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The New York Times > Technology > Circuits > Uses: A Mundane Shot? If It’s on a Photoblog, Someone’s

Posted 09/06/2005 under photoblogs

BLOGS are great for those who like to write and wonderful for those who like to read, but what about people who don’t like to do either?

They are expressing themselves through photoblogs,  Web sites that are part visual diary, part photo gallery, where in recent years anyone with a digital camera and Internet connection can take part. Many sites have made it easier than ever to share photographs, including Fotolog.net and Flickr.com, which was recently bought by Yahoo.

Among the most interesting photoblogs to peruse are group oriented,  where many people post pictures, all of them around a central theme. You will find abandoned bicycles, subway scenes, pets. Group sites celebrate the ordinary, the mundane, the ephemeral,  things that everyone can understand. Article available here

The Mirror Project

The Mirror Project, mirrorproject.com, gathers self-portraits reflected in different surfaces: windows, bodies of water, shiny balloons and rearview mirrors. More than 29,000 photos have been submitted from all seven continents since the project began in October 1999.

It began as “Friends of Jezebel’s Mirror,” or FOJM, a spinoff site to Jezebel’s Mirror, where a Web designer named Heather Champ posted 250 of her own self-portraits after the death of her parents, who had been the primary documenters of her life.

For the Mirror Project, Ms. Champ invites guest curators to sift through the submissions and collect photos around themes, some of these have been Ikea, Sept. 11 and books.

The value of the self-portraits, from supermodel-esque poses to corner-of-the-eye glimpses, is that people are less likely to put on airs when they are photographing themselves.

Guess Where

New York photobloggers have created a group photoblog game called “GuessWhere” on Flickr.com, where people post photos from specific cities and others have to guess where they were taken (often with hints).

The original, and most vibrant, is Guess Where NYC, with a hundred or so members. That inspired Guess Where DC, Guess Where San Francisco and Guess Where Tokyo. (At Flickr.com, type in “guesswhere.”)  In New York, all five boroughs qualify. And the photos are sometimes well-recognized places with a twist -  in a reflection, say, or close up.

Those posting photos have learned never to underestimate people’s intimacy with the city. One challenger posted a shot of a round street sign that read “Guardians of Hydrocephalus Research Foundation -  Water on the Brain.” Within a day, a person identified it as a sign at Sackett Street and Court Street in Brooklyn.

Challenge

A number of photoblogs pose one-word themes as a challenge for photographers. Wordphoto, at word photo.org, often poses words that have multiple definitions. The interpretation of the word can express as much of the photographer’s personality as the actual photo. “Slide,” for example, was expressed both as a child on a playground and a professor with an overhead projector.

Photo Friday, photofriday.com, and Thursday Challenge, spunwithtears.com/thursday.html, each pose a weekly theme, where people can then submit links to photos. 

Sadness

Digital photography makes it cheap to take photos of things that are otherwise ignored in daily life - like broken umbrellas, discarded bicycles or abandoned televisions.

But vibrant collections along such ordinary themes have shown up on Fotolog.net, a popular photoblogging site. The hundreds upon hundreds of photos from around the world reinforce a sense of universality.

Jason Wilson developed a fascination for the carcasses of mutilated and destroyed bicycles and started a group photoblog on Fotolog.net that quickly attracted contributors. “It turned out that many people had one, two or 40 of these pics sitting around looking for a context to thrive in,” Mr. Wilson said.

Europeans, who commonly use bicycles to get around rural areas and some cities, have contributed many of the most provocative photos.

“Sad Umbrellas” got its start with Eric Brown, who moved to New York from Los Angeles six years ago and became fascinated with the number of abandoned umbrellas on the street. He wanted to save the graceful, broken umbrellas, but that was impractical. Inspired by the “Sad Bikes” group, he found a home for his infatuation on Fotolog.net. Now there is also a “Sad TV’s” and “Sad Carts” (for shopping carts).

The Anonymous Archives

Almost all photoblogs have a contemporary feel -  a product of the instant digital photography age. By contrast, bighappyfunhouse.com has the feel of a group photoblog that pulls the past into the present, with a jarring voyeuristic effect.

For years, Ron Slattery, a 40-year-old entrepreneur from Chicago, has scoured flea markets, garage sales and trash bins for old photos. Last year, he started putting them onto the Internet: vacation photos from the beach, snapshots of pets, family portraits at birthday parties.

The photos are anonymous, both the subjects and the photographers. At a time when we routinely browse photo albums on Snapfish and Kodak’s gallery, there is something disquieting to see photos that were never meant to be public. His photos span from the late 1800’s to almost the present - a mishmash of hairdos, fashions and photo quality throughout the decades. So far, he has put up more than 900 photos. He often wonders about the people shown, smiling and not, and where their lives took them after that instantaneous meeting with a lens.

In May, he received an e-mail message from a man who had found a picture of himself and a friend, who was wearing a Hello Kitty costume, on his site. The picture was taken in 1982 in Houston when the two men, then teenagers, were hired by someone to pass out balloons at the grand opening of an office supply store.  “What is driving me CRAZY is this. ... How did you come across that photo?” the man wrote.


Multiblogging

Posted 09/06/2005 under news articles

Back in January 2004, I was wondering whether I had time outside my job as a print journalist to maintain even one blog. With the launch of this blog on technologyreview.com, I now have three.

I know I’m not alone. Technorati tracks just over 11 million blogs worldwide, but the actual number of bloggers is probably much lower, given that many people maintain multiple blogs under a single blog hosting account, or have blogs at several locations such as LiveJournal, TypePad, and Blogger. My blog count of three doesn’t even include the pseudo-blogs that go along with my accounts at places like Bloglines and Wallop.

Why on earth would anyone need three blogs, let alone one? (It’s important to remember that many people, if they know about blogs at all, still see bloggers as suffering from a peculiar blend of folly, arrogance, and narcissism.) I think the logic comes down to this: blogs are inherently personal, and we inhabit more than one persona as we move through our days. To the extent that blogging is becoming an important mode of self-expression and social interaction, therefore, we need a separate blog for each of our personae.

My first blog, Travels with Rhody, started out as a catch-all site where I wrote about “science, technology, the Internet, and life with a dog.” Most of the stuff related to my hobbies and miscellaneous interests, but I also blogged pretty frequently about technology stories that seemed too time-sensitive, too specialized, or too weird to write about in Technology Review.

Once a group technology blog was launched on technologyreview.com, I started doing most of my technology-related blogging there, and reserved Travels with Rhody for non-work stuff. But posting there didn’t feel all that rewarding to me. It’s a group blog, which means it’s rich with variety, but on the other hand it can’t be shaped to anyone’s personality, style, or particular interests.

This spring, my assignments for the magazine brought me to the point where I felt like I needed a one-man blog where I could air a single subject: social computing, the theme of a feature article I’ve written for TR’s August issue. The interface for THIS blog (the one you’re reading right now) wasn’t ready yet, so I launched the social-computing blog as a satellite site, the Continuous Computing Blog, using TypePad as a platform. We decided to use that blog to make the August article into an experiment in participatory journalism. The experiment involved a bit of JavaScripting that would have been difficult using the main TR site, which turned out to be another good reason to start a satellite blog. And if things go right, the August article will grow into a book. So Continuous Computing is a sort of hybrid work/personal blog where discussions on social computing can continue well past August, and where I can organize my thoughts for the bigger project.

And that brings us to this blog, Tech Coast. Here, I’ll blog about all things technological except ideas that relate directly to social computing, which will go to the Continuous Computing blog. I feel like I’ve got all the bases covered (at least for now): my home life, my work-related professional life, and my non-work-related professional life. Each of these personae has different things to say, to different audiences, and there’s no reason the readers of my TR blogs should have to suffer through my musings about macro photography and doggie day care.

Now that blogging tools have become so inexpensive and so easy to use, maintaining multiple blogs is almost as easy as having just one—at least from an administrative point of view. Of course, you still need to have something different to say in each blog. But I think multiblogging will grow in popularity as people realize that blogs are far more than online diaries. They’re channels for one-to-many and many-to-many interactions, on subjects that can be personal, professional, social, political, religious, or what-have-you. If we have 500 channels on our TVs, why not have two or three Internet channels for ourselves?

Article was available here


Sifry’s Alerts: State of The Blogosphere, March 2005, Part 2: Posting Volume

Posted 20/03/2005 under research

Possibly a more interesting set of stat’s than in my previous posting as it relates to the number of postings that Technorati track each day. According to Sifry they are currently tracking about 500,00 posts per day or 5.8 post every second. This is compared to about 400,000 posts per day in October of 2004.

image

The “event spikes” are particularly revealing.

http://www.sifry.com/alerts/archives/000299.html

 


Sifry’s Alerts: State of The Blogosphere, March 2005, Part 1: Growth of Blogs

Posted 20/03/2005 under research

In September of 2003 I noted in my thesis on blogging that Technorati, an independent weblog tracking service, were watching over 900,000 weblogs and tracking almost 78 million links. Now, according to this report from David Sifry, the founder and CEO of Technorati, his company is tracking over 7.8 million weblogs and 937 million links. The Technorati data shows that the blogosphere is doubling in size every 5 months, something that it has done four times in the last 20 months.

According to Sifry, this growth rate appears set to continue with the significant growth of popular popular blogging and journaling tools like Google’s Blogger, SixApart’s LiveJournal, AOL Journals, the proliferation of software like WordPress, Expression Engine and Movable Type and the launch of MSN spaces.

I wonder if there is there an increase in the amount of “meaningful” dialogue that is commensurate with this phenomenal growth rate or is there simply an increase in the amount of babble that is repeated endlessly over and over (as I am doing in my reporting of Sifry’s log right now)??? Does this increase in the amount of “authors” and “points of view” just mean that it becomes increasingly more difficult to disseminate all of this data? I think so.

http://www.sifry.com/alerts/archives/000298.html


So what are you reading these days?

Posted 25/01/2005 under news articles

With more and more people blogging and news services offering subscriptions to their RSS feeds there are more RSS feed aggreagotrs appearing every week it seems. Rojo Networks offers to help users find information more efficiently and also to help consumers share dynamic content. This article is from MIT’s Technology Review.

So what are you reading these days?
By Corie Lok Febuary 2005

These days it seems everyone’s blogging. Combine this newest source of information with more traditional online news sources, and you could spend your whole day slogging through lists of bookmarked Web pages just to keep up. Rojo Networks is one of the latest of a bevy of startups trying to help Web users make better sense of this content explosion. The year-and-a-half-old startup’s approach is to help users home in on the most relevant and interesting news and blogs by finding out what others in their online social networks are reading.

in enabling users to draw on the insights of friends, family, colleagues, and others in their social networks, Rojo departs from most of the competition. Rojo users can invite others to sign up for Rojo accounts; those accounts are linked, much like the accounts on the popular website Friendster. Rojo users can see what RSS feeds the members of their networks are reading and which stories they are flagging. Network popularity also affects the ranking of results when the user searches RSS feeds. “We all depend on our community for content discovery,” says Chris Alden, Rojo’s cofounder and CEO. “Any successful media service has to tap into that.”

read article here


Holy Shit I’ve Done It!

Posted 18/01/2005 under blogging tools

Right now I’m busy marking final exam papers and really shouldn’t be letting myself become distracted by blogging things. However, this has piqued my interest and as soon as I have a chance I will be checking out this concept from WordPress. This via Incorporated Subversion.

Then you’ll be asked to choose a blog name and pop in your email.

And then you’re there, you have your own brand new state of the art Wordpress blog and you can do whatever you blinkin well like with it!!!

CHECK IT OUT!

http://incsub.org/blog/index.php?p=185

 


Keeping an education-related online diary

Posted 18/01/2005 under education

Incorporated Subversion has reprinted this article from a Pakistani newspaper about blogs in education entitled ‘Keeping an education-related online diary’

The question however is, what are educational blogs? How do we define a blog, (which is increasingly taken as something personal), as something educational and academic? The different winners of the awards had their own perception of what an educational blog should be. However, according to Mr Farmer: “There are three big areas of ‘educational’ blogs: those that focus on teaching and learning, discipline-specific blogs (in an academic context) and ’service’ area blogs for things like institutional technology, libraries etc.”

 


pMachine is no more…

Posted 17/01/2005 under blogging tools

“The time has come” the walrus said, and for me the time has come to consider my blogging options. pMachine Pro will not have any further development time given to it in favour of its stable mate ExpressionEngine. I have been hesitating to make any change in my weblogging software because I know that, no matter how much I am assured, the migration will have difficulties and take time, time that I do not have. The promise of an upgraded version of pMachine (2.40) kept me hanging in there in the belief that this software had a future, but now I need to consider my options.

Remain using my current version of pMachine Pro, upgrade to the 2.40 version, change over to EE or go through the traumas of reviewing all the options in the marketplace and base my decision on a cost/benefit analysis???

Sigh!!

This letter from Rick Ellis, CEO pMachine Inc.

An Open Letter to Our Users

From Rick Ellis, CEO pMachine, Inc.
January 15th, 2005

It is with some sadness that I announce the official retirement of pMachine Pro.  Today’s release of pMachine Pro version 2.4 marks the end of official development for this program.  This was a very difficult decision for us, and one that took many months to make, but it was ultimately made by our users, who have almost universally embraced ExpressionEngine, our next generation publishing system, instead of pMachine Pro.

Although we will no longer actively develop pMachine Pro, we will continue to make it available for download.  In fact, it will now be free of charge.  We are changing the licensing, making pMachine Pro available for download at no cost.  pMachine Free will be discontinued entirely, while pMachine Pro will continue to be made available.

Read the entire letter here

 


del.icio.us - social bookmarks

Posted 07/01/2005 under linking tools

del.icio.us

social bookmarks

If you manage your linklog via del.icio.us, it will automatically post a digest of your links into your main weblog once every day. Your readers can then subscribe to your del.icio.us RSS feed.

del.icio.us is a social bookmarks manager. It allows you to easily add sites you like to your personal collection of links, to categorize those sites with keywords, and to share your collection not only between your own browsers and machines, but also with others.

Once you’ve registered for the service, you add a simple bookmarklet to your browser. When you find a web page you’d like to add to your list, you simply select the del.icio.us bookmarklet, and you’ll be prompted for a information about the page. You can add descriptive terms to group similar links together, modify the title of the page, and add extended notes for yourself or for others.

http://del.icio.us/

 


Six Apart: LiveJournal Acquisition

Posted 07/01/2005 under news articles

Six Apart buys LiveJournal, the discussion seems centred on the merits (or otherwise) of a business acquiring a community and what implications this will have for the community in question. Shelley Powers had this to say and there is a good discussion in progress at Danah’s site.
press release
mena’s corner
brad’s LJ

Q. Why did Six Apart acquire LiveJournal?

A. We think LiveJournal is a great community and a great company founded and run by a really talented team that is just as fanatical about blogging and online communication as we are. They have done an amazing job growing and supporting their online community and we think there is a lot we can learn from each other.

sixapart.com/faq

 


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