Lying in Ponds

— “Lying in Ponds is an attempt to quantify and analyze partisanship in the American punditocracy.” I heard this ole boy on NPR talking about his method for rating the partisanship of America’s punditocracy. Given that it rates Krugman as the number one most partisan pundit, it must be accurate. Definitely worth a visit, despite … Continue reading “Lying in Ponds”

— “Lying in Ponds is an attempt to quantify and analyze partisanship in the American punditocracy.” I heard this ole boy on NPR talking about his method for rating the partisanship of America’s punditocracy. Given that it rates Krugman as the number one most partisan pundit, it must be accurate. Definitely worth a visit, despite the Monty Python reference in the name.

Good writing

— There’s been a lot of exceptionally crappy writing in the Blogosphere lately, so I’m going to do my little bit toward improving the quality of expression by reminding my peers of one simple little principle that will help you make your musings more palatable to others: keep it brief. Sound ideas don’t need 1000 … Continue reading “Good writing”

— There’s been a lot of exceptionally crappy writing in the Blogosphere lately, so I’m going to do my little bit toward improving the quality of expression by reminding my peers of one simple little principle that will help you make your musings more palatable to others: keep it brief.

Sound ideas don’t need 1000 words to say what 100 say just as well; crappy ideas can’t hide behind lush undergrowth of indirection and irrelevent detail, and extremely stupid ideas couched in terms that waste the reader’s time don’t endear you to anybody.


Follow the example of the professional writers — there’s a reason they get paid for doing this stuff and you pay to do it.

Nigerian developments

— Amy Langfield’s New York Notebook Six people were arrested in South Africa over the weekend on suspicion of being involved in the infamous “Nigerian” e-mail and letter fraud. Damn – I was counting on that $5M for my retirement.

Amy Langfield’s New York Notebook

Six people were arrested in South Africa over the weekend on suspicion of being involved in the infamous “Nigerian” e-mail and letter fraud.

Damn – I was counting on that $5M for my retirement.

Design rant

— A writer, a weblog, her opinions: Yourish.com does a good and proper rant about reverse text blogs: There is a really good reason why reverse type is not used in the print industry except as captions, pullquotes, and short bits of text: It is unreadable in the longer form. This has been one of … Continue reading “Design rant”

A writer, a weblog, her opinions: Yourish.com does a good and proper rant about reverse text blogs:

There is a really good reason why reverse type is not used in the print industry except as captions, pullquotes, and short bits of text: It is unreadable in the longer form.

This has been one of my favorite hobby horses for years: so many website designers seem to strive for unreadable sites. Coming from a typesetting background like Yourish (and yours truly), this is abomination.

Strive to set your blog apart with content, not with insane graphics (unless, like Laurence Simon, your insane graphics are part of your charm.)

Why blogs will win

— Implicit in the shrill anti-blog essays from Alex Beam and others in the Media Establishment is the sense that journalism is losing mindshare to blogs and other forms of new media. This isn’t just because blogs, the web, and high-tech are so all-fired wonderful. No, the backstory is the decline of journalism under MBA … Continue reading “Why blogs will win”

— Implicit in the shrill anti-blog essays from Alex Beam and others in the Media Establishment is the sense that journalism is losing mindshare to blogs and other forms of new media. This isn’t just because blogs, the web, and high-tech are so all-fired wonderful. No, the backstory is the decline of journalism under MBA control, as Kathleen Parker explains in her column at

OrlandoSentinel.com: Opinion

Thanks in part to human resources personnel — those well-meaning, misguided individuals who view writers and editors as cogs in a well-oiled machine — newsrooms have lost their souls.

Parker writes from her home in South Carolina, so for her the newsroom is already a thing of the past. So don’t get the big-head, bloggers, it’s not so much that we’re winning as that the other side has given-up and is in full retreat. And what are they afraid of? Fun, mostly.

Nigerian spam

— I’ve noticed an increase in Nigerian spam recently. Bienvenue sur Emmanuelle.net has the lowdown: Merci bien, Yves. En fait, je d?couvre que l’excellent site Hoaxbuster a recens? diff?rentes arnaques africaines en fran?ais. Aux Etats-Unis, les internautes ont une certaine affection pour les messages nig?riens. Le site Snopes a rassembl? un dossier complet. Check it … Continue reading “Nigerian spam”

— I’ve noticed an increase in Nigerian spam recently. Bienvenue sur Emmanuelle.net has the lowdown:

Merci bien, Yves. En fait, je d?couvre que l’excellent site Hoaxbuster a recens? diff?rentes arnaques africaines en fran?ais. Aux Etats-Unis, les internautes ont une certaine affection pour les messages nig?riens. Le site Snopes a rassembl? un dossier complet.

Check it out if you’re into Urban Legends. In related news, the old saw about Bill Gates giving you money if you forward junk e-mail is still around — I got it from one of my starving children yesterday.

Nixon’s welfare explosion

— The welfare system exploded during the Nixon/Ford Administration, and I’d never understood why, since Nixon’s not exactly the kind of guy anyone would accuse of having an excess of compassion for the needy and downtrodden. There’s an explanation to be had from the book PatrickRuffini.com // Rants reviews today, “Intellectuals and the American Presidency.” … Continue reading “Nixon’s welfare explosion”

— The welfare system exploded during the Nixon/Ford Administration, and I’d never understood why, since Nixon’s not exactly the kind of guy anyone would accuse of having an excess of compassion for the needy and downtrodden. There’s an explanation to be had from the book PatrickRuffini.com // Rants reviews today, “Intellectuals and the American Presidency.” Nixon hired Democrat Pat Moynihan to reform the welfare system, according to Nixon’s vision where getting rid of social workers was the main priority. With them out of the picture, the welfare system turned into nothing more than a money transfer system, which lead to massive expansion down the road. It turns out the most important thing the welfare system does is help the poor and downtrodden get their lives together and do the things adults have to do, but this work takes adult supervision.

Cross-over blogging

— Doc Searls, the Linux dude, reports that Scripting News is taking dead aim on Glenn Harlan Roberts, who’s apparently been pounding his chest again about traffic: Someday Glenn Reynolds will be shocked to find out that he’s not the darling of the bigpubs anymore, then someone else will be blustering how they made him … Continue reading “Cross-over blogging”

Doc Searls, the Linux dude, reports that Scripting News is taking dead aim on Glenn Harlan Roberts, who’s apparently been pounding his chest again about traffic:

Someday Glenn Reynolds will be shocked to find out that he’s not the darling of the bigpubs anymore, then someone else will be blustering how they made him obsolete. It won’t be any more true then than it is now.

I hate to see all this animosity between people like Winer who’re obsessed with technology, and I mean that in a good way, and people like Roberts who’re obsessed with, um, other things. But one of the inevitable, recurring developments in tech-driven media is the emergence of massive ego after an accident of history puts a good-enough guy in the right place at the right time. If there was a way to bottle that and sell it, I’d be rich.

Winer does see one benefit to the rise of technically illiterate blogs — he’s not hated quite so much by the tech crowd any more, and given that he’s actually quite bright, it’s good that techies can work with him without being too put off by his personality, or more accurately, lack thereof.

It’s inevitable that technologies leave the tech reservation as soon as they’re sufficiently useful, often to the annoyance of their creators. But the interesting development in blogging today is the emergence of what I call “cross-over bloggers.” These are the rare people literate in both tech and the fuzzy realm of politics, public policy, and culture. There was a huge increase in their visibility post-Sept. 11, and it’s pretty much a given that many such people are blogging now, or will be shortly. This promises an interesting evolution for the culture as a whole.

I suppose Eric Raymond might be considered a cross-over blogger, since he’s involved in open source software, the second amendment, and the Playboy philosophy. But given the fringe nature of his doctrines, he doesn’t rate very highly on either the tech scale or the culture scale. There are others who make a more nuanced mesh, like Steve Den Beste, Bill Quick, Bjorn Staerk, and Charles Johnson, so it’s not impossible to beat the C. P. Snow rap that tech and the humanities are separate worlds.

UPDATE: Winer and Harlan Roberts kissed and made-up on the phone, so all’s peace and love again at the antipodes of the blogosphere, not that their hassle was ever really the point.

Nick Denton’s obsession with blog history

continued yesterday on Nick Denton’s blog. I wonder why he brings this subject up over and over and over again? It’s not for the traffic, obviously.Speaking of traffic, NZ Bear has hit upon a new way to drive traffic to your blog: post a completely ridiculous ranking of blogs, based on an allegedly objective measure; … Continue reading “Nick Denton’s obsession with blog history”

continued yesterday on Nick Denton’s blog. I wonder why he brings this subject up over and over and over again? It’s not for the traffic, obviously.

Speaking of traffic, NZ Bear has hit upon a new way to drive traffic to your blog: post a completely ridiculous ranking of blogs, based on an allegedly objective measure; when your method is criticized, make it even worse. It’s a pretty funny exercise.

In the same vein

— Salon.com takes a look at Media Whores Online: Rabid watchdog While attacking what it sees as a vast, right-wing media conspiracy, an anonymous Web site has led to a growing media mystery: Who is behind Media Whores Online? Yes, that right wing bias in the media’s everywhere, isn’t it? According to the easter bunny, … Continue reading “In the same vein”

Salon.com takes a look at Media Whores Online:

Rabid watchdog
While attacking what it sees as a vast, right-wing media conspiracy, an anonymous Web site has led to a growing media mystery: Who is behind Media Whores Online?

Yes, that right wing bias in the media’s everywhere, isn’t it? According to the easter bunny, anyway.