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Computer-assisted life-avoidance…

This weekend has passed like so many recently – in a complete blaze of do-nothing apathy and computer-assisted life-avoidance. The proposed redesign of plasticbag.org has come to nothing (so far), nor has the rebuilding of the Barbelith Underground, the bloggerising of the news page at The Bomb or the assembling of an architecture for the whole barbelith/plasticbag/filmsoho assembly of sites. Also I have yet to do the thing for the collaborative project I’m supposed to be doing with Matt. More to the point, I haven’t really done a lot of job searching yet, either.

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A decent article on blogging…

Yet another article on weblogging, this time from zdnet.com. This one, at least, doesn’t miss the point quite as much as some others: “But, regardless of whether they manifest themselves in the corporate world, blogs in their purest forms will remain throwbacks to the early days of the Web, when the rallying cry was the democratization of information and individual empowerment – not initial public offerings.”

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Nanotechnology from the top-down? "Careful

Nanotechnology from the top-down? “Careful on that couch! It could be a resting robot. Scientists are starting to make robots out of smart building blocks that make them morph into different forms to suit the job they are doing. Eventually, the researchers hope to use thousands of microscopic units to make infinitely flexible machines, fit for any task.”

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This may be the best

This may be the best description that I have written of the Barbelith Underground:

“This forum was originally created by a group of people who found a part of themselves inspired by what is commonly considered the lowest form of trash culture: the comic book. Something in this comic book spoke to their dissatisfaction and frustration with the world as it stands today. The writer of the comic book had felt the same way, by all accounts, and wanted to use his medium to help people recognise their own feelings of dissatisfaction with the world and channel that into a creative energy of transgression, answering back, full-on teen rebellion. The call to arms was promptly answered.

“The Barbelith Underground is, above all, about change and idealism. It’s about change because the world is not what it could be, it’s not what it SHOULD be either. It’s about idealism because the world should be a place where imagination can thrive, not a place where it has to be constrained and controlled.

“Beyond that you’re unlikely to get consensus – the wonder of this place is that you can come here to be inspired, not to be told what to do. And this can lead to frustration – what you think should be done may not be done by all. It might not be done by any. Some of our number believe in the power of direct protest, some believe in the power of the viral idea, some believe in bombs and guns, some in books and media. Some are liberal, some are libertarian, some are … not.

“Start a thread, create an idea, propose a cause and hit the streets, or … don’t. But wake up.”

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Where are the Blogger clones?

Where are the Blogger clones?

This text has been edited:
“If anyone out there is prepared to ‘lease’ the rights to develop Organizine or something similar then I beg of you – transform the web again. Give the common man access to the means of high quality media production. Lets watch the divisions between the uber-media and the micro-media blur still further, so that those of us who love the concept of online content management tools, but who have reached the limits of what Blogger can perform cleanly, can be free to create new content, new cultures and ever new worlds.”
tom%40plasticbag.org

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I am one of Nikolai's

I am one of Nikolai‘s randomly chosen collective of first round judges for the Bloggies project, which is both tremendously interesting (there are so many sites that I haven’t come across before) and incredibly tiring. I must have ploughed through a good couple of hundred sites today (before, during and after work) that I haven’t seen before – some of which are significant finds, designed well, or about subjects that fascinate me.

For any of you who might be interested, here are the numbers of first round nominations that plasticbag.org and various other sites that I like received: plasticbag.org: 4, notsosoft.com: 7, kitschbitch.com: 2, kottke.org: 6, lukelog: 3, evhead.com: 4.

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Net Culture

A List Apart on the dot com crash…

A List Apart confronts the current ‘crisis’ in the web creative industry in the US. The effects of the recent down-turn in dot-com fortunes has yet to hit the UK with quite as much force as it has in the US, although each week another dire e-commerce venture sinks vaingloriously beneath the mire (with a silent chirp of ‘yes!’ from me).

The situation in Europe and the UK is of course very different from that in the US – the UK has had the benefit of watching the US and either following in its wake or slowing down. When I went to Los Angeles last March I was astonished by the amount of web-based ventures advertising on television and advertising all over the place. That level of hysteria has never quite been replicated over here. Also, one of the benefits of the trans-atlantic delay is that many companies who got two years of funding are not going to run out of it, quite yet (give it another three months). And why? Because they got the funding after their American compatriots.

The rest of Europe is another case again. Some countries (Spain for one) have yet to invest heavily in the net, and so have the whole boom and bust to come – albeit probably with a certain degree of awareness of how America responded to it. It will be, by all accounts, a much less dramatic endeavour.

Which is of course why our esteemed prolific can say (which such ease and peace in her heart):

“Crisis? Wot crisis? Plenty of work here in the Netherlands, no sign of a slump. Our company is small, has longstanding clients. We will be merging with another smallish company that also has solid clients. Neither company ever had to rely on ‘VC’ money.”
“There are 180,000 jobs unfilled in the Netherlands. I’m not worried. I’m lucky. At last.”

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Net Culture

The History of Yahoo!

Inspired by a footnote in Information Architecture for the World Wide Web which reveals the secret name of Yahoo, I have undertaken a search on the site in question for information on its history. Here are a few facts that you might not know about the benevolent patriarch of internet directories:

  • When the site first began, Yahoo! had no more than one hundred accesses a day.
  • Across 1994, the site’s growth rate doubled almost every month.
  • By May 1995, the site was receiving 2 million page accesses a day. God only knows have much it receives today.
  • Yahoo! started off listing sex sites, but stopped doing so because every time they listed one, the amount traffic it would receive would bring it down. Porn sites rarely lasted more than a couple of days after being listed on the site.
  • And I quote: “The San Jose Mercury news recently noted that ‘Yahoo is closest in spirit to the work of Linnaeus, the 18th century botanist whose classification system organized the natural world’.” Yahoo! – Company History
  • ‘The two developers of Yahoo!, David Filo and Jerry Yang, Ph.D. candidates in Electrical Engineering at Stanford University, started their guide in April 1994 as a way to keep track of their personal interests on the Internet.’ Yahoo! – Company History
  • Yahoo was one of the first, and is still one of the few, internet companies to actually make a profit. And its annual revenue is huge: “For the fiscal year ended 12/31/00, revenues increased 88% to $1.11 billion. Net income rose 48% to $70.8 million.” Market Guide.

So what is the secret name of [god]Yahoo![/god]? David Filo and Jerry Yang insist that the name was chosen by themselves because they considered themselves ‘yahoos’, but many others suggest that the name is an acronym from a more wild geek frontier, an acronym which stands for: “Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle”.

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On an elegant design…

Walking West provides possibly the clearest and most elegantly designed weblog links and (brief) review page I’ve seen to date.

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On a Viral Marketing Strategy…

Viral Marketing Strategy: my editor was sent a hand-written postcard with a URL (http://www.ramitin.co.uk). Lurking on the site is a 70s-style macho-car-porn-parody Quicktime video which you have to see to believe. Assumption: timeout.com editor will send it to influential media people, resulting in full press saturation in two-to-three weeks, and a first full feature for the director within six months. We shall see if it is successful.