Sunday, November 30, 2008

50 Things


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

A 30/31December to Remember?

A couple of years ago a blogger friend set up a challenge to her circle of friends to keep up their level of exercise through December. For her, December was the hardest month to keep up her high level of fitness. Between the cold, the short days, holiday temptations and travel it was the month to get off track the easiest. The challenge was to keep up a December schedule where you exercised for 30 minutes a day for each of the 31 days. i made it, but it was harder than I thought.

I find myself in need of extra motivation this winter. I have not exercised as much as wanted this fall and my waistline shows it. I have some things I want to accomplish next summer which will require a higher level of fitness than i have enjoyed in the last 12 months.

So, I am making my December Challenge public. I start my road to redemption by reviving the 30 minutes for 31 days and will post my daily results here for scrutiny and ridicule.

Are ya with me Babinski?

Twitter for Douglas?

I have been spending the last few months encouraging (provoking?) a newbie blogger, Doug Hammerstrom by correcting many of the misconceptions contained in his posts with his initial foray into the blogging community at It's Not About Me. Now I will say that this really is not new. For over 30 years in dorm rooms, over pints of various kinds of beer, in long train rides, car rides, VW micro bus rides, on freezing mountain hillsides, in long letters and late night phone calls, the subjects may change but context has stayed about the same. Blogging just puts his foolishness in a public forum and it is just a too irresistible target for me. He is doing quite well as a new blogger, if you enjoy reading the well thought out musings of a iconoclastic, conservative, fundamental Christian, environmentally committed, well respected physician. From such a solid base you would think he would not get it wrong so much of the time.

Recently I told him that he was probably ready to take the next step and move on to microblogging with Twitter. His reaction - "that's just for folks who don't want to think". So, despite his lumping Twitter into the world of IM speak, text messaging and cell phone gabbers and his chronic dismissal of popular culture and the hoi polli as a whole (you have to forgive him as sometimes his nose gets so far up in the air he does not realize how far up his butt his head really is) it gave me pause.

Twitter does make me think. Or rather the network that it connects me to makes me think. I started like Doug. I blogged first because my daughter was blogging. My first efforts let me see the power of networking as I quickly found a group of folks connected by biking and outdoor activities and gave me a peek into the ways teens were expressing themselves online. Those steps lead me to reading blogs of people in my professional area, and Twitter has provided a logarithmic expansion of resources, ideas, people and culture. Twitter makes me go new places, it makes me read and reflect, it exposes me to people who think like me and those that don't. It is largely about K-12 education for me, but I am fascinated with the ways that "wisdom of the crowds" is being mined by Twitter derivatives and how the fast moving online culture is becoming a mainstream flow of information. From Obama tweets, to hastags about Mubai, to CNN & PBS moving into Twitter space, it is worth knowing and worth knowing about.

I find some common ground with Doug and some of the "old lions" of the K-12 ed community that are finding a surge toward Twitter is decreasing the use of blogging for expression of ideas and reflection on educational issues. In the "old" days when we just had blogs, the time and attention it took to write a few paragraphs created more thoughtful posts. You got to "know" the person by reading their blogposts. Nowadays if you can't stick it in a 140 characters including a shortened URL, it does not get noticed,and nobody checks out the blog where the longer post resides.

I do think about that piece a lot. We flit from topic to topic. We chase the latest thing like Twitter birds on the info tree. Is there less deep reflective thought? Are we and the kids we teach becoming a society of thin veneer where we know lots and think we know much but do not think deeply and thus really don't know jack? Is that where we are headed? A society of folks who because of instant access know much but know little? And yet I like the different kid of "knowing" when one of my favorite bloggers tweets the mundane factoid that they just took their kids to Madagascar2 and really enjoyed it, or that This Week in Tech is going live in a few minutes.

On balance I do know that understanding Twitter and how social networks are formed through new media is important in understanding society and especially youth culture today. The question on the table is why would it be important for a 53 year old physician, devoted father of 3, marginally adequate husband who habitually under appreciates his saint of a wife, church elder, politically conservative environmentalist, hunter, living in the last spec of red left in Colorado need to join Twitter? I have found two posts that I hope will lead him astray:

http://casesblog.blogspot.com/2008/06/doctors-opinion-why-i-started.html

http://radar.oreilly.com/2008/11/why-i-like-twitter.html

I am hoping that some folks who have wandered over to my personal reflections blog from my tweeting might be able to provide him with more reasons why he should join Twitter by posting responses to this blog post.

Oh, and Douglas, - the Twitter handle - DaHammer is taken but NotAboutMe is not. Act fast and sign up for an account!

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Blogging at a Snail’s Pace - NYTimes.com

  • tags: web20, mansfield20, blogging, DaHammer

    • “I’m definitely noticing a drop-off in posting — I’m talking about among the more visible bloggers, the ones with 100 to 200 readers or more,” said Danah Boyd, a doctoral candidate at the University of California, Berkeley, who studies popular culture and technology. “I think that those people who were writing long, thought-out posts are continuing, but those who were writing, ‘Hey, check this out’ posts are going to other forums. It’s a dynamic shift.”

      Technology is partly to blame. Two years ago, if a writer wanted to share a link or a video with friends or tell them about an upcoming event, he or she would post the information on a blog. Now it’s much faster to type 140 characters in a Twitter update (also known as a tweet), share pictures on Flickr, or use the news feed on Facebook. By comparison, a traditional blogging program like WordPress can feel downright glacial.

      • Danah Boyd - always a cogent thought on new media - post by stevesoko
    • Ms. Ganley, the blogger in Vermont, has a slogan that encapsulates the trend: “Blog to reflect, Tweet to connect.” Blogging, she said, “is that slow place.”

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Star WarsAcapella John Williams Tribute

This one just speaks, or perhaps sings for itself. Many thanks to Leo and Amber at Net@Night:


Sunday, November 09, 2008

More Cities Upon Hills

Looks like on beat up on my friend Douglas a bit too quickly. Today's Hartford Courant reveals that contrary to the remark by Babinski, I do not live in the People's Republic of Eastford, but on an island of red in the sea of Connecticut blue.

http://www.courant.com/media/acrobat/2008-11/43270443.pdf


I fear that I have not been a good enough Democrat, a Democrat that has forgotten the lessons of the past and how to win elections. I should have figured out how to vote more than once to sink the Isle of Eastford into the sea of blue.

All is not lost. Douglas blogged from Colorado's version of Helm's Deep that there is a scriptural basis for a different type of society than the one he fears that is coming. One that relies on Christian principled communal sharing rather than government coercion (that is taxation) to provide for the needs of the many.

Indeed there seems to be at least one of my ancient New England neighbors that unifies the two themes and suggested that the city on upon the hill DOES need to be based on being each others keepers:

John Winthrop - City Upon A Hill, 1630
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_upon_a_hill

...We must entertain each other in brotherly affection. We must be willing to abridge ourselves of our superfluities, for the supply of others’ necessities. We must uphold a familiar commerce together in all meekness, gentleness, patience and liberality. We must delight in each other; make others’ conditions our own; rejoice together, mourn together, labor and suffer together, always having before our eyes our commission and community in the work, as members of the same body. So shall we keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace. .... We shall find that the God of Israel is among us, when ten of us shall be able to resist a thousand of our enemies; when He shall make us a praise and glory that men shall say of succeeding plantations, "may the Lord make it like that of New England." For we must consider that we shall be as a city upon a hill. The eyes of all people are upon us...

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Joni Revisited

This is more than likely to be a depressing night for my friend Douglas. A deeply depressing night. A Joni depressing night.

So, Douglas my advice is settle back into the easy chair, pour yourself 3, maybe 4 fingers of a good stiff single malt, turn down the lights and watch the colors change across the map. Oh, and have your wife lock the knife drawer. This one is for you.....




Saturday, November 01, 2008

When Pumpkins Drink Too Much


Courtesy DRAFT Magazine - http://news.draftmag.com/2008/10/29/when-pumpkins-drink-too-much/