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Five years of plasticbag.org: The Visualisations

Five years of plasticbag.org – it has passed in a flash. It’s seen me move from temp jobs, through journalism school to more temp jobs, from multiple roles at Time Out, to working at emap, designing UpMyStreet Conversations (among others) and doing R&D work for the BBC. The last five years has seen webloggia change from a couple of hundred dorks mucking around on the internet to a few million dorks mucking around on the internet and being talked about a conferences. It’s seen the world go from millennial angst to millennial hope, only to see 9/11 happen and our countries declare war on Afghanistan and Iraq. In my personal life I’ve lived in three major homes, stayed on innumerable floors and been to America a fair few times. I’ve moved from writing about stuff on the web to stuff in my life and back to stuff on the web again and had a small but statistically significant number of particularly disasterous relationships. God knows if I can manage another five years like the last five (I don’t know if I’d be able to survive it to be honest), but if I do I think maybe I’ll be looking for a party to celebrate…

Anyway, a few days ago I put up a dump of every post ever published on plasticbag.org for people to rip apart as they pleased. I thought some people might decide to visualisations or to analyse word frequency or link frequency or whatever. To be honest, I’ve not had the most overwhelming response ever (but then again it’s not like I was giving away free chocolate bars or anything), but I’ve really enjoyed the stuff I have received. I think perhaps the concept would be more appealing and generally useful if (as New Media Hack suggested) more people opened up their archives in a similar style. Still, never mind. Here we go:

Our first batch of analysis comes from Cal Henderson who has basically used the data at his disposal to take the piss out of me. A few weeks ago I got a bit moody with Matt Jones after he complained that I was starting every post I was writing with the word “So…” (here’s the grump in question). So what has Cal done? He’s established the horrible truth of the situation – here’s a graph of how many posts I’ve started with the word “So” over time:

As you can see – a startling indictment and as Cal said to me on AIM, “evidence that you’re getting worse”. More evidence in that direction comes from Tom Carden who sent in three visualisations of increasing complexity. The first diagram is a simple model of posting frequency. The graph is separated into five separate blocks (at the bottom of the diagram) and each day is represented by a vertical line. The stronger the colour of the line, the more posts happened on that day:

As you can see from the visualisation, I really seem to have found my stride towards the end of my first year of weblogging (Nov 1999 to Oct 2000) – and throughout 2001 I’m posting very regularly. 2002 starts slightly more slowly, but then my post-frequency goes through the roof for a while before apparently starting a slow long drift off towards irregularity which flattens off around nine months ago at an almost total absence of posting. (You can see that image at its full resolution here).

Tom’s next step was to try and incorporate into the graph some sense of post length. Which resulted in this diagram (which I’ve distorted slightly to make it easier to explain):

So one clear consequence of me posting less often appears to be that I have – unfortunately – become a bit of a blowhard. Look at how much longer the posts are! (The larger version of this visualisation is here). And when you bring it all together, you get this stunning piece of work:

There’s a bigger version of this particularly complicated graph here. The red line indicates a moving average of post length (over 25 posts). That looks like it was fairly solid for the first three years and then suddenly started to get substantially longer towards the beginning of the fourth segment. This coincides with an apparent drop in post-frequency (each post is represented by a vertical grey line, where they overlap they get brighter – you can see this most closely at the bottom of the graph).

You may well ask what it was that caused my post-length to go up and my post frequency to drop so dramatically? Well it turns out, looking at my archives, that this happens at precisely the same time as I switched to using Movable Type instead of Blogger – which just goes to show how much the tool helps dictate the form of your writing online.

The purple line indicates the moving average post length (over a seven day period rather than over 25 posts). This has vacillated a lot over the last five years, but appears to be reaching new lows in the last six-nine months (as well as the occasional odd new high). This is probably a direct result of work pressures. However it doesn’t appear to have had an enormously negative effect – the green line indicates cumulative total of words written on plasticbag.org and – although maybe it’s starting to flatten a little – seems to be an almost totally linear rise over the last five years. The blue line indicates the cumulative total of posts on plasticbag.org however – and that really does appear to have changed quite dramatically. If all these trends continue in the way they seem to be going at the moment, you can look forward to one post a year around the length of a novel. You lucky bastards.

Anyway, that’s your lot – that’s all the visualisations I’ve had in so far. I’m hoping to get a few more from lollygaggers and slugabeds, but in the meantime thank you to Cal and Tom for spending their time so ill-advisedly, and thank you all for being part of my life for more or less of the last five full years. Now I must get back to doing something slightly more useful with my time. xx

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Five years of weblog data to rip apart as you please…

This weblog – originally located at barbelith.com but which subsequently moved to its current location at plasticbag.org – will hit its fifth birthday on Monday. That’s five full years of random plasticbag.org posts – 4175 of them in fact, plus 1517 links in the linklog (before I moved over to using delicious to manage them in the last couple of weeks). In terms of the non-linklog posts alone that works out at over two posts a day, each and every day of each and every week, of each and every month, of each and every year since November 1999.

In terms of words written it’s difficult to be precise. I’ve exported all the posts from my site, worked out the number of words in a given header, multiplied that by the number of posts and removed that from the total number of words that BBEdit tells me are in the exported dump. Clearly this is not going to be a terribly accurate way of measuring word count (God knows what HTML does to these things) but if you believe what BBEdit tells you, I’ve written in excess of 1.1 million words over the last five years. To put that in perspective, English versions of the Bible have only around 750,000 words in them. I’ve written a bible and a full third of a sequel.

Which brings me to why I’m mentioning all this stuff. I’m not sure I believe those figures. Hell, I’m not sure I want to believe those figures. But one thing is clear to me – there’s a lot of data here in one form or another – and there must be any number of ways to visualise that data or explore it or rip it apart or whatever. So I thought maybe what I should do is just open it all up – stick up a big MT export of everything I’ve done to date – and see if anyone out there can think of any interesting visualisations or ways of processing or graphing it. Obviously, I have no expectations – it could easily be that no one finds this the slightest bit interesting. But if you do, let me know (normal e-mail address tom [at] plasticbag [dot] org) and of course if you want me to post what you’ve done, or link to it in any way, then I’d be more than delighted to do so. It would be great to be able to stick something up that I’ve got from you guys on the fifth anniversary itself…

So here’s the dump: Every full post made to plasticbag.org over the last five years including – in an intriguing self-reflexive twist – this one. Have fun with it!

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Links for 2004-10-27

  • nutr.itio.us provides a more sophisticated interface with which to post to del.icio.us Appears to include a way of deducing common tags for a link as well as aiding you navigate through your own tags. The interface doesn’t quite scale to the sheer breadth of tags you might wish to use, however. I wonder how it could…
  • Some notes from GameDevBlog on The Sims 2 “The Unbearable Lightness of Being, what’s-her-name was mortified by her upset bowels when she first met Tomas. Not too far from having a Fear in The Sims 2 about losing control of your bladder at a party…”
  • Cal’s awesome presentation on Flickr and PHP I’ve never been more impressed, amused and missed a friend so much at the same time. Cal come home, they don’t love you enough.
  • Flickr’s fruit at the bottom – on bottom-of-the-page site navigation Ah – after posting a couple of links yesterday about bottom-of-the-page sitemaps and referencing Mr Jones, I’ve just noticed that he’s posted about it too. I’ve expressed some of my concerns in the comments, if you’re interested.
  • Foxy’s self-financed house of horror! A young small business owner decides to create an unorthodox Second Life installation featuring zombies and blood-sucking ghouls. So she plunked down $400 of her own money to rent the land and then converted $400 more, to hire the staff to make it happen.
  • bbc.co.uk/film gets reorganised The homepage is now some form of portal to films across the BBC (which isn’t immediately clear when you get there) – with the old site’s frontpage now renamed BBC Movies and moved to a new URL but everything else still living under /films. Very strange.
  • Alice Taylor thinks about Grand-Theft Auto, its use of radio and streaming real-world media into games Webb and I have been thinking about this – trying to work out if a game of the future would be interested in having a real-world radio network streamed into it. Or perhaps we’re talking about bespoke media? CNN reports on wars inside Star Wars Galaxies?
  • Dan Hill on the death of John Peel Gambaccini then listed a few of the artists that Peel’s Radio 1 show ‘broke’ in the UK and beyond: The Clash, Sex Pistols, Roxy Music, Althea and Donna, Led Zeppelin, Pulp, Leonard Cohen, Joy Division, Laurie Anderson, The Undertones, Elton John…
  • Apple release the iPod Photo And I have to confess that I’m slightly non-plussed by it. I mean it’s nice and everything (presumably the switch to Myriad as the font is a consequence of having a better screen that can handle anti-alliasing) but it’s just a bit, well, odd…
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John Peel has died…

As of 2.00pm today, it’s just been announced that John Peel – bastion of English radio – has died suddenly in Peru. Here are a few links that I’ve found following the announcement:

  • John Peel has died – “Veteran BBC broadcaster John Peel has died at the age of 65, while on holiday in Peru. Peel, whose radio career spanned 40 years, was on a working holiday in the resort of Cuzco with his wife Sheila when he suffered a heart attack.”
  • More from Radio 1 – “John Peel was a unique broadcaster whose influence on Radio 1 could be felt from its very first days. He nurtured musicians and listeners alike introducing them to new sounds.” – Jenny Abramsky, Director of BBC Radio and Music
  • Broadcaster John Peel dies in Peru (Reuters) – “He passed away. We don’t have any details. We received a phone call at 4 a.m. from his brother to inform us,” said Jonathan Clare, an embassy official in Lima.
  • John Peel dies of a Heart Attack (NME) – Radio 1 controller Andy Parfitt said “John Peel was a broadcasting legend. I am deeply saddened by his death as are all who work at Radio 1. Johnís influence has towered over the development of popular music for nearly four decades and his contribution to modern music and music culture is immeasurable… Over a career spanning 40 years Peel consistently championed new music, and in 1994 was given the NME Godlike Genius award for his services to music.
  • John Peel dies aged 65 (Guardian) – looks like a bit of a rehash from the wires, this one…

Recent news about John Peel from BBC News: Radio award for ‘unrivalled’ Peel and Veteran DJs in radio hall of fame. You can keep up with the news about his death on the Google News Search Results page. There’s a discussion on barbelith and on metafilter too. You can send in tributes to the BBC on this page and there’s a list of all the tributes on this page. Phil Gyford has also posted his personal feelings on the subject as has Mo Morgan.