This and That

Dave Winer posts a copy of an email he sent to the other side. As I’ve said before, I don’t know who’s right or wrong here, but this seems like a pretty reasoned letter.

Scott Karp has a good read on the sweetspot between old media and new media, which correctly says:

Old Media has the audiences, but doesn’t know what to do with them. New Media knows what to do, but doesn’t have the audiences.

Thomas Hawk demonstrates why he’s my favorite photographer. I absolutely love looking at one of his photos while reflecting on the name he gave it. You have to experience it to understand it, but the way he names his photos makes experiencing them like a little mini-movie. I love the way he names his photos.

Please join me in voting for JK’s excellent blog in the IT Community Choice Awards. JKOnTheRun in on the list as “OnTheRun,” so look in the O’s, not the J’s.

This and That

A few things in no particular order.

Disqualification

After seeing this indescribably juvenile ad, I regret and retract all the nice things I had to say about Tagworld.

stupidad-784420

If that’s the sort of brain-dead, lowest common denominator advertising they are doing, I want no part of it. So what if they are targeting young people. What kind of message is this sending them?

Tagworld won Round 4 of the Web 2.0 wars, but it’s just been DQ’ed for stupidity. Runner-up Tailrank will take its place in the playoffs.

Blogging Round-Up

Susan Getgood has a great roundup of recent posts talking about the evolving nature of blogs. She also says some nice words about a couple of my posts, for which I am deeply grateful.

Susan is doing a Blogging for Business Workshop at the University of Wisconsin on March 17.

The Argument for Partial Feeds

Amy Gahran explains why she streams partial RSS feeds. I’m on the other side of this debate, but if anyone in the world could talk me into using partial feeds, it would be Amy.

Reading List

Here’s what’s on today.

Robert Gale links to an hilarious Ali G video.

Fred Wilson likes Last.fm more than Pandora. I like both, but Pandora works better for me. Plus the Last.fm player sounds horrible on my computer (though this may be a problem on my end since no one else seems to have this problem).

Thomas Hawk (my favorite photographer) joins a new blog network.

Blackberry loses its appeal. Personally, I’m bored with the whole Blackberry thing. Let’s liquidate both companies as a deterrent to future stupid lawsuits.

Frank Gruber talks about his TagCloud experience.

Steve Rubel confesses that before he landed in the blogosphere, he had a gig at another famous amusement park.

Amy Gahran talks more about her great idea for improving podcasts.

A Link I Like, a Link I Don't

Here are my do and don’t links for 1/16/06:

One I Do:

Susan Getgood really gives it to Steve Rubel in this post for basically telling people he’s too busy to read their emails and suggesting they start trying to get links from less popular blogs and try to work up to a link from him. While I agree with Steve that begging for links is not the way to get them (Scoble has the best advice for getting them), I find the tone of his post to be pretty arrogant. I love Susan’s “watch out for exploding egos” line.

Again, I largely agree with what I think he’s trying to say, but I don’t like the way he said it.

One I Don’t:

Duncan Riley is selling The Blog Herald. I enjoy Duncan’s writing and hate to see one of my daily reads go on the block. Hopefully, Duncan will start a new blog at some point, because he seems to be one of the good guys.

A Link I Like, a Link I Don't

Here are my do and don’t links for 1/10/06:

One I Do:

Gapingvoid hits the nail on the head. Number 3 is my favorite, because bloggers are people and people generally want to talk more than they want to listen. We post with our mouths and we link with our ears.

One I Don’t:

If I got a write up in Wired or the NYT, you better believe you’d read about it here, so I am all over that, but Jason has been caught in the anaconda-like grip of the self-congratulatory hug.

More on the (Im)possibility Blog Building

slogAmy Gahran posted an interesting and well thought out response to my earlier post about the difficulty in growing a new blog. She sets forth her strategy for building a new blog and, in a comment to my post, asked if I have ever tried the things she suggests.

First, a little about her strategy for new blogs.

One of her core strategies is to find your focus and identify your target audience. That’s a very sound strategy. For example, if I really wanted to “own” an area, I’d find some narrow topic that I really understand and I’d write and write and write about it. Eventually, I might own the area, but it would be a small area tightly directed at one topic. We did that with ACCBoards.Com and it worked. My attempt at expansion into audio video message boards was a complete failure, to put it mildly. So I am a believer in keeping your focus.

The thing about blogs in general and my blog in particular, however, is that blogs are a reflection of their owners. If I want to own a space, whether for ego or monetary purposes, finding and directing my focus ought to be job one. On the other hand, if I simply want to write about and promote discussion about whatever interests me at the moment, focus becomes a little more challenging, since it will undoubtedly change as my interests change. I am interested in a lot of different stuff. Tech, gadgets, music, kids, and an ebb and flow of other stuff. And, as my wife will attest, whatever project intrigues me today may bore me to tears next month. Maybe an evolving focus works- a lot of the blogs I enjoy the most are sort of random like that, or maybe there is a built-in limitation inherent in my approach that will always send the rock rolling back down the hill.

On those days when I imagine Newsome.Org really taking off, it’s based on a three part process:

1) I actually do have a pretty unique combination of experiences, both tech related and non-tech related. And while I’m not going to paste my resume all over the place in some stomp my foot effort to convince people to listen to what I have to say, hopefully these experiences will allow me to write stuff that over time people find interesting and worthwhile. It’s more of a (hopefully) perspective advantage than a focus advantage. At least on my optimistic days.

2) If I keep writing consistently, at some point I will have been around a “long time” and more people will feel comfortable including me in the conversation by linking to me, and responding when I link to them. This sustained approach is exactly what Amy recommends in her comment to my post. My experience so far suggests that this approach will work to some extent. The big question is to what extent. While I get very discouraged when link post after link post (meaning a post that says “so and so has a post about xyz”) show up in the discussion links at Memeorandum, while my longer, more analytical posts get ignored (they used to show up regularly, but no more), I do have quite a few readers and my traffic has increased pretty consistently. But it’s hard. And it’s uphill. And sometimes I get tired.

3) I hope to find a group of other bloggers to engage in cross-blog conversations, like Amy talks about here. A virtual watercooler of cross-linking blogs can help build a critical mass. Richard Querin, Brad Kellet and I have started doing this a little. It really helps when you feel like you’re working with other people, as opposed to all by yourself in an isolated corner of cyberspace.

So, yes, I am at least trying to try the sustained effort. I can’t say for sure that it’s going to get me there, but I am making progress. What I don’t know is how long I can keep plugging away without some sort of psychological payoff- like a link here and there; getting on some blogrolls; that sort of thing. I guess as long as I’m having fun, I’ll keep doing it.

And now back upon my soapbox for another sermon on my favorite topic:

The fact remains that the people who believe they are somehow going to make a lot of money by doing a blog are guarding the door to the club too closely. I’m not trying to get rich by blogging, and, candidly, I think blogging to make money is sort of like playing hoops to get to the NBA- it takes the fun out of it and ultimately leads to disappointment. For me blogs are about conversations, hearing and being heard. An expanded, combined, evolved and more useful version of message boards and personal websites.

But there’s one thing I know: add the prospect of money to any equation and things get very complicated. Newsome’s Rule. Write it down.

Anyhow, Amy writes a great piece on blog building, and I am grateful for the opportunity to participate in the discussion. Richard, Brad, anyone? What do you think?

Friday’s Link: License Plates of the World

sc1960-757342

Tonight’s link is License Plates of the World. Yes, they have pictures of license plates from all over, and that is pretty cool. What I enjoy more is looking at pictures of license plates from the various states for virtually every year license plates have been made.

Here are the license plates for SC the year I was born and the rest of the 1960s

It may sound about as fun as watching paint dry (or even watching golf on TV), but it’s a fun site to explore.

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Friday's Link: Make a Police Sketch

Ultimate Flash Face lets you create a sketch of a face by selecting various facial features- sort of like a police sketch artist would. I tried to create a sketch of someone I know, but I couldn’t get it just right.

It’s still a neat diversion worth a few minutes of web time.

Bonus link for Friday night surfers: NPR is going to webcast a Son Volt concert at around 10:00 p.m. central time tonight. The show hasn’t started yet, but I’m tuned in and waiting.

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Whatever's on My Mind

Interesting conversation over at Thomas Hawk‘s page regarding Scoblegate. I think a lot of Robert and I hope and expect him to prevail in what is now a cyber-spat, but may turn into something more.

We had dinner tonight (as we do most Tuesday nights) with the Veldmans at Pico’s. Very good crab quesadillas there. The dining guides say it has live music Wed.-Sun. I’ve been there a bunch, but haven’t noticed any music. I need to look closer next time we go on the weekend. Good discussion tonight about Iraq, politics, etc. I used to be considered somewhat liberal, but Sharon makes me sound like a fascist. I’d rather talk to someone who thinks my political views are insane than someone who agrees with me on every issue, and Sharon fits that bill. She thinks I (and everyone else who isn’t a rabid democrat) am nuts. At one point Ray got frustrated trying to argue with his wife and started arguing his point to Raina. That is called preaching to the choir.

Andy and Floyd got all mad at me at work today, saying I am difficult and don’t keep confidences. I told them I appreciate the heads up and that I would not tell anyone they think that.

And a school teacher shall lead them…. Battlestar Galactica continues to move up my list of all-time favorite shows. The scene this past week outside President Roslin’s cell blew me away. The writing on that show is truly amazing.

Fred Wilson has a good read about blogging. He is a really good writer. He also turned me onto Josh Rouse, who has some great songs (Dressed Up Like Nebraska being the best) on some good records.