- Awesome Doctor Who-inspired T-shirts for people who really want to creep out people on the bus Apparently if you’re interested, then you e-mail “gasmaskshirt” at the domain address “comicfestival.co.uk”
- Some book pages on Amazon have Flickr-style visualisations of top words in the book, along with reading-ease analysis stats This is fascinating stuff – particularly because Amazon are clearly looking for ways to sell more stuff through the revelation of some quite complex data…
- Loic talks about the new Nokia N90 and drops a little interesting hint about Tiger’s support for Nokia phones If it means that I have a little more choice in what phones I can use properly with my computer, then I’ll be delighted…
A quick question for Bay Area friends…
If I was to wander over to San Francisco sometime between the 13th and the 27th June, would anyone be around? Are you all going to be off at some weird festival or something? Would there be time to hang and muck around at all? And if necessary – would anyone have a spare sofa or bed I could crash in for some of the time? Flights have suddenly got extremely expensive (US$1000 for a return to San Fran from Heathrow!) If you can see any possibilities, then send e-mails to the usual address, post a comment below or ping me on IM (plasticbagUK) or whatever… It’s all a bit impromptu, I’m afraid. If it comes off. Which it may not.
Links for 2005-05-31
- A Joy of Tech “Blast from the Past” posted as a riposte to that Waterstones guy… “Mr Dewbottom! Get Into My Office Immediately!”
- How to Become an Early Riser An interesting post on sleep which mirrors a lot of my own experience
- Heather Champ joins the Flickr crew because she is so awesome and they’re incomplete without her Yay Heather! Yay! Finally Ludicorp gets some classy people working for it…
- A new digital camera takes several photos at split-second intervals and throws away the ones where too many people are blinking… I love that we’re at a place in the technology cycle where it becomes possible to conceive of ludicrously excessive ways of solving simple real-world problems inexpensively
- Yahoo’s Mindset is an ‘intent-driven search’ interface that gives you a slider to help you influence the results you receive between ‘research’ and ‘shopping’ polar extremes It’s an interesting concept. Two thoughts: Are the axes correct? Do the results correspond to them properly? Not sure about either…
- For Lost fans: The most important thing you’ll click on today See the hidden trailer for next season’s episodes, see the on-screen slogans and feel the lust for knowledge all over again…
- Homophobia “hard-wired” by evolution A slightly random piece of writing describes some slightly implausible research that suggests that homophobia might be an adaptive trait
- How to write a business proposal and tips for business proposal writing No idea how good this one is, but it looked interesting and I want to plough my way through it later…
There are a whole ton of theories all over the internet at the moment about all the ‘Bad Wolf’ references appearing in Doctor Who. In two weeks an episode called “Bad Wolf” will air, and it looks like it’s the first part of a two-parter that will end the season. In pretty much every other episode so far there has been a reference to ‘Bad Wolf’. So obviously, people are thinking something pretty significant is going to happen. Obviously I have my theory, and again, obviously I have no interest in accidentally spoiling the experience for anyone should I inadvertantly appear to have got it right. So if you want to hear it, view the source and scroll down until you see the hidden comments…
Note added 20:00 pm on Saturday 4th June 2005: In case you hadn’t noticed yet, the BBC-owned URL of badwolf.org.uk started working yesterday, full of speculation and suggestions and theories. You might also like to read this thoroughly good weblog post about all the Bad Wolf references and this incredibly spoiler-full message board thread about the next couple of episodes. I’m not completely convinced that my theory is still correct, by the way. Particularly not after the end of the episode I just watched (which totally rocked).
Links for 2005-05-30
- The ‘Missing Words’ Round (BBC Backstage prototype) A glorious, if impossible, game based on part of the popular “Have I Got News For You” TV Quiz
There’s an article in the Sunday Times today called Golden rules for blogging clever which features a few choice morsels of salient quotage from some bloke not a million miles away from this weblog. For this reason alone I recommend you buy the paper in question. Possibly you should be so impressed that you should consider sending me some naked pictures of yourselves?
Moving on though – the article itself is very strange. It seems to wend its way between a number of different registers – starting off in a ‘weblogs and online communities are important’ area and then wanders directly into a ‘who the hell do you think you are to think anyone cares what you think’ kind of space. I find this very odd, given that the article is supposedly about giving people tips for writing a weblog. It’s been a while since I read a cookery book, but I’m pretty sure they don’t start by telling people that they’re worthless and they’ll never amount to anything. That kind of motivational speech seems more commonly left to parents. (Of course the article isn’t actually aimed at people starting a weblog at all, but at people who want to observe it from the sidelines with a cup of tea and a raised eyebrow while slowly dying inside.)
From having apparently smacked down the reader for their nerve – their very presumption – that they might find value in self-expression, the article moves on to slightly self-satirise. Now the mockery is a bit ironic – it knows we don’t really want to be boring and that we’re all able to see the funny side of the whole thing. To support its case, it brings in a few of the classier webloggers (Heather Armstrong and myself) to comment. And what do we say? Well, basically we say that all this stuff about being boring is rather missing the point and it’s not about getting a huge audience and that self-expression is really important and stuff and that if people derive value from their weblogs then that’s good, right? Right?
Well, all I can say is that it’s lucky that our brief comments don’t distract from the main thrust of the article! No hippies are going to distract from the relentless pursuit of traffic, after all. So we get a humourous take on giving your weblog a sexy name, a patch on how to pander to other weblogs to get hits, a bref paragraph on Googlebombing and a few words on the apparent incestuousness of the culture. The article recommends writing about your sex life, getting fired for writing a weblog and peddling extreme opinions. All of these things will get you a book deal and only then will people want to get you naked because they’ve heard your name on television.
I think the reason I find this whole article so amusing is because it’s the ultimate archetype of all news stories about weblogs. Its every word exposes the assumptions and prejudices of journalists and – I think more widely – the British. So you’ve got the censorious attitude to people expressing themselves in public (self-expression isn’t really proper), then you’ve got the whole amateur-versus-professional argument that neurotically restates only proper journalists are worth reading. These journalists, who – we are reminded by the rest of the article – really assume that (i) the only reason to write is to get famous, (ii) there’s no value in community or discussion or debate and (iii) normal people would sell their granny for dog meat to get famous. And to cap it all off, the examples that they use are all the ones that reveal the bankrupcy of the news media – that a culture of millions of webloggers can only really be understood by the tabloidish stories that make it across into the ‘proper’ media. The whole thing is gloriously cock-eyed.
I’m being a bit unfair, of course. It’s not nearly that clear-cut, and there’s some really interesting stuff here. I like that Simon Jenkins expressed an anxiety about the role of the newspaper columnist in the amateurised opinion space. I don’t think he’s got an enormous amount to worry about – in fact he should be delighted, he could be a giant in that space if he wanted – but that all depends on viewing changes as opportunities rather than threats. Here are a few more of my thoughts – good and bad – in the form of an unordered list:
- I love the fact that the word hippo-griff is used in this article. For that alone, I will give you one billion dollars. You heard me. One billion. Although I’m a bit surprised by the hyphen. Maybe I won’t give you a billion dollars after all. Damn sub-editors.
- “The absolute golden rule of blogging – it is literally made of gold – is: Do not blog”, says our journo. It’s literally made of gold? What, really? Dear God, man – misuse of ‘literally’ in this way is pretty much the first thing that you get smacked in the mouth for at journalism school. What are you doing!? Unless of course there really is a golden rule cast in gold somewhere – on a mountain or something. In which case, I want to see it. While we’re at it – who the hell made up this rule? I’ve never heard it before. It’s not even a parody of ‘Don’t talk about Fight Club’. I don’t get it.
- If you read the article in print, then you get confronted with an enormous picture of that bloody berk who got (as far as I can tell) fired from Waterstones for being a bit of an idiot and not reading his contract. I’ve never felt a lot of sympathy for him – even though the relationship between a weblogger’s site and their working life is a complex one that I’ve been coming up against a bit recently – because he just seemed to have been such a twit about the whole thing. I’d recommend reading two things about this subject: Anil Dash’s expansion on his assertion that no one gets fired for blogging and a Tech Station article called The Unbearable Rightness of Nick Denton.
Ah, that’ll do. I’m bored now. Fun article! Took me ages to respond to. Probably better than I’m giving it credit for. Seeya!
Links for 2005-05-29
- Congratulations to ex-co-worker and b3ta godfather Rob Manuel on the birth of his son, Angus I give it an hour before the child’s picture is in three thousand viral animations…
- Firefox gets a question on US quiz show, “Jeopardy” “I’m now using the Firefox Web Browser that got its start from this Time Warner company’s Netscape division”
- “Bacon, bacon, bacon, bacon, bacon, bacon, bacon, bacon, bacon, bacon, bacon, bacon! Mushroom! Mushroom!” Awesome little video that makes me feel a little queasy, but is kind of funny and cool…
- “Father appeals order in divorce decree that prevents couple from exposing son to Wicca” This one’s really strange. One judge who believes in the ludicrously supernatural stops a divorcing couple from raising their son with other ludicrous beliefs. If it wasn’t for the rights implications it would be difficult to care…
- The Usability of Subscribing to Feeds I’m interested in applying the Odeo model to centralising aggregator sites, and also in the exposed input box approach from BBC Radio sites…
- “All parents are supposed to think their children are attractive – but Canadian researchers claim that “ugly” offspring are treated differently.” Bit old this article, but interesting in terms of the unconscious cues that govern our behaviour.
- A weird little almost-anti-long-tail story from Nature.com: How long did it take you to find this story? It’s states that most people who are ever going to read an online news story (blog post) will have done so within three days of publishing…
- An awesome representation of the Internet on a Threadless T-shirt by Oliver J Moss They don’t have it in my size unfortunately, otherwise I’d buy it right now. It could help me in my Nathan Barley aspirations…
- From the new issue of Wired: The Mad Genius from the Bottom of the Sea Two articles in the same Wired about highly implausible geniuses with theories that the mainstream are suspicious of – getting more visionary or am I reading Fortean Times?
- A co-worker went to TED and talked to someone at the Google stand who asked about me… Anyone know who this was? Would be cool to wave and say hi…
What a strange episode of Doctor Who…
So without wanting to give too much away, did I just go nuts or did The Doctor just flirt outrageously with a group-sex-having, slutty, bisexual, American futurist space-rogue (and zoophile) and then invite said rogue to move into his travelling S&Mish trans-dimensional dance club with him and a teenage girl he picked up on Earth a few months before? I swear, this series gets better and better…
Okay, this is not a big rant, but it had to be said. Some weblogs actively appeal for people to send them links to stuff that they might like to post about. I do not. No doubt some people are delighted when people say, “you should put this on your site”. I am not. Let me say this really clearly once and for all – I do not link to stuff that people ask me to link to.
This is not an absolute rule, I’ll admit. Over the last five/six years I’ve probably been asked to post someone else’s links to my site about five hundred times. How many did I end up posting? Maybe four. I’m actually less inclined to post things to my site if someone has explicitly asked me to. When under those kinds of pressure, I feel I must demonstrate the independence and freedom of my site. I feel I have to demonstrate that it’s a space where I’ll act as I think is best, with full cognisance of my responsibilities to work, friends. If people explicitly ask me to post something, then of course my assumption is that all they want is the link, that they’re trying to exploit my site for their own gain in some way and have no actual interest in my opinions or being part of a community. I will be contrary in those situations. If you are listening, e-marketeers, then take note already.
Let me be blunt – I will not link to things if you ask me to. If you send me a link saying, “you should post about this”, then – unless I’m really clear it’s for altruistic reasons – I almost certainly will not. And I may look at you funny the next time we meet down the pub. I may not go down to the pub with you at all. Are we clear? Good.
In the meantime if there’s something you genuinely think I might find interesting, please feel free to send it to me! I like reading new things – I’m interested in all kinds of stuff. Just please make it because you genuinely think it’s something I might care about rather than because you might make a nickel out of it. I thank you and good night.
Links for 2005-05-28
- The most linked UK weblogs as of May 2005, according to troubled diva… Interesting set of statistics which go to show (again) that links bear very little relationship to traffic