All posts tagged Hypertext

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?

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.

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.

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.

My First Book Review

I guess its serendipity. I spent part of Friday afternoon updating the links page to reflect a long list of literary websites, resources, and weblogs. I did this with the hope that NoCategories might become a more literary endevor.

Today, I recieved an email requesting that I write a book review, and an offer for a free review copy.

I know I complained earlier about all the “Buzz Balls & Hype” that can engulf a website that writes book reviews.

It seems as if the realm of the literary blog is already beginning to diverge. There are the so called “literary blogs” that discuss reading and writing, and then there are the ones that serve promotional purposes for a struggling writer, the so-called “author website”. Need I bother to mention that I prefer the former to the later?

Its not just something that happens to literary websites. I’ve noticed a recent proliferation of advertizing on the Gawker family of blogs. On one recent entry — it is a very funny article called “Lies I Have Told Verizon DSL Support Today” — the ads are so thick you can barely find the text of the article! Those blogs are starting to remind me of the mid-90′s websites, with all the clutter, etc. Blogging Pro put it well, with the headline: “Gizmodo Revamps RSS Feeds to Make More Money

To the credit of the Gizomdo Blogs, Blogging Pro mentions:

Gizmodo seems to have developed a fair policy of delivering partial ad-free feeds or full feeds with advertising enclosed. Readers choice. The ads are placed every fifth entry so the reader is not bombarded with sales pitches.

It seems that Web Syndication is a viable way to avoid the kind of bombardment I’m complaining about.

To return to the topic at hand, I’m resolved not to let that kind bombardment happen in my little internet garden here. While I’m delighted to get a free book for review, and would be delighted to do so in the future, I’ll do my very best to be fair in my assesment of such a book.

Besides, any press is good press.

Screenfulls

The Reading Experience mentions something in the very words I often find myself using for a “screenful” — that is, the electronic equivalent of a pageful.

Google searches for quality not quantity

I have received some Disinformation that

GOOGLE has plans that will dramatically improve the results of internet news searches, by ranking them according to quality rather than simply by their date and relevance to search terms.

The Sandbox Effect

Mark Bernstein responds to Jason Kottke’s recent, popular post about “A Whole New Internet“, where the main question seems to be what will happen now that the dot-com bust has busted itself. Money has come back into the vacuum. What will that do? Both Kottke and Bernstein seem to be cautionary about the future.

Kottke says:

Now that the money is back, the focus will necessarily shift even though, as Janice notes, we’ll be a little wiser about it this time around. There will be less innovation and activity from individuals because they’ll be snapped up by companies to work on their projects for their customers. The information flowing out of companies, even those that are pretty open, will be limited because of competitive and legal concerns. A person who — when she was unemployed 3 years ago — could spend a couple weeks in releasing a neat web app for anyone to use because she wanted to or could say what she wanted on her blog will now be putting all her coding energies into an application that serves a few customers & needs to be cash-flow positive and won’t have the time to post anything to her blog (and can’t say much about what she’s working on anyway unless all her readers want to sign NDAs). (Not saying this is bad…this is just what companies are for. But what’s good for companies, their shareholders, and their customers isn’t necessarily what’s good for environment those companies inhabit. On the other hand, everyone I know has more work than they know what to do with and that’s a good thing too.)

Bernstein adds:

We don’t want a static A-List where ten pioneer bloggers become the next Rupert Murdoch and everyone else is perpetually consigned to LiveJournal; we want variety and novelty and excitement and, yes, we want a blogosphere where you can grow to be Kottke if that’s what you want.

I’ve been pondering exactly what we can do to make sure the tail remains a good place to be, and to make sure that there isn’t a sign at the big end of the tail that reads “Sorry: we’re full.”

One step in the right direction, for those so called “tail end” bloggers, might be the kind of blogging that friendster, and similar sites like Blogger, provide. By offering state-of-the-art html output, quality designs, and syndication, these blogs offer more technological sophistication than the average user would ever have the patience to develop on their own — aside from that, it allows others, who may already have the ablity to build such things on their own, to go beyond those things. (Its easier to build on top of a blogger site than it is with others.) Most importantly, making good blogs readily available to anyone who wants one is very good for the flow of ideas. That flow of ideas is something Kottke dwelt on in his post, mentioning that much of the “new” internet came about as a result of the bust, where suddenly unemployed tech-types had time to play with things rather than requirements to work on them. Now that blogs exist, the easier they are to build, the more they leave room for that very important sandbox effect.

As for sites like LiveJournal and MySpace, there is the potential that these users might be left out, and end up publishing B-list content – content that looks like crap, doesn’t syndicate, and is difficult to navigate and link to, etc. I’ve already noticed that dozens and dozens of my friends have begun using MySpace, for example, to start their own forays into the blogging world, and I’m happy for them! I am also annoyed on their behalf that their blogs aren’t nearly as good as they would have been if they had chosen any number of the other options out there. I think they chose MySpace for its particular brand of social networking, which isn’t slow, like friendster, or empty like Orkut.

  • I wonder if social networking is the “B-list” to CMS Blog’s “A-List”?
  • Perhaps that relationship will reverse?
  • I wonder if the more private aspect of these smaller networks might obstruct the flow of ideas, or at least limit the ideas to those in certain circles.
  • I wish I had one single unified interface for interacting with all the blogs, the social networks, and the memes that I try to follow on a daily basis.
  • In fact, I wish that all of it would arrive in my inbox everyday, like some sort of user-friendly newspaper.

Book Blogs and Publicists

What seemed promising in a post on 3quarksdaily, about the promise held by the internet for novellists, “Could cyberspace be the novel’s best friend?“, turned out to be more hype about the publicity-power of the internet.

The article in the Villiage Voice is calledBook Smart: Could cyberspace be the novel’s best friend? Litblogs take off—and grow up. sets out to give book blogging some of the journalistic attention that has lately been applied largely to political blogging. Unfortunately for this reader, most of that attention has to do with marketing. It is as if to say that the only thing that can come positively from blogging is money, or that the only way to support novellists is by advertising, as if thats all that book blogs are.

That wasn’t the whole topic of the article. There was an interesting comparison between today’s blogs and the earlier ezines.

An editor at feed.com back in the Internet boom days of the ’90s, Lipsyte believes the new wave has a very different agenda from the Web pioneers who founded content-heavy sites like Feed and Suck. “These bloggers are not so evangelistic about the medium,” he says. “For them, it’s not about using technology to create a new world. It’s about creating a space that isn’t available elsewhere to talk about the thing they care about—which happens to be books.”

Here’s hoping they don’t sell out too much.

Social Blog Networks

It seems the social network and the blogsphere are coming together into a new thing. (again, with the buzzwords)

Could it be that a trend has begun? I noticed a while back that other social networks had blogs as part of them, MySpace being one of them. The advantage a Friendster blog has over a MySpace Blog is that Friendster offers a RSS feed for a blog. MySpace doesn’t. LiveJournal is one of the largest social networks out there. Its also basically a blogging site, more so than it is a social network really.

I’m frustrated with the variety of “social networks”, to be honest. As far as I am concerned, there is one internet, and I have one “social network” of my own. However, with different cliques of friends dispersed, some on this network, some on that one… It becomes more difficult to communicate easily. Technology is getting in my way here. A social network offers, what, a “profile” which is more limited than a “home page”, and a way to send, also more limited, but somehow glorified email “messages” to my friends. Oh, and don’t forget about the advertisements everywhere. I do prefer ads to fees, but they’re both party poopers.

Many of my friends don’t feel so down on this stuff, on the other hand. They’re gobbling up memberships to every social network that comes down the pike. They’re sharing pictures. They’re making blogs, forums, rants, raves, etc. And that’s great. I don’t feel so lonely on the internet anymore. They like it, because its easy, and its “new”, so its fun.

Cnet reports

The company that earned some notoriety for firing a blogger is now bringing bloggers into the fold–and hoping to collect fees in the process.

Friendster, a so-called social-networking site of linked personal profiles, launched a beta, or test version, of Friendster Blogs, a section of the site that lets people post and archive the daily musings known as blogs.

The Minotaur Project

To my growing list of writings that are presented with flash animation I would like to add:

= = = THE MINOTAUR PROJECT = = =

The Minotaur Project is part of a hypermedia novel in verse which explores contemporary issues of identity using the framework of the classical myth. The Minotaur Project is a poem cluster taken from a hypermedia novel in verse (as yet untitled), which reimagines the classical myth of Kore.

The Minotaur Project draws from the premise of the classical myth, but re-imagines Minotaur as a combination of human and machine. A disembodied intelligence looping endlessly in the computer’s labyrinth, attempting to understand itself and others without that primary means of connection to the sensate world, the body.

You might be asking yourself, what, exactly is “a poem cluster taken from a hypermedia novel in verse “. Well, read it and find out! What interests me the most about the Minotaur Project are its classical allusions. I am interested in tinkering with these myself, partially because of having read T.S. Eliot’s Tradition and the Individual Talent in college, but also because I like the myths.

Doing to Windows what Windows did to DOS.

John Battelle’s Searchblog posted a copy of the press release announcing the 1.0 upgrade of the increacingly interesting Google Desktop Search. Highlights include better features, the ability to use a search engine function on the contents of your own computer, etc.

But wait, there is more. The new GDS will also create a floating “search box” independent of any browser, which you can place anywhere you want on top of Windows. Hmmmm. This sounds very, er, post browser, very…Web 2.0. See my musings on how web-based apps are starting to do to Windows what Windows did to DOS here….and man, this sure feels a lot like a paving stone down that particular road.

the manhattan zombie apocalypse

This just in from brokentype.com

Monster Island

the manhattan zombie apocalypse
an ipod zombie zovel

by David Wellington

There are different ways to read this novel

  1. To read the novel online visit
    www.brokentype.com/monster
  2. Download the novel
  3. Read the novel on an iPod:
    • Download the file
    • unzip it
    • and
      copy it into your ipod’s notes folder.
      It works, try it.
    • To Read:
      Scroll to Extras > Notes > Island.

Write to the author at:
contactmonster at hot mail dot com.
© 2004-2005, David Wellington

Footnotes, Endnotes & Hyperlinks

The Institute for the Future of the Book has posted a review of a recent article in The Atlantic Monthly. The review compares this article to hypertext, by calling it “hyperlinks in print

ifBook describes David Foster Wallace’s cover story about talk radio in the April issue of The Atlantic Monthly.

Wallace is well-known for his copious use of footnotes & endnotes, and this article is no exception. However, either Wallace or The Atlantic’s art director have decided to treat his digressions differently in this case: words or phrases in the main text that signal a jumping-off point have lightly colored boxes drawn around them, rather than a superscripted numeral after them. In the print edition, boxes in the margins – one immediately thinks of windows – with notes in them appear, color-coded to match the set-off phrases. Some of the notes have notes; they get more boxes of their own.

The review also makes an interesting note about the interface a reader encounters when using Adobe’s Acrobat PDF reader.

The Atlantic Monthly has often served as a haven for hypertext ideas in print. Vannevar Bush wrote the essayAs We May Think,” which was published in the July, 1945 edition ofThe Atlantic Monthly. Both call “for a new relationship between thinking man and the sum of our knowledge”.

Approaching the end of World War, when American Science had been devoted extensively toward developments for the war efforts. Vanevar Bush proposes that future progress depends upon, and should “implement the ways in which man produces, stores, and consults the record of the race”. He argues this based on the fact that the complete store of information is growing more complex and specialized. By the middle of the 20th century, specialized information was not necessarily accessible to the few specialists capable of understanding it. Further complicating the accessibility of information was that fact that all of it was in print, occupying so much physical space and so many different spaces. Bush urges developments toward changing that. In addition, Bush argues for a new structure for the information which is to be stored in new ways:

Our ineptitude in getting at the record is largely caused by the artificiality of systems of indexing. When data of any sort are placed in storage, they are filed alphabetically or numerically, and information is found (when it is) by tracing it down from subclass to subclass. It can be done in only one place . . .. Having found one item, moreover, one has to emerge from the system and re-enter on a new path.

The human mind does not work that way. It operates by association. With one item in its grasp, it snaps instantly to the next that is suggested to it by the association of thoughts, in accordance with some intricate web of trails carried by the cells of the brain. . . . Selection [of information] by association, rather than indexing, may yet be mechanized.

“As We May Think” develops the subject of the mechanized indexing of information, arranged by association. Bush describes a postulated “device,” a “mechanized private file and library” which “may be consulted with exceeding speed and flexibility,” a kind of personal computer and research assistant. Vannevar Bush’s ideas were foundational to hypertext theory, so much so that it seems his article is describing the Internet. A description of a typical interaction with such a device, for which he coins the term “memex,” is a description of an associative path through the written record, from general to specific and down divergent paths along the way, each leading toward other specific points. This is a description of what has become a common experience. The process Bush defines, using technology very similar to what he describes: these are commonplace parts of the research process anymore. The path of these associative trains of thought is a familiar path now, and Bush says that it is because we think this way ourselves.

Flash Interface for Fiction

Here is a list of some of the current projects hosted by a very interesting website called Digital Fiction .

  • Book of Waste
    Short experimental/interactive fiction imposed against a series of anonymous objects, buildings and animated landscapes. Compelling wasted tales with full motion video backgrounds.
  • The Diary of Anne Sykes
    An unfinished, chaotic mix of sculpted paper scribblings, childhood memories and fragments of a poisoned relationship from imaginary author Anne Sykes.
  • Inside: A Journal of Dreams
    Living alone and secluded, an elderly man keeps a surreal record of his dreams as he is slowly poisoned by his gas fire leaking carbon monoxide.

Continue Reading

Google Goofs!

One more than one occasion, I have spoken out in favor of Google. Google can be generally described, in words from a recent posting by web standards guru Jeffrey Zeldman, as having been “a good corporate citizen and outstanding netizen for so long that one wants to give the company the benefit of the doubt.” What’s this about a doubt?

Somewhat suspect practices, that’s what. Zeldman describes a new feature of Google’s toolbar software, called Autolink:

For instance, if your company’s site includes a street address, a link to Google?s map service will magically sprout from your page. Likewise, a book’s ISBN number will trigger a link to an Amazon page selling that book. The BBC and CNET cite additional examples.

That sounds great to me, but I guess I’m one of those people they call an “early adopter” when it comes to new technology. I might be like a cowboy who will “push buttons first and ask questions later”, which is why I enjoy reading responsible media commentary by people like Zeldman, who observes:

Critics point out that with this technology Google is doing the very thing Microsoft tried to do in 2001. See Chris Kaminski’s “Much Ado About Smart Tags” (A List Apart 22 July 2001) if you missed that drama. Kaminski cited three problems with smart tags:

  1. Per Walter Mossberg inThe Wall Street Journal, Smart Tags enabled Microsoft to “edit any page on the web without the author’s knowledge.”
  2. They extended Microsoft’s monopoly power into new markets, giving the Redmond giant the power to decide which non-Operating System companies would live and which would die. (Companies Microsoft’s Smart Tags division partnered with would live; their competitors would eat worms.)
  3. Not least, Smart Tags were “amenable to nefarious uses, such as covert user tracking” (Chris Kaminski in ALA, paraphrasing Dan Gillmor).

If you are concerned about this, and would liek to take matters into your own hands, Zeldman offers some solutions. For those, you should read his article, Protect your site from Google?s new toolbar

Best Writing of a Weblog

Best Writing of a Weblog

The Bloggies awards for the best blogs on the internet has added a new award to the list of awards: Best Writing of a Weblog. The award replaced “best weblog about music” which is a shame, I think, because the only reason I care at all about these bloggie awards is so that I can comb through the list of nominees looking for interesting things to read. If that’s what you care about too, you might be interested in reading the lists of winners from 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, and The Webby Awards, which are similar awards for quality websites.

And the nominees for “Best Writing of a Weblog” are…

I have yet to vote, how about you?

The Education of Elisabeth Eckleman: Freshman Year

Elisabeth Eckleman just left home, and has a lot of difficult decisions ahead of her. Sarah Hepola follows Elisabeth’s life and lets you make the tough choices for both of them. In this installment, Elisabeth loses her high-school boyfriend and drives to college with her parents. You decide what happens next.

The “About The Author” is as much fun as the story.

source: The Morning News