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Times have changed, and space has changed too

Sottsass Typewriter

I’ve been thinking of the dis-intermediation of printing. The disruption of the book, the magazine and the newspaper are in the headlines. A change is upon us, the valuation of things and the physics of the economy are irreversibly new. The big companies that employ thousands are the ones we think of most. The ones with the most reach, the powerhouses, the giants, the ones with the furthest to fall seem the most tragic. It’s a trans-valuation of all values.

But my mind wanders to the little literary magazine, the publishing project done for the love of it. These little magazines always seem to lose money and struggle on year after year. There’s an industry of writer’s workshops across the country that coach and prod writers to fill the pages of the little literary magazines. The interesting thing about these little magazines is that it still takes a lot of money and infrastructure to publish them. Desktop publishing brought the price down, but there’s still the editing, design, printing and distribution.

We now have a publishing medium that allows direct distribution of text over the network. Blogging software has become the new typewriter, and publishing is as easy as Tim Berners-Lee originally imagined it would be. The little literary magazine serves the purpose of a filter, it finds the best writing. But the cost of the filter is not much more than the cost of producing the printed matter. Is the writing about the tradition of ink on paper, or is it about the art of putting one word after the other?

The other thread this tangles up with is Hugh Macleod’s idea of the global microbrand. Hugh writes and draws cartoons from a small town in Texas called Alpine. It’s just up the road from Marfa, Texas, the place where sculptor Donald Judd established an outpost for modern art and minimalism in 1971. Times have changed, and space has changed too. Used to be that Marfa was a long distance from New York City, now it’s just a click away.

Of course for the UNIX operating system, 1971 was the beginning of time. It probably also marked the date when distance began to shrink at a visible rate.

Audiences for the little literary magazine, or Hugh Macleod’s cartoons, no longer need to be locals. They don’t have to live in Alpine, they can see it all through the network. It’s a gathering of tribes from across the globe, not tribes based on proximity or kinship, but on a common social object. We like Hugh’s sense of humor, or the taste of an editor who assembles a collection of short stories. We form a bond.

The highest value in the swirl of texts, images and sounds that roar by us minute by minute, second by second on the network is the good editor, the curator, the finely-tuned filter. Philip Roth, in an introduction to a collection of eastern European writing during the cold war, made an insightful comment: when nothing is allowed, everything is significant; when everything is allowed, nothing is significant. When we can see everything, where do we choose to rest our eyes?

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Twitter = Bird: Bird is the Word, B-b-bird, b-b-bird…

Yeah, the Trashmen did the best version. And that scene from Full Metal Jacket still haunts my dreams. But here’s a nice Twitter commercial by the Ramones. Everybody’s heard about the b-b-bird…

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Music Changes Everything

As someone who grew up with the Cold War as an assumed state of affairs. This video made me smile. We had some ideas about how music might change the world back in the day. Music changes everything, if you take the time to listen.

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Surrealistic Democracy: An Approach to Twitter Feature Requests

Surrealism - Magritte

The practice of Surrealism often takes the form of connecting unexpected things into a single object. Magritte often used this technique, as did Meret Oppenheim. The fur-lined tea cup is beautiful example. Innovation also takes the form of connecting the unexpected to create the new.

The churn of innovation in the Twitter space is running at full speed. And the tools for a new approach to making feature requests and creating requirements are ready-to-hand in the network. As a user of Twitter, I’d like to view Twitter channels, streams made of specific sets of Twitter users. I found a site called TweetPeek which allowed me to put together some crude channels. These Twitter channels are analogous to the RSS channels on NewsGang.net.

Amy Bellinger took my idea and extended it by putting the RSS feed for the Twitter channel next to the feed for the Audio MP3s in GRAZR.

Amy would like to see live ‘show notes’ for the NewsGang podcast via Twitter. GRAZR doesn’t allow the MP3 to play while the Twitter Channel is updating, but you get the idea.

The channels I’ve sketched out are really rough outlines. They don’t update as quickly as I’d like, I’d really like them to be XMPP based so the flow was real-time.

And the Twitter channel I’d really like to see is the one that features the delegates and bloggers at the Democratic National Convention in Denver. Two things need to happen to create this primary source information stream:

  • We need real-time twitter channels, both XMPP and RSS
  • We need to get the word about Twitter to the floor of the convention.

Take this idea and move it forward. If you’re a technologist, think about the technical problem. TweetPeek is a start, but it’s not optimal. If you’re connected to the Democratic convention, spread the word about Twitter.

As the Trashmen said in 1963…

A-well-a everybody’s heard about the bird
B-b-b-bird, bird, bird, b-bird’s the word
A-well-a bird, bird, bird, the bird is the word
A-well-a bird, bird, bird, well the bird is the word
A-well-a bird, bird, bird, b-bird’s the word
A-well-a bird, bird, bird, well the bird is the word
A-well-a bird, bird, b-bird’s the word
A-well-a bird, bird, bird, b-bird’s the word
A-well-a bird, bird, bird, well the bird is the word
A-well-a bird, bird, b-bird’s the word
A-well-a don’t you know about the bird?
Well, everybody knows that the bird is the word!
A-well-a bird, bird, b-bird’s the word
A-well-a…

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