2005-03-31

Linklog

Just a technical note: I added a linklog category (via Links > RecSense or here). I'm still struggling with the format, and I need to figure out a way to fully automate the posting process, but if you like triplets and/or an eclectic mix...

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Short Tail

gapingvoid has a nice comment on the interesting elaborations on the economics of the Long Tail:



This opens quite some room for interpretation.

related:
Wired 12.10: The Long Tail
The Long Tail (Chris Anderson's Blog)
The Long Tail (Wikipedia)
The Long Tail of Software

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2005-03-25

RecSense: 2005-03-25

Figlet Server
The infamous UNIX tool online (ascii)
Spell with flickr
Visualize words using photos from from Flickr (img)
Amaztype
Generate words using products from Amazon (Flash)
Recs by Sauuuurier



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Flat Screen



(mimicking this gorgeous Flickr group)


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2005-03-24

RecSense: 2005-03-24

Fred Gratzon  Steve Pavlina
Productivity Showdown Day 1
Fred Gratzon  Steve Pavlina
Productivity Showdown Day 2
Fred Gratzon  Steve Pavlina
Productivity Showdown Day 3
Recs by Sauuuurier



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Autopoetic Tags

Heh. del.icio.us user SpikeH1464 tagged the URL for the del.icio.us tag blogs with these tags:

 actionResearch   aggregation   apprenticeship   artefacts   backchannelling   ?   blog   blog101   blogBusiness   blogComments   blogCommunities   blogConversations   blogEcosystem   blogEffects   blogLearning   blogNetworking   blogOrganiser   blogReading   blogResearch   blogTools   blogWriting   communities   conceptMapping   conferences   creativity   del.icio.us   email   emergence   ethnography   folksonomy   groundedTheory   groupthink   hypertext   innovation   inspiration   instructionalDesign   internetResearch   journal   knowledgeMapping   knowledgeSharing   knowledgeWork   KWmodel   learning   learningInformal   mathodology   media   Selection   meta-learning   metadata   metaphors   methodology   nature   networking   ontologies   people   personal   personality   perspectives   PhD   PIM   pKM   productivity   Radio   reflection   research   researcherBlog   researchTools   RSS   RU   search   security   socialSoftware   storytelling   technology   Adoption   Technorati   theory   thinking   timeManagement   tipping   Point   tools

(he didn't autoreferentially tag it with blogs)


Instant analysis: if the zero value of tagging is tagging a tag or an entity with itself (e.g.: 189 people (!) are tagging 'http://del.icio.us/' with the tags del.icio.us or delicious - see) and the informative value of tagging is -well- tagging entities with one's associations (which implicitly creates a broader and richer tagspace via aggregating the tags of all other users), then tagging tags can be seen as an autopoetic turn in this scenario, with tags no longer pointing to anything outside but themselves.


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2005-03-23

RecSense: 2005-03-23

WOMAD 2004
Audio archive of an amazing  set of  gigs online for a year! (world)
London Jazz Festival 04
... more sounds from the BBC. Make sure to check out Matthew Herbert's gig. (jazz)
Xtra Bass
... even more sounds from the BBC. (drum & bass)
Recs by Sauuuurier


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Flickr ay ay

I'm a lazy (and a lousy) photographer, so I may be the last user of Flickr to find out, but the free version will only display the most recent 100 photos you uploaded. The previous ones still reside on Flickr's server farm, and they still are accessible if you do know their exact URL, but if you don't you're out of luck.

I just uploaded my 101st photo and my beloved Take 1 of my Next Action Balls project has disappeared (imagine one photo missing):



(if you have been here before - now you know what I'm up to besides rolling next action balls ;) )

This limitation obviously does not apply when you buy a pro account, but even if you do, once you stop renewing you fall back to the most recent 100 limit (leaving 12 gigs of photos behind each year, if you have been busy uploading) - see the Flickr Help.

So it's probably a good idea to save the URLs of your photos whether you do have a pro account or not:

(1) click on a photo in your photostream to open the corresponding page:



(2) click on 'all sizes' to grab the photo's URLs:



If you have a nice workflow for backing up those URLs, please let me know.

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2005-03-22

Next Action Balls 9

Next Action Balls 2005-03-21 Next Action Balls 2005-03-21
current snapshots of my next action balls basket

Workflow note to self: sips

sips (I always forget the name) is a OS X command line tool for image manipulation (and integrates nicely with the shell, scripting languages or AppleScript). It rotates, flips, crops, pads, resamples images, changes dpi, and reads and writes metadata (see ADC's TN2035). This can be quite a timesafer.

sips *.jpg -Z 160 [creates those nicely sized images you see above]

sips -h [displays all options]


Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7, Part 8, main documentation page.

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2005-03-17

Mirror Stage II

Saurier
Duval

generated by amaztype - a flash based Amazon Web Services hack for looking up books or whatever. (Psychoanalysts will see the identity building fun of the mirror stage -the moment when a child for the first time recognizes its self in a mirror- in full effect here).

via Seth Godin

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2005-03-15

Gaming and Sleeping

Samorost Spaceship Samorost Forest
Samorost screenshots

Two absolutely lovely flash-based games: Samorost and Treasure Box. I'm no gamer, but I definitively didn't expect this amount of strangeness and weird beauty (via DieLux).

Change of subject: I'm currently reading a transcript of Niklas Luhmann's introductory lectures on System Theory, and for two nights in a row I was hit by a narcoleptic attack at the same sentence -'(information) is a difference that makes a difference'- after reading only two pages. If I read before sleeping, I usually read about 50 pages, and I wasn't tired at all. The only similiar experience I can recall was when I was learning Scheme (a Lisp dialect) trying to get a grasp on continuations. For a few days in a row I really wanted to think this through, but it was like 'OK. Call with current continuation zzz'.


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2005-03-12

Next Action Balls 8

Next Action Balls 2005-03-12
current snapshots of my next action balls basket

Next Action Balls 2005-03-12 closeup 1 Next Action Balls 2005-03-12 closeup 2
close-up of next action balls (blog exclusive)


Currently I'm trying to shift my 'goal oriented' communication from email to blogs. It remains to be seen whether this is a feasible approach, but there are a few promises:

* less noise. If you know that your output might persist, you think twice before stating the obvious.

* it creates a corpus of shared history. OK, many do collect or archive or print out their emails, I usually trash them as soon as possible. The never ending stream of asynchronous and atomic messages makes it difficult even between two people to discuss issues, and almost impossible for distributed groups. The format blog also helps people joining a project orienting themselves (what has been going on,...).

* it creates a shared topic and knowledge space. Blogs are searchable, postings can be tagged and grouped, I use Textpattern which also makes it easy to extract persistent pages and thematically related sections.


Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7, main documentation page.

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2005-03-10

A labeler is just the best thing

I just listened to an interview with David Allen hosted by Richard Giles at the Gadget Show. Favorite quote:
..that's one of the most bizarre tools you can get is a labeler..
there is something mystical happening to your life when you start to label your files..

Entertaining and informative probably also for non GTD adaptees.

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2005-03-09

Surrogate TV



cyclists in snow

Part II of my escape your TV challenge (part I is here).

For whatever reason watching television requires the synchronicity of all other viewers to be really enjoyable. Whatever is on, you can be sure millions of others are staring at the same bullshit at the same moment. This obviously creates some sense of imagined community, some remote connectivity via the shared info/image/distraction flow. I started to record everything I might or might not want to watch and then usually just forget about it - even The Simpsons. (This effect corresponds with Cory Dodorow's notion of the Outboard Brain - your VCR/TiVo just can watch TV better than you.)

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2005-03-08

Next Action Balls 7

Next Action Balls 2005-03-08
current snapshots of my next action balls basket

Originally I wanted to describe my latest and greatest GTD setup here, but then I followed a pointer of Merlin Mann to an article of Mark Wieczorek, who rises the killer question for assigning Next Actions to Contexts:
Can I act on this item as soon as I read it?

This superbly captures the essence of what David Allen is thinking about the @Context lists - and challenges me with some balancing to do between the two forces zen like minimalism and playful hacking upon the system. It's hard to get rid of habits.

related:
What @actions do you use? - recent thread on Contexts at the GTD forum, CosmoGTD's posting contains a nice analogy from free jazz, which might be a good idea to consider: you have to learn to play INSIDE first, before you can play OUTSIDE


Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, main documentation page.

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2005-03-06

Linklog Test

Testing this fancy XMLHttpRequest method (I adapted the example given here)...








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2005-03-03

Notes on the Making Money Session - Bloggercon III

IT Conversations hosts the complete audio archive of the Bloggercon III held November 2004. My sixth stop was the Making Money Session, hosted by Doc Searls.

quick notes:

* making money with blogs vs. making money because of blogs

* with blogs (words / content as product): ads; selling something; donations; stuff writer - some jobs seem to appear; ('nickle and dime mindset')

* because of: networking mechanism; solicit your ideas; blogs as relationship tools (with potential partners, customers); as a laboratory; as a reference for what you have been thinking or doing;

* questions framing the topic: do you write for readers? do you deliver content? do you have an audience? is your blog a brand? what do you want to get out from blogging (passionate thinking / a job)?

* tons of use cases for blogs with different implications (journalistic, marketing, entertaining, educational,...) - there is no monolitic approch, but blogs can be leveraged for many things.

* business blogs - not the same old marketing hogwash please, but real people behind the facade (Scoble effect).

* no thrill possibilities for money: provide infrastructure

* brand: borrowed from the cattle industry

* social and cultural capital: if you start writing for a newspaper you inherit the reputation from day one. As blogger you start from below zero and need to build this trust. This is a valuable lesson.


Previous stops were the Newbie Session, the Overload Session, the Journalism Session, the Academia Session, and the Emotional Life Session.


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Notes on the Emotional Life Session - Bloggercon III

IT Conversations hosts the complete audio archive of the Bloggercon III held November 2004. My fifth stop was the Emotional Life Session, hosted by Julie Leung.

quick notes:

* what do you put on your blog, what not? (everything; respect privacy of your family and others; not telling things that are not yours;...)

* how can blogs touch emotions, help connecting people? Blogging is a system of telling and listening, of passing on personal experiences, of resonating with each other, of interconnecting people who are out of the spotlight. But: how much are you really connected?

* blogs vs. wikis: blogs are (usually) the voice of one person (might be ego-centric, authoritative, seperating); wikis produce a shared space.

* personal vs. informational blogs (this is my life / check what I know).

* blogging enforces to take an opionion on a regular basis, also allows to change your opinion.

* raising your opinion as employee (could change work culture since common problems are there anyway vs. don't talk about clients or your employer)

* outdated notion of privacy?

* two conflicting instincts: flee (bite) vs. welcome. Blogging might bridge these.

* building knowledge on group processes

* via blogging also little stories can gain visibility (vs. scripted pseudo reality tv shows)


Previous stops were the Newbie Session, the Overload Session, the Journalism Session, and the Academia Session.


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2005-03-02

Notes on the Academia Session - Bloggercon III

IT Conversations hosts the complete audio archive of the Bloggercon III held November 2004. My fourth stop was the Academia Session, hosted by Jay Rosen.

quick notes:

* killer question: why should (or should not) academics blog?

* in part the academic publishing model was based on limited publishing resources (peer review, printed publication = expensive,..). Blogs provide a new way for this that exceeds digitizing journals as PDFs.

* dissemination of ideas that have been closed within the academy vs. academia as system based upon keeping information closed

* various use cases (professor student interaction; research collaboration; collaborate workspaces; self-promation;...)

* possible changes: broader audience; history of thoughts; interactivity; possibility for a less civilized discourse, noise; attacks on the reputation system; uncontrolled utterances (no prefilter); publication of unfinished texts;...

* blogging is symbiotic to other knowledge generating machines, not a replacement

* unprecedented confrontation with legitimacy (what are you guys doing all day?)

* loss of prestige which relies in part on the exclusiveness of the discourse, on incomprehensible and intimitating language.

* institutions are founded on the control (how to generate, disseminate, monetize) of the knowledge; blogging attacks the very DNA of this principle


Previous stops were the Newbie Session, the Overload Session, and the Journalism Session.

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