Filling the Void

gapingvoid cartoonHugh MacLeod draws cartoons on the back of business cards and he’s been sharing those cards as well as his great insights into the creative process through gapingvoid. I’m keen to follow the conversation and to point others at him. He gets it and it’s fascinating to watch the shape of how things are working now emerge. A lot is changing and Hugh is starting to trace around the edges of it. How is he different from others pronouncing on trends and how to be successful? He listens, he’s generous and he’s got a wicked, cynical sense of humour. He doesn’t have to do the blog or draw the cartoons, he wants to. That makes a big difference. I’m glad that he’s doing it. I wish more people would.

October 20, 2004 , , , ,

Flickr

I like to think that I’m an alpha geek. I try as much stuff out as I can and I like to be able to see things that are coming or things that I want to see develop. There were some rumblings about Flickr and I noticed it and looked at the site and the photos there a few times and read about it, but never signed up. Finally I did and I was hooked fairly quickly. Flickr is a way to share photos which isn’t really that revolutionary, but it’s how they do it that is remarkable. There are a bunch of ways to put galleries together to share images, but they can be a bit of a pain. If you want to have more personal photos you can set up rules and passwords, but that’s not a lot of fun. Flickr really clicked for me when I realized that I was emailing the same photos to different people. It would make more sense to have the photos in one place and let them go there. Then it clicked even more when I made the connection between RSS and Flickr. In the same way that I don’t need to go to a different site to see if it has been updated, it’s easier to check the feed. With Flickr you have an imagestream, which consists of the photos that you upload. You can also view streams by how they are tagged or who uploads them. When this is combined with the ability to share certain images with contacts or friends or family or everyone it moves into the killer app territory. It’s in beta now and all of the details aren’t worked out, but I’m hooked. It’s easier to understand once you use it though. The interesting thing is not that you have a limited amount of space, but it is how the space is limited. You have limits on how much you upload each month. So the bias of the system is to post stuff every month (or day or hour if you start to use it a lot). If you have a cell phone with a camera you can send images directly to Flickr. If you have a blog you can blog directly from Flickr. Technologically it’s great, but the social component is what will make it stick… that and the well-documented Flickr API that lets you make other cool new things out of it and of course they have a blog. They also have Creative Commons licensing built-in as well! Hopefully as it develops and the pricing scheme is worked out it will take off. This is going to be very big I think. In some ways I think that Flickr and the RSS and Atom feeds that it generates will also help a lot of people understand why they would want to use feeds. Outside of the more tech-savvy blogging world there are a lot of people who use the Web and don’t use feeds. NetNewsWire has changed the way that I view the Web because of how it lets me use the feeds and I think that Flickr is dramatically changing the way that I see sharing images. You can go to my Flickr page and you’ll only see the photos that you’re allowed to see… if you’re a contact you’ll see more, if you’re not you’ll only see the public photos. It’s simple, functional and addictive!

September 6, 2004 , , , , , , ,

blog1979

Daniel Dugas found an old journal in a box and he’s putting parts of it up. 25 years ago he took a trip around Canada and the U.S.A. starting and ending in Moncton, New Brunswick. He obsessively wrote in a journal during the trip. If he did this today he’d be posting to a blog with a cell phone and a laptop. What’s neat about how he’s doing it now is that the entries are going live 25 years after the fact in blog1979. The other cool thing is that it’s not just a documentation, but he’s got links as well. In his first entry he mentions the 375th anniversary of the arrival of the Acadians in this part of the world (New Brunswick and Nova Scotia) and when I read that I thought about the Congrès Mondial Acadien, which is all over the place here in Wolfville and Grand Pré and he helpfully links to it. It’s a link from the past into the present. Sometimes we’re obsessed with things that are live or wireless (guess where I’m blogging from!, etc.). This project shows that you don’t have to put something up right away. It also makes me feel better about the boxes of stuff that I have laying around… maybe they’ll be useful someday. I should have a look at them soon. But for now I’m looking forward to following Daniel’s chronologically offset adventures.

June 28, 2004 , ,

Conversations

Doc Searls points to a great bit of writing on Britt Blaser’s blog Escapable Logic. He writes about blogs as conversations (which is not new) and puts things in a great way. The theme he explores is: “Memorable conversation is the foundation of civilization.” That quote hit me and it’s one of those moments where the time and place and state of mind where I am all click.
Right now I’m in Truro taking a course with another amazing group of NSCC people. We talk a lot and share experiences of teaching and the rewards of working together to change the world through changing people’s lives. It’s important that we talk with each other and maybe the popularity of blogs and blogging is due to this inherent need to speak and be heard. Blaser hits the nail on the head in saying that blogs “contain a huge body of thoughtful conversations” and then he connects the conversations with actions to make the world a better place with the Spirit of America project. It’s amazing how quickly things can happen when people work together and engage in conversation which leads to action. People are working to make the world a better place. It reminds me of the amazing outpouring of support and random flowers to same-sex couples who were getting married in San Francisco in February that was made possible through conversations on the Web.

June 23, 2004 , , , , , ,

Guardian Unlimited Weblog

During the war in or on Iraq I relied a lot on online news sources…in general I’ve been getting more and more of news from online sources and not tv… the only exception is CBC radio… so not a lot of tv news. The most fascinating reading during the recent events in the Middle East were the BBC Reporters Logs which were halfway between brief news reports and notes from reporters to the world. But an earlier and still-running collection of links to a broad range of information about what’s currently going on in the world is the Guardian Weblog. I rely on the Guardian‘s journalism and their Weblog keeps me informed as well…and I recently checked out some of the “Weblogs We Like” sidebar which had me surfing around for a while.

May 6, 2003 , , , ,

Whew!

It’s time for some updates to the site as I’m approaching my 1 year anniversary with bitdepth… soon I’ll probably update to blosxom 2.0 (maybe the beta, maybe the release) as I like the look of some of the plugins. Even though I’m using Movable Type at work, I like the more hands on approach of writing stuff up in BBEdit and uploading it for my own blog. I just don’t want to get too far from the raw content, but I don’t want to spend a lot of time coding.
Teaching Screen Arts is fun, but it takes up a lot of time during the school year (it is my job)… and it cut into my blogging, but things are easing off a bit now and I have to reestablish the routine of blog first, ask questions later. It reminds me of a video artist friend of mind who was frustrated with me with my film background and shooting style with a video camera…I’d carefully think about the shot and shoot very efficiently, but her aesthetic was to capture the moment. I’ve taken the same approach sometimes with the blog…not a lot of posts, but interesting stuff that I’ve thought about a bit more. But now I’ll try to rebalance it a bit.

April 29, 2003 , , ,