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A: Probably.
Speculation continues that Dear Raed, the weblog of a young man in Baghdad who posts under the name Salam Pax, is a hoax, perhaps even a disinformation campaign by the CIA or Mossad. A month after Computerworld published a story quoting a "terrorist" who turned out to be a one of their former writers pranking them, it would be foolish not to wonder.
[...]
A traceroute on Salam's most recent originating address got as far as Transtrum, a unit of the Lebanon-based ISP TerraNet. Requests for further routing info from Transtrum went unanswered, but senior network engineers who looked at the headers for me in the US think they're legitimately from Iraq.
Details on Iraq's network can be found in this Salon story by Brian McWilliams, the same hacker/journalist who duped Computerworld and cracked the "send email to Saddam" mailbox on Uruklink.
- Salam's blog is hosted in Santa Clara, California, at a high speed co-location facility along with the rest of blogspot.com. This seems obvious to Net veterans, but an MSNBC article's wording misled some readers into believing the site is served from Iraq. Salam posts his blog remotely using Blogger's editing software on a PC. That means blogspot.com (aka Pyra, now a division of Google) has IP records of his previous posts in their log files. No luck getting them yet.
- Yes, blogspot.com was one of the domains blocked by Iraqi network administrators in January, possibly in response to Slammer. But Salam and other Iraqis know how to use Web proxies and other tricks to get around the blocks.
- Salam Pax is a pseudonym composed of the Arabic and Latin words for peace. But he has signed what may be his real name in personal correspondence to another blogger.
- At least one American has received a package from Salam, apparently mailed from Jordan where the titular Raed (a friend for whom Salam says he originally created his weblog) lives.
- Salam posted this morning to say BBC reports that state radio had been taken over were false. He was right about that.
In the end, it's still a matter of faith. Yes, I think he's really in Baghdad. And so far, he's still alive and well.
2:39:09 AM
The Media. So Syria threatened to kill the official who had given them permission to cross the border, and that got CNN to move. [The Other Side]
[...]
There a lot of serious, professional journalists here, several of whom were here (or other parts of Iraq) for the first Gulf War and a few of whom are real experts on the region. There are also a lot of clowns. The worst offenders, naturally, are American TV. A sample of what they[base ']ve done:
Last fall, CNN came to Kurdistan through Syria, which used to be the easiest way to get here. Syria gives you a two week visa, and you have to be in and out of Kurdistan in that time. CNN, however, apparently decided it wanted to stay longer. Syria wants to keep decent relations with Iraq and Iraq didn't like CNN being in Kurdistan, so it asked Syria to kick them out, and Syria did, but CNN refused to go. So Syria threatened to kill the official who had given them permission to cross the border, and that got CNN to move. Then Syria closed the border to all journalists. And, this is according to a local who worked with CNN, president of the Kurdistan Democratic Party Massoud Barzani personally appealed to the president of Syria to let CNN [^] but no one else! [^] cross the border again. This made the rest of us unloved hacks have to go through a much more difficult procedure to get in through Iran.
Now CNN, and several other American TV networks, have hired government press officials at salaries much higher than their government pay to work exclusively for them. These are the people that everyone has to use to get an interview with government officials, and now you have to hope they have enough time to pity you and help you out while they[base ']re taking a break from carrying ABC[base ']s tripod. I[base ']m told this is somewhat of a standard practice in these situations, but that doesn[base ']t make it any less distasteful (not to mention a violation of the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act).
One night a couple of weeks ago I couldn[base ']t get to sleep because of the sound of a truck idling loudly in the street below my window. It was unloading sandbags into the breakfast room of the hotel. The next day, following the trail of sand, I saw that it led to the fourth floor of the nine-floor hotel, the one rented by FOX. They have covered every window with sandbags, and a reliable source tells me they paid $5000 for this. Unless they[base ']re expecting Erbil to become another Sarajevo or Beirut (a scenario very far from likely) it[base ']s not clear what exactly they[base ']re protecting themselves against. And I can[base ']t imagine what the people below must think, having survived several wars in the past decades.
Now FOX has spearheaded an effort to militarize the whole hotel, shutting off the surrounding streets and, they tell us, when the coalition troops come we will have American and British military guards in the hotel. Why doesn[base ']t this make me feel safer? While there are some assorted anti-American elements here, journalists are not at the top of their list. But soldiers sure will be! And now that there will be some here, right smack in the middle of the city rather than on the base far out in the country, the hotel will be a much juicier target. Thanks, FOX!
1:09:50 AM
This is Josh Kucera's weblog, called The Other Side. It is the first thing I've seen of the so-called "warblogs" that actually IS a warblog, meaning real reporting from a person ON THE GROUND in a dangerous place.
More dangerous than I would like to think, as I watched on CNN tonight as air raid sirens went off about 40 km from Erbil.
What Josh is doing is even more sobering to me when I hear that CNN has more than 600 journalists working in the Mideast, covering the Iraq war, but only DOZENS in Kurdistan. Most of the CNN folks are sitting tight in safe places, or places marked safe inside dangerous zones. I will have to quote in here the great post Josh did on the presence of the TV media in Erbil too. It is very funny.
When I think of what the blog idealists promise with grassroots journalism in this social movement, I mostly hear talk talk talk.
They say they scoop traditional media. They say they can blog things live. They show it by blogging their favorite tech conference. Whoo hoo. Here's a clue: it is a very small cadre of journos who actually spend all of their time covering tech conferences. Most of them are busy beating out their stories the hard way.
Oh, and this post of Josh's below, about the exodus from Erbil? I read it on his blog several HOURS before CNN and other sources started filing their stories. I sat down at work that day, read Josh's blog, and then started in on my daily tasks with the tv monitor on near my desk as always. I didn't see this story cross until much later that afternoon.
Not that traditional stories are what Josh's focus is on. He has to file those for money. In this blog, his accounts are personal, immediate. And I just think that is so fucking cool...
Miasma
War Panic in Erbil. Today is the first official day of war panic in Erbil. Yesterday everything looked much like it has since I got here. Today many shops are closed, there are fewer cars in the street and people tell me their neighbors are fleeing the city for towns further towards the Iranian border. My translator's family all left for their hometown of Koy Sanjak, which is closer to the Iraqi lines but which they feel is less of a target. Shopowners are emptying their stores, putting their stuff in more secure locations in case there is looting during the war. Most people... [The Other Side]
1:04:30 AM
On the other hand, I don't doubt that "Hasty Generalization" was the most common logic error I marked on freshman comp papers simply because that was what my students HEARD around them most the time: a baldfaced statement without support or evidence, backed simply by the assumption that saying something makes it so.
Aha! We have not been transported to the pre-Enlightenment days of the Inquisition. Oh no, we are actually in the mystical Kabbalah days, where to name something is to control it, and words are magic, literally, magic words.
Umberto Eco in Foucault's Pendulum would be proud.
Miasma
A clinical description of moral aphasia.
"Flag conservatives" like Bush paid lip service to some conservative values, but at bottom they didn't give a damn. If they still used some of the terms, it was in order not to narrow their political base. They used the flag. They loved words like "evil." One of Bush's worst faults in rhetoric (to dip into that cornucopia) was to use the word as if it were a button he could push to increase his power. When people have an IV tube put in them to feed a narcotic painkiller on demand, a few keep pressing that button. Bush uses evil as a narcotic for that part of the American public which feels most distressed. Norman Mailer at the Commonwealth Club, Feb. 20, 2003.[Tom Matrullo's Stuff]
2:26:01 AM
Thank you Anne Galloway. Sometimes I think the blog universe thinks they invented the idea of the link, when hypertext pushed on what can be connected associationally far better than some blog software that seems unnecessarily hierarchical and based on outline-driven structures. True, blog technology helps the WEB become more hypertextual in a two-way, dialogic fashion, but it still ain't the Akashic.
Miasma
Can blog trackers step into the same river twice?.
Anne Galloway is thinking about tracking and representing ever-changing meanings among blogs:
...we're looking at constantly shifting contexts, shifting uses, shifting practices, shifting meanings, shifting understandings. To represent that, to nail it down, with only quantities of points of connections suggests that our social experiences of blogging can be effectively, and adequately, defined in terms of linear and causal relationships based on the transmission of data quantities. We always talk of networks and nodes, but didn't hypertext originally offer us more flexible, more rhizomatic possibilities? It seems to me that blog and blog-related software (like aggregators) seek to control - if only by filtering and structuring - the flow. And that's not very sociable if you appreciate serendipity.
This is an important insight. It will be posted on Stir when servers allow. Meanwhile, we might do well to consider how our notions of "content" and "memes" serve to constrict how the possible relations among blogs and the speech within blogs is represented by current tracking products. More to come...
[Tom Matrullo's Stuff]
2:17:08 AM
In short, information, knowledge, is like money, it only really gains value if it circulates, a democratizing principle. On the other hand, for those who want short term gain, hoarding seems to consolidate power, that is, if the money or information already has value. The reason this works through an elitist principle is that the hoarder or society protecting various "holy of holies," whether that be technical arcana, religious insight, kung fu, or a big vault at a big fucking bank, is that it seems to confer power to the gatekeeper position.
In a democratized or distributed system for creating value, the rising tide floats all boats. But introduce widespread hoarding into the equation, and elitists construct borders and gates and gatekeepers. Values diminish as people do without the thing being hoarded, and you have to distribute some of it or let more inside the gate for value to again accrue.
The professional longevity of Alan Greenspan I think in some ways depends on the fact that he has deeply internalized this principle. The utter stupidity of the Bush adm, which is rumored to be not going to reappoint Greenspan due to has non-party line comments on the tax cut (and because maybe Bush assumes the HW Bush recession was actually a Greenspan "attack" on his daddy), is revealed by just how deeply this administration slept through Economics 101.
Miasma
Poynter sees the point.What is the trade-off when a newspaper (or other institutionalized journalistic entity) offers a blog, but requires people coming because of a major story to register to see it?
I'd suggest to news sites that require registration and find themselves in a similar situation that they turn off user registration temporarily -- or at least turn it off for stories about the big breaking story...That's Steve Outing, a very bright journalist long involved with the Net, on Poynter Online. He points to Sheila Lennon's site, Projo.com, which moved its newspaper blog about the Station fire outside the registration barrier because the news need was greater than the, uh, whatever the need is (death wish?) that causes news entities to require people to register to see news. This is the news blog I described yesterday (scroll down to A community's journal).
12:38:15 AM
Logical Fallacies and The Rush To War. Dave Koehler of PhillyBurbs.com has written an outstanding summary of the logical fallacies used by the Bush administration to try to convince the world at large of the necessity of invading Iraq in the absence of any sort of compelling evidence. If you think Bush is full of it, but couldn't put your finger on how, exactly, read the article. If you think Bush is making a good case for invading Iraq, read the article anyway. [kuro5hin.org
Let's review them, shall we?
One of the favorite methods of the current administration is a false dilemma. This is when only two choices are given when, in reality, there are more options. Right after 9/11 you heard, [base "]You are either with us or against us,[per thou] in the fight against terrorism. Actually, countries can be both against terrorism and not an ally of the U.S. More recently, many countries are showing that they are both against a pre-emptive war and against the current Iraqi regime.[...]
Another arguing device is the argument from ignorance. This involves claiming that what hasn[base ']t been disproven must be true. We hear Iraq hasn[base ']t shown that they do not have WMD, therefore they do. The real burden of proof is on the party making the claim. The U.S. and/or U.N. must prove that Iraq has WMD. It is impossible for Iraq to prove that they don[base ']t.
An argument portraying a series of increasingly bad events is called a slippery slope. This is used effectively by gun-control opponents who suggest handgun registration will eventually lead to government confiscation of all guns. On Iraq, we hear how Saddam will develop WMDs and give them to terrorists who will then use them on America. While this is one possible chain of events, it hardly justifies a pre-emptive attack on a sovereign nation.
[...]
Criticizing a person or group instead of an issue is called an ad hominem attack. The current talk about France by many Americans is a perfect example. It is not only childish, it distracts from the real issues. France is not obligated to go along with every American idea because we saved them from Nazi Germany 60 years ago.
[...]
Another common device we are seeing is a fallacy of exclusion. Colin Powell and President Bush have both talked about aluminum tubes being used for uranium enrichment for use in nuclear weapons. They always fail to mention that according to U.N. nuclear inspectors the tubes were actually conventional rocket artillery casings. They also mention Iraq[base ']s use of chemical weapons against Iran in the 1980[base ']s. They again leave out that we supported Iraq at that time in their war against Iran, and basically ignored the use of WMDs at that time.
[...]
Arguing a claim is true based on someone being an expert on the subject is known as an appeal to authority. In our case, the experts are defectors from Iraq. Powell claimed defectors reported there were 18 mobile biological weapons labs cruising around Iraq. First, these defector[base ']s stories are suspect due to their obvious dislike of Iraq. I[base ']m sure they would be happy to tell the U.S. what they wanted to hear if it hastened the destruction of the Iraqi regime and they could return to their homeland. More to the point, chief weapons inspector Hans Blix said his men had examined some of the trucks and found them to be food-testing labs.
[...]
Why is the Bush Administration using these deceptive techniques to rush us into a war with Iraq?
Is there any solid evidence that Iraq still processes weapons of mass destruction and has ties with terrorist groups? A few audio tapes and fuzzy satellite photos are not proof. All we hear is the same anecdotal evidence repeated over and over again.
President Bush has said that if Saddam and his generals [base "]take innocent life, if they destroy infrastructure, they will be held accountable as war criminals.[per thou] Isn[base ']t the United States about to take innocent life and destroy infrastructure?
What I've found in all the listservs I've been on since 9/11 is that there are TWO things Americans need most in this world. I've hollered and yelled, "Oh my kingdom for just these two little things!"
They are:
1. For everyone to retake 8th grade civics class, with particular focus on the US Constitution and the Bill of Rights.
2. A university-level course in rhetoric and argumentation, Logical Fallacies 101, if you will.
If we just had these two things, fewer people would be DUPED by stupid and poorly constructed arguments. I swear, it is if the Enlightenment never happened, and all those poor postmodernists NEED the Enlightenment to rebel and rail against. Would you take such a precious thing away from them?!
And this, from the American Dialect Society Mailing List, documents an interesting part of this most curious postmodern phenomena. For what is next, the trademarking of words like "stuff," or "dog" or "cheese?"
Miasma [TM][R]
Date: Tue, 25 Feb 2003 06:44:02 -0500 Reply-To: abatefr@earthlink.net Sender: American Dialect Society Mailing ListComments: To: "DSNA list," From: Frank Abate Subject: FW: Google trademark concerns Comments: To: ADS-L@LISTSERV.UGA.EDU Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Dear lexos and others:
Paul McFedries gives us (see below) a classic instance of what happens when the growth of the language cuts across someone's proprietary interest.
Of course google is used as a verb. And why not? It only makes sense, it is short, it is fun, it works. And what the Google (TM) lawyer knows, but does not say, is that the company he represents cannot do anything about its use as a verb, legally. They cannot sue, as one cannot claim proprietary rights to a verb. Jesse Sheidlower recently pointed this out to me; apparently it is an explicit part of US law re trademarks.
So the lawyer is really merely trying to get Paul McF to do something that he need not do, but hopes he will be scared into it by having received a letter from a corporate attorney -- enough to get anyone's attention. I'll bet it was sent certified mail with a return receipt requested -- that always impresses (and scares) people.
The bottom line on this is the following:
1. The English language has a verb, google. It is new, but it is in widespread use, and this can be documented.
2. It is perfectly right and legal for dictionaries to cover this new verb, or any new usage for that matter.
3. The company Google apparently has a trademark interest in the use of the term "Google" (whether capital or not), but legally, by statute, can only protect that use as anything other than a verb. So, if someone were to come along and set up a similar service to what Google does and use the word google on that service, then Google could sue to stop that. They could even, conceivably, get a cease-and-desist order from a judge to stop that use instantly, during the waiting period for a trial on the matter. This is within their legal rights as trademark holder, assuming that they have filed for a trademark for the exclusive use of the word commercially.
4. Paul McF -- or any lexicographer or dictionary publisher -- can and should cover the language as they see fit. They should not feel restricted by trademark issues, as regards whether they report on actual, documentable usage. That sort of reporting is the same as what journalists do, and so, in a sense, if not in actual, legal fact, is protected by the First Amendment as a matter of free speech. Reporting on usage is not a violation of another's commercial interests, at least not unless the circumstances are VERY unusual.
5. The best policy to follow in cases like this, as regards how a dictionary should handle these sorts of things, is to report on the usage and have the evidence ready to back up what the entry says. If a term is a trademark item or may be a trademark item, it is good practice to acknowledge this explicitly in the entry, in a note or in the etymology. Having done that, the entry should report on the usage.
6. Finally, it is good practice to put a general note in the front matter of a dictionary (or equivalent place for an e-dict) saying that the mention of "trademark" (or similar words) in any of the entries does not affect the actual legal status of the term, but is merely an acknowledgment that the lexicographers have found in their research that there may be a trademark (or similar) claim with regard to certain terms in the dictionary.
In short, Usage trumps Legality, in this instance, at least.
Frank Abate
11:50:31 PM
Just throwing some emphases below. Tom Matrullo brings an interesting perception to most things.
to our senses.I posted this in one of Shelley Powers' comments, amid a discussion of Google/Pyra, and intended to elaborate it a bit:
...we keep thinking in terms of news reportage and commentary as having greater or lesser authority as it has more or less power to represent some external reality. Big Media has decided it can also represent "our" internal reality, as when it mourns for us. I doubt this can remain viable, especially now that we do have a means of sharing what we experience, as opposed to having Tom Brokaw read it to us. The pointillistic representational realm of blogs, especially when coupled with the semantic potentialities of Google, could lead to a richer, more vibrant realm that does not replace journalism, but provides a more resonant context in which news reports can be contemplated.
I like that reference, "pontillistic representation" pulls in feelings of movements in art.
The basic idea is simple: In the 18th century, as cafes and salons brought people together, public conversational spaces opened up, connections between persons, ideas, and disciplines were forged, things began to happen. Things we still live inside of, like democracy by revolution, historiography, etc.
Like an Awakening of those who have been asleep, or at least rendered sonambulistic by one-way Old Media force feeding and mind-fuck.
The U.S. has been derelict in keeping up a certain level of public conversation. Quite some time ago, any semblance of it was replaced by corporate messages artfully tricked out to seem like a mirthful bouquet of harmless, because mindless, bits of disjointed information, guided by no intellect, curiosity, imagination, or passsion.
Derelict? The US has often been mocked for anti-intellectualism, and while Mark Twain-style frontier-speak and plain-talking is to be valued, stupidity and ignorance are not, and these are things Americans, for all their ingenuity, have not perceived how much to the world we appear dupes, lacking full critical facilities--too easily conned by an authoritarian appeal. The only culture that fares worse are the Germans, who spawned a great university system, yet still love to march.
Meanwhile, people starved for these attributes of intellect keep finding that some of the time, they may be found on the Net, on blogs like Shelley's, for example.Oddly, this very exhibition of spirited dialogue is pooh-poohed, occasionally by the very bright folks who take the trouble to share their intelligence.
These "bright folks" are a euphemism for Old Media journalists, no? And while they share their intellect, they also share the heady sense that the 4th Estate is entitled to its accoutrements of power, and jealously guards its gatekeeper position because it feels threatened, as threatened as the 1st and 2nd Estates felt with the rise of the merchant & guild class in the waning years of the Middle Ages (or Dark Ages, if you will, for it took such a revolutionary overthrow to emerge from the imposed hardened arteries of darkness, and so it will take now.
Sharing what we apprehend, filtered through several minds capable of informing and disproving each other, offers glimpses of possibilities of larger representational richness than what we've grown used to.Reflex dismissal of the possibilities inherent in this new public space for speech - before they've been explored - is not uncommon in the wake of the blogger/google hook-up. It seems premature. A few short years ago, no one saw Google coming.
I've found reflexive dismissal is simply the arrogance of power, and when corporate journalists wear this cloak, it betrays something worse, a reluctance to ask hard questions, the questions journalists are supposed to ask, because they could disturb the status quo.
Miasma
2:57:20 AM
It drives me utterly mad with lust.
It makes me think about Marshall McLuhan and how the media shapes not only messages but also cultures that spring up, facilitated by such media. More on that below.
Miasma, the pistachio-eater
Petabyte Disk Drives in Seven Years--What Does That Mean for You?
"So just how big is a petabyte drive and what could you put on it?
One certainty is that you will not fill the space with personal jottings or reading matter. In round numbers, a book is a megabyte. If you read one book a day for every day of your life for 80 years, your personal library will amount to less than 30 gigabytes. Remember a petabyte is 1 million gigabytes so you will still have 999,970 gigabytes left over.
To fill any appreciable fraction of the drive with text you[base ']ll need to acquire a major research library. The Library of Congress would be a good candidate; it is said to hold 24 million volumes, which would take up one-fiftieth of your disk. So you could fit 50 Library of Congresses on your petabyte drive.
OK, I'd accept that as a good start! But soon I'd need more space. [G]
Other kinds of information are bulkier than text. A picture, for example, is worth much more than a thousand words; for high-resolution images a round-number allocation might be 10 megabytes each.
And this is being generous. Most images from a digital camera are one to four megabytes, not 10. How many such pictures can a person look at in a lifetime? I can only guess, but 100 images a day certainly ought to be enough for a family album. After 80 years, that collection of snapshots would add up to 30 terabytes. So your petabyte disk will have 970,000 gigabytes left after a lifetime of high quality photos.
Again, I'd need more time. I'd have plasma screens rotating images on poster-sized screens in every room. By then we would be using wall-sized screens, so eventually I'd want more bandwidth too. I am ever the bandwidth pig, but even more so, for I become a digitally-driven Ansel Adams with an 8x10 view camera if you give me world enough and time.
What about music? MP3 audio files run a megabyte a minute, more or less. At that rate, a lifetime of listening--24 hours a day, 7 days a week for 80 years--would consume 42 terabytes of disk space. So with all your music and pictures for a lifetime you will have 928,000 gigabytes free on your disk.
Surely the revolution in musical tastes, less overdetermined by playlists and rotations and scarcity and monopolies and more by choice will give us all great evolving and self-selected jukeboxes and the entire Library of Congress Library in audio books too. Great works of literature shall be our room wallpaper, as now I am listening to poetry collections from Audible. To each house a closet rack of servers, and to each house a good night!
Not to mention peer-to-peer satellite-fed Net Radio from whatever house may choose to share with the peers it designates, or perhaps those peers who subscribe?
The one kind of content that might possibly overflow a petabyte disk is video. In the format used on DVDs, the data rate is about two gigabytes per hour. Thus the petabyte disk will hold some 500,000 hours worth of movies; if you want to watch them all day and all night without a break for popcorn, they will actually fill up your petabyte drive if you have a lifetime of video on it as it will give you 57 years of video....
Ooh, the bandwidth I could suck with wall-size video. I will soon run out!
Still another nagging question is how anyone will be able to organize and make sense of a personal archive amounting to 1 million gigabytes. Computer file systems and the human interface to them are already creaking under the strain of managing a few gigabytes; using the same tools to index the Library of Congress is unthinkable.
Hardly. We will have advanced home searching systems on par with Google. We will have new interfaces, new GUIs, new navigational metaphors. We will swim in VR and use the multi-layered approach of the software I saw demonstrated once called "Cloud." Oh for the infinite layering!
[The Shifted Librarian]Perhaps this is the other side of the economic equation: information itself becomes free (or do I mean worthless?), but metadata--the means of organizing information--is priceless.
The notion that we may soon have a surplus of disk capacity is profoundly counterintuitive. A well-known corollary of Parkinson[base ']s Law says that data, like everything else, always expands to fill the volume allotted to it. Shortage of storage space has been a constant of human history; I have never met anyone who had a hard time filling up closets or bookshelves or file cabinets.
But closets and bookshelves and file cabinets don[base ']t double in size every year. Now it seems we face a curious Malthusian catastrophe of the information economy: the products of human creativity grow only arithmetically, whereas the capacity to store and distribute them increases geometrically. The human imagination can[base ']t keep up." [Mercola.com, via LibraryPlanet.com]
I think she means our brains will explode. Frankly, I can't wait.
"Thus, if we cannot make our sun stand still, then we will make him run." Andrew Marvel, To His Coy Mistress
Miasma
2:29:21 AM
Salon.com | Raise Limbaugh's blood pressure! Keep Salon in business [Daypop Top 40]
[chest tumping alert!]
Yup, I am a Salon subscriber, premium service. I resisted for a long time, but eventually admitted that I was powerless over my addiction, and I had to turn it over to a higher power along with doing a searching and fearless moral inventory...
Wait, wrong meeting. Sorry.
What I mean is that I sucked it up and bit the bullet after long resisting, because I don't believe in the subscription model on the web, and figuring I'd resent it even as I resent having registered for the NYTimes site and having been a long time hater of the Time Warner Pathfinder site in the mid-90s asking me to sign over rights to my first born child before I could even log on...
As in, this STUNK of OLD MEDIA.
But then I did it. I wanted an article dammit! And since I know how to get around the NYTimes archive fee charge (not gonna tell how...), this is the ONLY one I did cough up for.
Funny thing happened on the way to being co-opted. I started really using the premium service and liking it. Liked the little music compilation thingie too. Not to mention the Mother Jones and Utne Reader subscriptions. Good will. Then they added blogs, and I'm still happy even tho my blog isn't in that club.
Worse, I would be sad if Salon went away in a way that I would not be sad if Slate went away (has it gone away?). Obviously I subscribe to it in my news feed reader and Radio aggregator.
I like its righteous ballsy streak. I miss Suck.com, and that sucks. There are a lot of things we could and do miss because VC interpreted the dot.com bomb as an excuse to take leave of what little imagination and vision the pathetic souls had in the first place.
So they say Salon spends too much money and lives too high in its offices. That these periodic death throes are con jobs to get more money and get propped up a bit longer.
To that, I say, "What the fuck? It is a hell of a lot better than those far more periodic beg-fests on public radio and television, and I cough up for those every 5 years or so when I am flush and when the guilt hits me."
Salon is like a less serious and more mouthy version of NPR, and for that I love it. And if you need more reasons, here's their version of a beg-fest. Come on, y'all. Cough it up. It isn't as bad as you might think.
Miasma
Did you ever get the feeling that some people want you dead? Last week's flurry of news stories about Salon's imminent demise produced another wave of hate mail from those eager to dance on our grave. (The fact that Salon never seems to actually die -- despite the tone of absolute certainty in these perennial press obits that this time, yes, it MUST be going under! -- never diminishes these letter writers' bloodlust.)[...]
Stan Willock offers these words of consolation to Salon readers: "[They] will still have PBS, where hundreds are misinformed and entertained at taxpayer expense, as well as CNN, ABC, CBS and NBC. All are losing viewers to the fair and balanced Fox News Channel and to conservative talk radio. Best of luck looking for a new job. Hopefully you qualify as a member of a preferred group (person of color, female, gay, lesbian, etc)."
[...]
Salon -- and I -- take all these attacks in stride. As Ishmael Reed observed, "writin' is fightin'." When you publish a rambunctiously independent daily in a time marked by conservative backlash and martial fever, you're bound to make some enemies. And we're proud of those we've made over the years, from Ken Starr to John Ashcroft and, of course, the right-wing guidance counselors at the Wall Street Journal's editorial pages.
[...]
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12:47:09 AM
Old Vannevar had no truck with hierarchies. Well, in his Memex machine, at least. He found they inhibited the exchange of scientific information that should be associationally linked instead.
Then you can take a look at Alvin Toffler in PowerShift. Not exactly a guy I think that highly of, but that book popularized a lot of anti-hierarchical ideas, such as the idea of a Flexfirm that undermines the hierarchy of the org chart and bypasses what he calls "smokestack era" gatekeepers and turf guardians.
Nah, I just don't figure where all this love affair with outlines is going, but that the folks at Radio/Manila made a toy for outlining, and all the good little bandwagon folks piled on without thinking about the relationship of outlines to hierarchical structures, structures that are oppressive and most definitely do not fit the interactive associational linking structures of New Media.
Miasma
living with outlines. Like Russ, I too live in a world of outlines.
| The built-in outliner in Radio UserLand has a lot to offer, including timestamps and weblog integration. |
| Weblogs are rendered outlines from how I look at 'em. |
2:42:29 AM
Wouldn't it be cool if there were a way to visualize that thermostatic shifting, live and in a 3-D mapping system?
Miasma
The Google Memex.On the Trail of the Memex: Vannevar Bush, Weblogs and the Google Galaxy
"While blogs are creative and often charming tools in the hands of individual bloggers, by harvesting the collective power of armies of bloggers, the power Google stands to wield in online publishing begins to stagger the imagination....
If Google[base ']s PageRank algorithm is the shimmering star of the cyberspace firmament, it presides over a vast array of fellow travelers and hangers-on. For all intents and purposes, Google owns the Web, by virtue of its superior and highly popular search engine. It owns the history of the Internet, thanks to GoogleGroups, which searches over 20 years of Usenet archives. It owns the present, thanks to GoogleNews, which constantly scans the front pages of thousands of online newspapers, deduces which stories editors around the world consider the most important, and snags the headlines and lead paragraphs from those sentences to assemble a patchwork quilt that exposes news readers to a wide variety of editorial and political opinions....
The future of intellectual life, as mediated by hypertext, may well be defined by collaborative, member-driven [base "]writerly[per thou] communities such as Slashdot (where extremely brief [base "]articles[per thou] are drowned out by hundreds posts, which are then sorted and rated by volunteer moderators who separate the wheat from the chaff) or Wikipedia (a user-created encyclopedia, created two years ago and recently collecting its 100,000th user-authored article)." [dichtung-digital]
And one ring [Google] to rule them all? Will it own the past, present, and future (breaking news, "where should I go next")? Dennis G. Jerz sent me the link to his article, saying that he had already written the article and submitted it to his editor when the big news broke. A few modifications, and voila - serendipity.
It's an interesting article, so read the whole thing.
[The Shifted Librarian]
1:52:53 AM
[The Shifted Librarian]"I think I'll make one more minor change before I go. I'm going to designate one of the new Mammal species as the Planet caretakers during my absence. I'm going to program them a slight appendage modification, called an 'Opposable Thumb' and I'm going to boost their CPU capacity a little.
With these enhancements, this species (which I've decided to call 'Primates') will have dominion over the rest of the Planet so they can keep things under control while I'm gone.Oh, and blogging will be light for a few millennia until I get back from the Seventh Dimension." [via Jarrett House North, via McGee's Musings]
1:44:06 AM
The Three Stages of Blog-awareness
"One of my lawyer friends who is tech-savvy and runs a cool website has recently been made aware of blogs. After a few weeks of studying the blog phenomenon he sends me an E-mail and reports the following:
'OK, a couple of weeks ago I knew nada about the subject of blogs. Here is my take on the 3 stages of blogging:
1) There must be something to blogs because so many people are into it, but I don't have a clue.
2) OK, it does seem kind of cool and there is much, much more to it then I expected. I just don't see any really practical applications.
3) Oh my God, the things I can do with this are coming to me faster than I can keep up with.'
Well, looks like another one has been assimilated. We who have already been assimilated know that resistance is futile. Apparently, he's working hard in his laboratory on some new fangled way of doing things that will revolutionize the world. Man, I love it when the complete absence of a plan comes together." [Ernie the Attorney]
This is so true! Come to the SLS Tech Summit about blogging on Thursday, February 27, and skip directly to step three. Pass GO and collect $200! :-)
[The Shifted Librarian]1:40:31 AM
Question: How can SmartMobs mobilize when they gotta sit and tap out the letters on their phone?
I keep coming back to a thing I saw at the MIT Media Lab some years ago, one of the guys developing wearable computers. He had a SWEET way of typing, better than handrwriting, better than these keypads.
Chording. That's right, it was a thing you held in your fist, no visual contact with the "keys," you TYPE like chording a guitar, a variation of how braille words, I think, or Sign Language, the alphabet kind, or even like Morse code. Very simple system where you do one-handed chording and by doing it, type letters. The guy with the computer battery in the sole of his shoe and the screen in the corner of his glasses (what Neal Stephenson would call a "gargoyle") said he could do it faster than keyboard typing. He said sometimes if he was just thinking, his hand just automatically started chording.
Now what ever happened to that device?!
Miasma
Now Bloggers Can Hit the Road. Mobile weblogging, or moblogging, is the latest trend in the world of blogs. New software allows users to update their weblogs remotely with cell phones and other handheld devices. By Peter Rojas. [Wired News]
1:36:04 AM
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