Month: March 2005

  • Reading vs. Scanning, Browsing vs. Searching

    A common objection to blogs is that because the medium is so easy to update and the cost so low, too much unedited drivel makes it online to make the material useful as a source of business information. I have to say I don’t mind people speaking their mind in an unedited stream. I describe it as viewing the raw feed from a network news show, the satellite uplink where you get to see the anchorman get his nose powdered during the commercial break.

    To me, the rough edges, where you see the process behind the production is an important part of the context. To those that view these edges as irrelevant and something that should be edited out of sight, I say that any skillfully-crafted search statement should be able to cut right by these distractions.

    The internet is messy. It’s not about finished pieces – it’s about works in progress. When Usenet was my the source of information, my kill file was my friend, it helped me filter out irrelevance. Navigating through a site map or other navigational aid is becoming a paradigm of the past. Now it’s all about using search engines used as scalpels to get right to the point. This is why search engine marketing has become such a hot business.

    I read magazines, I browse newspapers. I search the internet, I scan the results. I really don’t browse the internet anymore. If there’s a lengthy piece I want to read, I print it.

    Which leads me to my last point. I saw the piece about blogging on ABC Nightline last night and the one good point they made is that as links are propagated to the second and third degree, they drift further from the original point and the linking process twists original context much like a phrase gets misinterpreted in a game of telephone.

    How do we keep necessary context while also allowing people to drill down past it?

  • Dining with Yahoo

    The folks at SFist write about their dinner with Yahoo where they get an insight into some of the economic shifts that are a result of the changes in the media landscape.

    Greg pointed out that in the past, papers could depend on classified ads accounting for up to 35% of their revenue. Now they’re lucky if it represents 15%. And Susan’s friend Bob, who was nice enough to give us a ride back up 101, noted that 93% of businesses in San Francisco have fifty or fewer employees, and that as print publications increase their ad rates to account for revenue shortfalls, small, local businesses are being shut out of much needed publicity, which opens the door for chains and franchises who can subsidize the increased media costs.

  • Nando Rebranded

    A sign of the times perhaps. Nando Times, one of the first online media organizations is being re-branded by it’s parent as McClatchy interactive. Nando, launched in 1994, was shorthand for The News & Observer and was, in the early days, the first place to go for quality news online.

  • 2MHost.com is now a Movable Type Hosting Partner

    I’m pleased to announce another Movable Type Hosting Partner. 2MHost offers an Movable Type integrated into an MT-Ready hosting package. A full list of all Movable Type Hosting Partners can be found on the Six Apart website.

  • TypePad in the Classroom

    Bud Gibson, who teaches at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business, writes about using TypePad in the classroom. On the three reasons why blogging is not just another technology in the classroom fad Bud writes,

     

    By design, blogging allows individuals
    to raise topics of interest and create threads of conversation without
    having to ask anyone’s permission. That was an explicit design
    consideration for this course; I wanted to know what was going on with
    students. Bulletin boards tend to be top-down and are owned by one
    person. Wikis force you to go through a social filter. Others can edit
    your pages or even delete them.

    Second, because blogging also produces XML-based feeds, it is very
    easy to aggregate all of the individual contributions in one place
    while still maintaining individual attribution.

    Third, the XML-based feeds in blogs allow me to join people and
    resources to my group vs. having to get them to join me. Note, I did
    ask permission of everyone whose feed I aggregated into our site, but
    they did not have to go through a sign-on process and explicitly
    produce content for the site. By localizing content creation, blogs
    make it possible to ask permission and get a coherent stream of content.

  • Redwoods, Wine, & Seashore

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    We went up to the Russian River this weekend to celebrate Izumi’s birthday. The draw was the annual Barrel Tasting festival but we branched out and did a few other things while we were there. There was an amazing grove of 2,000 year old redwoods right up the road from our hotel where Izumi found a four leaf clover, and we also drove down to the coast where the Russian River meets the Pacific and headed down South to Bodega Bay.

    I was a tad optimistic thinking that the kids would appreciate a tour through some of the regions finest vineyards. The finer points of what makes a good Pinot was a bit lost on them. Not all was lost though, Tyler did learn that the tin cap on the top of champagne corks is there to keep out the mice who used to gnaw their way through the cork. We did get to taste some fine Chardonnay Champagne and made it to Davis Bynum to taste some of their organically grown Pinots as well as a Syrah from the barrel.

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    The trip was a last minute idea and everywhere I called was only taking reservations for two nights so I jumped on the place that called us back. Let’s just say I wouldn’t recommend it. I was lured by the good-looking photographs on their website (Retreat Resort & Spa in Guerneville) and the owner, who called us back, seemed nice enough. We arrived but instead of being welcomed, we felt as if we were intruding. The rooms definitely were not as nice as the pictures – electrical sockets hanging out of the wall, a soggy, moss-ridden rug out on the back deck, a half-finished closet, and water stains on the ceiling. It basically looked like a half-finished total makeover project. On the surface there was an attempt to reform what used to be a cheap roadside motel into a nicer set of bungalows but while they had made much progress so that on the surface it looked OK, there was still a lot of details that needed work.

    The town of Guerneville was kind of interesting too. Despite being nestled within some pretty ancient redwoods, the kind where you’d expect to find fairies and gnomes, the folks that we met there seemed to be late-80’s era yuppie refugees. The hotel was playing a kind of house music I used to hear blasting out of windows when I lived in the Castro and the local coffee shop was playing Huey Lewis & the News.

    Lessons learned this weekend? Don’t believe the photos you see on the website. Wine tasting is boring for kids. Sonoma County is beautiful. More photos here.

  • Steve Fossett, where are you going?

    When talking with Tyler this morning about Steve Fossett’s solo flight around the world, my five year old son asked,

    "Why did he do that? All the way around the world to end up at the same place? He should have visited someplace and met some people."

    Good point.

  • Annoying Message from the Sponsor

    Don’t you hate those corny flash movies that dance around in front of you like a spastic chicken keeping you from getting to where you want to go?

    Happy Friday y’all!

  • Pay-Per-View Blogging

    I’m a kottke.org micropatron.

    I was going to post (or should I say pile on) the commentary surrounding Jason Kottke’s three week fund raising drive to support his devoting full time to his blog. As usual, several links later and I’m staring at a service selling a perfect-bound copy of all of John Battelle’s posts for 2004. I blessed Jason with PayPal dust and had to resist doing the same with John’s book, (I didn’t because he’s in the process of boiling down all the great stuff on his site into a book).

    For the same reason I bought a copy of suck.com’s book back in the 90’s, I will continue to show my support for good writing on the web and when I can do it with a direct contribution (with a few basis points shaved off the top by PayPal) it makes me feel that much better.