Category: Uncategorized

  • OpenDNS is live

    It’s been a long day, so I’ll simply relish that OpenDNS is now live to the world. More to do, but at least some sleep is in order. Wired covered the release with “Site-Lookup Service Foils Fraud,” and there were more than 1500 diggs today. If you want to learn more, visit the website.

  • The web, a decade ago, when it was still measurable

    Tim Bray resurrects a presentation he gave in May, 1996 entitled “Measuring the Web.”

    A worthy part of history, and now it will be preserved in various caches for… well, a long time. Some of the sites named are long gone, and no longer well known. Infoseek, for example, where I interviewed in December, 1996, when it was a rising star. Infoseek’s location, a 45 minute drive from San Francisco at off-peak hours, ruled it out by the time I arrived at the building. Some things work out for the best!

    In the presentation, there are two tidbits I’m curious about that don’t get explained in Figure 7, Most Lumous Sites (those that link out). The right-hand side of the graph is titled Sites With Pointers from: x1000. The second largest site, after Yahoo, is listed only as an IP address: 197.160.127.201 I wonder what that site was? A reverse DNS lookup tells me nothing, since DNSStuff.com says Asking f.root-servers.net for 201.127.160.197.in-addr.arpa PTR record: Sorry, there is no such zone! On the left-hand side of the graph, Outgoing URLs, x1000, there is a different IP address just over halfway down: 198.147.102.253 Looking that one up via reverse DNS gets caught in a loop, so I’m going to have to remain curious for both of them, or hope that Bray remembers what they might have been and provides an update.

    Some of the graphics carry a lot of information, despite their somewhat crude edges. I expect Matthew Hurst would have fun with the original data set (if it still existed), given what he’s showing in exercises like his map of the blogosphere. These pictures don’t always convey all we’d hope, but more fun than words, and visually appealing, too. I have Tufte’s newest, Beautiful Evidence, on order from Amazon. I can’t make beautiful or information-full pictures, but I do enjoy poring over them.

    If you do find the written history of technology appealing, don’t forget about How the Web Was Born.

  • Movie: Superman Returns

    With a bunch from the office, I saw Superman Returns the night after it opened last week. Normally, I wouldn’t brave the crowds to see an anticipated film this early in its cycle, but always more fun with a group.

    The movie worked, but certainly didn’t feel new in any ways. Brandon Routh, playing Superman, is a comic book character, hardly human acting at all. Kevin Spacey enjoys playing the super villain, and does it well, but then he could perform on Sesame Street with similar purpose and flair. Despite Spacey, the movie felt a bit too long. Only the fun hints (and then more than hints) of Superman’s (ahem) “legacy” encouraged anticipation of the next scenes and (of course) a future film.

    The Metacritic score of 72 feels a bit high to me.

    On a tangential note, reading the Wall Street Journal review of the experience after the fact, I’m glad we chose not to see the Imax enhanced 3D version, which only has 20 minutes of 3D. And that means you won’t be disappointed, probably, if you wait for the home viewing experience.

  • Book: Sprawl

    Robert Bruegmann gives book Sprawl a dry subtitle, “A compact history.” To his credit, it’s appropriate. In 225 pages or so, not counting the extensive endnotes and bibliography (which I skipped), the professor (for that’s what he is) does a thorough job of trying to define sprawl and then politely demolish the demonization and negative characterizations of the word. Bruegmann reiterates that the definition itself has been malleable over time, as people use the word to tar with broad strokes anything which doesn’t meet their approval. Sprawl, to Bruegmann, is mostly a class-based attempt to criticize any lifestyle that is not one’s own, especially for the upper and upper-middle class elites who live in cities or ex-urban communities. To the author, sprawl is a normal condition of cities, and not uniquely American, either. Affluence anywhere leads to similar conditions for cities and their environs. While the argument gets repeated a bit often, I got the point, which I would sum up with this one line from the book:

    I would argue that worries about sprawl have become so important not because conditions are really bad, as the critics suggest, but precisely because conditions are so good. [p.164]

    In the endnote for this phrase, Bruegmann says this idea is explored more deeply by Gregg Easterbrook in The Progress Paradox, which is summed up thusly: “Living standards keep rising, yet people are no happier as a result. What does this paradox tell us about ourselves and our future?” Glum stuff, perhaps. But at least Sprawl provides — and supports — a more pleasing interpretation of modern life.

  • Book: The Paperboy

    Pete Dexter’s The Paperboy was a step in a different direction from my recent reading. A novel about investigative reporting and family dynamics in Florida, The Paperboy mostly smolders, and almost catches fire. You feel the humidity of Florida in Dexter’s writing. The characters feel complete, with the deliberate exception of the narrator, the younger of two sons of a small-town newspaper editor. His floating chronicling of his older brother, a reporter, made me wish he would turn the mirror on himself a bit. It’s been maybe ten days since I finished the book, and I can’t remember the protagonist’s name. (I looked it up… Jack James.) His role is to enable, and watch, and (via reflection) slowly mature — but rarely divulge. This reticence made him more interesting.

    I was pleasantly surprised by this book, in part because I had no expectations. I’d pick up a Dexter again, though I’m not going to rush out and buy or borrow one.

  • 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.