There’s a moment about a fifth of the way through King Kong (IMDB / Metacritic) when a young character who’s reading a copy of Heart of Darkness suddenly twigs that he’s not reading an adventure story. And then about thirty seconds later, you realise you’re not watching an adventure story either. And then the ground falls out from underneath your feet and the next time you breathe it’s about an hour later and you’re so hooked and consumed by the whole experience that you don’t want the film to ever end. I’ve never seen a movie that so comprehensively crapped on any and all opposition, that so savagely went for your throat and held you by it until you begged for mercy. God knows how it’ll stand up to repeated viewings – it’s not a short film and there are patches where you could find fault – but for the moment I can only say that there’s never been a blockbuster like this, it’s going to clean up everywhere and I’d put money on it putting years on Speilberg. Unbeatable. Amazing. Must see. Wow.
Author: Tom Coates
Links for 2005-12-14
- Alexa Web Search Platform “The Alexa Web Search Platform provides public access to the vast web crawl collected by Alexa Internet. Users can search and process billions of documents — even create their own search engines — using Alexa’s search and publication tools.”
Links for 2005-12-13
- The Best Web 2.0 Software of 2005 I’m not buying the Web 2.0 = web app concept as such, but this is still a pretty solid list of good web apps out there and hence (at the very least) pretty much a place to find the gold standard to get inspired by…
- The Several Habits of Wildly Successful del.icio.us Users I know pretty much all of this stuff, but del.icio.us can have a bit of a learning curve for new users. It’s generally worth it in the end though. Explore away!
- Punk photographer Andy Rosen has signed up for Flickr and is starting to post his private collection… Astonishing stuff – and apparently confirmed by various people around the place. Mass amateurisation goes both ways, as professionals start to take advantage of the more innovative tools of the little guys…
- Openomy – an online file-system with tags Haven’t had a play with this yet, but I’m intrigued by the idea of enhancing the very idea of online storage in various ways. Bears further investigation…
- Yahoo! offers Movable Type as part of its offering for small professional outfits “Yahoo will effectively act as the preferred provider of Movable Type for small business users, taking advantage of its scale and efficiency, Anil Dash, vice president of professional products for San Francisco-based Six Apart, said in a phone interview.”
- Hotwiring Your Search Engine Repulsive SEOs wallow in their own crapulence over on Newsweek, happy to ignore the evidence that search engine position based on lies is always going to be under attack from search engines eager to reduce spam.
Update from San Francisco…
So I’m halfway through my first Yahoo-employed trip to San Francisco and I’ve been so bloody busy that I’ve not really had much of an opportunity to keep up with my e-mail or my community or with what’s been going on around the internet. What’s made the whole thing even more difficult to keep hold of has been my pernicious gut-rot, which kicked in on Wednesday evening (vomit everywhere) and has continued now for almost five days solidly. The initial grotesquery has been replaced with a perpetual sourness, recurrent belching and vicious and unexpected cramping. Other than Thursday, where I could barely get out of bed, I’ve tried not to let it stop me doing things, but it’s certainly put a tiring dampener on the whole experience.
Yesterday I was persuaded by Simon and Dinah to go for a drive over the Golden Gate to look at some Redwoods. I was initially reluctant, but with the exception of a few moments of minor inflating body horror, the whole experience was pretty special. The whole day has been carefully (and expensively) documented via MMS-to-Flickr (A day with Simon and Dinah), and here are some odd pictures below that should help capture the whole thing:
Workwise, the whole trip has been extremely illuminating – a hell of a lot has happened while I’ve been out here, including the official announcement of the acquisiton of del.icio.us by the mothership. It looks like a fair number of people are nervous about the whole thing, but I can’t help thinking that they’re going to be in good company near the Flickr and Upcoming crew out here in Mission College. I’m looking forward to getting the little London Tech Dev team that we’re setting up playing with the emerging Yahoo Social Software scene. We should be able to come up with some pretty neat stuff.
What else has been going on? I went to see Narnia with Cal and I’m sorry to say that I think that the critics for the most part got this one wrong – the first two thirds of the film, adapted inelegantly from the book, are pretty mediocre at best and pretty terrible at worst. The last third – barely referenced in the book – is substantially better if you’re prepared to see Lord of the Rings-style tropes slapped on the screen with little innovation or creativity. I found the whole thing disappointing, and was only pleasantly surprised by the actor who played Peter Pevensie who is the spitting image of my little brother (also called Peter). Very strange. My little brother in a movie. Anyway – hopefully King Kong or Brokeback Mountain (which I’m hoping to squeeze in before I leave) will be more entertaining.
Otherwise, to the few nerds in the city I haven’t hung out with yet – I’m around until Friday and it would be great to see you. I’m not going to make it to Syndicate unfortunately, but I’m free most evenings and really trying to plug in both to what Yahoo are up to and what’s going on more widely. And then on Friday I can fly back to London and collapse in an exhausted heap in a pile of dirty laundry and let everything sink in for the couple of days before Christmas!
Links for 2005-12-10
- Metacritic reviews The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe – and likes it! I’ve fallen over with a revolting stomach bug overnight and feel like crap, but I’m still completely looking forward to the Narnia film and King Kong. Maybe I can persuade Cal to go too…
- Another film I’m looking forward to a lot – Brokeback Mountain 89 out of 100 for a gay cowboy movie. It’s difficult to see anything here that’s not worth investigating in greater depth…
So the big news of the day around my way is the acquisition of weirdly punctuated site del.icio.us by weirdly punctuated site (and my current employers) Yahoo!. You can read more about it on the Yahoo search blog (Two Great Tastes That Go Together) and on the del.icio.us blog (y.ah.oo!):
Jeremy: As Joshua writes, the del.icio.us team will soon be working in close proximity to their fraternal twin, Flickr. And just like we’ve done with Flickr, we plan to give del.icio.us the resources, support, and room it needs to continue growing the service and community. Finally, don’t be surprised if you see My Web and del.icio.us borrow a few ideas from each other in the future.
Joshua: We’re proud to announce that del.icio.us has joined the Yahoo! family. Together we’ll continue to improve how people discover, remember and share on the Internet, with a big emphasis on the power of community. We’re excited to be working with the Yahoo! Search team – they definitely get social systems and their potential to change the web. (We’re also excited to be joining our fraternal twin Flickr!)
Links for 2005-12-08
- MeetWithApproval.com – “Arrange a meeting or event. Work out which day is good for everyone & keep track of who is coming.” This is a lovely piece of kit – pretty easy to assemble, but really elegant. This would be a charming component of a larger social calendaring enterprise.
- Consumating.com gets bought by CNET There really does seem to be a bit of an explosion of really early-stage acquisitions going on around the place at the moment. It’s interesting…
Links for 2005-12-06
- The BBC has investigated the product placement claims I linked to a few days ago… “The investigation found that … where products had been sourced for free, this was done in accordance with the BBC’s guidelines. However, the investigation found … there were instances of product prominence that were not editorially justified…”
Bay Area, here I come…
Right then. This is a short post because I’ve got to set up a printer, do my washing, pack, pay my rent, package up a couple of letters, find all my dodgy peripherals, set alarms and clean up and stuff, but for those of you who are interested, I’ll be in the Bay Area for the next couple of weeks on work-related stuff (visiting the mothership). I don’t imagine I’ll have an enormous amount of time, but I just thought I’d let people know so they could ping me and we could try and work something out.
Which reminds me. I’m looking for someone better at Latin than I to write a convincing motto that goes something like “Honour and Fun”, for a completely personal project that I don’t have time to implement. Anyone up to the challenge?
Links for 2005-12-01
- An evening with Jon Stewart of the Daily Show – in London, in about a week! No idea if they have any tickets left, and I’m not going to be able to go because I’m in the US, but I can’t imagine that it would be anything but pretty bloody awesome. Go if you have motor function anywhere.
- There’s an entertaining web development kind of cartoon over at Scaryideas today And you know what it indicates to me – that you’d be much better having fewer people on a project and that communication is above all the most important element – hence rapid iterative multi-disciplinary work is best. Which I knew already!
- Nick Denton spells out the web apps and businesses that every start-up should be using… Some great stuff here, although much of it is more appropriate to the US than it is to us poor saps living in Start-Up Free Britain…
- Surprise! Computer scientists model the exclamation point I find myself newly interested in the science of the exclamation mark after joining Yahoo(!) I’ll be honest, the brand’s punctuation offends my grumpy old sod tendencies and desire to write non-offensive English… Perhaps science can help…
- Cameron Moll talks about 180 days of freelancing… I work freelance for a few months about four / five years ago and I was a disaster. I had no idea how to promote my work, manage cashflow. Total nightmare. I’m only now beginning to think that I’d be capable doing it properly.
- Interesting Psychology Today article on training yourself to wake up in the mornings… I’ve not had an alarm clock for about six years now, and I’m always awake at roughly the right time. If I have a special event I need to be up for, I look at the clock and visualise the hands turning around until the time I want to wake up, and then – alm
- Firefox 1.5 is launched And although I had some weird confusions trying to download it through Safari, I can state without question that the page works perfectly in Firefox 1
- Clearing out my Inbox of things to write about, I find that the BBC has been inadvertantly (geddit?) broadcasting product placements… “Companies are paying fees of up to ¬£40,000 to advertise their products covertly on BBC programmes, often in breach of the corporation‚Äôs rules.”
- Onlife – keeps track of pretty much everything you’re doing, keeping an impromptu record of your life… I wanted to write about this when it came out, but as usual decided it needed a greater degree of depth than a linklog post and – as a result – wrote nothing. The idea is great. The execution is pretty good. It slowed down my mac a fair deal though.