Archive for June, 2005

Writing Tools

In addition to the writing about strong language mentioned in the previous post, incisive offers reviews of writing tools: software that helps writers. The list isn’t very long, but it’s a great idea. So far, only Macintosh software has been reviewed. Unfortunately, Tinderbox hasn’t made it on the list yet.

Not all the “writing tools” out there are software. ScribblingWoman provides a link to Writing Tools, little tips like this one:

“Good writers move up and down the ladder of abstraction. At the bottom are bloody knives and rosary beads, wedding rings and baseball cards. At the top are words that reach for a higher meaning, words like “freedom” and “literacy.”

There could be more writing tools out there. Some questions come to mind:

  • What’s out there, other than Microsoft Word?
  • Are there better spell/grammar/style checkers?
  • Is there an html (standards?) friendly word processor?

Content is King

A recent theme among the people who make websites seems to be that there is not enough emphasis on the content of a website. Their battle call is “Content is King” People who make websites seem preoccupied with visual presentation, and they do not seem to be concerned as much with the substance of the presentation.

Zeldman says, to communicate visually one must first have something to communicate about.

Recent discussion has produced a small handful of tools or strategies that emphasize content during the web-building process. Still, the vast majority of resources out there are centered around presentation more than content.

A list Apart, a respected web magazine for people who make websites, gives roughly half the number of articles about content as there are articles about design . Many of the “content” articles are about little bits of code, more than they are about content.

There are three very good articles about content.

Strong Language

If you heard the phrase “strong language”, you would probably think of profanity. Profanity is not the only example of strong language, but it is a good one. Strong language is not weak. It gets your attention. It conveys its meaning directly.

Dervala.net gives a few examples of what is not strong language.

When a software engineer writes vague instructions, her program breaks. When a scientist notes observations imprecisely, her experiment suffers. When a Green Beret commander gives a rambling order, his guys are put at risk.

But a literary theorist who expresses his ideas in clear language betrays the expert mystery on which tenure depends. An MBA student who avoids crass jargon might fail for seeming not to know it. A marketer who relies on simple, direct language must know exactly what the product can do for the customerand understanding that takes effort.

It seems to me that engineers and scientists are also willing to approach writing humbly, as a craft in which they are not expert. To them, clear prose is not a gift or a luxury, its a skill that can be learned with careful practice; a skill that makes them better at their jobs. They share this view with old-fashioned advertisers like David Ogilvy, fiction teachers like John Gardner, and great essayists, like E.B. White, who said, The best writing is re-writing.

Both dervala.net and incisive have recently added content about strong language, because it is important. Erin Kissane is the author of incisive, who writes:

Its not about being right on principle. Its about the reasons that The Elements of Style is relevant to corporate strategy as well as corporate copy. Its about nailing the structure weve built for thinking and communicating and using it to speak, write, and act humanely.

Kissane begins writing about Strong Language with A Call to Arms, about why strong language is important.

source: Notable Words

Writing for a Schema

for the ever-ongoing revision of “To Win, Simply Play” a friend of mine has helped me work out an xml schema. I don’t really write xml but basically it works like this: Each node can contain annotations in addition to links. The annotations are text that appears depending on whether the reader is interested in it or not. that appearance is determined, in part, according to what has been read previous to arrival at that node. There are also links, of course. the xml can spit its content into either a flash interface or a text interface.

My question is, how should I write/edit/arrange the copy so that I don’t go insane, and so that it can be easily input into the schema?

Notable Words

I am very proud of Garrett Dimon for saying something that has been on my mind for a very long time.
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BlogShares

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Eastgate Systems’ new intern.

Ariana Geogriou is the new intern over at Eastgate this summer. She’ll be working with Tinderbox, in order to make tutorials for the software. Read all about it on Ariana’s Blog.

The proverbial first day of the rest of my life.

After my final college class, a few of the usual suspects were congregated for the evening in the living room, drinking tea. Topics ranged from feral humans to bizarre aquatic life. I learned of something called a grampus. It was a typical college night. Will I miss having long conversations with other educated people? I hope not.

I slept in, on the morning of the proverbial first day of the rest of my life. After noon, I put in a full day’s work on LEspaceMotorcoach.com, which should be finished soon. It’s exciting to say that this is the second website I’ve been paid to create this month.

Now what? At the end of the day, I was still in my pajamas, bored and worried.

My sister called just then, with a promising idea. She knows of some exciting work that I could begin doing. I don’t want to say very much about it, because I don’t know very much about it, but it sounds like something that’s right up my alley. From the initial description, it sounds like it would resemble the internship I loved having at Eastgate Systems last summer. In addition, this would give me an excuse to go to Kansas City and see my baby nephew, who has grown toward being a toddler now, and I have never seen him yet.

Perhaps this is premature, but now that I’m no longer a student, I’m a bit worried about how I am going to “stay in shape” so to speak. For years I’ve been a loyal devotee of that driving question echoing through my daily thoughts: “What’s on the syllabus?”

There is no syllabus after graduation. Better yet, I write my own syllabus. Better still, I grade myself. But what’s on the syllabus? How will I be graded?

Balustra

I’m not sure what Mr. J. Nathan Matias is up to right now, but I like it. It appears to be fiction, entitled, Balustrade. The story has definately got my interest.

It’s dim now.

Something about a girl, I think. Yes. It must have been. Something more? But I remember the other man’s eyes. They too, like the lanterns in the windows, were expectant. Why was he there? The glow moseyed over the rough floorboards, skipping over the cracks and shadows. The light vaguely slid through the porch railings and settled on

Oh.

His gun.

Read Balustra, by J. Nathan Matias…

The Format and Availability of Electronic Books

Update: a lot has changed in the world of digital books, since I wrote this post in 2005.  Devices like the Kindle and the Nook and the iPad have changed the way we read digital books, and have fanned the fire for the debate about their format(s). Website applications, like the Google Books app, have introduced a new way to store and retrieve digital books, which keeps users from ever having an actual copy of the book on their devices, and thus prevents the transmission of those files. It seems that books are being digitized and consumed digitally, but that it isn’t exactly like the digitization of music.


Beatrice has recently discussed The New York Public Library’s addition of downloadable audiobooks to its online holdings. I noticed a complaint that I also have about my college’s online library.

Both types of files expire after three weeks, after which you can always check them out again if you weren’t finished yet, although I’ll admit I find this bit confusing: “If the desired eBook is not available, you may place a hold on the title.” Isn’t the whole point of making books downloadable that through the miracle of mechanical reproduction they’re always available

I’ve got a few thoughts about this sort of thing, about the format and availability of electronic books.

Format

First of all, I really don’t think we’re going to be able to fully reap the benefits of that “miracle of mechanical reproduction”, where electronic books are concerned, because all of it so confusing. There are so many different file formats! There are too many of these formats. When we read an electronic text, we might read it as a web page, as a .pdf file, as a .txt file, or as one of the innumerable, proprietary “ebook” formats. Microsoft makes one, Adobe holds the reigns to the .pdf files. I don’t think that the average user wants or needs to be savvy enough to deal with all these different formats. It isn’t practical to have so many.

All of this contrasts sharply with the digitization of another medium: music. While there is also a variety of formats to find your music in, somehow things have settled down for now so that nearly everyone uses the .mp3. All the different software, on all the different kinds of computers, and thus all the different people can use this single, ubiquitous format. So far as I know, nobody is holding the reigns on the .mp3. I can make an .mp3 file, you can make one, even my graddad can make one. Its simple and easy.

Ironically, there has been a ubiquitous file format for text (.txt) for years longer than there has been one for music, yet for one literature class I needed five different pieces of software to read the variously formatted electronic formats for the course’s books. I was the only one of the fifteen students who had the patience for all of this. My peers would prefer to spend all that money on the paper books, rather than stress over the electronic versions, even though I found them all for free.

I can’t wait for the day that I have a “media player” for my book library. Something that collects and displays my books the way iTunes or Winamp collects and displays my music. Wouldn’t it be nice if there were something as ridiculously easy to use as an iPod, something to read books on? I’ve looked at those electronic book readers out there. They don’t seem very good to me. Too expensive, too complicated…

Maybe its just that these things do not exist due to a lack of demand. Video games and music are more marketable than electronic books?

Availability

It makes absolutely no sense to me that a library would ask for you to “return” an electronic book. The only reason to return a paper book to a library would be so that somebody else could borrow that object. Can’t the library send me a duplicate copy? Of course, there are issues with royalties and copyright. Google has caught a bit of guff with regard to those issues. Google plans to digitize hundreds of books, in a searchable way. This is a wonderful thing, but it isn’t making any money for the authors and publishers of those books, is it?

Again, there is a parallel in the electronic music scene. The compromise seems to be that, for a dollar a song, you can “check out” any song you like from the various services out there, and in return for that dollar, you get to own the song. People seem to be willing to do this, even though it is generally preferable to get the files for free.

With books, its just as easy to get the files for free, provided that those books have entered the public domain. (I suppose I wouldn’t balk at the idea of large scale book piracy, like we’ve already seen with music, but I don’t think we’ll ever see it.) If a book isn’t in the public domain, it isn’t likely to be available online. Surely the publishers have electroic copies of their books, before they ever go to press. Don’t they want to sell those?

Perhaps this entire post is nothing more than an expression of my ignorance about electronic publishing, but I hope I’ve been able to express my hopes for where it might go: that it might become easier, more fun to collect electronic books the way so many people do with their music.

Romanticizing Depression

This is a quoptation from an interesting article I found via Arts & Letters Daily. The article is from the issue dated May 6, 2005 of The Chronicle of Higher Education

One question followed me from lecture to lecture, from talk show to talk show, bookstore to bookstore. Because the question was so automatic, so predictable, it took me months to appreciate how peculiar it was.

At a book signing, I might give a short introduction to this or that aspect of Listening to Prozac, discussing workplace pressures to remain upbeat, say, and the ethics of using medications in response. What I spoke about seemed not to matter. Inevitably someone would ask: “What if so-and-so had taken Prozac?” The candidates for drug treatment were drawn from a short roster of tortured 19th-century artists and writers. Friedrich Nietzsche and Edgar Allan Poe made frequent appearances.

My response was perfunctory — a quick review of theories of art and neurosis. I resented the joking distraction from issues I had raised. I did not treat the what if question as I did others. I did not attend to it, puzzle over it, take it to heart.

And then one day I did. The setting was a professional meeting in Copenhagen, in 1995.

The Last Day of College

I just realized something: it is now the last day of my college career.

Boston’s Papercut Zine Library.

I love zines. I made one myself, for quite a while. I quit doing the zine. Publications like Factsheet Five are becoming increacingly diffficult to find. Blogs have nearly overtaken the zine thing, in so many ways, but not completely.

Blog of a Bookslut has indicated that the zine scene is not as dead as I thought it was. In fact a zine library has recently caught the attention of The Boston Globe. The post, The Boston Globe profiles Boston’s Papercut Zine Library says that “There are zine libraries all over the country.” That’s good news to me.

From the Globe:

Just blocks from some of the world’s most esteemed libraries, a very different reading room has sprung up: Papercut Zine Library, dedicated solely to the quirky, independently published magazines known as ”zines.”

It’s a humble space, a small, wood-paneled room in a fading leftist meeting hall, with a hand-printed sign taped to the peeling front door

Steel Structures

i think of steel structures,
towers of slabs
plane atop plane
their weight

And in there, cars.
some of them parked outward
a view beyond the windshield
over where the slab drops off
and the space until the next slab
and sky.
some of them on the roof, even.

There is a loose society.

people pay rent for their automobiles.
real estate
in the sarcophagus
of cars.
they know each other.

Trisha Bowyer, photography

still life with a head by Trisha Bowyer

Trisha Bowyer is a friend of mine, and a damn fine phtographer, too. Trisha has published an online portfolio of photographs by Trisha Bowyer.

Post Secret

PostSecret is an ongoing community art project where people mail-in their secrets anonymously on one side of a homemade postcard.

You are invited to anonymously contribute your secrets to PostSecret. Each secret can be a regret, hope, funny experience, unseen kindness, fantasy, belief, fear, betrayal, erotic desire, feeling, confession, or childhood humiliation. Reveal anything – as long as it is true and you have never shared it with anyone before.

Create your own 4-by-6-inch postcards out of any mailable material. But please only put one secret on a card. If you want to share two or more secrets, use multiple postcards. (Please do not email your secret.)

Please put your complete secret and image on one side of the postcard.

Hypertext as Subversive?

I have just discovered (via Mark Bernstein) an essay, in hypertext, by David Kolb called Hypertext as Subversive?. The essay introduces itself by saying:

Universities are said to be places of critical discussion and evaluation that train new cognitive explorers, make better maps, and also create new territories for exploration. We are all familiar with the internal walls that limit that creativity. These walls may may be implicit in the very ideal of a university. Could hypertext linking help resist and subvert those walls, and undo what is too often the university’s one-way meta-position?

This essay is self-referential: it works around a debate about whether media like itself are inevitably linked to processes of homogenization and oppression.

Its interesting to me that I never found this essay while working in an academic institution to create a hypertext.

I enjoyed the fact that the essay begins with an early link to how to read this essay. Ironic really, considering that one of the benefits of a hypertext is a variety of paths through it, that there would be a need for a users manual.

Google Sitemaps

Google has just launched a new endeavor called Google Sitemaps

Google Sitemaps is an experiment in web crawling. Using Sitemaps to inform and direct our crawlers, we hope to expand our coverage of the web and improve the time to inclusion in our index. By placing a Sitemap-formatted file on your webserver, you enable our crawlers to find out what pages are present and which have recently changed, and to crawl your site accordingly.

Basically, the two steps to participating in Google Sitemaps are:

  1. Generate a Sitemap in the correct format using Sitemap Generator.
  2. Update your Sitemap when you make changes to your site.

As it turns out, there’s already a Google Sitemap plugin for WordPress to make the content management include a google sitemap.