twittered:
Patience is a virtue
Twitter demands it.
blogged:
Sun
May
04
2008
This Personal Site
Recently Jeffrey Zeldman wrote about “The vanishing personal site”:
Our personal sites, once our primary points of online presence, are becoming sock drawers for displaced first-person content. We are witnessing the disappearance of the all-in-one, carefully designed personal site containing professional information, links, and brief bursts of frequently updated content to which others respond via comments.
Sat
Mar
15
2008
Who's Divisive?
In what probably should have been a predicted development, political weblogs are mirroring the campaigns they write about and advocate. In other words, it’s ugly and divisive blue on blue action, and portends what could be coming this fall: no matter who wins, a large portion of the Democratic party may decide to take their ball, go home, and stay there:
Sun
Feb
17
2008
Olympic Blogging Redux
They might be one of the slowest organizations to change with the times, but somehow, after the fiasco of four years ago, the International Olympic Committee is beginning to get a clue:
The International Olympic Committee is for the first time permitting athletes to write blogs.
The IOC has set out guidelines for blogging at the Beijing Games to ensure copyright agreements are not infringed.
Sat. Jan 05, 2008
What Color Is Your Mud?
Once upon a time, the image, views, and positions of a political party were transmitted to the public in a limited number of ways, by a limited number of people. The candidates themselves were the primary means. The national party apparatus did their part to help sell the party vision. And a fairly limited number of openly partisan pundits in the media often sang along to the party tune, be it a in newspaper column in the NY Times, or on a talk radio show, or as a talking head on the political TV shows. All of them pretty much “household names” within the world of politics.
It was usually a fairly cohesive, coherent, and compatible set of policies and talking points, and was put forth fairly consistently by a literal handful of public voices.
My, how times have changed.
Mon. Oct 15, 2007
The Long Dark Tunnel of American Politics
Regular readers of this site may recognize this as the beginning of another of my Jeremiads, a screed against partisan jackassery of all colors. Though I must say I’m collecting additional evidence and refining my view quite a bit. Others may bow up at the very term “partisan jackassery,” as it is something they … enjoy. Feel free to move on. But for the two or three of you who fit neither description, as well as to rid this voice from my head, I shall proceed.
Mon
Aug
06
2007
Isn't Blogger Union An Oxymoron?
After reading this, I quickly scanned my calendar and the article date to make sure neither said “April 1.” They don’t. So this must be for real.
In a move that might make some people scratch their heads, a loosely formed coalition of left-leaning bloggers are trying to band together to form a labor union they hope will help them receive health insurance, conduct collective bargaining or even set professional standards.
Mon
Jul
16
2007
Seven
Seven. No, I’m not the seventh son born on the seventh day (I’m actually the first born on the twentieth, which has no rhythym, so it must be “authentic” white boy blues).
And no, I don’t mean the Seven Deadly Sins.
Or maybe I do. Maybe it’s the unwritten eighth sin (unwritten, because it had to be “published”).
Mon
Apr
02
2007
Rantosphere Misdirection
Political bloggers on both sides of the aisle will tell you they are an antidote to the obviously partisan media. They claim the nature of blogs allows them to update and correct as events develop. And they say blogs are self-correcting due to the fact their readers will point out their errors.
OK. Got one for you.
The claim was posted yesterday around the web that John McCain was heckled by CNN reporter Michael Ware. The original claim came from an anonymously sourced article at the Drudge Report, and then was linked as a fact and further evidence of the partisan media.
Wed. Feb 07, 2007
Attack of the Blog Archives
For years now I’ve written my little Jeremiads about the political blogosphere, its harsh and often profane nature, and how ultimately counterproductive it could be. Well, I hate to say I told you so, but…
Sun. Dec 31, 2006
I Insist You Have A Happy 2007
It recently came to my attention that December 29th was National Drunk Blogging Day. Or, was it National Blog Drunk Day. Hell, let me go check the link. OK, it was the former, not the latter. At any rate, no one bothered to send me the memo, so I was distressingly sober that day. So I’m making up for it. Right now.
Thu. Jul 06, 2006
I'm A Bad Blogfather
I’ve recently noticed a few folks reassessing where they are at with regards to their web site (I’m such a trend setter). People who’ve been doing this roughly as long as I have, and whether they realize it or not, people who created a site so affecting that it motivated others to try and create one for themselves.
On the web, there really is no greater or more sincere compliment than that.
And it moved me to take a look at an old site I haven’t seen in ages. A site that once listed blogs that claimed my site inspired them to start blogging, i.e., they claimed me as their blogfather. My blogchildren.
There were once nine of them. Only one has posted in the past month, and most are completely dead. I guess that makes me a Bad Blogfather. Consider this my memorial to them.
Mon. Jun 12, 2006
Not A Blog Anymore
If “blog” is a relatively new term for you, or if you have no knowledge of (or interest in) the “inside baseball” of the Blogosphere (i.e., probably over 90% of visitors to this site), rest assured that nothing is really going to change around here. At least, not any more than it already has this year. This is just me venting. At length. Again.
But for those of you who know your Technorati from your Elbowroni, this site is not a blog anymore. At least not in any current sense of what blogs are, or most especially, what blogs commonly aspire to be. I’m reverting to what this site was prior to July of 2000 when I first started using a piece of web-ware called Blogger … a personal web site.
Well, it will still be a series of individual articles. Posted in reverse chronological order. With comments. But semantics aside…
I hereby secede from the blogosphere as it is known today.
Wed
Jan
04
2006
First Reports Almost Always Wrong
The first reports on 9/11 said a twin engine prop plane had accidently hit one of the Trade Towers (soon thereafter, we also heard about the bombing of the State Department in DC). On Election Day 2004, the first reports of exit polls said Kerry was winning. The first reports after Katrina were that the levees in New Orleans had held. And back in October, there was a terrorist attack at Georgia Tech (or maybe it was just a blogger).
Thu
Dec
15
2005
The Year in 12 Sentences
“So this meme is going around, where you’re supposed to pull a line out of one of your entries for each month of the year.” Sort of “my year in 12 copy-and-paste sentences.” OK, let’s play!
Sat. Nov 26, 2005
Blogging For All The Wrong Reasons
A couple of recent “events” in the blog world emphasize to me that despite all the hype, [1] blogs cannot be forced into an effective collective, that’s something that has to happen naturally, as they are the sites of individuals who might happen to agree on an issue … and not much else. [2], though it happens for a few, blogs are not a means for making money, they are a medium for self expression available to all. [3], blogs cannot be conglomerated and rebranded in a Time-Warner-AOL like manner. And [4], 21.8 million blogs cannot be lined up in any particular order. Not without raising a big stink.
Obviously, most of those points come from the learning experience known as Open Source Media, or Pajamas Media, depending on the day you check. If you want, you can skip down to that. But let’s start with “the ordering of the blogs.”
Thu
Nov
17
2005
A New Blog Conglomeration
Whether you heard about the launch of Open Source Media yesterday probably says more about you than it does about them. If you haven’t a clue what or who they are, that means you’re a normal American not obsessed with something called the Blogosphere. Congratulations.
Thu
Nov
03
2005
East of Eden
There are days that I really need a good story. A hopeful development. If not a happy ending, at least the end of a sad beginning. Yesterday, I got one.
Wed
Sep
28
2005
Operation Eden: The Good Son
Over the past year or so, I’ve become quite cynical about the world of web logs and what it has become. Of course, there’s as much diversity as their is in humanity, but the trend I see is a lot like Reality TV; “I’ll do considerably degrading and disgusting things, because I want to be on TV!” And since I’ve decried the ugly, I feel an obligation to also point you to its plain and sparkling opposite. Because the other day I stumbled across a blog that simply stunned me, and actually made me think “this is why blogs were invented.”
Sat. Jul 16, 2005
Five Years
Though I’ve been “on the web” since early ‘96, it was five years ago today that I first posted something on this web site via this little application called “Blogger” (notably, the first link I made is now dead, but I’m still here, and so is Blogger).
Five years is a fairly long time in Real Life, but on the Internet, it’s an eternity. Or a significant percentage of one. Because I wasn’t a part of the First Wave of blogs, many hundreds had preceded me. I was, at best, a Second Waver, a web geek drawn in at first by the application, Blogger, but soon absorbed in the process, blogging.
The explosion in weblogs since then has been amazing to watch. It hasn’t all been good. There are many who are still far too dismissive of blogs. But there’s at least an equal number (and likely more) who take blogging far far too seriously.
Fri
May
06
2005
Hey, Have You Heard of 'Blogs'?
There’s an article that “made the rounds” earlier in the week, and from what I can tell, a lot of people got all a-twitter over it. One might almost say, “pleasurably engorged.” But to me, the article sounds a bit like a rookie reporter showing up at Super Bowl XXVIII, and detailing the future of Super Bowls based on that one game, with no knowledge of the 27 that preceded it.




