuck with having to use only that basic OpenID identifier as your OpenID login. You can still use your own URL as your OpenID login if you prefer (I'll explain how below). They're just separate alternatives. You can log in to OpenID-supporting sites with either the special URL your identity provider gives you (your basic OpenID identifier), or (once you've taken a few extra steps) your own URL. Either will do.

Checking if your new OpenID identifier works

How can you test if your OpenID ID is working?

You could of course try to sign in with it on one of the OpenID-supporting sites.

Or you can try OpenIDEnabled's checkup page for testing OpenIDs - just enter your OpenID URL/identifier in the box and hit Check. (They also have a page to help the geekier ones amongst us to test OpenID servers they've set up themselves).

Registration form filling - Simple Registration, and personas

Now, an OpenID feature you may find helpful is Simple Registration, which I touched on earlier. Many websites, when you register with them, ask you to fill in a form with not only a username and password but also other personal details such as your email address, gender, birth date, postcode, country of origin etc - some of which is compulsory. It's a pain to have to enter all that info just to complete your registration with the site, site after site after site.

So OpenID allows you, under what's called Simple Registration, to store certain commonly-requested pieces of personal data with your identity provider, which you can then selectively choose to pass on to the relying party when requested during your signing in process.

As long as your identity provider supports simple registration (not all do e.g. ClaimID doesn't seem to at the moment), you can store with it whichever of those pieces of identity information you choose. And you can edit it all afterwards, of course.

However, different identity providers deal with simple registration differently. It's easiest to illustrate the differences with some actual examples.

MyOpenID
allows for a concept called "personas", where you can create different personas, each with a different set of personal details, all under the same OpenID. One persona may be associated with your birth date, gender, email address etc, but another persona only your gender; or different personas could be associated with different email addresses. The "persona" concept is also described in the recently-finalised OpenID Attribute Exchange 1.0 specification as "A subset of the user's identity data. A user can have multiple personas as part of their identity. For example, a user might have a work persona and a home persona."

When you try to login to a relying party site, MyOpenID will fill in the boxes on the registration form for you depending on the persona you pick. For instance, the "identity data" info I've associated with my default persona on MyOpenID by filling in the form on MyOpenID is limited to name, nickname, gender, website, country, language and timezone (I've not included email or birth date; never ask a woman's age!).


Now I'll try to login to the AOL Developer site via my MyOpenID ID. That's fine, I get in after I give my OpenID password on the MyOpenID page which I'm taken to. But then the AOL site's registration form for new users asks them for their email, gender and country. Well, that info is automatically entered into the registration form boxes for me by MyOpenID, because I'd previously registered it with MyOpenID; but where I've not given details to MyOpen ID then, not surprisingly, it's not filled in - e.g. here I've not given my email address or date of birth to MyOpen ID, so those boxes are blank below, but my gender and country have been completed by MyOpenID for me. I could then still delete anything I decide not to give the site, or edit it, before I finally hit OK:


If I had a separate persona called e.g. "Fake Man" where I'd entered some email address and given my gender as male (yes I can do that!), and I'd selected that persona on MyOpenID for logging in to AOL Dev, it would have filled in the email field for me and selected Male. And so on.

Verisign, on the other hand, lets you fill in one set of personal information in your Verisign account on your "My Information" page there, e.g. your email address (I've just blanked it out from the screenshot below):


- and then when you try to log in to a relying party site with your Verisign PIP OpenID, you are shown the type of info required by that site on the left (boxes corresponding to the data requested), as you can see below. The info you'd previously filled in on the Verisign site is shown on the right (in this case only my (blanked-out) email address), and you can then choose which ones to "copy across" to the left with a few clicks, to help fill in the relying party site's registration form. More steps are needed on your part, but perhaps you have more control this way:


As another example, another relying party site where I'd signed in using my Verisign OpenID only wants my nick name, so there are virtually no boxes on the left shown to me by Verisign:

Which OpenID identity provider?

There are many OpenID identity services which will provide you with an OpenID ID, many of them for free. See:

It's your decision who you go with, of course, but you're probably better off signing up with one of the providers listed on the official OpenID page as they're relatively known quantities and hopefully can be relied on to be more careful with their security. Reassuringly, all the ones on the OpenID page are also on the AOL whitelist.

They all appear to be slightly different - see the OpenID wiki list for brief descriptions. Myopenid.com is probably the best known as the company behind it, JanRain, has been heavily involved with the OpenID project from the start. They also have decent help pages. ClaimID seems to be venturing into social networking, encouraging users to "claim" all their websites, and providing supporting "identity tools" like microformats for your profile contact details. Some providers will charge you for providing you with an OpenID. You pays your money...

But I'd just mention a few particular points to bear in mind when you're choosing an identity provider:
  1. Does it support "delegation" (covered below)? If you want to use your own URL as your OpenID login, you have to pick a provider that supports delegation - most of them do, but it may be worth checking the point. For instance, VeriSign doesn't seem to support delegation.

  2. Does it support Simple Registration / Attribute Exchange, and if so how does it work? I think it's very useful, so personally I'd prefer a provider who does have it.

  3. How much do you trust it to keep your information secure and private, and to not stop being an OpenID Provider, not go bust and not sell your details to someone else?

How to use your own URL for your OpenID identifier

Now if you control your own blog or website, such that you can insert some HTML code into the head section of the main page of your site template (e.g. Blogger blogs, or a WordPress blog that's not on WordPress.com), then you can use your own blog or site URL as your OpenID login.

This makes use of an OpenID feature known as "delegation". If you don't run your own identity provider but have signed up with a third party identity provider (which is most of us), you can "delegate authentication" of your identity to the identity provider that you've signed up with, like MyOpenID or VeriSign or even Blogger. The OpenID wiki explains how to set up delegation.

To use your own URL as your OpenID:
  1. Sign up with an OpenID identity provider that supports delegation.

  2. Set your website or blog up to delegate authentication by inserting certain HTML code into the head section of your blog template or site's home page or index page (i.e. the page that visitors are first taken to if they just try your base URL), and save and publish / upload. Most providers will have the delegation code info for their particular service somewhere on their Help pages. (For beginners - go to the Edit HTML view of your blog template or similar, and in the line just before the </head< tag, paste in the delegation code.)
The basic format for the delegation code is the following, but you'll need to get change YOUR-PROVIDERS-OPENID-SERVER-URL to the URL of your provider's identity server, and change YOUR-OPENID-URL to the special URL given to you by the identity provider when you signed up with them i.e. your basic OpenID identifier (in my Verisign example, that would for me be http://improbulus.pip.verisignlabs.com):
<link rel="openid.server" href="http://YOUR-PROVIDERS-OPENID-SERVER-URL">
<link rel="openid.delegate" href="http://YOUR-OPENID-URL/">
or for providers using the shiny new OpenID Authentication 2.0 spec, the code is in the slightly different format:
<link rel="openid2.provider openid.server" href="http://YOUR-PROVIDERS-OPENID-SERVER-URL">
<link rel="openid2.local_id openid.delegate" href="http://YOUR-OPENID-URL/">
Both versions do the same thing. The first line indicates the URL of your identity provider's identity server - so that the relying party site knows which server to go to in order to check your OpenID identity. The second line indicates your OpenID basic identifier, so it knows which identity / identifier it should check.

MyOpenID uses both versions of the code, plus a bit extra which I won't go into here, with their code currently being the following (change YOURMYOPENIDACCOUNT to your own MyOpenID username before inserting it into your blog template or site HTML, of course):
<link rel="openid.server"
href="http://www.myopenid.com/server" />
<link rel="openid.delegate"
href="http://YOURMYOPENIDACCOUNT.myopenid.com/" />
<link rel="openid2.local_id"
href="http://YOURMYOPENIDACCOUNT.myopenid.com" />
<link rel="openid2.provider"
href="http://www.myopenid.com/server" />
<meta http-equiv="X-XRDS-Location"
content="http://www.myopenid.com/xrds?username=YOURMYOPENIDACCOUNT.myopenid.com" />

For ClaimID the code is the currently the simpler older OpenID Authentication 1.1 spec version, being:
<link rel="openid.server" href="http://openid.claimid.com/server" />
<link rel="openid.delegate" href="http://openid.claimid.com/YOURACCOUNT" />
You get the drift... you'll have to consult your provider's help pages for the exact delegation code to use, as it'll vary with the provider - in particular you need to know the URL of their identity server to insert it in the server or provider bit of the code.

But you'll notice that the URL of your blog or website, the URL which you want to use for your OpenID identifier, doesn't appear anywhere in the delegation code. It doesn't have to: it's enough that the right code is added to the header section of the template or HTML of the blog or site whose URL you want to use as your OpenID identifier. As long as the correct code is in the HTML of the website whose URL you've entered on the relying party site, your OpenID sign in will work.

One possible gotcha to note. My main URL is http://www.consumingexperience.com/, but via the settings pages of my domain registrar, I have also fixed it so that the URL of http://consumingexperience.com/ (without the www) will forward to http://www.consumingexperience.com/. In other words, if a visitor tries to go to http://consumingexperience.com/ in their web browser, they'll be taken to http://www.consumingexperience.com/. However, when I login to an OpenID relying party site, I can't use consumingexperience.com - I have to use www.consumingexperience.com, which is my main URL, or else it doesn't work and I can't log in. I don't know enough yet to know if it's the provider or just the way OpenID is, but rather than face problems, it's probably best to enter your full main URL rather than being idle like me!

If you change identity providers, all you have to do is update the delegation code in the head section of your blog or website's to your new identity provider's delegation code, and voila you can still use your blog or site's URL with the new identity provider.

Can you have more than one OpenID identity?

You can have more than one OpenID identity if you want. All the talk about a "single ID" or "single-sign-on" with OpenID doesn't actually mean you are restricted to using a single ID on participating OpenID-enabled sites. Rather, it just means that, if you wish, you can use a single user/password across all OpenID-enabled sites without having to register separately for each of those sites (which is the main point of OpenID and similar systems).

You don't have to do that, though - if you prefer, you could stick to using a different ID/password for each site, or have two or three different OpenID identifiers to use for different types of sites (I'll explain how below).

So I could have an "Improbulus" OpenID ID for all tech sites, another OpenID identity like "Singer" for (say) music-related sites, and yet another OpenID user for sites which I'd visit under my real name. And, given how strongly I feel about privacy and security/safety online, I would.

You can even have more than one OpenID from the same identity provider, e.g. VeriSign offers this option.

If you control more than one blog or website, you can use different URLs for different OpenID accounts. Put one bit of code in the head section of one blog, and put different delegation code in the head section of another blog or site!

Can you use more than one URL to "represent" the same OpenID identity?

Conversely, if you really want to you can have one OpenID account but put the exact same code in the head section of more than one blog or website.

Then you can log in to relying party sites using any of those blog URLs (but with the same password, the one you use for that particular OpenID account).

For instance if I put the MyOpenID code above (altered for my MyOpenID username of course) in the head section of the template for this blog, and also put it in the head section of the template for a test blog originalimprobulus.blogspot.com, then I could log in to any OpenID-enabled site by using either www.consumingexperience.com or originalimprobulus.blogspot.com as my "username" / OpenID identifier! Either would work.

What you shouldn't do though is to try to insert delegation code more than once in the same template, but pointing to different OpenID providers' servers. The site you're visiting might throw a fit trying to deal with being directed to more than one OpenID provider, or it might just take the first one it finds in the head section and ignore later ones, but either way it's not a great idea and I for one don't intend to try it as I don't want to be responsible for giving any poor widdle servers the wobblies, they've got enough to contend with as it is.

The OpenID login process - a walk through

A quick walk through the OpenID login steps might be helpful at this point - that is, logging in to an OpenID-enabled relying party site with your OpenID.
  1. Find the OpenID login page or tab on the relying party site. That can be the hardest challenge in this process! On some sites the login is OpenID as standard, but on other sites unfortunately you have to choose the correct tab or select the correct option (which sometimes is well hidden away or needs some hunting around for), in order to be able to use OpenID for the login.


  2. Enter your OpenID URL. Once you find the OpenID login page or tab, you'll see that they only ask for your OpenID user or identifier, i.e. your OpenID URL, see the screenshot above. No password is required at this stage, nor should it be (if it asks for your OpenID password it may be a bad site trying to get hold of your info!). Just put in your OpenID URL and carry on. (Note: it seems you can leave out the initial "https://" and any final "/" in the URL - works for lazyfingers me, anyway, so I'd just enter www.consumingexperience.com.)

  3. Behind the scenes. The relying party site then, behind the scenes, goes to find the webpage whose URL you entered, and (if you entered your own URL rather than the special URL given by your provider) sees if there's delegation code in the webpage source (this is known as "discovery"). Then, it goes to whichever server of the OpenID provider is specified in the delegation code.

    • Of course, if you entered the URL assigned to you by your OpenID provider (e.g. my VeriSign OpenID URL is http://improbulus.pip.verisignlabs.com), it will go straight to your OpenID provider's servers without checking any other webpage.

  4. Your identity provider kicks in. At this point things may differ depending on whether you were already logged in with your OpenID provider before you went to the relying party site. The common factor is that you are now redirected to your OpenID provider's site. This might not always be obvious. But you shouldn't be taken to any site - only your provider's site. Be suspicious if it doesn't seem to be your provider's site.

    • Choose registration details. If you had already logged in with your OpenID provider via the same web browser before you tried to visit the relying party site, you can just choose or edit any further registration details required by the relying party site (as mentioned above), and then login (sometimes it may be the other way round, you may only be asked for further registration details after you log in). And you'll be taken back to the relying party's site, all nicely registered (if necessary) and logged in. In the screenshot below, I'd click Add Persona (outlined in red) if I wanted to use a different persona with different registration details.


    • Enter password and choose registration details. If you hadn't yet logged in with your provider (and there's no particular reason why you should be), then you'll need to enter your OpenID password on your provider's site - that is, the password for your OpenID account with that particular provider - also, before you can proceed further. (If all checks out, i.e. you give the right password, again you'll be taken back to the relying party's site.)


    • Choose how long your sign-in is good for. In the MyOpenID screenshot a couple of pics above, do you see in the bottom right hand corner something I've outlined in blue? "Allow Forever, Allow Once, Deny". Those options are self-explanatory. You can choose to always allow that relying party site, if you trust it and want to be able to access it more easily in future, with "Allow Forever". Similarly, just before the "Which OpenID identity provider?" section above, the VeriSign screenshot shows a "Trusted Site Expiration" box at the bottom: Never expire, Expire on [a date of your choice], Expire after signing in. Similarly if you use Blogger as your identity provider:


  5. Return to relying party site. If you've entered your correct password with your provider, then it'll take you back to the relying party's site, confirming to the relying party that it all checks out, and you'll be registered / logged in to the reyling party site.

Note that it's the server at your OpenID provider that checks that you've entered the right password for the OpenID account associated with your URL. The relying party site never gets to see your password. Simple and effective, isn't it?


Blogs and OpenID

Now on to blogs. There are of course two ways in which OpenID can be relevant to a blog, on whatever blogging platform:
  1. Can the blog accept OpenID logins from commenters? i.e. is it an OpenID relying party, is it OpenID-enabled?

  2. Can you use your blog URL as an OpenID login (a) with delegation, or (b) directly (i.e. without having to insert any delegation code)?
I'm really mainly a Blogger user so I'm going to cover in detail just that platform. However, I believe there is a WordPress plugin for those who want to enable OpenID commenting on WordPress blogs and see this on amending WordPress files.

Allow commenting on your Blogger blog by OpenID users

For 1, as mentioned earlier the answer is now "Yes" for Blogger / Blogspot blogs. Blogger blogs can now be set up to allow comments by people who login using OpenID.

As you'll know if you have a Blogger blog, you can control the sorts of people who can post comments on your blog: Anyone, Registered Users, Users with Google Accounts or Only members of the blog (Dashboard - Settings tab, Comments, Who Can Comment).

Obviously "Anyone" lets anyone comment on your blog, even anonymously. So it's up to them if they want to use OpenID or not.

If you want to stop anonymous comments but allow readers to comment using their OpenIDs, you can pick "Registered Users" to enable OpenID commenting. This would widen the pool of commenters beyond just other Blogger users. In other words, "Registered Users" will allow both OpenID and Blogger users to comment (AOL, LiveJournal etc logins are of course just one type of OpenID, as you now know):


And Blogger will even give hints to LiveJournal, WordPress, TypePad or AIM users as to the format to use for their OpenID:


There's Blogger Help on OpenID commenting and Kirk's post on enabling OpenID support on blog comments for Blogger gives a step by step on how to use OpenID to comment on a Blogger blog (as does a Technorati post, using your Technorati profile as your OpenID ). There was a little niggle which Kirk pointed out but they fixed it, Blogger folk generally listen to him!

What about using your blog URL as your OpenID? As mentioned above, you can now simply use your Blogger blog's URL as your OpenID username when logging in to any OpenID-supporting site - just go your Blogger dashboard, Settings, OpenID tab to check what your OpenID URL from Blogger is.

If you want to use your own domain name on Blogger but use Blogger as your identity provider, just use delegation, as I've already covered above (and as Kirk previously had, much more concisely, in his post).

Team Blogger have given some delegation code in a Blogger in Draft post:
<link rel="openid.server" href="http://draft.blogger.com/openid-server.g">
<link rel="openid.delegate" href="http://yourbloggerblog.blogspot.com/">

In case anyone is confused by that, the code is to let you use Blogger as your OpenID provider, but instead of using your Blogspot.com URL as your OpenID identifier, you can use your own domain name URL. So say you owned the domain MyGreatDomain.com, and you had a Blogger blog at MyGreatBlog.blogspot.com. You'd change the HTML of MyGreatDomain.com's base webpage to add the delegation code above, changing "yourbloggerblog.blogspot.com" to "MyGreatBlog.blogspot.com" in the second line.

Then in future you can login to an OpenID-enabled site by using MyGreatDomain.com as your username (instead of using MyGreatBlog.blogspot.com), but using your Blogger password as the password. You wouldn't need to do anything to your Blogger blog's template.

What if you have a custom domain with Blogger? Now I haven't tested it yet but I expect that in that case either you wouldn't need any delegation code at all, or else you would insert the delegation code given by Blogger in the head section of your blog template, but changing yourbloggerblog.blogspot.com to your custom domain's URL.

OpenID tools for end users

I've only come across a couple of OpenID tools for OpenID endusers i.e. us consumers (as opposed to identity providers), so far.

Both are free add-ons or extensions for the fab Firefox browser (how to install a Firefox extension; ) and they're intended to help you manage your OpenIDs, if you have more than one, and help to automatically fill in your OpenID username (i.e. identifier URL) in the appropriate box on the sign-in page of OpenID-supporting sites whenever you go to the login page, to save you typing in the logon URL manually.

Be warned that I haven't had the chance to test them properly yet, but I'm listing them here for those interested, they both add icons to the right of your Firefox status bar; I've outlined them both in the screenshot below:


  • Appalachian (download) - for the modern privacy freak like me, who has more than one OpenID ID... Outlined in orange in the pic above (and the icon is an orange oval).

    • They say "Appalachian assists users by storing which of their OpenIDs have been used on which sites. It is inadvisable to use one OpenID for all identification purposes, especially if you want to keep your activities in one regard separate from another, or if you desire anonymity. "

    • "Appalachian also keeps you from repeatedly typing your OpenID."

    • "To shield you from a well-recognized weakness in the OpenID login protocol, Appalachian will also help you combat phishing attacks by explicitly verifying that the login protocol is proceeding as it should or noticeably warning you when it appears the login protocol is deviating from expectations."

    • Once installed you'll get that little orange oval in the status bar of Firefox as shown above. Rightclick it for settings etc:


      At first sight it doesn't look very user friendly, but you're supposed to be able to add OpenID info for your IDs just by logging in to your OpenID provider's page, whereupon the oval should show a blue plus sign, see below, and left clicking that should automatically add in your OpenID details for that provider; however, it wouldn't work for me, so I may have to add the info manually - would be interested to know if anyone has managed to get it to fill in the details automatically?:


  • VeriSign's SeatBelt plugin - outlined in red in the status bar, bottom right, in the screenshots earlier. This is meant to ease OpenID signin and looks out for phishing attacks - it was produced for VeriSign PIP users mainly, of course, but there's an option to add other providers and switch between them (if the other providers support Seat Belt).

    Here are some screenshots of SeatBelt's settings:


    As you can see from the pic below, it lets you add other OpenID providers apart from VeriSign, too; in fact, when I login to MyOpenID on the MyOpenID site, SeatBelt seems to automatically detect that login, which is great (see the screenshot above which shows my URL identifier next to the lock icon at the bottom right). So that beats Appalachian for starters, where clicking the plus sign doesn't do anything at all to grab your OpenID details from your provider and store them in Appalachian:


    There's a tab in the settings for OpenID delegation also, but it doesn't automagically insert delegation code for you, alas - what it does is to let you enter your preferred URL (e.g. blog or own site URL) in a "Delegate Identity URL" box and choose the OpenID provider you're using for that, and then when you go to an OpenID-supporting site it'll automatically fill in the username box with the URL of your blog or site. But you still have to add the delegation code to your blog or site before that'll work properly.


    Don't worry about the following "error" by the way, that just means you haven't logged in with an OpenID provider during your current Firefox session. You just need to login there before SeatBelt will fill in your OpenID identifier for you on OpenID-enabled sites.

    This tools isn't without its problems or issues. For example I've been getting these even when logged in to an OpenID provider, and if you can't trust myopenid.com which is one of the original OpenID sites, who can you trust...? Shurely shomething wrong, shomewhere?:



    Still it's early days yet, I'm sure things will improve with time.
There are also some Greasemonkey OpenID user scripts but I've not tried them yet. (More on Greasemonkey for Firefox.)

I gather that Firefox 3.0 when out is due to have built-in OpenID support, but it doesn't seem a priority so who knows when...

Risks / problems with OpenID - security etc?

With the increased convenience comes some risk. If someone knows your blog or site URL and gets your OpenID password, they could of course login as you at any of the variety of sites supporting OpenID, so you're possibly more exposed in that way.

You'll thus be very dependent on the strength of the security of your OpenID provider. Which is a major reason why earlier I suggested you go for a well known one rather than a new tiny outfit from somewhere you've never heard of.

And phishing may indeed be made easier by OpenID.

Arguments seem to rage either way, see e.g. this post. I'm taking a "wait and see" approach myself, but I really like the concept of OpenID and want it to succeed.

And the future of OpenID?

Hopefully more sites will support OpenID in future. One interesting development as I mentioned is that some providers allow you to have several different "personas" associated with the same OpenID identity e.g. one for technology sites, one for things accordion, one for sites where others share your secret passion for collecting candy bar wrappers, and so on.

There seems to be more progress generally, with technologies meant to be complementary to OpenID like OAuth being developed (more on OAuth and its relationship with OpenID; Wikipedia entry) and, of course, the DataPortability movement.

But I don't think OpenID will take off properly until more sites agree to support OpenID as relying parties, not just as identity providers. Indeed, it's even been suggested that big companies which just set up as providers are exploiting their users (AOL rebuttal..). Google has been mentioned as one of the few that is both a provider and "consumer" with Blogger, but in fact it's not really fully supporting OpenID in Blogger yet, because if you want to create and post to a Blogger blog you have to have a Google account - not just an OpenID identifier.

Time will tell...

More OpenID info

If you're keen to find out more about OpenID, try these: