Category: Uncategorized

  • Saturday night links

    Pirillo Starts Large Scale Community CMS Project is TechCrunch coverage of Chris Pirillo’s announcement of Gnomepal. I’m trying to think of a company where its content management system is a sustainable competitive advantage. I’ve been involved in the building (and rebuilding) of several, and it’s hard to imagine a scenario where you wouldn’t start with one of the open-source projects first.

    A look at the first Web server at CERN is a Scoble video I want to watch because I enjoyed this book about the CERN origins of the web.

    Dan Bricklin video about WikiCalc is on my list simply because I enjoy his continued evolution as a curious mind in this industry.

    Mary Meader led an interesting life. (via) The opening graph of her obituary in the NYTimes:

    Mary Meader, who as a spunky new bride in the 1930s took off on a 35,000-mile journey to advance geographic knowledge by making unprecedented aerial photographs of South America and Africa, died Sunday in Kalamazoo, Mich. She was 91.

    History in a food fight. Worth a look.

    I watched the CampfireOne videos introducing Google App Engine, and read a few reviews/reactions. Many folks I respect pointed to this writeup as the most useful. It’s alright if you’re only going to read one.

  • favorite10.com helps you find new music

    My friends Vin and Chris found time for favorite10 this year. f10 is for music lovers who are constantly on the lookout for new music. Honestly, I am not the target audience. Hard to remember the last time I looked for new music, whether online or off. But Vin was kind enough to invite me to the private beta, and now it’s available for everyone. If you believe in vinyl and the coherence of the album in a singles world, then you care enough about music to use f10. Give it a look.

  • Thursday night notes and links

    Khoi Vinh watches another generation fall under Tintin’s spell. Been there, and also waiting for the movie. Some of the language in these comic albums isn’t PC anymore (e.g., “dirty gypsies”), but Tintin is never one to stand for injustice.

    Google News finally answers some of publishers’ questions, and promises more information in the future. Wow…I spent a fair bit of time trying to deconstruct this for News.com 3-4 years ago.

    Academic PDF, which I have not yet read, but plan to: “The User Experience of Software-as-a-Service Applications” (link is to HTML abstract)

    Jon Udell goes LazyWeb with “Parsing human-written date and time information, and the commenters come through, especially with DateJS.com. Not the only solution, though. I’d never heard of GATE, but looks useful. I’ve used solid implementations of this type of parsing at I Want Sandy, 30boxes.com and a few other places. Wonder how many rolled their own, or started with DateJS, GATE or similar utilities, and built from there?

    Ken Norton makes his Scoble video debut in Google Announces Offline Docs. Ken, good job, but the laptop in hand was a bit tough. And now we know where this tweet came from.

    During the last year or so I was at CNET, I pinged the legal team a few times about a corporate policy on blogging by employees. Didn’t happen while I was there. I realize it’s not so simple when you’re a media company — but it didn’t have to be that hard, either. So I noted the BBC’s Guidance –
    Personal use of Social Networking and other third party websites
    , including the section on blogging. Good for them: more media organizations should follow this lead.

    Speaking of British media companies, the Guardian impressed me in two ways last week. First, by creating the position of head of the Guardian’s development network with the goal of “offer[ing] data and tools for external developers.” Second, by hiring
    Matt McAlister to inaugurate the role. Good luck and have fun.

    Brief notes on Charlene Li’s 2008 SXSW presentation, “Social Strategies For Revolutionaries.”

    Stefanie Olsen talks with John Battelle a couple of weeks ago. For when you can’t keep up with his blog, a distillation of some of the topics he covers and thinks about for FM.

    I know storage isn’t free, and photos add up, but still surprised to get an email from BrightRoom telling me it’s the last chance to order some race pictures. I’ve bought a few before… wouldn’t you at least keep shots of customers, even if you dump all the other finish line photos? Of course, the email is remarkably promotional, and short on details: “Your Run Wild 5k/10k photos are going into retirement: SALE details below!” Will the photos disappear, or will you simply charge me more in the future to “retrieve” them? If you’re keeping them at all, then retrieval is almost without cost, so this feels like forced urgency. And I’m not interested or impressed.

    I’ve set up my FriendFeed, but not using it yet. Definitely finding Twitter more and more interesting, and I’m now including my tweets on clock, on the home page.

    Watched only one of Barry Pilling’s videos so far, but worth a link and a look.

    2005 article someone (Ken?) recently reminded me about: “Wheels and Deals in Silicon Valley” I did my first racing in January, at the Early Bird, and I’m putting in some miles now in preparation for a mid-May century. Been mostly solo, though…guess I’m missing out on the deals! 🙂 Any San Francisco-based riders reading?

  • Mary on the accordion

    My sister Mary sits in with The Loose Marbles, a New Orleans street band. That’s her on the accordion, on the right. Original location, if the embed causes any problems.

    More about the Loose Marbles in The New Yorker from May 2007.

  • Book: The Amber Spyglass

    I found the final book of the His Dark Materials trilogy, The Amber Spyglass, a bit loose. No untidy loose ends, but Philip Pullman uses more words to describe less action as the climax approaches. I do appreciate the bittersweet ending, though. You don’t get to save the world and live happily ever after. Think of Frodo at the end of The Lord of the Rings. Even in victory, something may be lost.

    I’m an optimist, generally, but a bit of pathos never hurts.

  • Book: The Subtle Knife

    Book 2 of His Dark Materials passed in a flash last week. The Subtle Knife continues Philip Pullman’s trilogy, and introduces the not-so-subtly named Mary Malone, the former nun turned physicist. These tales twist, and are complete independently, but the sweep across all three books taken together is marvelous.

  • Book: Of Mice and Men

    I was heading somewhere I knew I’d have to wait, so I grabbed John Steinbeck’s thin novella Of Mice and Men off the shelf. A few pages in, I realized I’d read it before, but didn’t remember details. Anyway, 118 pages later, I knew why Lennie had to die, just like their dreams. It’s not subtle, but the stark language feels like people.

  • Movie: The Bank Job

    I’m a sucker for a heist movie. The Bank Job isn’t brilliant, but fun all the same. Jason Statham, mildly known from the Transporter movies, and recognizable from The Italian Job (“Handsome Rob,” the driver), carries the movie through some rough spots, even without all the opportunities for action which mark his previous roles.

    I saw the movie last week, but jumped on the opportunity to write it up after reading about the guy who makes Eliot Spitzer look pure. This movie turns on some blackmail pictures of various high-and-mighty personages enjoying themselves in ways which don’t benefit from sunshine and press. The Bank Job’s producers must wonder about life imitating art. Using the term “art” very loosely. (Read the link, even if you don’t see the movie.)

    Metacritic verdict? 69 I’d bump it a few because I love the genre, even if the attempt at sexual tension between Terry (Statham) and Martine (Saffron Burrows) falls flat.

    Best heist movie I’ve seen? Inside Man.

  • New Neal Stephenson in September

    Via Slashdot, I learn that Neal Stephenson’s new novel is coming in September. Not pre-ordering right now, but on the list.

  • Setting the bar at floor level

    It’s Not You, It’s Your Books, a recent essay in the New York Times, includes this snippet.

    Let’s face it — this may be a gender issue. Brainy women are probably more sensitive to literary deal breakers than are brainy men. (Rare is the guy who’d throw a pretty girl out of bed for revealing her imperfect taste in books.) After all, women read more, especially when it comes to fiction. “It’s really great if you find a guy that reads, period,” said Beverly West, an author of “Bibliotherapy: The Girl’s Guide to Books for Every Phase of Our Lives.” (emphasis added)

    I suppose I’m glad to clear that particular bar, even if it’s set at ankle height. On behalf of all men, ouch. 😉

    Thanks for the link, Pat.