- Flickr Related Tag Browser – by the creators of the Flickr Postcard Browser
This must have been everywhere in the last couple of days, but hey. Love it. Awesome. Beautiful. - The Smiths set for academic study
“Morrissey has enjoyed an up-and-down solo career
Iconic 1980s indie group The Smiths are to be studied at an academic conference in Manchester, their home town.” - Branding the band
“What’s the best band name ever? Is it Mot√∂rhead, Neutral Milk Hotel – or could it even be the Band?” - The Coming War on Blogs by James D Miller
“I can think of three areas in which the MSM might successfully change laws and regulations to hinder their blogger competitors…” - Glassdog on BoingBoing making money
At the little weblog conference I was at the other day, someone said that BoingBoing was making $40,000 a month. I have no idea if this is true… - Josh Schachter quits his job to take del.icio.us professional
I really hope this one works out for him. I’m a bit nervous that it won’t easily translate into a commercial space… - Ludicrous bollocks about ‘how to save the internet’ from a whole range of people I would feel on-the-whole quite comfortable giving unpleasant labels
If this is the kind of stuff that Cory Doctorow is dealing with on a daily basis, I guess I can understand why he’s set himself up so strongly in opposition - Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger to arrive in April
I’m catching up on a lot of open tabs at the moment. Could be doing that on Tiger within a month!
Category: Random
Links for 2005-03-26
- The editor of BBC News Online comments about the cuts at the BBC
For us it means a proposal to close about 12 journalism posts directly related to this website in the coming year. We have yet to finalise our plans for years two and three… Will you notice? Probably… - Entertaining Gay Comic strip – I give you, “Young Bottoms in Love…”
I think maybe the title’s the best bit though… - From Homogenous to Honey
A comic strip written by Neil Gaiman in the 80s in protest against Britain’s Clause 28 - Flickr users discuss the BBC News story
Apologies to anyone who thought I was belittling their work on the site – that couldn’t be further from the truth…
Links for 2005-03-25
- Banksy improves some of New York’s finest museums “Dressed as a British pensioner, over the last few days Banksy entered each of the galleries and attached one of his own works, complete with authorative name plaque and explanation.”
Links for 2005-03-24
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Phil Gyford writes about Flickr for BBC News (and talks to Timo and me as well)
“It’s about capturing moments – things your eyes have got caught on – and doing what you’d do to a friend if they happened to be on the street with you, saying ‘check that out, isn’t that awesome’..” -
Sanity is Having A Massage – Flickr-style
Ah. Back in the UK. Work. Flat. Computers. How very drole. {snaps} -
Jamie4U is the funniest parody of a young gay weblog that I’ve ever read. Well done sir! Bravo…
“Then me and Craig were like boyfriends for a whole week, but then I got bored of him and dumped him because he was too clingy and I needed like SPACE and FREEDOM to BE MYSELF.” -
Awesome eboy poster of London that I ordered and arrived in the office today…
It’s beautiful and it’s huge! I have no idea where to put it… -
BBC to cut 2,000 programme jobs
The BBC is to cut more than 2,000 jobs in its programme-making divisions and new media… -
Jeremy Dear and Mark Thompson go head-to-head about the BBC cuts
“The BBC has announced more job losses in its programme-making divisions, bringing the total to 2,050 over three years, as it seeks to save ¬£355m a year to reinvest in programmes.” -
Riding Shanghai’s maglev, the world’s fastest train…
Sounds like a vaguely uninspiring experience, a waste of money and a tremendously impressive futurist folly. We need more of this… -
BBC faces strike ballot deadline
“Union leaders have threatened to hold a strike ballot at the BBC if it presses ahead with its plan for 2,050 redundancies at the corporation.”
A few images of sunrises…
So catch-up time. We left the Farmer’s Daughter hotel on Sunday morning, wandered around the mall a bit (completely exhausted), and then managed to get ourselves to the airport and on the way back home. I think we were all feeling a bit more relaxed and peaceful after all of the stresses of the last few weeks, so it was a bit unfortunate that we arrived back in the office halfway through Mark Thompson’s announcement that an additional 2,000 BBC staff were going to be cut.
Brief beautiful moments caught from bad nights sleep put everything into context a bit, I guess. Or at least as much as they can. Hm. This was about five o’clock in the morning on the day of one of the ETech papers:
Two notes about Barbelith…
So after a conversation with Chris Heathcote earlier today, it has occured to me that I should let people know about the current status of Barbelith and remind people about some old bits of functionality that we had in the day that suddenly got popular in the background and which I completely forgot about…
For those of you who don’t know, Barbelith is an experimental discussion board that I set up a few years ago with later help from Cal. It’s a discussion board with a roughly counter-cultural / intellectualist spin, and it’s been running now for about six and a half years. It has fora on all kinds of neat stuff, from gender politics and philosophy through to chaos magick, film theory and comic books.
Unfortunately a (long) while back it came under attack by some really persistent trolls and so as a consequence we temporarily closed it to new memberships until we could do some technology fixes behind the scenes. These fixes were designed to really push the envelope of community design around some interesting principles that I’d been thinking around. Unfortunately, both the redevelopment work and the weblog I started to discuss creative online community development stuttered under the weight of work pressures and haven’t really started since. So the community hasn’t had many new members except ones that I’ve manually let in. This has been a terrible terrible shame and hasn’t helped the community develop, but the board’s members have fought manfully through this period and remain an engaged and intelligently argumentative bunch.
Recently some of the community proposed that they should come to my rescue by taking on much of the work that was supposed to be systematised and doing it by hand. It’s a tremendously cool response from them – and one that I think could work (at least for the short-term). The consequence is that now, if you want to join Barbelith as a member then there’s a better chance now than pretty much at any time over the last year. All you need to do is to read this thread here and do what it says. Fundamentally it just comes down to you persuading the members concerned that you are roughly who you say you are and that you’re not a lunatic. If they’re comfortable with that, then they’ll e-mail me your address and I’ll invite you onto the site sometime in the couple of weeks after that. It’s not the most elegant of systems, but I think it’ll work until we can sort out something better.
Alongside this I should also talk about the Barbelith RSS feeds which we launched in August 2002 (wow, nearly three years ago now). At the time I don’t know that we really expected the explosion of interest in RSS that has happened more recently, and since I always assumed that the existence of the feeds was pretty well-known, I’ve never really bothered to promote them. Anyway, there’s more information about them here: RSS Feeds and Newsreaders – including ways to hack the URL so that you can get feeds for specific parts of the board. Can I particularly recommend these following feeds as being a really good way to keep up with things that people are talking about:
- Latest threads about philosophy, science and current affairs
- Latest threads about chaos magick, religion and mysticism
- Latest threads about books, comics, music and film
- Upcoming Barbelith Events
I might try and get a little work done on these feeds over the weekend, but no promises. In the meantime, add them to your RSS reader today. Now it’s nearly 1am again and I need to go to bed.
Links for 2005-03-22
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The blue whales extrude bubbles, the pink ones pulse elevating noises. It’s easier than it sounds…(categories: denisewilton)
Links for 2005-03-20
- It’s not funny because it’s rude, it’s funny cos…
Well because it looks like it’s funny because it’s rude… - Lions in coffee cream
Beautiful, elegant and I hope it was intentional - Mediocre reviews for Daft Punk’s new album: Human After All
I’ll buy it anyway, of course, and pray that everyone else is just wrong… - Rogue Amoeba is “Airfoil” allows you to pump any audio from your computer through AirTunes
We tried it with some television last night and it was a full two-seconds behind. Someone has to fix this. It’s too important… - Many-to-Many: Amazon’s Statistically Improbable Phrases
Amazon pulling out improbable phrases from books – could they be used for fauxonomic tagging? - Another year another “Is ETech discriminatory” thread
I wish I could say I agreed and saw a cause here worth fighting for, but the argument is starting to sound a bit shrill to me now… - Matt Jones on the new Doctor Who
Interesting thoughts on the publically-leaked series from the BBC - Another attempt to formalise and structure fauxonomic tagging which I fear is doomed to fail
But it triggered some interesting ideas for me around how a site that aggregated tags should operate… - If you hug a needie the other two bitch about the third one behind his back…
Wonderful implementation of pervasively networked toys from Tom Igoe’s talk at ETech 2005 - Junkie’s Little Helper – as mentioned by Tom Igoe at ETech 2005
Tracks your drug use and keeps all your friends informed about how high you are in a chatroom - Cat fungus rots your brain, and makes you slutty or mean…
I’m suspicious of the science, but I love the story. Thanks to Dan Pike for pointing me in this direction…
I'm going to get lynched…
Oh shit. I think I just woke up everyone else I’m staying in the hotel with by sticking headphones into my Mac, pressing play and then ramping up the volume when nothing appeared to happen – forgetting that the computer was busy streaming all the noise to Matt and Matt‘s stereo in their room downstairs. I’m going to get lynched.
I’m in Los Angeles now at the glorious little Farmer’s Daughter Hotel near the Farmer’s Market with Manar, Webb and Biddulph. It is raining outside. The hotel’s suites are awesome – although we’ve already put paid to much of the ambience by dousing the entire place in cables, airport express wifi networks, pizza boxes, beer bottles, bottles of coke, bits of paper and chunks of apple packaging. Ah, beautiful geekdom. I salute thee. Tomorrow it’s off to the airport and back to London.
I’m still in ETech recovery mode – I’ve been processing and reprocessing my notes, trying to find the themes of the year, but I’m afraid you’re going to have to wait a little longer for that because they’re not ready yet. My general reaction has been a bit subdued though. The last two years I’ve been to the conference I felt as if someone had hit the brain-reboot button a couple of times. This time, for the most part, little came as a surprise. The positive spin on that might be that I’m now so well-connected in the future tech sphere that I’ve become cynical and hard to impress – but I don’t think I believe that for one moment. Matt Jones has taken back his scepticism about this year’s agenda, but I’ve still yet to make up my mind about whether or not he was right all along…
There were more than a few things that got the heart pounding, of course. I’ve never been more delighted to have my cynicism proven wrong than I was during Ev Williams / Odeo / Podcasting talk. In the space of about twenty-five minutes I went from wondering if Ev had burned-out on Blogger through to evangelising Odeo all over the place and wondering if he had any jobs that I’d be good at. I’ll write more about this later, I think, because there’s so much there that people should really be getting excited about and I want to do it justice.
The two papers we were in town to do felt completely different to me. I’ve already written a bit about the Reinventing Radio paper, but I didn’t say much about the reaction to it. In the room somehow it felt a bit flat to me – that people weren’t sparking off it as much as they’d expected to. There was uniform engagement, but at a rather light level. I’ll be posting some more stuff around this area once I’ve had a change to take stock a bit and get myself in the right frame of mind – and I think we’re going to try and open up one of the demos we did during the event as well. That might help people start to get the directions we were talking in.
The Programme Information Pages paper was a completely different kettle of fish though. The room was barely a third full to start off with, and I was worried enough about people getting why it was exciting beforehand that I felt compelled to actually state out loud beforehand that they might not. And then the screen went down in the middle of Gavin’s part of the session which threw everyone off whack a bit. Things did not – in a word – appear to be going terribly well. Even when the paper ended, a good block of the audience seemed entirely non-plussed by the whole thing. But what was extraordinary to me was that there was a proportion of the audience who genuinely seemed to get what we were talking about and when they did they got very excited. After the paper each of us got into separate passionate discussions with three or four people who had really seen some of the implications of the very simplest of ideas implemented properly and what that could mean for a world in which at least one significant group of people were moving into a post-broadcast mindset. I felt much much better about this paper than I did about the radio one – and I’ll be posting up the presentation itself in all its slightly unstyled glory in a few days.
In terms of the BBC presence at the event, I think that Paula LeDieu’s final High Order Bit on the Creative Archive really drew everything together and people who’d seen all of our papers started to see the edges of a unified vision of the future. Or at least I hope that’s what happened. Paula’s brief paper blew the room away at least a couple of times. It’s an exciting time to be at the BBC…