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Watching time, the only true currency // A journal from John B. Roberts

Month: June 2006

  • Book: In Cold Blood

    I was prompted to pick up Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood by the movie Capote. I haven’t seen it yet, and didn’t want to until I’d read the book.

    In a world where CSI strives to get just a bit gorier with each episode, and Hannibal Lecter’s “fava beans” quote is a joke, this narrative tale of a real murder from 1959 doesn’t shock. Two previously small-time criminals execute a family of four in rural Kansas, and for some reason the newspaper story in New York captures the attention of a writer for The New Yorker. Six years later, the story is serialized in the magazine, and then published in its entirety as a book the following year (1966).

    Hmmm… not quite The Tipping Point or Blink, where New Yorkermagazine articles were expanded into books.

    The tale was well told, but there is certainly a bit of projection and imagination (expansion, at least), as there are no gaps presented in this story which the author never lived, despite the legendary obsessiveness of his reporting. Clearly, this book meant much, much more when it was published than it does now. I finished it a few weeks ago, but I didn’t fire straight through it with no interruptions.

    While looking for the links above, I did come across two others worth sharing. First, a 2002 Salon story looking back at the book’s impact on journalism. Second, a fine package from LJWorld.com (speaking of journalism), which combines articles on the legacy of the book in Kansas, as well as the original newspaper reporting of the murder and trial. The first headline? “Garden City family slain over weekend, from the The Associated Press, Monday, November 16, 1959. I didn’t go deeper in the package than that, but I’m impressed by the care evidenced in this stitching of history’s original reports and the ripples through time.

  • What a busy week

    When the kids are away, I’m supposed to be less busy. Hah.

    At least the World Cup has given me a two-day breather, while we wait for the quarter-finals. I might even find time to watch those games in full (hope so).

    Lots of blog backlog to clear… it will be brief, but I’ll close some loops.

  • Online to print, in rolling fashion

    While at CNET News.com, I led some experiments in PDF production of online special reports. Multi-day reports are made available in PDF format, and placed behind registration regularly. We also tried selling some of these reports, with mixed success…but it wasn’t worth the effort.

    So today’s news that the Guardian (UK) is going to offer a constantly updated printable edition, G24 caught my eye. Aimed at the commuter crowd, which I’m told in London (at least) commands a majority of the working world, I’ll be curious to see how many people print. I know I’d like it, even though I use my Treo to check out a few websites now and again. Paper is still easier on the eyes.

    Additional irony, for me, is that BT will be the first sponsor of this new edition. I wonder which telecom product or service they will push to those sitting on the train? Mobile data or web surfing? Naahhhhh.

    I’m also curious about two areas related to pagination. First, what will the advertising creative be? I would expect the Guardian and BT will avoid full-page ads… otherwise, that is the first page to be recycled, not read on the train or bus. Second, how will the copy flow for material written for the web? G24 will be produced every 15 minutes, according to the article, so I strongly doubt human intervention can be part of the process. I wonder what technical solution they’ve found to handle the differing lengths of material, or are they simply going to allow some white space? We shall see.

    The tools to from online to print are sure to continue improving, even as the need fades. 😉

  • Birthday for the girl

    The party was ten days ago, but she ratcheted up the excitement again today for the actual day. Advice for parents of small children: go with the small cupcakes!

  • Catching Joe Jackson, thanks to Craigslist

    My original search of Craigslist for Joe Jackson tickets was clearly done too early. Thanks to a colleague, I was reminded to set up a search RSS feed, and as the date (this coming Thursday) approached, more tickets became available. A big thanks to Steele for the ticket.

  • Too many red cards

    The BBC applauds the US earning a draw today against Italy, although they didn’t agree that the Mastroeni red card was too much. Thank you, Ghana, for keeping this group very interesting all the way through Thursday’s matches.

  • Data and formats: how much control?

    I’ve had too nice a day overall to spend too much time teasing out something truly new on the topics of where data lives, which data is your data, what formats are most future-proof, and which companies may or may not have found a path for data and formats which both serves people best and supports their business.

    But over the past few days, I’ve read different and varied posts on these very topics… and I don’t think they are different topics, so it is worth the time to put all the ideas (with links) in one post for contemplation. I’m going to pluck sentences here and there, but most of these are worth reading in context and in full. The better posts are the length they are because they convey ideas with varying subtlety, not in pullquotes.

    Data

    I saw the Flickr API conversation via Michael Arrington, which was also the path to the “how-does-he-find-the-time?” comments of Thomas Hawk in the Flickr forums. This thread of the data and formats tapestry starts on whether an API must be open to competitors or not, but gets into fun territory with the conversation about whether tags (and other metadata) are owned by the tagger or the service…and whether’s there anything that can be done about it, practically. Folks even muse on extending the JPEG format (!) for a place to store this data.

    Kudos to Stewart Butterfield for answering with respect, but not being pushed around, either, both in the Flickr thread (his home turf) and in the TechCrunch comments.

    Today, Dave Winer adds “It’s the Users, Dummy,” banging a drum he’s hit before

    The only criteria for winning that should be tolerated, by anyone, are features, performance and price. Lock-in is not an honorable or sustainable way to win.

    Also on this sunny Saturday (in SF, don’t know about DC), Scott Karp pitched in with Data Storage Is the Key to the Web App Revolution, where he quotes a correspondence with Nick Carr about how enterprises already depend on external storage and applications (Salesforce.com is only the most prominent example, mentioned by Carr). Karp adds

    On the consumer side, granted that most people would do better outsourcing the securing of their data, but perceived control, even at the expense of actual security, is also a powerful force.

    I’d argue that perception is certainly shifting. Webmail is the thin end of the wedge on this issue: most people are content to believe their data is safe with one of the big webmail services out there. The “cloud” hasn’t let many down in the first decade of this type of service. I have to believe it’s getting better, not worse.

    Formats

    After switching away from Apple for the first time in 22 years, Mark Pilgrim explains why in “When the bough breaks

    I’m creating things now that I want to be able to read, hear, watch, search, and filter 50 years from now.

    He doesn’t trust the Mac to enable that future.

    I’m thrilled to see Mark Pilgrim blogging again. No one combines incredible depth of knowledge with such crystallized attitude in every well-written sentence. I have no idea if he’s quite as formidable verbally as he is in writing, but damn!

    John Gruber responded first with a quick note, and then with a lengthy essay to clarify: “And Oranges

    The hard part is deciding how much importance to give to each factor you care about. How much openness are you willing to give up for a system with a better interface?

    (On a related note: John Gruber’s contribution to the fray is what prompted me to become a member, after reading him since the beginning. I don’t need full-text posts via RSS, but the Linked List feels worth $20.)

    Pilgrim responds with “Juggling Oranges,” where he appreciates the thought put into Gruber’s essay, but notes that the larger point of data preservation is the point. ASCII text comes off looking brilliant, for reasons like this:

    So if you care about long-term data preservation, your #1 goal should be to reduce the number of times you convert your data from one format to another.

    I wonder what Mark Hurst thinks, and whether Creative Good still follows The Good Easy, which is not about formats, per se, but might reduce conversions. Of course, Hurst’s bit literacy would say… let those bits go. So maybe Mark Hurst and Mark Pilgrim aren’t quite on the same page here. But I digress.

    Anyway…Tim Bray follows Pilgrim and Gruber’s exchange with “Time to Switch?,” where he answers his own question in the affirmative.

    This feels like a crazy name-drop post, but it’s indicative of my reading habits, and given the relative prominence of all these folks in the tech blogging world, I’m sure I’m not alone in subscribing to all/most of these blogs, so I’m surprised no one has (ahem) mashed-up these two themes.

    My effort here may be little better than the lines the boy draws when he connects the dots, but I absolutely feel this is all part of a larger conversation about control. Does controlling your data make you feel like you’re in control of your life? While I love that idea, it’s bound to be a false sense of security. It’s still stuff, even when it’s bits, not atoms.

    Still, I admire those looking ahead, and I’ll continue to support the bleeding edge customers who help challenge companies to improve. I’d be curious to read my blog and look at my photos in 50 years, even if few others will.

    Maybe someone else can put together a well-written essay on what it all means? I nominate Jarod Lanier, who enjoys wading in on hyped topics and knows how to write (e.g. Digital Maoism: The Hazards of the New Online Collectivism, which is on a separate topic altogether). But anyone else is welcome to jump in.

    N.B. Of course, all this from someone still struggling to back up their current computer, which has at least a decade of files transferred across as many as four Macs. Said files may or may not be in workable formats if I should ever try to open them once more. But I console myself with two facts: I still have them (until my hard drive befores my backup) and I haven’t touched most of them yet, so would my life (or anyone else’s) really be different if they did disappear?

  • Upgraded to WordPress 2.03

    I’ve just upgraded to WordPress 2.03 from 1.5, less than six months after finally switching. So far, so good. This post will help test. Let me know if anything appears awry.

    I also added a way to subscribe to full-text posts via e-mail, courtesy of FeedBurner. For those that are interested, enter your address at the top right of the web pages.

  • Looking for one ticket to see Joe Jackson on June 22, 2006

    I’ve search StubHub and eBay and Craigslist, without success so far. Joe Jackson will be playing in Saratoga, CA next week, on Thursday June 22, 2006. The performance is sold out, so I just posted my first “Want it Now” on eBay (eBay – Want It Now Post – Joe Jackson ticket one for Saratoga, CA June 22, 2006 – 6638404263). I’m not expecting much, but any other tips? Beyond paying attention months earlier!

  • Niche search engine with large type: Big.com

    I find Big.com clever. It’s just another search engine, but the fonts are bigger. Fun twist, and with a short URL, sure to get some traffic. Of course, the Terms of Service are not in the bigger font. Hmmm…

    This is all part of Idealab, as is the current Snap.com. Although the results for Big.com come from Ask.com. Got that straight? Enough three and four letter URLs for you?