Archive | October, 2006

TheGoodBlogs Public Beta

For the past few months, I have been a part of the private beta of TheGoodBlogs.  Today they opened the public beta.

TheGoodBlogs is a blog link aggregator that displays links to other topical blog posts via an easy to use and highly configurable widget.  You may have noticed the widget in the right hand column at Newsome.Org.

One of the benefits of TheGoodBlogs is exposure.  Your blog posts get rotated through the widgets on other blogs.  This results in new traffic and new readers.

But the benefit I enjoy the most is the ability to spot and click to other people’s blog posts via the widget on my blog.  I first noticed a number of the blogs I currently subscribe to via TheGoodBlogs widget.

Vernon and Tony have a really good thing going, and I recommend TheGoodBlogs to any blogger looking to find and be found.

Kate Trgovac (a regular read I found via TheGoodBlogs) has a good write-up on TheGoodBlogs.  Mathew Ingram, Mark Evans, Laurence Timms (creator of Chuquet) and Ian Delaney are other blogging pals of mine who have been a part of TheGoodBlogs beta.

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Calling All Photographers

I have reluctantly concluded that in order to take my new passion for photography to the desired level, I am going to have to learn Photoshop.  I can’t adequately describe the dread inherent in that phrase.

About 8 or so years ago, I took a deep breath and bought Photoshop.  At the time, I found it to be about 65,000 times more complicated than I thought it needed to be.  I gave up and decided to learn Pascal, Latin and Chinese instead.  At the same time.  While jumping rope.  It was much easier.

But having seen so much of Thomas Hawk’s great photography and having read a few tutorials on the various photography sites, I have to jump back into that great ball of confusion.

What are the best books to read to learn Photoshop?  Are there better ways to learn it?

I need something that is easy to follow, but comprehensive enough to allow me to know what can be done with photos, as well as how to do it.

Suggestions will be appreciated!

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The Demise of Television

A beautiful irony is when some self-impressed cat like Steve Gillmor talks about the “stupid blogosphere” in a blog post.

Another beautiful irony is when I am forced to agree with someone whose entire internet persona I find utterly irritating.  But, sadly, Steve is right about TV.  He’s just wrong about the reason.

It is dead.  When shows like Deadwood can’t make it and Deal or No Deal can, TV is dead.  When I have to find out about a show as perfect as Firefly after it has been off the air for almost 4 years, TV is dead.

When I can watch the entire season of Firefly in a week via Netflix, TV is dead.

When there are no network shows that I would allow my kids to watch, TV is dead.

But it’s not about the internet.  No one other than a honking nerd wants to watch TV in a little window on a computer, when a big screen HDTV plasma is sitting 20 feet away.

Podcasts are too hard to make and no one listens to them.  I do a podcast, but it is becoming more chore than pleasure.  If someone can put their favorite songs on an iPod and listen to them on the train, why in the world would they download and listen to the nasal rants of some geek talking about technology that no one cares about?

It would be more productive to have open Skype calls once a week than to do podcast after podcast and toss them into the ether.  But most podcasters are doing it for themselves, not for the audience, so that doesn’t happen.

It’s not about Digg or MySpace either.  Grownups don’t use those sites.  And most of the 20-somethings I know who do still watch plenty of TV content.  Sometimes they TIVO it; sometimes they wait a season and watch the episodes on DVD.  But in no way, shape or form has some butt-ugly MySpace page or the geek-o-river of news at Digg replaced TV.  The fact that some people think they have tells you how completely out of touch with the real world some bloggers are.

It’s not the content of TV that is dead.  It’s TV as a medium for that sort of content that’s dead.  The networks should just release their shows straight to DVD.  It would save them money and us time.

Crappy shows that cater to some imaginary brainless demographic and a better, ad-free alternative in the form of DVDs and TIVO killed TV as anything other than a screen on which to view carefully selected content.

Ed Sullivan and the important half of the Beatles are gone.  I don’t see anyone rushing in to make TV relevant again.

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Morning Reading: 10/23/06

James Kendrick responds with his list of travel gear.  If JK carries it, you know it’s good.

Om Malik on the overuse of 2.0.  Amen, brother.

A Brief History of Computer TV Ads has some must-see videos. (via Robert Gale)

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Proximity Will Always Matter

Mathew Ingram has a post today about the role of proximity in the Web 2.0/internet arena.  He laments that fact that the west coast, and particularly Silicon Valley, seems to be the hub for everything Web 2.0 related.

Mathew’s post was inspired by an article in the New York Times about the need for proximity in business and financial relationships.  The article talked about the many benefits to startups of being near Silicon Valley. 

Fred Wilson jumps in to defend the other coast.  Fred lives in NYC, which also has a lot of proximity advantages.  Silicon Valley and the Big Apple arguing about who has more proximity to money is like Halle Berry and Scarlett Johansson arguing about who’s prettier- it’s largely an academic exercise and the loser is still mighty pretty.

To those of us who live in the hinterlands between the coasts, the proximity issue is the 900 lb gorilla in the room.  We can try to ignore it, but it’s always sitting over there waiting for us to capitulate and say the words it wants to hear.

“You know you’re wasting your time,” whispers the gorilla.  “They are never going to let you in the club, because they don’t know you.”

The indisputable fact is that proximity has always mattered, and it always will.  Why?  Because every meaningful business deal depends, at least in part, on relationships.  Granted, technology has significantly reduced the need to travel, but it has not reduced to need to look someone in the eyes.  Technology and cost notwithstanding, I find that most senior executives want to discuss major points of a large deal across the table- not across the country.

And it’s not just business deals.

The music industry is another example.  Technology being what it is, it shouldn’t matter where a new artist lives.  If he is good enough, he should get discovered and become a star.  Nope.  Where you live has a ton to do with your chances of getting the star maker machinery behind you.  No honest person who knows anything about the music business would deny this.

Blogging is another example.  I’ve talked a lot about how hard it is to build a blog if you don’t live in an area where there is an active blogging community.  It’s a lot harder to develop a relationship with someone via cross-blog conversation than it is by showing up at some dinner or event.  And once you know someone in the real world, it’s a lot easier to get included in the conversation.

It’s also harder to ignore someone who you see every week or two than someone in some place you’ve never been who keeps trying to discuss issues with you while you’re busy trading links and inside jokes with the guy a few notches up from you in the Technorati 100.

“Did you say something,” whispers the Gorilla as he mutes the latest last edition of the Gillmor Gang?  “I was listening to Steve Gillmor talk about stupid people and trolls.”

In fact, proximity is probably the most important factor in the creation and maintenance of the caste system that makes the blogosphere so frustrating.  Many of the so-called gatekeepers know each other in the real world.  Some of them have business relationships.  Money or the prospect of money is a recipe for exclusion.  Ironically, so is the human need to belong.

If the rest of us had any sense, we would have long ago banded together and created a rival kingdom.

But it doesn’t happen.  Because of proximity.  We are scattered all over the world.  That, and the false hope of future inclusion, keeps us at the bottom of the hill and the so-called blogging elite at the top.

“Those bloggers you try to talk to are highly incentivized to maintain the state of attention asymmetry,” the gorilla sighs, as he flips through a worn copy of Freakonomics.

Proximity matters.  No matter how much those of us who call out from the wilderness wish it didn’t.

That sound you hear is the rock tumbling back down blogger’s hill.

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Road Gear

Brad Kellett has a post about the tech gear he takes on the road.  He asks Richard Querin and me about our travel gear.

Here’s Richard’s response.

Now that I am so into photography, it makes picking gadgets for a trip tougher than it used to be.  My current digital SLR is a lot bigger than my old point and shoot, plus I have to choose and pack additional lenses I might need.

Given all of that, here’s my current travel gadget list:

1) Blackberry 7130e.  This is my everyday cell phone and PDA- plus it serves as a wireless broadband modem.  This allows me to connect to the net from airports, hotels and even out of the way places like Bandera.

2) Thinkpad X41 Tablet PC.  I have an HP laptop at my office, but I travel with the X41.  It’s smaller and the tablet form allows me to use it more easily on planes.  It has a memory slot where I can stick a memory card full of MP3s to listen to on the plane.  It’s not a perfect laptop, but overall I am very happy with it.

3) Linksys WTR54GS Travel Router.  If I am going to stay somewhere for more than a night or so, I generally buy the in-room internet access and then set up my travel router so I can use my X41 wirelessly.  This little router kicks ass.  I highly recommend it.

4) Canon EOS 30D.  I love this camera.  It’s big, though and once you add a couple of lenses, a charger and an extra battery, you’ve got a load.

5) Extra Lenses.  Typically, I take a wide angle lens and a zoom lens in addition to my primary lens.  If I am driving, this is not a problem, but if I am flying, the lens threshold becomes a bit higher.

6) Tripod.  If I am driving, I take a tripod for my camera.  If I’m flying, I don’t.

7) Assorted Memory Cards, Adaptors, Cables and Headphones.  I usually take 1 6GB memory card and 2 1GB memory cards, some cables to connect my gear and a memory card adaptor that lets me move my photos to my X41.  I also carry a set of headphones (full size- not earbuds) so I can listen to MP3s or watch movies on my X41.

8) Garmin StreetPilot 2620.  If I am driving, this is my handy co-pilot.  I sometimes take it on planes if I plan to rent a car in a city I don’t know well.  I have been a little frustrated with Garmin, but once you get it set up, this device works really well.

That’s my travel gear.  What’s yours?

Hey JK, Dwight and Claus- what do my fellow Houstonians carry around?

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Blogosphere, Annotated

Dave Winer edition.

What he said:

“[T]here’s no point, imho, in responding to people who disagree with things they say I believe but I don’t. If you can’t quote me correctly, don’t expect a response.”

What he meant:

There’s no point in trying to engage me in a discussion, because I will either ignore you if I think you are somehow beneath me or I will engage in self-exegesis to redefine my position.

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Morning Reading: 10/17/06

DirecTV launches another satellite. Too bad it’s not for more national HD programming. I am starting to like DirecTV less than the cable companies.

Here are lots of old Apple II games online. (via John Dvorak)

Kevin Burton announces Tailrank 2.0.

Digital Photography School has some Halloween photography tips.

Gizmodo has a chart of what the earth would look like over time if all humans vanished.

Mark Evans doesn’t get the virtual world phenomena. I think Second Life is cool, but like everything else at the crossroads of business and the web, people keep trying to make it more than it is. A Reuters office and dedicated reporter in Second Life? Sounds like a momentum play at some new readers to me. I’ll be curious to see if it’s still there in a year.

Warner is right about the latest Walmart/Edelman fiasco. I called it on Sunday and, other than Tony Hung, no one responded (including Steve Rubel, even though I was one of the few not to get on the bash wagon). Why? Because Steve not knowing anything about it wasn’t as juicy as some great conspiracy.

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Self Checks on the Blogosphere Court

Back in the day, I played a lot of basketball.  In fact I remember this one reverse move I put on my lifelong buddy Tommy (who, unlike me, played basketball in college) at some court in Ocean Drive circa 1980.  He called it a “made miss,” but it was sweet. If I had a video of that shot, I’d move back to SC just to taunt him with it.  The fact that he owned me on the court for the rest of my life would conveniently be omitted.

There is a hoops phrase called a self-check.  It means that a player is so bad that you don’t need to guard him.  He keeps himself in check by dribbling the ball off his knees or throwing up bricks against the bottom of the rim. 

There are a lot of self-checks running around the blogosphere too.  Unlike in basketball, however, there is no rim to block their pitiful attempt at a layup, and there is no referee to call traveling as they stumble into a face plant.  It’s up to the collective refereeism of the blogosphere to call a foul.

One textbook example of a self-check in the blogosphere is Andrew Keen.  Here’s a guy whose tired act is telling his readers until he is blue in the blood that they need journalistic lamas to help them understand the world around them.  It’s not that blogs are different than traditional media.  It’s not even that blogs are not as reliable as traditional media.  It’s that our entire culture is about to be swept away by the horrifying egalitarianism represented by such evil forces as blogs, wikis, social networks and digital media.

The horror.

What makes Andrew an obvious self-check is not merely the fact that he is one of the people who, under his world view, should play the lama part.  After all, he’s written a book- on paper.  And he’s really smart- just read anything he’s written and he’ll tell you.  The rest of us, well let’s just say that we are silly little dunces doing our little equality dance while the world crumbles before our folly.

It’s not merely the blatancy of his position talking and the sweet irony that is his blog that get lost in the flood of big words, dire proclamations and extreme statements.

It’s mainly the fact that he actually makes some good points along the way- points that are completely lost on his audience thanks to unbridled arrogance and condescension.  Part of being smart is knowing how to communicate your message to people who don’t agree with you.  To persuade, you must first connect.

Andrew makes no effort to connect.  Which tells me that he is writing for himself and, perhaps, a few self-important eggheads who already share his views on how stupid everyone else is.  When someone is talking solely for themselves or their devotees, there is neither the intent nor the desire to enlighten or persuade.  There is only the desire to be heard.

That is a textbook definition of a self-check on any court in which communication is the goal.

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RanchoCast – October 13, 2006 Edition

I did a new podcast Friday night.

I played some great songs by 5 Chinese Brothers, Asylum Street Spankers, the Bodeans, Blaze Foley, Traffic, Utopia and others.  I also played the most beautiful instumental song I have ever heard.  The finale was a blues jam by Taj Mahal.

No tech talk, but I did make some book and video recommendations.

Click here to listen or download. Or just click this play button for a quick preview. Podzinger users can get it here.

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