New project - wists.com, visual bookmarks plus
Monday, February 28th, 2005Will post more shortly - such as what features will be adding. My new project is called Wists.
Have a play, mail me If you like it or don
Will post more shortly - such as what features will be adding. My new project is called Wists.
Have a play, mail me If you like it or don
“Even if we expanded our domain at the speed of light - a pretty safe theoretical upper limit - and managed to colonize all available stars and planets within a sphere expanding at light speed, then, increasing our population at 2 percent per year, we will still run out of room and perish in our own wastes within the next millennium.”
I was watching a Christian debate an atheist on TV recently. The Christian was against contraception on the grounds that it says in the bible ‘that we should fill the earth with all God’s glory’. Unfortunately the result of the attempt would either be an extinct earth filled with filth, or continuous war. Perhaps that’s what a glory hole is.
Make love with condoms, not war.
Foremski ups the ante on the Flickr/Yahoo partnership rumor, suggesting that an acquisition is about to be announced.
Noah and Evan’s Odeo launches - a turnkey service for publishing and subscribing to podcasts.
I’ve had a sneak peek and it confirms two things: 1. Blogger was not a fluke success, 2. Evan only works with really good people like Noah.
Odeo is a beautifully designed application.
It seems like a small thing, but day after day I can’t help thinking that there is a distinct pattern to the business model of things such as the Associated Press going more and more down the route of using open syndication rather than traditional distribution partners.
Wikipedia vs. Brittanica
Writer Branded Blogs vs. Media Brands
Tags vs. Taxonomies
Slashdot vs. Peer Review
Metacritic vs. Critic
What all these things do is place ordinary people or individual nuggets of information as nodes in a non-hierarchical web rather than a series of disconnected pyramid hierarchies.
The way the web looks to the end user, the way it looks to publishers and the way it works in terms of money flow are starting to look the same as the underlying technology - a non hierarchical web.
And the really interesting thing about webs, is that is how the real word works - things that look like hierarchies, like species taxonomies are in fact snapshot renderings of a non-hierarchical web.
For years, people thought that the hierarchical taxonomy of species reflected the way things are, a legacy of a 19th century view of the word. This world view is a metaphor.
It turns out that the definition of a species is not whether two organisms can reproduce with fertile offspring - but whether they normally do so in the wild. I.E. the nodes in the hierarchy are not absolute.
Secondly, although most higher organisms that have evolved as separate species never mutate in such a way as to be able to reproduce with parent species, this sometimes happens with small organisms such as bacteria. As microbiology increases the resolution of biological investigation, this is more apparent. I.E. the hierarchy is in fact a web that tends to look hierarchical at low resolution.
Even the taxonomy of species, the quintessential, immutable hierarchy, is an ever changing web.
So Kottke has set up in an garret in Brooklyn to become the first full-time Blogger with Left-Bank style freedom - which is great news, good luck Jason.
What is irrational is that people somehow think that having patrons, as opposed to a day job or corporate sponsors is selling out.
Er… patronage is what traditionally separates artists from employees. Van Gogh had a patron, he was not a ‘for-profit’ enterprise.
Take this nonsense in the Guardian:
“For me, a more serious concern is that, like the rapper who runs out of things to write songs about when he becomes a celebrity, Kottke.org’s “voice” will become lose something from becoming a for-profit enterprise.”
Give me a break!
Clearly Apple is doing much better having brought back the visionary CEO that they originally fired. And he was fired for exhibiting all the things that he is now lauded for: creating a culture based upon vision and uncompromising design.
The opposite of this is what is taught at business schools - i.e. to create a culture of products based upon understanding the market, rather than vision and innovation.
Apple is a great vindication of ballsyness rather than MBAness. Jobs is our generation’s Frank Lloyd Wright.
That Apple is doing well is also a great vindication of everyday people over faceless corporations. When companies buy laptops they buy boring thing like Dells on the assumption that they are reliable, not Apple’s which look too flashy. What Apple owners know is that their product is plain better.
So Jobs is a star and Fiorina out to pasture. Perhaps there is a god after all - and perhaps Microsoft and Oracle which currently offer substandard or over priced products that companies seem to like, are in for some trouble.
But with the rebirth of Apple something more fundamental is up - people rather than companies are in control. Individuals dictate the marketplace and innovation in tech, - with media PC’s, iPods, cellphones and personally owned laptops. And people clearly have more individuality and taste than companies.
Global warming is fact.
As of this week we now know that global warming as a man made phenomenon is a fact.
That the effects of global warming will cause death and destruction is a fact.
Given these facts, government avoidance of action to reduce global warming would now be criminally negligent.
I am moving to New York at the end of the month, to continue working on a product which I hope to launch next week.
The product is somewhere between Flickr and delicious and, amongst other things, will build upon the concept of tagging, to allow ‘metatagging’, where anyone can create their own types of category: restaurant, location=ny etc.
While I’m really looking forward to it (I am still an architect at heart and NY is an architect’s wet dream), I will miss San Francisco.
For me, San Francisco is a model of a 21st century city, it is at the heart of an area which is the world capital of both science and liberal thinking. As such, it is one of the few places where engineering is taken to a truly creative level, becoming an art as much as a science.
One of the most memorable things that I have done since living in San Francisco is see Jimmy Smith play at Bimbo’s, with my good friend Nick Rossi, who is also an awesome Hammond B3 player.
Jimmy Smith was a true genius, taking an instrument normally associated with church services and inventing a sound worthy of its spiritual origins.
R.I.P Jimmy Smith.