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Tuesday, August 16, 2005
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Tuesday, August 16, 2005
started 8/16/2005; 4:57:59 AM - last post 8/18/2005; 1:16:48 AM
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Doc Searls - Tuesday, August 16, 2005 
8/16/2005; 8:57:59 AM (reads: 7346, responses: 5)
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First Darwin, now Newton
The beat goes on
| | Mike Taht turned 40 a few days ago. Sorry I missed it, so here's a belated happy one for the big guy. Mike was born the summer of '65, on a day with five launches. I was just out of high school and getting unready for college. The family was just done camping one last time out at Hither Hills, near Montauk, where a year earlier I had fallen for a sweetie from the Bronx named Janice Planamenta. I think, by August 12, we were on another camping trip, this time up to Kring Point State Park, at the Thousand Islands, where my friend Bob Fischer and I wet out in a canoe with an outboard clamped to the side, picked up some beer (we had both just turned 18) at a marina, and killed it camping on an island out in the St. Lawrence somewhere, as giant freight-carrying ships eased up and down the deep channel, like moving walls blocking our view of the Canadian side. The radio was playing Dylan's Like a Rolling Stone, Sonny & Cher's I Got You Babe, the Stones' (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction, the Righteous Brothers' Unchained Melody, the Byrds Mister Tamborine Man, the Beach Boy's California Girls, Barbara Lewis' Baby I'm Yours, the Four Tops' I Can't Help Myself and the Beatles' Help!. There was a fabulous overlap of Folk, Motown, Beatles, Surf, Pop and teen romance ballads. FM was just getting hot, although Top 40 AM radio had nearly a decade left. At night we listened to WABC and WKBW while camping in both places, hanging out on the boats and beaches, feeling all grown up, or something like it. |
| | I don't think I ever camped with the family again after that. I was off to college, and worked every summer, earning money for more college. By the time I got out, I was already married with a kid on the way. The Vietnam War was tearing the world apart and the paradise that was Summer was something that had to wait for my own kids to appreciate. So, as Sonny and Cher put it... |
Cygnus as in health
| | So let's not talk about relationships. Let's talk about sex. Let's not talk about "healthy narcissism" and getting your needs met. Let's talk about the humility that comes for free with being what we are, without any need to pretty it up with hearts and flowers and breathy whispers about Truth and Beauty. |
Looking for a better doghouse
| | As you know if you've tried to visit Sam(the ugliest dog)'s home on the Web, there's a small bandwidth issue. Sam's blog is fine. But sam's site (samugliestdog.com) is hosted by an outfit that can't stand more than a trickle of visitors. That's not a knock; it's just the way it was set up in the first place. |
| | So Susie is looking to find Sam a home that can handle the occasional crowd. Like yesterday when Sam was featured in the LA Times, Drudge and MSNBC. |
| | I told Susie we'll find her something. Post something here, or send me an email (doc AT searls.com). |
How did I miss this?
The difference distinction
| | Journalists go to work and do their jobs to earn a paycheck and provide the necessities for themselves and their families. The notion that their job is something intrinsically greater than that is, well, silly. If you don't think so, ask all the journalists in the US to work for nothing more than the chance to "make a difference," and see how many you have showing up in the newsroom the next day. |
| | Of course, there will still be many, many journalists who are willing to do exactly that. We call them the Blogosphere. And that is the New Thing that is shattering the clay foundations of the journalism myth. |
Quote du jour
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Mike Warot - Re: Tuesday, August 16, 2005 
8/16/2005; 9:06:31 AM (reads: 710, responses: 0)
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Why not make some form of collaborative transcription system? You could randomly pass out sections of the podcast (or random podcasts, for that matter), and have volunteers put pieces of it into text.
I'd like to see some soft of markup language that allowed the external tagging of locations within an MP3 file to aid in accomplishing this.
--Mike--
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Eric Schwartzman - Beyond podcast transcription web services 
8/16/2005; 10:36:41 AM (reads: 711, responses: 0)
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At first I was thinking this might be true, but only until technology makes audio and video content automatically keyword searchable. Isn't that what Visage was trying to do? I know that the SHOAH foundation has a proprietary media server database that allows you to keyword search and randomly access thousands of hours of holocaust survivor testimonials. Whoever figures out how to make that function accessible to everyone via the Net will be living positively, astronomically, monumentally humongis.
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David Gilbert - Tagged Clips, not Transcripts 
8/16/2005; 6:48:04 PM (reads: 676, responses: 0)
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Transcripts? Way too laborious! We need, instead, to create a folksonomy around segments of podcasts--that way we are all responsible for contributing the metadata, just like with del.icio.us and flickr, et al. To make it useful, though, we need to be able to tag listener-defined segments of podcasts, not whole podcasts. I sketched out a possible interface for such a plan that I call Podilicious:
http://homepage.mac.com/dave7/podilicious/podilicious.htm
Unfortunately, I'm too much of an ignoramus to know how to build it.
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Dave Winer - Re: Tuesday, August 16, 2005 
8/17/2005; 7:38:16 AM (reads: 657, responses: 1)
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I can't stand to look at the dog, but I have a server with unlimited bandwidth, and am happy to help.
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Doc Searls - Re: Tuesday, August 16, 2005 
8/18/2005; 5:16:48 AM (reads: 809, responses: 0)
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Thanks!
I'll pass that along to Sam and Susie, and see what happens. They may have already made some kind of arrangements. We'll see. (Though some of us may not want to look.)
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