for all the kind words. The cast I’m getting Monday will allow me to type, but VR is a good idea, esp. for programmers.
Thanks
for all the kind words. The cast I’m getting Monday will allow me to type, but VR is a good idea, esp. for programmers.
for all the kind words. The cast I’m getting Monday will allow me to type, but VR is a good idea, esp. for programmers.
for all the kind words. The cast I’m getting Monday will allow me to type, but VR is a good idea, esp. for programmers.
Saturday, so blogging will be light for the next few weeks. Check the linked blogs for your reading fix.
Saturday, so blogging will be light for the next few weeks. Check the linked blogs for your reading fix.
— In the last few days, I’ve seen quite a bit of crossover blogging: Dan Gillmor writing about civil liberties in connection with Abdullah al-Muhajir and about the estate tax, elf Dave Winer trying, unsuccessfully, to write about journalistic ethics, Doc Searls linking Susanna Cornett as Blog of the Day, warblogger Jeff Jarvis commenting on … Continue reading “It’s the people, stupid”
— In the last few days, I’ve seen quite a bit of crossover blogging: Dan Gillmor writing about civil liberties in connection with Abdullah al-Muhajir and about the estate tax, elf Dave Winer trying, unsuccessfully, to write about journalistic ethics, Doc Searls linking Susanna Cornett as Blog of the Day, warblogger Jeff Jarvis commenting on elf content on his World War III blog, and even Glenn Harlan making a Winerian attempt at getting technical in connection with the WiFi LAN he’s trying to set up in and around his house in Tennessee.
This is a reaction to the New York Times article on the supposed rift between warbloggers and techbloggers, of course, and a testament to the independence of bloggers which makes us unwilling to be pigeon-holed.
So just when it’s looking like peace and harmony is about to break in the Blogosphere, along comes Megnut with What We’re Doing When We Blog and slaps warbloggers in the face with a large and nasty dose of elf condescension, sparked by what was actually quite an excellent article on blogging by Cathy Seipp:
Rather than rant that Catherine just “doesn’t get it,” it seems to me that her article, and others that are similar, are perfect opportunities for the blogging community to talk about our own evolution
Seipp doesn’t “get it,” according to Megnut, because she doesn’t wax technical about hyperlinks, timestamps, reverse-chronological sequences, and that all-important elfin sacred construct, “community.” With apologies to Werner Erhard, I have to say that it’s Megnut who doesn’t “get it.”
The Blog form, as we all know by now, is as old the web, complete with reverse-chronologically-time-stamped-hyperlinked-articles, but nobody paid any attention to them (except for few programmers) until Sept. 11. So the form isn’t responsible for the recent explosion of interest. We could make a half-hearted argument that the new easy-to-use tools are important, but that doesn’t really explain all of what’s going on now either, although they helped.
Warblogs broke down a barrier that existed between the media and the legion of informed and concerned citizens who had a desperate need to understand a new set of issues related to war, politics, culture, and religion that hadn’t been handled without spin for two generations. So blogs became interesting and relevant because interesting and relevant people started blogging. The form of the blog is less important than the content, and the “community,” if there is one, is everybody.
So it’s not the technology, it’s the people, and “what we’re doing when we blog” is the same thing we do at cocktail parties, except that with blogs we provide evidence; which was Cathy’s point, after all.
Bloggers have made the media more honest, and we’ve made it more relevant to people’s lives. We applied technology to a real human need, and we’d best be paying more attention, as technologists, to how the technology is being used, and as citizens to what we’re able to learn through this medium about the world we live in. The medium itself is not the message, never was, and never will be.
— Trying to throw us off-guard, Matthew Engel of the commie Guardian Unlimited lists Fifty ways to love America But, in the interests of balance and to avoid future difficulties with the immigration service, here are some reasons why the US is wonderful. Stuff like green suburbs, more wonderful race relations than Europe has, and … Continue reading “Wacko Graudian strikes again”
— Trying to throw us off-guard, Matthew Engel of the commie Guardian Unlimited lists Fifty ways to love America
But, in the interests of balance and to avoid future difficulties with the immigration service, here are some reasons why the US is wonderful.
Stuff like green suburbs, more wonderful race relations than Europe has, and “ever-open shops” that aren’t possible in socialist countries. I’m surprised he didn’t list our soccer football team, which actually scores a gooooooooooaaaaallllllll occasionally.
— Dan Gillmor responds to Winer’s bizarre criticisms of him at Silicon Valley | 06/08/2002 | The 404 Saga: My Response Here’s my response to the continuing broadsides against me you may have read in the past few days. I say bizarre because Winer’s mainly upset that Gillmor stopped using Winer’s software, and he covers … Continue reading “Dan Gillmor’s response”
— Dan Gillmor responds to Winer’s bizarre criticisms of him at Silicon Valley | 06/08/2002 | The 404 Saga: My Response
Here’s my response to the continuing broadsides against me you may have read in the past few days.
I say bizarre because Winer’s mainly upset that Gillmor stopped using Winer’s software, and he covers that by claiming Dan’s not a Real Journalist because he didn’t criticize his employer. Thing is, Dan did criticize Knight-Ridder, and in fact he’s done so much more conscientiously than Winer’s criticized his, who happens to be himself.
— | KEN . LAYNE . DOT . CON | said today: I’m also jealous. I got invited to this cool Blogging Panel Deal at the National Press Club in D.C., but I had to say no. Can’t afford the plane ticket this month. This would be a good time to hit Ken’s tip jar … Continue reading “Worthy cause”
— | KEN . LAYNE . DOT . CON | said today:
I’m also jealous. I got invited to this cool Blogging Panel Deal at the National Press Club in D.C., but I had to say no. Can’t afford the plane ticket this month.
This would be a good time to hit Ken’s tip jar if you haven’t done it lately — I’d like to see him on the panel, for the greater glory of Blogistan.
— Senate Advances Paid Family Leave Bill SACRAMENTO — Legislation that would make California the first state to promise disability pay for workers who take time off to care for an ill family member or to welcome a newborn into the world was passed Monday by the Senate. My friend Sen. Ray Haynes calls this … Continue reading “Money for nothing”
— Senate Advances Paid Family Leave Bill
SACRAMENTO — Legislation that would make California the first state to promise disability pay for workers who take time off to care for an ill family member or to welcome a newborn into the world was passed Monday by the Senate.
My friend Sen. Ray Haynes calls this a “tax on jobs” and he’s not far from the truth. But it’s still not a bad idea, as long as it’s strictly monitored. The end result of this kind of thing, however, is making employers reluctant to hire women.
— Expanded hate-crime bill faces key Senate hurdle / Legislation would cover gays, disabled Washington — Calling hate crimes against gays a form of “domestic terrorism,” gay rights supporters hope to clear a major hurdle in the Senate today in their effort to strengthen federal prosecution of violent crimes against gays and lesbians and the … Continue reading “Federal hate crimes bill”
— Expanded hate-crime bill faces key Senate hurdle / Legislation would cover gays, disabled
Washington — Calling hate crimes against gays a form of “domestic terrorism,” gay rights supporters hope to clear a major hurdle in the Senate today in their effort to strengthen federal prosecution of violent crimes against gays and lesbians and the disabled.
Is this the most egregious exploitation of 9/11 yet? I think it may be. The two major problems: criminalizing thought and federalizing state jurisdiction over criminal law.
— Eric S. Raymond demonstrates a finely nuanced political sensibility in this post ostensibly listing liberal and conservative values. About 15 of his twenty issues are strawmen, such as the claims that conservatives are creationists and liberals communists.So here are my Top Ten Reasons for not being a Libertarian: America isn’t France: we don’t do … Continue reading “Top fifteen strawmen”
— Eric S. Raymond demonstrates a finely nuanced political sensibility in this post ostensibly listing liberal and conservative values. About 15 of his twenty issues are strawmen, such as the claims that conservatives are creationists and liberals communists.
So here are my Top Ten Reasons for not being a Libertarian:
No strawmen, only the facts. Now a much more interesting list would be the Top Ten Reasons Why I’m not a Moderate, since that’s the dominant political point of view in this country as in all developed nations. Reason number one: Moderates are wishy-washy and have no moral compass.
— The New York Times story on the fight between Blogistan and Blogtopia is up, at A Rift Among Bloggers This time it is happening to Weblogs. Five years ago a few programmers pioneered this form of hyperlinked online journal, posting their thoughts on technology matters and personal musings. Later they built Weblog publishing tools … Continue reading “Blogtopia v. Blogistan”
— The New York Times story on the fight between Blogistan and Blogtopia is up, at A Rift Among Bloggers
This time it is happening to Weblogs. Five years ago a few programmers pioneered this form of hyperlinked online journal, posting their thoughts on technology matters and personal musings. Later they built Weblog publishing tools for nontechies, and a vast spectrum of Weblogs — blogs for short — quietly bloomed.
As regular readers of this blog, Ken Layne’s blog, and most other popular warblogs know, the weblog was not invented by a few web elves in Frisco five years ago, it’s a form that’s as old as the web itself, if not older. What the Frisco elves created was the name “weblog” and some scripts that made archiving old updates easier. I’d hate to have to hang my technical hat on such a thin contribution, but it that’s all you’ve got, you’ve got to make the most of it.
Now that Dave Winer has drunk the Kool-Aid, he insists that there’s no rumble between elves and pundits, but rather there’s a big showdown between amateur writers and professionals. I don’t buy this polarization either, since most of the blogs I enjoy reading are written by people who have, at one time or another, been paid for their writing. That doesn’t make these people (and I’m one of them, marginally) Big Media or some such capitalistic cabal, because they’re mainly free-lancers, but it does mean that they’re able to express their ideas coherently. Dave’s Kool-Aid inspired rant against Dan Gillmor is an embarrassment to Dave’s mama, it’s so lame. And no, Mickey Kaus didn’t suddenly become a piece of dried doggy poo just because he moved his blog to somewhere within MSN. Some jealous competitors just need to get over themselves and celebrate the man’s success.
UPDATE: Gallagher wasn’t talking about Dr. Frank, but about Max Power, whose real last name is Frank. Ken thinks the Gallagher article was pretty good, even though the dude largely ignored what Ken told him over the phone and went with some more inflammatory comments from Ken’s blog a while back. It seems odd that Gallagher didn’t get the fact that the root of the conflict between Blogtopia and Blogistan is political.
Blogtopians, to the extent that they have politics, are left-wingers, generally subscribing to a doctrine of anti-Americanism that’s not far from Chomsky — fear of large businesses, belief that Colonialism caused all the Third World’s problems, distrust of the Right-Wing bias they believe is inherent in media, and belief that we have to understand the Root Causes of terrorism (American wealth and power) before we defend ourselves. The pride of ownership issue is a smokescreen, and it’s not even factually grounded. It’s a shame that Gallagher didn’t pick up on this, but he was writing for the NY Times, so he may not have been allowed to discuss it.