Posts Tagged ‘new’

Resolution

Friday, January 1st, 2010

This year,
my one and only
resolution…

Red House New Year's Eve (2009-2010)
(click to enlarge)

…is to make sure to take more pictures
by helping to create situations
that should be photographed.

Overblog?

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009


Series of Tubes
by ritingon

How many blogs is too many?

Like a lot of my peers, I'm interested in talking aimlessly and ad nauseam* on more than one subject.

Right, ok so why should that be a topic for an entire blog post? This has already been well established.

For some exposition, I already partitioned off my posts pertaining to musicianship and have placed them here, and that has turned out to be a good thing because it seems that as much as people like the idea of musicians, they don't care to hear about what it's like to be a musician -- or maybe more specifically, they don't care to hear me talk about it.  Moving my musicianship posts to a sub-blog has worked out for me surprisingly well, in that my online world got more organized but also it turns out there were listeners who didn't care to sort through my daily life to find what music I've written.

I'll probably reference musicianship here like I do since that actually is a part of my everyday life, but that's not necessarily the point of this blog. Besides, the more that I stuck with writing in this blog about life in general, or the internet in general, or general life on the internet, the more people were inclined to stick around.

Hypothesis: Talking about musicianship is niche, and writing entries that are more general can engage more people because slice-of-life stories are far more identifiable for the average blog reader than talking about how it took me hours to find a snare drum.

Moving on to talking about work: When I talk about the industry in which I work (interwebs - or specifically, social media), it sometimes interrupts the momentum of anecdotal story-telling, even if that is by and large a string of reminders to myself of what has happened in my social life amidst the fucking craziness of agency life (the kind of life where work follows you home).

The thing is, the anecdotes about working on the internet is its own set of stories, too. I chose social media as a career because it is, in fact, another thing about which I can rattle on and on for hours. However, I didn't need that to take over my entire personality, and in the same way, I probably shouldn't let it overrun this blog.

Enter the Research & Development Clippings blog.

Ah, that feels good to get out of the way. All of my career-related musings can now be found there unless I'll call it universal enough to drop in this main blog.

But this brings up a question I'd like to ask my fellow bloggers:

Do you try to keep life facets distinct from each other or do you mash it all up into one destination? And what are the other things in your life you do with enough passion to start another blog / site for it?

*Yes, that's how you spell it.

Chi Town, Part 1

Friday, June 26th, 2009

The New Economy

It’s interesting that even though I hadn’t caught up reading all of the 20SB Meetup Attendees’ blogs before I got here, I knew from previous various networking events that bloggers are the type of people to never let me down.  That is, in getting some well anticipated pizza, being surprised at how much people knew about each other without having actually yet met in person, being fully mindful of recent news (here, here, here, and of course here), and the whole-drinking-while-doing-everything aspect; it’s weird to feel like you “belong” in a place you’ve never stepped foot; and instantaneously, no less. You’d think that one would have to work really hard to make these kinds of connections.  Maybe the work is being done for us now.

We live in the future, after all.

Proof of this is in the fact that in the early evening last night I basically wandered alone around downtown Chicago last night, really goddam fairly drunk the entire time, reassured that when the sun was good and gone that I’d have new friends by the time I passed out needed to get to bed. And I was totally right.  These people whose phone numbers I did not have, whom I had never met in person, whose voices I could not discern (except maybe that of Courtney‘s), welcomed me with open arms.

But how does that factor into my sub-headline?

During my last cigarette of last night, dshan and I talked about what you’d expect from people who are really into blogging: social media.  Twitter notified us all that Michael Jackson / Ed McMahon / Farrah Fawcett had passed on from this mortal coil before any of us saw any headlines on the television. Facebook status comments make it feel like you’re never too far away from friends’ and acquaintances’ clever quips.  But what’s interesting about all of this is it has led to a reputation based economy, whereby proper citations and attributions are really what count in this realm, and simple participation is how you get involved in the game.  (But how to translate that to actual currency?  That’s probably the next purple cow.  I am probably not the best source for figuring that out.)

But it occurs to me today, in brief retrospect and while putting away some web work I planned on doing during this trip, that the reputation-based economy is also as D put it last night: it’s based on trust. Which actually is directly proportional to how real-world finances work (and he should know).

So that means that linking to, replying or RT @, playing in the forums with, commenting on, and subscribing to another person’s net identity; this is how our generation generates trust.

We do live in the future.  And in this future, we are apparently participating in a currency exchange where character counts for a lot.

And what can you gain from participating in this economy?

Well, the opportunity to network with some really genuinely good people is a nice start, isn’t it?

Two Point Eight

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

Quick note to my fellow WordPress users, if you’re self-hosting you should DEFINITELY upgrade to 2.8 today.

WOAH.

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

Have all my self-hosted WordPress friends upgraded to the new version? 2.7 is really easy on the eyes and noticeably faster.

This was written in the new little “QuickPress” area, which is an instant-post tool in the main dashboard probably created in light of the micro-blogging movement (*ahem* Twitter).

We’ll see what problems I may run into while breaking it apart on purpose like I usually do, but in the interim: I dig, WP folks. I dig.