Miscellaneous favorites from the past

43 Folders: Eric Idle, on John Cleese’s Writing Process

Michael Hyatt: What I Have Learned in Four Years of Blogging

cnewmark: Apture – a tool for political news transparency

cnewmark: NY Times re Consumers Union: “Success Without Ads”

cnewmark: fedspending.org: new tools expose Congressional finances

How to Change the World: Take the Entrepreneurship Test

How to Change the World: The Five Most Important Lessons of Entrepreneurship

Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketin: Are you awakened or just an entrepreneur?

Bargaineering: Average Net Worth of an American Family

Bargaineering: How I Lost My Job, Part One

Social Media: ‘Why journalists suck at business’

Chris Pirillo: Edit Video with a Video Editor: 5 Tips

Lifehacker — favorites from the past

Wired News — favorites from the past

Boing Boing — favorites from the past

KK Lifestream — favorites from the past

The Man Who Wanted to Classify the World

Awesome Musical Tapes From Africa

Tips for Conference Bloggers

Playing Digital Games Together

One of my biggest surprises as a parent has been to see how often video games and computer games turned into social events. I had been led by many media reports to believe that playing video games was an anti-social act. So when our kids turned player age, I  was expecting to see them hide away while playing games. Sure, that does happen, but more often their choice is to play games — whether video, computer, or with balls outside — with their friends.

Downtailing

In a November 10, 2006 blog posting Carr postulated that blogs were headed down to further obscurity rather than up to the floodlights of fame.  He wrote: “Back in October 2004, there were three blogs in the Technorati top 10. Last year, there was one. Today, there are zero. Defining the short head more broadly, as the top 100 sites, provides an even starker picture of the rapid downtailing of blogs.”

Subterranean Tutoring

For more extreme nerdiness like this fuse-blowing, eyes-popping, brain-frying backyard craziness, check out this Australian mate’s website. Gigantic tesla coils are just the start of it. He’s got a dozen other outrageously neato basement experiments going.

The Tools of Cool Tools

Eight years ago Cool Tools started out as short email messages containing my personal recommendations for cool stuff. I occasionally emailed these quick raves to a very small circle of friends. Several of my friends asked me to add their friends to my list. Soon there were several hundred readers. In the winter of 2000 I published 90 or so of my tool reviews in an issue of Whole Earth Review. This was not much of a surprise since I used to edit the magazine, and the reviews were clearly written in Whole Earth style — short, always positive, useful. I kept reviewing a tool or book when I thought of it, but after several years of adding folks to the list (which is still going) it occurred to me that with a small amount of extra work I might as well post my recommendations on a blog. On April 17, 2003, five years ago, I posted the first review on this site. (It was the Utili-Key, a sharp blade built into a key, a tool I continue to use and get past airport security.)

Affluence is Good

For the past 30 years the conventional wisdom has been that once a person achieves a minimal standard of living, more money does not bring more happiness. If you live below a certain income threshold, increased money makes a difference, but after that, it doesn’t buy happiness. That was the conclusion of a now-classic study by Richard Easterlin in 1974.

However a recent paper disputes that conclusion and shows that worldwide, afflluence brings increased satisfaction. The New York Times produced a fine graph, along with a good article, “Maybe Money Does Buy Happiness After All,” illustrating this new thesis.  Richard Easterlin would like to see better data for individual countries over time, but it does seem like affluence breeds satisfaction.

Self-Generating Money vs. Productive Wealth

Movage

Digital continuity is a real problem. Digital information is very easy to copy within short periods of time, but very difficult to copy over long periods of time. That is, it is very easy to make lots of copies now, but very difficult to get the data to copy over a century.

Amish Hackers

The Amish have the undeserved reputation of being luddites, of people who refuse to employ new technology. It’s well known the strictest of them don’t use electricity, or automobiles, but rather farm with manual tools and ride in a horse and buggy.  In any debate about the merits of embracing new technology, the Amish stand out as offering an honorable alternative of refusal. Yet Amish lives are anything but anti-technological. In fact on my several visits with them, I have found them to be ingenious hackers and tinkers, the ultimate makers and do-it-yourselfers and surprisingly pro technology.

The Sudden Appearance of Technology

This cool tool graphs the frequency of words used in US State of Union address since 1790. You enter two different words and this website races them (thus speech wars) in chart form to see which term is more common.


Smarterware — favorites from the past

Gmail Priority Inbox Puts Important Messages First
On Google Wave and “Failed” Experiments
Google Apps vs. Google Accounts Parity Coming
What Private Facebook Information Your Friends Can Publish
TWiG Live from SXSW
Google, Gmail, and Google Apps Accounts Explained
Control Your Email Inbox with Three Folders
Google Wave Versus the Rest, Feature by Feature
About That Google Server Breach

Douglas Rushkoff floats the idea that Google’s China announcement is a smokescreen for the fact that their servers got hacked–which means your data isn’t safe in the cloud. A serious and well-publicized security breach would be a crushing setback in Google’s cloud apps business. Was the China surveillance and Gmail break-in it, and we just missed it amidst all the cheering? The question mark at the end of his headline makes me think that Rushkoff’s unconvinced about his own thesis; still, it’s an interesting theory.

Update Your Google Account Password Recovery Options

Adopt a Freelancer’s Mindset (Even If You’re a Nine-to-Fiver)
Programmer 101: Teach Yourself How to Code
My New Book: The Complete Guide to Google Wave
How to SMS with Google Voice from Any Mobile Phone
The Google Wave Highlight Reel
On Archiving, Curating, and Republishing Public Twitter Conversations

Frequently Asked Questions About Google Wave

Google Wave 2009 Year-End Screencast

E-media tidbits — favorites from the past

Rob Curley Enters Stage Left at WPNI

Now, Rob is headed to Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive (WPNI) on Oct. 2 as vice president of product development. I couldn’t be more pleased to have Mr. Curley in the neighborhood.

Documentary Shines Light on Citizen Journalism

Chat with “Long Tail” Author Chris Anderson

What Digg Can Do for Your Web Traffic

Jay Rosen on “The People Formerly Known as the Audience”

On June 27, NYU professor Jay Rosen published a bluntly worded clarion call to mainstream media organizations: The People Formerly Known as the Audience

Excerpt: “We feel there is nothing wrong with old style, one-way, top-down media consumption. Big Media pleasures will not be denied us. You provide them, we’ll consume them and you can have yourselves a nice little business.”

A Print Reporter Does Multimedia

Training Citizen Journalists: News Industry’s Responsibility?

Innovative Blog Design

A Grand Citizen-Journalism Experiment in Bluffton

The Scary Fragility of Digital Archives

If you’re old enough to remember using WordStar, the most prominent word-processing program (long before Microsoft Word) in the early days of computers, you can understand this conundrum: Digital archives are much more fragile than good old paper archives.

Preparing for Future by Clinging to the Past

In case you haven’t seen it yet, the February/March issue of American Journalism Review has an important article about the Washington Post‘s print circulation slide and efforts to stem it (by senior writer Rachel Smolkin), “Reversing the Slide.” If you care about the future of news, read this.

OJR: Online Journalism Falling Short of Its Promise

Today, Online Journalism Review published an excellent analysis by Nora Paul, director of UMN’s Institute for New Media Studies. In ‘New News’ retrospective: Is online news reaching its potential?, Paul revisits perspectives offered a decade ago at Poynter’s first New News Seminar about where online journalism might be heading, vs. where we’re at today.

She focuses on the outcome to date of these early prognostications: the limitless newshole (the opportunity to present all information gathered), additional depth and context, hyperlinking from and between news stories, and increased reader-reporter interaction. Paul notes that for the most part, news organizations (…)

An Eyetracking Blog

Greg Edwards of Eyetools (the company that did the heavy lifting on Poynter’s Eyetrack III study last year) has started a blog about eyetracking and Web design. (Eyetracking is simply tracking the path of the human eye as it reads or views something and analyzing the resulting data.) If you care about online design, you’ll want to add this one to your bookmarks (or add the blog’s RSS feed).

An Indicator of RSS Use by Newspapers