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Random

Playing linklog catch-up…

Lots to get through this morning – all the stuff that I’ve meant to talk about in greater depth but haven’t had time to do so… Apologies to all concerned for trivialising your hard work…

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Random

When e-mail clients attack…

This probably couldn’t be any more trivial, ridiculous or infantile. But – just occasionally – OSX’s Mail.app’s tendency to truncate e-mail subjects and place an ellipsis at the end of the line has unintentionally funny side-effects…

truncate.gif

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Random

George Bush Funeral Home…

There’s a page on this site that’s recently been getting a fair amount of traffic. It’s a page in the gallery which includes pictures of an establishment in Norwich, Norfolk called the George Bush Funeral Home. I don’t know how I feel about this. I took the pictures a couple of Christmasses ago after September 11th but before any massive pro or anti-war demonstrations were happening – and way before Iraq was even back on the international agenda. I’d seen the building years before of course – on my way back from school when I was a kid – only suddenly becoming a source of black satisfaction when George Bush the first got into power and when the first Gulf War was underway…

I don’t get that feeling any more. People linking to those pictures in ‘approving’ terms’ seems cheap to me. Tacky. Glib. It’s not an image that helps people think in different terms about anything. It doesn’t give people any more context or an understanding of any larger issues. It’s too easy an image to be ‘decent’ (in the moral sense). I feel more and more that a grasp of this issue must be fought for, worked at. What’s black humour in times of dissent becomes propogandist in times of war.

Categories
Technology

NetNewsWire Strawpoll…

Inspired by a terrifying conversation with Dan Hon in which he revealed that he had 135 subscriptions strapped to his groaning copy of NetNewsWire, I decided to do a bit of a straw-poll. Not enough people were available online for me to do it properly though, and I’d had quite a lot of caffeine so I got quite impatient, so here are some unsubstantiated rumours glued together with some implausible guff

Spies situated on the shiny pinacle of nearby Trump Towers have spotted Meg Hourihan striding through “The Internet” with roughly thirty subscriptions in NetNewsWire yapping after her like tiny dalmation puppies. But our insiders think that more is going on here than meets they eye… Could she be reading many more sites via bookmarks?

The mysterious shadowy figure of Anil Dash is said – shockingly – to have rejected the one true church of NetNewsWire and to have narry a subscription at all. Indeed, he’s recently seen cavorting with old-style “browsers” in a down-town speakeasy filled with cookies and bookmarks.

Your humble editor can only confess to around forty subscriptions – several of which are also not strictly ‘read’ as such, while several other people… {blah blah blah… time passes} … with a stoat where the sun don’t shine. But enough about that particular mystery weblogger…

Back to the issue at hand, the quest for the Ultimate Subscriptions Champion was proceeding apace. Throughout my investigations, the great mythical moon monster of Captain “Zeitgeist” Doctorow kept cropping up. Could this silver surfer of the cyberspaceways be an RSS man-mountain? One of our sources claimed he had in his secret underground lair a massive installation of NetNewsWire linked by thick fibrous cables to three hundred or even more subscriptions, each of which would be downloaded freshly each day! Such dastardly decadence! Sadly, the truth is a little more prosaic – after e-mail contact, Cory has confirmed that he’s only attached to around 120/130 sites… Our winner therefore remains – undefeated – Dan “Bandwidth” Hon – whose every crippling refresh breaks the very fibre of the internet underfoot. All hail him, for he is the geek of all geeks…

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Random

The sky over Primrose Hill…

A couple of weeks ago I went to visit a friend in Primrose Hill. On the way over the bridge across the train lines I saw a beautiful sky. I like skies. You don’t get to see them enough in cities.

primrose_hill_sky.jpg

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Random

Brief thoughts on e-mail newsletters…

The site for the Text E-mail Newsletter Standard is a well-intentioned and intelligent attempt to develop some standards for plain-text e-mail newsletters. It only falls down because the accessibility-conscious design strategy they’ve taken doesn’t seem to be actually very easy for the non-visually impaired to read. I’d be really interested in the opinions of the b3ta and popbitch crews on this subject – they’ve made readable plain-text e-mails an artform (although screen-reading the ascii logos must be excruciating). cf. Stef’s comments on screen-reader browsers.

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Random

Good things to do with noises…

Noise. Where would we be without it? Trapped in a sensory-deprivation tank, perhaps. Maybe – at a push – in space (although we’d have to not have any air-tanks or helmets or anything to experience the absence of noise, and I don’t know what the auditory effects of boiling blood, near-absolute zero temperatures and explosive bodily decompression might be)…

  • The Sound of Things to Come
    Through the magic of transmitting sound to directionally precise co-ordinates the HyperSonic Sound Amplifier (which has got to be about an hour and a half away from being usurped as a band-name) enables really specific and clearly defined parts of the 3-D real-world to be exposed to noise in such a way that people a couple of feet away can’t hear it at all. The most depressing part of this otherwise fascinating story is that the best thing they could come up with as an early application was a Coca-Cola machine that suggested you buy one when you went past… “Wouldn’t a Coca-Cola feel pretty good about now?”

  • Babel Fish on the Horizon?
    A company is working to produce a device that uses text-to -speech software to take something someone says to you in French (for example) and then run it through a translation matrix of some kind (like Babelfish, but presumably not as funny) before speaking it out again. Essentially a portable computer translation device. In all likelihood, it’s going to work like a dog strapped to a badger in a big bowl of custard.
Categories
Personal Publishing

Observation on the Trackback "How To"…

I don’t know what it is about Trackback that makes it utterly impossible for anyone to explain it well. Certainly the How Trackback Works (from cruftbox.com is a scruffy but noble attempt to make it comprehensible to people. But I think it’s going to fail because it explains the process before it adequately explains the concept. I think it has another failing too: it concentrates on explaining the mechanical and clunky ‘do it by hand’ approach of getting trackback URLs and pumping them through the ‘pings’ interface. No-one’s going to get it until everyone’s using autodiscovery.

Ben and Mena Trott’s version (Trackback for Beginners) is well-written and comprehensive, but essentially incomprehensible. I think it’s because it doesn’t concentrate on explaining the core uses of the functionality (get person x to automatically link back to me when I post something about them), but instead tries to go right back to first principles. Personally I’m not only not interested in someone Trackbacking my site simply in order to get a mention, I’m actively against it and don’t think they should be mentioning it – let alone promoting it. On a weblog (at least) there’s got to be reciprocity of some kind otherwise it’s going to be the most-spammed feature in online history.

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Random

Blogroll revisited…

I’m slowly and systematically working my way around plasticbag.org, sorting out the weblog sidebar. I’m trying to find the best ways of helping the site to explain itself on each and every page – without compromising cross-site and inter-post navigation. It may sound naff and unremittingly tedious to you, but I’m finding it intensely satisfying. As a side effect of this process, I’ve decided to have a hack at the part of the sidebar that deals with my favourite weblogs. This is now almost a direct copy of my NetNewsWire subscriptions, which means one of two things – either everyone’s getting an RSS feed, or I’m gradually ceasing to read people without them…

Categories
Journalism Personal Publishing

Designing for extreme readers…

So a mainstream news site is often comprised of many hundreds – thousands – of individual news stories. These stories are mostly designed to fit into a pretty clear taxonomy which reflects “what the news site is for”. This taxonomy is normally pretty clearly defined and normally has a pretty wide top level (the items that deal with the news alone are divided up into anything from seven to twelve sections – world, business, science, politics etc). Articles may be faceted or sit under several headings (heterarchical organisation), but the taxonomies concerned are fairly clear (often inherited from org-charts derived from parallel print products – but never mind, eh?). This kind of taxonomy results in the need for left-hand navigation (it’s simply difficult to put large lists horizontally on a page). This kind of navigation, in turn, is well-suited to the kind of readers that a news site tends to get – people who have an ongoing relationship with the publication in question (ie. they knew of the site before they went there) and are therefore prepared to browse the site because they came to it as a specific first port of call for a kind of information or to answer a specific question.

Weblogs are very different beasts – particularly those weblogs which are based around single-entry archives. Firstly, they don’t tend to have clearly definable taxonomies. Some may – but they are the exception, and tend to be the more professionally oriented. So there’s no need for large navigational structures or organised heterarchies. Weblogs are also not first port of call sites when you’re trying to answer a question or get a specific kind of information. They are specifically designed to be feeding out information as and when the publisher wishes, and not in direct response to anything going on in the world outside. You cannot guarantee that Jason’s site – on any given day – will provide you with all the news you need to know about any subject. Nor is the site organised to make the finding of entries on a specific subject matter as simple as possible. This is not a flaw in Jason’s site – nor is it a flaw in weblogging in general. It’s simply the way the form is structured.

In fact, while news sites are a coherent whole into which individuals dip themselves, weblogs have two very different types of readers with two very different forms of interaction. Firstly, there are those with a long-term association or relationship with the person / site in question. Secondly, there are those who are directed to a specific internal page by a link from another weblog or via an unfortunate (or inspired) search request. These extremes are more radical than a news site. On a weblog, it’s entirely possible that someone might find themselves on a specific internal page without having the slightest idea of the context of a post whatsoever – or anything about the site in question. This will be still more true about a site that allows people to publish individual entries to individual pages – like Movable Type.

Essentially, while a substantial group of readers are treating your site as an ongoing narrative centred around the presence of a singular human author, many other people are seeing nothing more than an infinitesimal slice of your content. For all they care, your weblogging application might not be producing one coherent site at all – in fact to any individual member of this second audience, your weblog will consist of just one of dozens / hundreds / thousands of bespoke self-contained and only loosely connected one-page sites that all happen to share a design. One of them might see “What Tom Coates did at the pub last night”, one might see “Niels Bohr and the War in Iraq”, another “Extreme Readers and Weblogging”. This group further breaks down into two groups – the group that might be persuaded to hang around for longer and those who came for information and information alone.

Most weblogs are designed for the weblog-literate – who you might want to lure across the rest of the content on your site by supplying them with previous / next links or calendars ,or by illuminating your (probably fairly haphazard) taxonomies through displaying lists of categories. But the average member of the general public will understand the page that they find themselves upon only if you supply context – above and beyond that supplied by a standard news or article based website. They need to be able to assess your trustworthiness, they need to be able to estimate the value of your writing. They also need to be able to figure out precisely what kind of writing it is.

So here are a few recommendations to webloggers who wish to be comprehensible to these readers:

  • Place a small piece of explanatory text on your individual archives explaining the structure of your site.
  • Elucidate or link clearly to information about you – the author of said weblog – including any pertinent details that make you qualified to talk about what you’re talking about (if it is a personal site, then that’s qualification enough).
  • For this audience it’s important to recognise that you’re not necessarily going to want to promote your own personal ‘brand’, so leave your navigational links simple, clean and self-explanatory.