June 2005 Archives

Microformats blog and wiki launch

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Tantek (among others?) has launched a site to promote XHTML-based microformats as a microcontent solution building on existing standards.

(Boy, poking my head into Yahoo 360 sure gets me up to speed on industry buzz quickly. Then again, that's more a function of the social network I brought with me and a bit of currentness - currency - working together).

Anyway, check out the microformats wiki to see the formats being discussed so far, currently including

  • hCalendar
  • hCard
  • RelLicense
  • RelNoFollow
  • RelTag
  • VoteLinks
  • XFN
  • XMDP
  • XOXO

Other formats, including hReview (I've been looking for a unified review data model for quite some time - so we can make a distributed "epinions"-type network out of the world's blogs), are under discussion as draft specifications.

Yahoo launches My Web 2.0 beta

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My Web 2.0 looks like some kind of taglicious social search engine.

When to use wikis

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As the LA Times seemed to have learned, perhaps editorials aren't the best context for publicly editable wiki-ing.

Wikis seem to work best when used to build a repository of information by people who share a common goal or ethos.

I wrote about this last week at Personal Democracy Forum in an article my editors entitled "Wikis: Productivity or Plague?"

Compacter

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What makes someone park their big-ass 4x4 across two spaces clearly marked "COMPACT" in the parking lot of my office building?

Probably the same thing that would make someone write ASSWIPE on a post-it and put it under their windshield wiper facing in.

LA Times 'wikitorials' vandalized, taken down

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It seems that the wiki got slashdotted, which lead to pr0n being posted (goatse, I wonder?), and the site being removed in response: Full Circle Online Interaction Blog: LA Times WikiTorial Update - vandalized.

(via Nancy White, via Weblogsky)

GRM?

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In the POM book I talk about a technology practice that I refer to as ARM, meaning "activist relationship management," modeled on the idea of CRM (customer relationship management). ARM is big business these days (see Personal Democracy Forum's coverage of the flap over ARM vendor Convio's policies regarding who they will work with as customers).

All of these various *RM concepts can be loosely related together under the heading of GRM or group relationship management. Over on Weblogsky, Jon Lebkowsky is exploring the idea of Weblogsky: Group Relationship Management, which keeps cropping up in the online discussions of activist technology, CivicSpace, CiviCRM, and related topics.

It's a beautiful day

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The view from ExtractableTraffic was light today on the way to San Mateo, so my commute took only about 35 minutes instead of the usual 40 to 50. First Sunday of the summer. I snapped this photo from my window with my new phone (just switched from Verizon to Cingular and will save money in the process).

My new job's new web site

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Not that I can take any credit for it, but Extractable has a spanking new web site launching today with a slicker look and some updated content. Congratulations to the crew who did the redesign!

LA Times to try wikitorials

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This sounds llike a cool idea (Bright Lightbulb Overhead: LATimes.com Goes Wiki):

I won't believe this until I see it launched and operating unmolested by higher-ups for a good month or so, but barely a month after relaunching a cleaner, freer web site, LATimes.com is planning to launch a wiki to invite public comment and discourse on its editorials.

This will take the form of something called slyly - but vaguely - "wikitorials," according to today's op-ed message from editorial pages editor Andres Martinez....

Happy birthday month to b

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B and I can never cram a full celebration into one single day a year, so we like to celebrate birthday months, with gifts and special events appropriate at any time for a loosely defined month surrounding the birthday in question.

B's birthmonth got off to a good start this past weekend with a wonderful (as always) dinner at BayWolf on Friday night (after my second day on my new job). Then Saturday evening, her actual birthday, we saw Wilco at the Greek Theatre.

The Court and Spark opened. Funny how they seem to be named after a Joni Mitchell album. This SF band is a bunch of young-ish guys playing rootsy, guitar-driven rock. The lead singer is kind of tall and gangly. His mic was set up so he had to crouch a little to sing, and he tends to punctuate his verses with a kind of spasm of bending his knees and almost seeming like he might start duckwalking (but not).

At first this made a poor impression on me, because his microphone wasn't amplified correctly so his voice was faint and wimpy sounding. I liked the lead guitarist a lot more because he seemed to be quietly making all the best sounds. Finally, word got back to the band and the lead singer started singing from the bass players microphone and then everything clicked into place and the second half of the set was very enjoyable. He is in fact a good singer with a strong voice and once the sound was right his mannerisms didn't signify to me at all.

Then Wilco took command of the stage and were just fantastic. B had never seen nor heard the band before and she was still fully entertained, very taken with Jeff Tweedy's charismatic stage presence and singing voice. At one point she said something like "it's all about him, isn't it?" This was only my second time hearing them (the first was at Jazz Fest), but once again I was had a great time.

There are few bands that you can enjoy without knowing their material well. The audience is full of culty lovers of every song who sing along and cheer nearly every song choice, but I found that on the majority of songs that I was unfamiliar with by the end of a verse or chorus I felt entirely drawn in.

Sunday we went down to Palo Alto to celebrate with B's parents. B did a bunch of yard work and I brought my uke and serenaded her with happy birthday and Effervescing Elephant and Salty Dog and The Angels Changed My Name.

Perhaps the best part of the weekend though was the idle time we spent in the back yard. Or, rather, I was idle on the hammock - she was mostly puttering in the garden or trying to prevent the cat from eating birds.

New feedreader with tagging

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Via Waxy.org links comes news of yet another feed reader, FeedLounge that offers tagging along with some NetNewsWire-type features, such as saving feed entries forever and flagging entries. It supports all browsers and imports OPML, naturally.

Currently in an invite-only alpha.

The web-based feedreader market is getting crowded. When will they start doing more dynamic attention-y things? There's no way this manual management of feeds is going to scale.

Open source Meetup replacment?

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From this post at Am I Patriotic it sounds like plans to develop an open source meeting scheduler to replace Meetup continue afoot.

As PNH calls it: The book meme that ate blogdom's brain

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OK, OK, I'll play (I guess you can call this entry the final straw, although I wasn't "tagged" by it, so this is kind of a bastard-child in terms of meme lineage):

Total number of books owned:


No idea. At least 2000. Possibly double that, counting boxes of books in the basement. Would be a multiple of that again if I hadn't purged my author copies and editor copies of every book I was ever personally involved in a few years back with the help / at the insistence of b.

Last book bought:


Paperback of John Coltrane: His Life and Music by Lewis Porter, on the recommendation of xourmas, who says the way we've been studying music theory together and learning to play has some parallels in Coltrane's own history.



Last book read:


Does re-reading count? If so, put me down for Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey / Maturin series, which I've just re-read for the umpteenth time. If not, Up from Conservatism by Michael Lind. It's now a tad out-of-date, and Lind is still more conservative than I have, but turncoats make the best informants.

Five books that mean a lot to you:

  1. The Truelove by Patrick O'Brian. One of my favorites from that series.
  2. Money and the Meaning of Life by Jacob Needleman. A philosopher takes a hard look at what money really is and what it means and why it matters. I'm probably overdue to read this again.
  3. Creatures of Light and Darkness by Roger Zelazny. One of his space-future reinterpretations of mythology, in this case Egyptian.
  4. Night Soldiers by Alan Furst. I love all of his books but this first one in the series sets the stage for the rest and begins the series of subtle interlinkings that connect them all.
  5. Invitation to a Beheading by Vladimir Nabokov. Again, this stands for many, but is definitely my favorite among them all. Conjures up mid 20th century totalitarianism and manages to weave together an intertwined take on literature and spirituality, at least the way I read it. Postmodern without being annoying.

Tag five people to continue this meme:


Cecil Vortex

Bill Cassel

Frances Pabon

Pete Gaughan

Willem Knibbe

This doesn't surprise me

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Quoting from More Alan Furst Blogging:

More Alan Furst blogging, this time from Unqualified Offerings:

Unqualified Offerings: Henry Farrell got me into a to-do for novelist Alan Furst at GWU this evening. The food was fabulous and the author did not disappoint. Controversial GWU President Stephen Joel Trachtenberg did the introduction, and it was good - the kind of informed appreciation a writer can get, if lucky, from a very smart fan. See previous Furst-blogging on this site and current Furst-blogging from Brad DeLong. Furst read a few pages from The Foreign Correspondent, which will be out in time for Father's Day - 2006. I have to say, the excerpt completely hooked me...

Now excuse me while I turn green with envy.

If anything I'd expect to see more discussion of Alan Furst in blogs. He's an incredible writer and as good as Patrick O'Brian is at conjuring up a different time in all its nuances. Now that I've read all his books I'm always impatient for the next one, and other supposedly similar writers out there (not naming any names) don't quite scratch the same itch.

Halley cast the tarot for me

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a mini tarot A few weeks ago when I was in New York for the PDF conference, Halley Suitt (rhymes with Sally Root) was offering to give tarot readings at the cocktail party the night before the conference. I've always been a fan of divination and the subconscious so I asked her to read me. Mary Hodder took a picture of us and put it up at Flickr and Jon Lebkowsky asked me to tell the story, so here's the reading as best as I can recall it (the closeup of the cards links to a larger "in situ" picture).

This was not one of your extended Celtic-cross type layouts. Halley had me choose three cards and then a final card for summation.

The first card was the Seven of Staves (or Wands). Note that I'm linking to pages that discuss the tarot and show the same deck, but that the interpretations may not tally precisely with what Halley read for me. The magic, as it were, for me in divination is the human element and what we read in each other consciously and unconsciously, so my memory of her words count much more to me than anyone else's generic interpretation. Halley told me that for a writer this card meant that I had something to say, that I needed to get out, and that if I were to persevere I would be successful in saying my piece.

(I am simplifying our dialogue because I do not remember all the details and nuances, though the gist was clear.)

My second card was The Devil, and Halley read it to mean that to achieve the success (in writing or speech) that I longed for I would need to embrace my inner "bad boy" - that I would have to deal with the dark side of myself and perhaps even indulge a kind of forbidden selfishness without which my own words would fail to make it to the surface. Naturally, this is a very powerful card, even with all of its obvious negative symbolism.

The third card was The Sun and Halley took this as a very good omen indeed, suggesting that if I were able to handle the darkness and get my words, my speech, my writing, my saying out of myself and accept the consequences good or ill, that I would meet with success, radiance, a happy ending.

The final card was the Five of Swords which Halley read to me as a form of victory with negative consequences. She pointed to the illustration and showed that the others have surrendered to the warrior, but that there was jealousy, resentment, negative feelings, and rumors surrounding the victor. Together we interpreted this as connecting to both the first and second cards, in that what probably holds me back from entirely expressing myself is a form of self-censorship driven by fear of selfishness and of how others will receive or perceive me. That is, I may be more afraid of being seen as selfish than of the actual vice of selfishness. Together, Halley read these cards as encouraging me to plow ahead and speak my mind and damn the consequences.

Not a bad reading on the eve of a public speaking event covering the twin power streams of politics and technology in my home city, the Mammon-ridden veritable capital of the planet, eh?

By the reefers of Bobby-lawn

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Ed Ward reminisces about Bob Marley and the Wailers and the rock music journalism scene of the mid 1970s, a reverie triggered by an old photo sent to him by an old friend. Great stuff.

Repurposing Deaniacs

Sharper eyes than mine have caught Bret Schundler's campaign website compositing images taken from the Dean campaign (Thank God I'm Not a Republican!):

Separated at Birth: Bret Schundler and Howard Dean:

One photo was taken at a 2004 Dean for President rally sponsored by the American University College Democrats in Washington, D.C.

The other photo comes from Bret Schundler's campaign website, advertising Schundler's Reform Gear

Photo Copyright John Pettitt 2003, courtesy CloudView.com

Photo Copyright John Pettitt 2003, courtesy CloudView.com

\\

Brad DeLong says "All Schundler needed was ten enthusiastic young supporters and a camera. And he couldn't find them?"

I was going to post this over at Personal Democracy Forum but Kate Kaye beat me to the punch.

Do we have a right to mine the record of our own "attention"?

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Steve Gillmor, a champion of the attention.xml concept, wonder whether there is an inalienable right to not just our own data but also the data describing our "gestures" and the record of where we've spent our attention.

These are not easy questions to muddle through as the urge to monetize Web 2.0 heats up all around us.

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