Archive for the Blog Resources Category

I’m writing this from Boulder, Colorado, which seems like a good place
to make this announcement — it was in this town that Carla Sinclair
and I launched bOING bOING as a print zine in 1988. During the past 19
years we’ve gone through many changes — from zine to webzine to
directory to blog. Today, Boing Boing is changing again, in three
exciting new ways: a redesign, the return of user comments, and a blog
about personal technology.

The new look comes from Jemma Hostetler of Studio Sans Nom. Her
redesign is cleaner, easier-to-read, and built to incorporate
additional new features that we’ll be adding to Boing Boing in the
near future. The redesigned logo and new character mascots were
created by the fun-loving folks at eBoy, a collective of awesomely
talented pixel-pushing artists from Germany and New York.

We’re also happy to be reintroducing comments to Boing Boing, a
feature we reluctantly dropped a couple of years ago. At that time, we
lacked the resources to manage the comments, and felt that a lousy
comment system was worse than no system at all, so we pulled the plug.
We’ve never felt good about it, though, because our readers’ comments
added a great deal of value to the blog. To correct this, we hired a
terrific community manager to oversee the conversations: Teresa
Nielsen Hayden. At her own blog, Making Light, Teresa has proven
herself to be a wonderfully wise and talented tender of online
conversations. Teresa worked closely with our designers to develop a
commenting system that supports the Boing Boing community while
preventing noise from drowning out the signal. “We want this new
community system to make Boing Boing even more fun and informative,”
says Teresa. Under her supervision, we’re sure it will be.

Our third major change is the launch of a brand new blog:
Gadgets.boingboing.net. While Boing Boing has always covered personal
technology, the four of us (Cory, David, Xeni, and I) believed a
critical, intelligent, optimistic, and selective blog about personal
technology and consumer electronics would be a fine addition to Boing
Boing. But who could we trust to oversee a tech blog that the four of
us would want to read? Actually, it wasn’t hard to find that person.
We went straight to Joel Johnson, a former Gizmodo editor and founder
of Dethroner. Joel is smart, funny, knowledgeable, and curious about
technology. He was our first, and unanimous, choice to run
Gadgets.boingboing.net. And we’re grateful he agreed to come on board.

We’d like to thank the happy mutants who helped make this major
relaunch possible. These folks went under the hood and untangled the
mess that Boing Boing’s code had snarled into, and created an elegant, powerful system that positively
shines. Federated Media’s Jonathan Schreiber and Ivan Kanevski did an amazing job of
dealing with the technical aspects of the redesign. Our beloved system
administrator Ken Snider worked his magic on the server side and made
sure all changes to the site wouldn’t impact the speed of page reloads or clobber us with high bandwidth costs. David Jacobs at Apperceptive upgraded Boing Boing to the newest
edition of Movable Type, and designed and implemented the new comment system
to Teresa’s specs.

Special thanks go out to the gang at Federated Media: John Battelle,
Chas Edwards, Josh Matison and everyone else that
contributed a significant amount of time and hi-octane mental effort
on making this relaunch a success. We’re grateful to all of you for
everything you’ve done. Extra special thanks to FM’s Jason Weisberger for
endless advice, encouragement, and, well, adult supervision.
Thank you!

We hope you enjoy the new Boing Boing. Let us know what you think by
clicking on the “discuss” link and adding your thoughts.

Originally by Mark Frauenfelder from Boing Boing on August 28, 2007, 9:58am

William Gibson, Mr. Cyberspace, dropped into the house yesterday morning for coffee and an hour’s gab. He seems light-hearted and handsome for a hard-core geek-intellectual; friendly and digressive for a cult celebrity on a book tour.

William Gibson by Michael O\William Gibson by Michael O’Shea

We talk here about: First, the disappearance of the virtual, of cyberspace itself, because it’s not “there” anymore, viewed from “here.” It’s everywhere, and we’re inside it most of the time now.

In 1981 there was very little cyberspace around. Everything else was ‘the world.’ In 2007 the ratio has reversed. Most things that are happening are simultaneously happening to some extent in cyberspace. And relatively few things are happening outside it. The amount of time we spend without connectivity is getting scarce… For me the best and most profound experience of seeing a technology change something was being in London on a series of trips when the cellphone hit. One trip was the old London. You were in that solitary grid of London that Ezra Pounds’ little haiku about “petals on a wet black bough” describes perfectly. You’d just see faces along the tube platform. People didn’t chat with one another or with strangers. Next trip, they all had cellphones. The solitude of the transit through London vanished instantly. And it became in that moment a different city, and the previous city needs an artist to recapture. We can’t remember how it was before.

William Gibson, in conversation with Chris Lydon, August 20, 2007.

Click to listen to Part I (10.7 MB MP3)

Second, about the incisive, expatriate politics behind Spook Country.

During the Blitz in London, at the back of every British Post Office there were enormous scarlet posters, with the Crown at the top and below it the legend: Keep Calm and Carry On. That was their response to some of the most massive bombing any European city had ever experienced. That is the much more appropriate response to any form of terrorism. The non-state actor has very very limited resources and depends necessarily on a sort of theater, and the peculiar mechanism that causes people to think they have a chance of winning a lottery — or its black obverse, that they or someone in their family might be killed by a terrorist. The British understood that when you ceased to keep calm and you ceased to carry on, that was where you started to lose…I met a number of Department of Defense people about 14 years ago, and I was so impressed that they were on top of the asymmetric war paradigm, and so commited to not repeating the mistakes of Vietnam. Where did those guys go? I think they were fired, or frightened into silence. I know I comforted myself on the day of 9/11 by remembering those people. I was thinking: we have some really hip people in the Pentagon and maybe we won’t make the obvious and ridiculous mistakes that the terrorist wants us to make…According to the emergent paradigms of warfare, when you invade another country, you just lost. Period. When you use air power against relatively undeveloped people, you lose. Period. Those are at the top of the list of things you don’t do if you want to win against non-state actors, but they’re culturally counter-intuitive… Everything the United States has done — I really can’t think of a counter-example — is the opposite of what the theory of asymmetrical warfare would suggest you do.

William Gibson, in conversation with Chris Lydon, August 20, 2007.

Click to listen to Part II (16.3 MB MP3)

And Third, about “ubiquitous media” and Bill Gibson’s own “mediated” evolution from hippie genius and oft-transparent blogger in the direction of, shall we say “commodified” author. Will we, each and all of us, ever shake the manipulations of media?

You know, we were once a society that made cars and shoes and things like that. I think now we’re mainly a society that markets things and creates celebrity. There’s no way to be seen as an artist without that commodification coming into play…

William Gibson, in conversation with Chris Lydon, August 20, 2007.

Click to listen to Part III (5.2 MB MP3)

Spook Country is William Gibson’s first comic novel, an acidly satirical broadside against the “war on terror.” Set in the political present (2006, in fact; Tower Records is still in business), it’s a thriller about a geo-strategic “prank,” to disrupt or at least embarrass the Pentagon’s cash offensive in Iraq, the real-life inundation of Baghdad in 2003 with pallet-loads of millions of $100 bills.The “chase” that threads the story turns on rival gangsters and gamesmen — “non-state actors,” in the current parlance, but mostly of the US persuasion — all trying to track a single land-and-sea shipping container. Is it loaded with weapons of mass destruction? Or museum treasures looted from Baghdad? Why is this Flying Dutchman container being driven now to Vancouver? And who’s really behind the several networks of agents hoping to manage its next move? At all events, it’s the political edge of Spook Country that marks Gibson’s graduation not just from science fiction but also from the cyberpunk genre he mastered and famously linked with episodes of The X-Files, movies like Johnny Mnemonic and Bono’s music. And it was the political apercus in the book that I was interested in chasing down in conversation. Like this one from the character Milgrim, an intelligence agent who emerges from the haze of an Ativan tranquilizer addiction now and then to speak, it seems, for the author of Spook Country:

“Are you really so scared of terrorists that you’ll dismantle the structures that made America what it is?” Milgrim heard himself ask this with a sense of deep wonder…”If you are, you let the terrorist win. Because that is exactly, specifically, his goal, his own goal: to frighten you into surrendering the rule of law. That’s why they call him ‘terrorist.’ He uses terrifying threats to induce you to degrade your own society…”It’s based on the same glitch in human psychology that allows people to believe they can win the lottery. Statistically, almost nobody ever wins the lottery. Statistically, terrorist attacks almost never happen.”

William Gibson, Spook Country, page 137

In other words, building a world view or a foreign policy around the experience of 9/11 is something like building a family budget around the chance of winning the Irish Sweepstakes. And then there is the sly observation by one of several ex-rockers in a cult band called The Curfew:

“Inchmale thought that America had developed Stockholm syndrome toward its own government, post 9/11…” The Stockholm — or “Patty Hearst” syndrome — being “the fondness and loyalty one could supposedly come to feel for even the most brutal captor.”

William Gibson, Spook Country, page 310.

I am feeling dazzled and a little dazed by my sudden immersion in Gibson — by my first careful complete reading of a whole Gibson novel, and now by a morning’s easy exposure to the man himself. He is the rarest real thing: an imaginative fictionist for our own strange time. Of course lots of people have been saying that for years. I am a little chagrined to be coming so late to the party, and all the more grateful, too.Do we see ourselve, Open Sorcerers, in Gibson world?

Originally from Open Source by Chris reBlogged by caleb waldorf

Originally by caleb waldorf from calebwaldorf.net on August 21, 2007, 9:58pm

This is way over due, but - like most of this stuff, never too late. Here is a quick and dirty visual guide to the militarization that was practiced at the recent G8 Summit in Germany earlier this year, with some grafted captions.


Martin Krenn took this photo and tells us,“For the Group of Eight summit, Heiligendamm was turned into a high-security fortress. 7.5 miles long and 8 feet tall, a fence was designed to protect the leaders of the world’s eight richest countries. The G8 summit in Heiligendamm costed a round 92 million euros just for security.”Angela adds: “Heiligendamm takes its name – “holy dam” – from parables which seek to mark the victoriousness of Christianity and, it might be added, do so as the theological rendition of borders, specifically the borders of a Western, Christian Europe. Depending upon which legend one prefers, a shepherd triumphed over the devil in a wager, or the dam miraculously rose up against floods through the prayer of monks. Much more remains to be said here, not least about the theologisation of the political. But, in turning over these confluences and their significance, the most obvious question is of the continuing expression of an ostensibly ‘European’ politics in anti-summit discourses.”


[Image: Workers clean the security fence in the sea near Heiligendamm. The fence was 12 kilometers long and 2.5 meters high, surrounding the whole village and sealing off the beach of the Baltic Sea. (AP Photo/Thomas Haentzschel)]







Here are even some maps of how the area was ringed off with walls, coastal patrols, buffer zones, armored personnel carriers, trucks with water-cannons and police helicopters.
Maps_Fence_Update_070114

allgemeinverfuegung

zaun_hybrid

For lots of good coverage, see these resources:
Fence, heavy security at G8 summit in Germany evokes memories of Iron Curtain
The Blockade of Heiligendamm by Boris Kagarlitsky
G8, Heiligendamm 2007 - A flickr stream by djcampfighter
G8 Protest: Summit Blockaded From All Sides - Indymedia UK
G8 Blockade Occupies Road - (Gate 2 Shut Down!) - Indymedia UK
Final demo in Rostock.- Indymedia UK
Tons of YouTube videos here including this one.

Originally from Subtopia by Bryan Finoki reBlogged by caleb waldorf on Aug 17, 2007, 3:22PM

Originally by caleb waldorf from calebwaldorf.net on August 20, 2007, 8:15pm

Critical Planning: A Journal of the UCLA Department of Urban Planning / Spatial Justice, Volume 14, Summer 2007

Purchase a copy of Spatial Justice, Volume 14 of the Critical Planning Journal and help support Just Space(s), an upcoming exhibition and symposia in Los Angeles also on the theme of spatial justice.

Table of Contents / Volume 14 (52KB PDF)

What Makes Justice Spatial? What Makes Spaces Just? / Three Interviews on the Concept of Spatial Justice (3.3MB PDF) // Critical Spatial Practice Reading Group: Nicholas Brown, Ryan Griffis, Kevin Hamilton, Sharon Irish, and Sarah Kanouse

Spatial Justice for Ayn Hawd / Thoughts on an Alternative Master Plan for a Palestinian Village (2.6MB PDF) // Sabine Horlitz and Oliver Clemens

Editorial Note: Why Spatial Justice? (3.7MB PDF) // Ava Bromberg, Gregory D. Morrow, and Deirdre Pfeiffer

This volume proceeds from the notion that justice is, and should be, a principal goal of urban planning in all its institutional and grassroots forms. Yet why speak of spatial justice instead of social justice? What do critical spatial thinking and practices contribute to the pursuit of justice?

Over the past three decades, activists seeking a more fair distribution of the benefits and burdens of society have increasingly turned from conceptions of (economic) equality to broader coalitions of justice. This appeal for a “just” society has been a powerful rallying point for a wide range of social justice movements – economic justice, racial justice, environmental justice, etc. – that collectively frame justice in both material (re-distributive policies) and non-material terms (liberty, happiness, opportunity, security, etc.). John Rawls (1971) most clearly articulated this paradigm with his two principles of justice: 1) that everyone should have an equal right to have equal basic liberties within a total system that ensures liberty for all, and 2) that social and economic inequalities, where necessary, should be arranged to benefit the least advantaged among us. Indeed, most post-war western democracies through the early-to-mid 1970s pursued Keynesian economic policies that operated within these principles – shifting resources from “have” to “have not” regions in an attempt to ensure the least advantaged would have an equal opportunity to succeed.

The economic crises of the 1970s, however, began to weaken these principles; global trade practices, the offloading of responsibilities to macro and micro-level institutions (the EU, WTO, World Bank, NAFTA, etc. at one extreme and common interest communities, business improvement districts, neighborhood associations, etc. at the other), and a concentration of investments in the most globally competitive urban agglomerations have collectively ushered in a new paradigm of neoliberal Darwinism. The predictable decline of rust-belt and rural regions is replicated at the micro level between have and have not neighborhoods, and at the macro level between have and have not global regions. The result is an intensification of a distinct pattern of geographic disparity.

It is out of this painful transition to the “new economy” (economic restructuring, globalization, flexible accumulation, etc.) that many of the current global justice movements emerged. Yet, these justice movements have largely retained the Rawlsian conception of a universal justice, illustrating the conflicting nature of Rawlsian justice that has guided much of recent efforts: while its intent seeks to ensure equality and fairness, as a normative ideal, it leaves social and spatial difference out of the equation. It also fails to discuss where such shared notions of justice would be established and activated.

By the 1990s, faith in this normative justice began to wane as activists recognized not only the new geographies of injustice but also that the circumstances of different social groups mattered – that a one-size-fits-all justice (as conceived by the well-educated, largely white elite) did not necessarily serve everyone equally (as Young (1990) and Harvey (1996) so vividly conveyed). Indeed, we now understand that the distribution of material wealth, opportunity, health outcomes, educational attainment, job creation, and virtually all of the metrics of quality of life are not distributed equally across space – that one-size-fits-all justice does not account for growing regional disparities (which are also strongly correlated with race and ethnicity).

A few key texts – for example, Harvey (1973), Lefebvre (1974), and Soja (1989) – especially challenged social scientists to question the long-accepted treatment of space (or territory) as fixed, unproblematic and inconsequential. Instead, seeking justice means understanding the dialectical relationship between not only the economic and social conditions of different groups, but also the geography of injustice – that is, how the social production of space, in turn, impacts social groups and their opportunities. The earliest use of the terms “territorial justice,” “spatial justice” or “socio-spatial justice” – for example, Davies (1968), Reynaud (1981), and Pirie (1983) – linked geographic distribution to concepts of fairness, but few scholars interested in social justice have thus far explicitly treated space as socially (re)produced. Among the notable exceptions are Flusty (1994), Soja (2000) and Dikec (2001). Much works remains, particularly in theorizing what spatial justice means and how it can be usefully deployed as a framework for critical practice. Yet, a growing body of literature is beginning to contribute to the concept; some additional references are included in the further reading section.

As the texts in this volume reflect, the renewed recognition that space matters offers new insights not only to understanding how injustices are produced through space, but also how spatial analyses of injustice can advance the fight for social justice, informing concrete claims and the activist practices that make these claims visible. Understanding that space – like justice – is never simply handed out or given, that both are socially produced, experienced and contested on constantly shifting social, political, economic, and geographical terrains, means that justice – if it is to be concretely achieved, experienced, and reproduced – must be engaged on spatial as well as social terms.

Thus, those vested with the power to produce the physical spaces we inhabit through development, investment, planning (and their antitheses) – as well as through grassroots embodied activisms – are likewise vested with the power to perpetuate injustices and/or create just spaces. If, as Lefebvre (1974) suggests, space is not just “out there” but is produced and reproduced by social relations, it is incumbent upon planning practitioners, theorists, community organizers and residents alike to take a critical position about their own roles in perpetuating or mitigating spatial injustice. What a just space looks like is necessarily left open, but must be rooted in the active negotiations of multiple publics, in search of productive ways to build solidarities across difference. This space – both process and product – is by definition public in the broadest sense; the opportunity to participate in inscribing its meaning is accessible to all. As Deutsche (1996: 269) eloquently states: “how we define public space is intimately connected with ideas about what it means to be human, the nature of society, and the kind of political community we want.” Justice is therefore not abstract, and not solely something “handed down” or doled out by the state; it is rather a shared responsibility of engaged actors in the socio-spatial systems they inhabit and (re)produce.

One idea not directly addressed by the contributors to this volume is how diverse struggles, being inherently connected through the fact that we live, experience, and reproduce justice and injustice in space, may be furthered by alliances and solidarities across different scales and scopes. The power of connecting “issue based” social movements (environmental, economic, racial, gender, labor, etc.) within and across geographical scales (from the local to the global) to organize collective action has yet to be fully explored in practice. Perhaps mobilizations at multiple and simultaneous scales can create sustained levels of visibility and greater pressure for change that broaden a base of popular support. Such attempts may yet produce ever more effective political and practical strategies, and inspire the extension of functional networks. A burgeoning national movement around “The Right to the City,” which began in late January with a convening of representatives from “over thirty community-based social movements and resource organizations from eight metropolitan areas” in Los Angeles, provides an excellent example of one such attempt. The objectives for the initial meeting – “to build collective capacity for local urban struggles to become a national movement around the right to the city; to provide a frame and structure…for regional organizing and for connecting intellectuals to the work being done; and to build a national network / alliance that will allow organizations to learn from one another, that will create a national debate on issues affecting urban communities…and [to] to coordinate a national program” – illustrate the goal of casting a wider net, to incorporate multiple issues as well as intellectual work to further shared struggle. (Right to the City, Notes from the inaugural convening 2007: 1) This is but one of many examples to follow closely in the years to come.

While much theorizing about – and active experimentation with – the role and potential of a spatial justice frame remains undone, we see this volume contributing to the articulation of a very powerful concept. The notion that this and future work can further the active production of just spaces remains at the heart of our interest in it. The specificity it provides may yet be part of what helps us evolve from a society with abstract and faraway aspirations for justice and highly developed modes of reacting to injustices, to a society that arrives at the particular expression of what a just version of our society will be like, and the means to secure it for all. The task is no less than the development of immaterial and concrete conditions that can reproduce justice exactly where we stand, in our neighborhoods and our institutions, at the level of the body, the home, the street corner, the city, the region, the network, the supranational trade agreement and every space within, between, and beyond.

Ava Bromberg
Gregory D. Morrow
Deirdre Pfeiffer

Just Space(s) exhibition and symposia at LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions), September 26 – November 18, 2007.

Originally from Critical Spatial Practice by nicholas_senn reBlogged by caleb waldorf on Aug 16, 2007, 10:00PM

Originally by caleb waldorf from calebwaldorf.net on August 16, 2007, 10:31pm

The Shorenstein Center at Harvard just released a report arguing that local newspapers are the most threatened by the internet. I’ll discuss how to deal with that “threat” in a moment.

But first, I have to say that I think the report’s methodology — and, a few cases, its analysis — are seriously flawed. They relied on just one source of data for news sites’ audience, Compete.com, and in my random check of its data versus the stats I know for various services, Compete wildly undercounts audience — by half or as much as two-thirds. Like all sampling methodology in a broadly distributed or fragmented universe, it cannot possibly accurately measure smaller, nicheier sites — that is, it will be biased against local sites because their audiences are smaller. In other words, its undercount for local news sites I know is worse than its undercount of NYTimes.com. And that comparison is critical to the study’s conclusions: that big, national brands are better off than local brands. They say they picked Compete because it is free and U.S.-based and that its rankings are relatively in line with other services. But rankings are not the basis of this report; absolute numbers are. So it is a pity that they did not also approach the sites they analyze to get server data and compare that with the samplers’ data. It also would have been helpful to go to services that have a broader view of traffic, such as Tacoda, to triangulate their data and also deal with issues of audience overlap.

Having said that, let’s still take the Shorenstein report’s conclusions at face value and talk about how local newspapers can deal with this alleged threat.

But first, I’ll challenge the notion that it’s a threat. As I see it, local newspapers are, for the first time since the advent of network news in the ’50s, in competitive markets. And I’ll argue that competition is good and healthy. The continuing growth of the national brands the report points to comes in a highly competitive national news market. So while the report notes that some of its small sample of metro papers are suffering flat or even declining traffic, it also notes growth in local TV stations’ sites — now that they are getting competitive and now that video is a workable medium on the web. And so, adding newspapers’ traffic with TV sites’ — and the many other local sites that are starting to blossom and that the report acknowledges are nearly impossible to measure using sampled data — isn’t there a net growth in local news traffic? anticipated. The report wonders: “[I]t is not clear just how much Internet traffic a particular community can bear. If local newspapers, television stations, and radio stations all compete strongly for residents’ Internet
time, are there enough users to go around?” That’s the wonder of competition. It’s not as if we pick one news site and stick with it; that’s even less likely in a medium built on links and search. No, I say that more news means more interest in news.

But let’s still accept the Shorenstein conclusion that national brands will have an easier time than local brands in attracting traffic. Says the report: “The Internet is also a larger threat to local news organizations than to those that are nationally known. Because the Web reduces the influence of geography on people’s choice of a news source, it inherently favors ‘brand names’—those relatively few news organizations that readily come to mind to Americans everywhere when they go to the Internet for news.”

I think they have a point. In a portal economy, the big guys get bigger. But I’ll keep arguing that the most successful internet company — Google — isn’t a portal but a distributed network and there are lessons in that for local news: WWGD.

So given present circumstances, are local newspaper sites screwed? Let’s take the Shorenstein report’s worst case and say they are. But the response to that should not be to lie down and die but to figure out what to do about it. This isn’t an attack on local newspapers. It is a new market reality. The only responsible response is change. A few humble suggestions, linking to posts on the subject I’ve written here:

* Get distributed. Get aggregated. The Shorenstein report marvels at the growth of Digg — growth so great (2-to-15 million users in a year) it wouldn’t fit on their chart. But the report’s authors come at this with an old-media prejudice: that aggregators are “free riders” that compete without bearing “an equitable share of the production costs.” Wrong analysis. These aggregators are your distributors — and they’re even better than newsstands because they’re more efficient and targeted and they don’t take a cut of your circulation revenue. So the natural question the report should be asking — the one that more and more wise newspapers are asking is: How do we get on Digg more often? How do get more links and audience Digg?

A while ago, I had lunch with a big-paper executive and brought son Jake along. The executive was pooh-poohing Digg, saying nobody really uses it. At that very moment — swear to God Google — Jake was sensibly bored and was engrossed in his iPhone. What was he doing? Digging. And how does Jake find the news he reads — and it’s a lot of news? Through Digg and friends. Aggregators and links, the magic combination. Jake told the executive that he doesn’t even go to blogs to read them anymore. He gets his news not from portals and brands but from links.

Keep in mind that I’m a partner at an aggregator, Daylife. Part of my reason for getting involved is that I believe aggregation and links are the keys to success for news organizations online. Without aggregation and links, all you have is marketing costs to attract users to a portal that doesn’t fit in their online lives anymore.

* Think beyond the link: Widget it. Perhaps a link isn’t enough. In relying on the link, we are still making people come to us. We should be going to them. Listen to CBS’ Quincy Smith: “We can’t expect consumers to come to us. It’s arrogant for any media company to assume that.” What does that mean? I’m not sure. But think of it this way: The more that we can find ways to put out content out there — and benefit from branding and monetization via advertising or other means — and the more we can get people to distribute us (in which case, we are the free riders), the larger we will grow. So if we can come up with those means, we should encourage the aggregators and portals and bloggers to take our stuff and spread it around. If.

* Network. Network. Network. We need to network in every sense of the word:
1. Just as we need to be aggregated, we need to aggregate. We need to pull in a broader network of content from our communities. We can’t do it all ourselves, not anymore.
2. We need to set up networks that benefit these new producers so we can gather more and produce less. I mean ad networks.
3. Get involved in our communities. If our value is local then we have to get local and mean it. We need to crack the hyperlocal nut and that’s not just about content. That’s about enabling a community to do what it wants to do. That’s about human relations in our communities. Local is about people.
So in the long run, to measure our success and influence and loyalty, you don’t just measure one site, you measure our presence in the community online.

* Promote while we still can. Rather than fretting about cannibalization, we should be using our diminishing promotional power to push people to what comes next. Invent it. Promote it.

* Report, damnit, report. The most important thing we can do is, of course, bring journalism to the community: report. We need to become known as the indispensable sources of local help and information and I’d argue — contrary to the Shorenstein report — that this comes not from trying to compete with the big guys in national, commodity news but by putting all our resources behind what we do best and what no one else — including, ferchrissakes, local TV — can afford to do: report. We have to make our value absolutely clear and we need to increase that value even as our resources are diminished. How? Do what you do best and link to the rest.

: LATER: And while we’re screwing newspapers, let me finally get around to analyzing Henry Blodget’s eulogy for newspapers now that he is tossing more dirt into the grave arguing that the big only guys only get bigger while the once-big offline guys only get smaller. Jack Schofield does a great job summarizing reaction from Seamus McCauley, not to mention Steve Yelvington.

Blodget’s first analysis — in which he purports to run the numbers and show how the New York Times is screwed — is flawed for many of the reasons these others point out (the Times is the Grand Exception to all rules, for example) and others’ I’ll point out.

First, he far underestimates the savings that would result from the hypothetical death of print. I don’t have current numbers for the Times, but use the San Francisco Chronicle as an example: It has 3,000 employees, 400 of whom are editorial. Blodget said that if paper died at the Times, only 25 percent of labor costs would disappear. Hardly. Ink, paper, printing, handling, distribution, circulation marketing, accountants who audit sleazy distributors, plants for all this, trucks… lots of costs would disappear. I’ve heard it said that this would amount to $1 billion a year at the Times.

Second, there are other savings that papers other than the Times can execute — getting rid of commodity news, for example.

Third, there’s no reason to say that some highly profitable print products could not remain — specialized publications, free papers, hyperlocal publications, and so on.

The fundamental problem with both Blodgett’s and the Shorenstein report’s analyses — not to mention the worldview of too many a newspaper executive still — is that they essentially define the product as it is, steady state, without the innovation, change and growth the internet enables and demands.

Who says that a newspaper is just news? It can also be community. Who says all the content is produced by expensive staff? Much of it can be produced in a broader network the paper doesn’t have to pay for. Who says that the only inventory to be sold is on newspaper.com page? Build a bigger network and you have more to sell. And who says Google has to own the world?

Blodget’s latest analysis argues that Google is “sucking the life out of media.” That’s because we in media are letting Google do that — indeed, helping Google do that. Newspapers make it painfully difficult for advertisers large and small to buy them — because they spent so many years operating as monopolies (I honestly know people in the classifieds departments of newspapers who spent their days telling advertisers what they could not do with their money). And they have no idea how to serve the limitless mass of small advertisers who couldn’t afford them before but who can now afford Google. Add to this the general behind-the-times stupidness of advertisers and, yes, you do have a formula for Google world domination. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Newspapers and media companies can create and sell new value to advertisers and can band into networks to make it as easy for those advertisers to give them money as it is for them to go fill in a form at Google.

If they do nothing, I agree that newspapers are screwed. But there’s still time to do something. Tick. Tick. Tick.

Originally by Jeff Jarvis from BuzzMachine on August 17, 2007, 9:54am

Being stuck in San Diego for a couple more days allows me time to catch up on the stuff I haven’t been twittering, like counting the calories I’ve consumed on my April 2007 SoCal Food Tour and figuring out how many times I can listen to the Daft Punk remix of Prince’s ‘Kiss’ before Tricia gets sick of it. Here’s a rundown of what’s been on my mind lately:

Canon HV20 vs Sony HC7 - I’ve been in search of a small, 1-chip HDV camcorder for use on my own field reports for Rocketboom (yes, I’ll be on camera. I used to do it all the time.) Although the image on the HC7 would probably match better with the HC1 we’re currently using for production, I’m leaning towards the HV20 and its native 24p mode, especially with the release of FCP6 and its open format timeline support (although I’ll have to upgrade my 12″ Powerbook G4 to something that can at least play back a 1080 clip.)

Terra Plana’s new Spring 2007 line is out. Terra Plana makes relatively eco-friendly shoes of mostly locally-sourced recycled materials and minimal glue. I like them because they have thin soles and weigh next to nothing. With the exception of an unnecessary pair of snow boots and my basketball kicks, I’ve been buying all of my shoes from Terra Plana for a couple years now. If like me you can’t afford their regular prices, keep an eye out for their end of season sales. I’ll usually stop by their NYC store twice a year to scoop up three or four pair at $50-$75 a pop.

The USC Annenberg Center is being shut down in July which is a low down dirty shame. I’ve also heard rumblings of a new IP policy regarding the stuff produced by game dev students (they won’t own them, much like the cinema school does with student films) which concerns me to no end.

Speaking of games and USC, Justin’s PMOG is brilliant (although I’ve only completed a couple of quests.)

Why is it that the only people I know who seem to be excited about Joost live in NY or LA?

Enjoying MTAA’s Karaoke Death Match almost as much as Cory’s live performance of his Glockenspiel Addendum for Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run.


Also enjoying Ethan Zuckerman’s Draft paper on mobile phones and activism. Considering his how his ideas impact our Wizzy Digital project.

Watching NY1 via my Slingbox makes me giddy.

Blip’s new Show Player is pretty slick.

Not as upset about the Knicks missing the playoffs as I thought I would be.

Taking a good hard look at the labor situation in Hollywood and thinking about its impact on the 2.0 space (and our potential impact on it.)

Some good folks I’ve had the great fortune to meet, hang, or catch up with in the past couple weeks: Mark, Meg, Alice, Bill, Karin, Drew, Steve & Zadi, Annie, Sandra, Anil.

Lastly, I’ve been working on several rboom Casual Friday episodes with Erin Greenwell and Sheila Callaghan. Here’s a tease of the first:

(much respect to David for the title of this post, btw.)

Originally from braintag on April 16, 2007, 12:17am

Her plea for help surfaced one morning in my inbox. I’m sharing it here with the hope that together we can find some resources for this woman who has been diagnosed with breast cancer:

Dear Marion,
I was recently diagnosed with breast cancer and have to be on chemotherapy in two weeks time. I was checking out your website and it is interesting to read about organic gardening. If you know of any source or organic foods that are good for breast cancers, I’d sure appreciate it. I live in Sacramento…

Originally by marion@ptialaska.net (Marion Owen) from Acorns on September 14, 2006, 3:47pm

Lock-Pick.png
Remember how hard you tried to get into your parents’ liquor cabinet on prom night? Well, fast-forward 10 years to when your toddler locked you out of the house and wouldn’t let you back in. Moral of the story: You never know when being able to pick a lock can come in handy. Gunslot, a firearm forum, has a detailed tutorial that demonstrates how to pick a lock (ironic, I know). It’s no easy feat, but according to Gunslot, you should be able to pick five pin locks (shown above) with relative ease after casually practicing for 3 to 5 days. For more lock-picking fun, check out the Locksport International guide to picking locks.

Originally posted by Kyle Pott from Lifehacker, ReBlogged by Jefferson on Aug 16, 2007 at 02:36 AM

Originally by Kyle Pott from Eyebeam reBlog on August 16, 2007, 12:36am