2009 04 23 Thursday

shared from: kottke.org

great article describing twitter. I'm @jbullfrog if you want to follow...
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In defense of Twitter

from kottke.org on 2009-04-23:

Living in a big city, you get to hear other people's conversations all the time. These are private conversations meant for the benefit of the participants but it's no big deal if they're overheard on the subway. And you know what people talk about most of the time? In no particular order:

1. What they had or are going to have for breakfast/lunch/dinner.
2. Last night's TV or sports.
3. How things are going at work.
4. The weather.
5. Personal gossip.
6. Celebrity gossip.

Of course you'd like to think that most of your daily conversation is weighty and witty but instead everyone chats about pedestrian nonsense with their pals. In fact, that ephemeral chit-chat is the stuff that holds human social groups together.

Ever since the web hit the mainstream sometime in the 90s, people have asked of each new conversational publishing technology -- newsgroups, message boards, online journals, weblogs, social networking sites, and now Twitter -- the same question: "but why would anyone want to hear about what some random person is eating for breakfast?" The answer applies equally well for both offline conversation and online "social media": almost no one...except for their family and friends.

So when you run across a Twitter message like "we had chicken sandwitches & pepsi for breakfast" from someone who has around 30 followers, what's really so odd about it? It's just someone telling a few friends on Twitter what she might normally tell them on the phone, via email, in person, or in a telegram. If you aren't one of the 30 followers, you never see the message...and if you do, you're like the guy standing next to a conversing couple on the subway platform.

P.S. And anyway, the whole breakfast question is a huge straw man periodically pushed across the tracks in front of speeding internet technology. There is much that happens on Twitter or on blogs or on Facebook that has nothing to do with small groups of people communicating about seemingly nothing. Can we just retire this stupid line of questioning once and for all?

(Would you like to post this link to Twitter?)

Update: From Twitter, two pithier reformulations of the above:

@phoutz: If Twitter is banal it is because you and I are banal (It's called social norming)

@thepalephantom: The "no one cares what you're doing" proclamation is a solipsists way of saying "i don't care"

Update: Three related articles. How the Other Half Writes: In Defense of Twitter by Geoff Manaugh of BLDGBLOG (thx, @secretsquirrel):

Again, I fail to see any clear distinction between someone's boring Twitter feed - considered only semi-literate and very much bad -- and someone else's equally boring, paper-based diary -- considered both pro-humanist and unquestionably good. Kafka would have had a Twitter feed! And so would have Hemingway, and so would have Virgil, and so would have Sappho. It's a tool for writing. Heraclitus would have had a f***ing Twitter feed.

Twitter: Industries of Banality by Struan McRae Spencer of Vitamin Briefcase:

Living with friends and colleagues would be a cheap alternative to living alone. People generally don't do it because it's not a good thing for humans to do. We are genetically predisposed to need time in solitude occasionally. So instead of living with your friends and colleagues, try living with their disembodied thoughts floating around on your computer and popping up on your desktop every fifteen, thirty, sixty, (manual refresh), minutes. Fellowship exists to provide us with relief from solitude and our individual pursuits. Living in a state of constant fellowship with hundreds, if not thousands of people who have known you (or not) across various stages of your life becomes an insurmountable problem the longer you try to do it.

To Tweet or Not To Tweet by Maureen Dowd of the NY Times, the essay that finally set me off in the first place:

Do you ever think "I don't care that my friend is having a hamburger?"

Tags: twitter  weblogs  www
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2009 04 06 Monday

shared from: kottke.org

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Jet lag

from kottke.org on 2009-04-07:

Amalfitano had some rather idiosyncratic ideas about jet lag. They weren't consistent, so it might be an exaggeration to call them ideas. They were feelings. Make-believe ideas. As if he were looking out the window and forcing himself to see an extraterrestrial landscape He believed (or rather like to think he believed) that when a person was in Barcelona, the people living and present in Buenos Aires and Mexico City didn't exist. The time difference only masked their nonexistence. And so if you suddenly traveled to cities that, according to this theory, didn't exist or hadn't yet had time to put themselves together, the result was the phenomenon known as jet lag, which arose not from your exhaustion but from the exhaustion of the people who would still have been asleep if you hadn't traveled. This was something he'd probably read in some science fiction novel or story and that he'd forgotten having read.

2666 by Roberto Bolaño, page 189.

Tags: 2666  robertobolano  travel
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2009 03 31 Tuesday

shared feed: It's as Good as Dancing Queen

One of my favorites on the show...

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Andy Hallett (August 4, 1975 – March 29, 2009)

from It's as Good as Dancing Queen on 2009-03-31:


Andy Hallett, who played Lorne, the demon who could read people when they sang karaoke on the TV show “Angel”, passed away from congestive heart failure this week at the age of 33.  Andy and the rest of the cast of “Angel” kept me company late at night when we were dealing with Sunshine’s sleep woes.  He will be missed.

For those of you who have never had the pleasure of seeing a demon sing karaoke, here is the clip where his character was introduced:

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2009 03 27 Friday

shared feed: Schneier on Security

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Gorilla Detector

from Schneier on Security on 2009-03-27:

From Muppet Labs:

How many times have you awakened at night in the dark and said to yourself..."Is there a gorilla in here?" And how many people do you know whose vacations were ruined because they were eaten by undetected gorillas?
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2009 03 21 Saturday

shared feed: kottke.org

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Twins commit perfect crime

from kottke.org on 2009-03-21:

Twin brothers are suspected of stealing millions in jewelry and watches from KaDeWe in Berlin. DNA from the crime scene matches the brothers' DNA. But their DNA is too similar to match either brother individually so the police have to let them go.

German law stipulates that each criminal must be individually proven guilty. The problem in the case of the O. brothers is that their twin DNA is so similar that neither can be exclusively linked to the evidence using current methods of DNA analysis. So even though both have criminal records and may have committed the heist together, Hassan and Abbas O. have been set free.

How long before this shows up on CSI?

Tags: crime  genetics
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2009 03 11 Wednesday

shared feed: Errata Security

Interesting little tool. Using public networks (wifi) to use the web can be very dangerous. This is why... point and click sidejacking.

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Hamster 2.0 and Ferret 2.0

from Errata Security on 2009-03-11:

I updated my Sidejacking tools Hamster and Ferret. You can get them from the site http://hamster.erratasec.com (or, if DNS hasn't propagated yet, you can grab a zip or tar from the main site).

Biggest change is that the tools now work on Linux and Mac OS X. Previously, Ferret was cross platform but Hamster was stuck on Windows. Hamster was written to be mostly portable, but I never got around to fixing the last few bugs on Linux.

Another change is that you can launch Ferret directly from within Hamster. Just tell Hamster what Interface you want to sniff, and it will go off and do it. Kinda makes you forget that Ferret exists. You also get status updates in the screen so you can keep track of how many packets you've captured (so that you know that it's actually working).


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2009 03 05 Thursday

shared feed: ze's page :: zefrank.com

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so awesome

from: ze's page :: zefrank.com on 2009-03-04:

THRU YOU | Kutiman mixes YouTube :: hit the credits link while a movie is playing to go to the original clips

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2009 02 27 Friday

shared feed: waltmink

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Update #48

from: waltmink on 2009-02-25:

Update -

My new website will blow your freaking mind. Music is available again, too.

.: http://zsumoz.com

Status -

  • I’m bulldozing through tech headaches but loving the material. Very broadly speaking, it’s coming together and I’m thrilled.

  • My workspace is evolving into a madman’s hangout – cobbled-together gear, piles of stuff, notes. A thousand wires. Very cool.

  • Seeing increased activity on email. Folks dropping a line here and there, offers of help. Props to P. Rosenzweig, T. Rammer, E. Roy, M. Quigley, M. Cheng, R. Kohr, et al.


Coming -

  • VIDEO. I’m working on some teasers akin to the promos we do at Nickelodeon. A couple of 30-second spots or something.  Great exercise for me – and it is high time I put out something people can see and share.

  • There are a few more things I intended to mention, but they elude me currently. The point is – I’m working on it. It is good.


Another update next week.

- Butler

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2009 02 24 Tuesday

shared feed: Dane101 - The collaborative blog for Madison, Wisconsin

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The Big Splash

from: Dane101 - The collaborative blog for Madison, Wisconsin on 2009-02-24:

cold.jpgI walked out of the changing tent onto the water-covered ice. My sandals and socks were instantly damp, providing discomfort as the wind blew over them and my bare legs. Unlike one member of my group, I decided to wear a shirt – two actually. A t-shirt showing a boat headed towards lettuce with a dialogue balloon proclaiming “Iceberg, a head,” had entertained other jumpers at the bar moments before. The top shirt was comprised of entangled neon dolphins. A yellow cowboy hat with purple leopard print and a pair of black-framed sunglasses with the lenses knocked out comprised the rest of the ensemble.

An hour earlier, I was sitting at a nearby drinking establishment warming my insides with a beer by the fire and discussing the 2009 Polar Plunge. Most inhabitants were other participants preparing for their own jump. This would be my first plunge, and one patron offered his advice:

“Get really drunk now, because once you hit the water you’ll be instantly sober.”

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