Categories
RDF Weblogging

The gluttony of information

There’s an elegant bit of synchronocity in play when one is inundated with emails and assorted and sundry articles on RSS on the same day one’s mouth is operated on. Where before I might blow over the discussions, I was driven in my fixated, drug-induced state to focus on everything that everyone was saying. Every little thing.

For instance, The W3C TAG team – that’s the team that’s defining the architecture of the web, not a new wrestling group – has been talking about defining a new URI scheme just for RSS, as brought up today by Tim Bray. With a new scheme, instead of accessing a feed with:

http://weblog.burningbird.net/index.rdf

You would access the feed as:

feed://www.tbray.org/ongoing/ongoing.rss

The reason is that using existing schemes opens the feed in whatever tool you use to access the page, such as the browser. However, what you don’t want is to open the feed, but to access the URI directly for the purposes of subscribing to the feed. Using a MIME type doesn’t apply because MIME types operate on the data loaded, and the URI of the subscription isn’t necessarily part of the data.

An example used was the mailto: scheme, which is used to open an application and pass in the value attached to the mailto: – the email address, rather than load that data in the browser.

The response to this topic in TAG was more discussion than has occurred on many another topic lately, a behavior which tends to happen with RSS. This amazes me, when you consider that RSS, or from a generic point of view, the technique of using XML to annotate excerpts of syndicated material that’s updated on a fairly regular basis, is actually a pretty simple concept. It’s handy, true, and I’m just as taken with Bloglines as several of my compatriots – but it is still syndication.

But that’s not all. Doc also discussed RSS today, but his take was more on an advocacy of syndication. More so, he focuses on that aspect of syndication he considers most relevant – notification:

Meanwhile, it seems to me that notification is the key function provided by online syndication. And that’s the revolutionary thing. Publishing alone carries assumptions framed by the permanance of all the media that predated the Web in the world. Hence the sense of done-ness to the result. The finished work goes up, or out, and that’s it.

But the Web isn’t just writable. It’s re-writable. I’m writing this live on the Web, and I’ll probably re-write parts of it two or three more times.

Hence the need for notification.

I agree with Doc that syndication in conjuction with aggregators is pretty handy. Since I started using Bloglines, I visit my favorite weblogs much less frequently than I used to, waiting for the bold text and the count to tell me how many new posts the person has published. And I can see from my referrers others are doing the same because most of my visits now come from aggregators and bloglines or Technorati or Blogdex or some other somewhat generic resource.

Of course, I still know people are visiting…I just don’t know who, or from where. And though sometimes I may wonder, wistfully, if my old friends still visit as much as they used to, I contrast this with my being able to read that many more weblogs now. Sure, this also impacts on the conversations we used to have across our comments and across our blogs because we don’t alwasy visit to read the comments as much, or to add our own, but we’re much more connected into the stream of information than ever before.

Previously I had perhaps 20 or 30 weblogs on my blogroll I would visit a couple of times a day. Now I have over 100 that I only visit when they update, and I’m a veritable information maven neophyte compared to others. I remember in a recent comment discussion with Steve Gillmor that he mentioned he was subscribed to 3762 different feeds if I read his comment correctly.

Speaking of Steve Gillmor, his name popped up in several places today in connection with RSS. He had a conversation with Doc, who blogged some of it:

He’s advocating thinking larger than the Web as it stands. Blogs are a subset of RSS. So is sndication a subset of RSS. He says. In a time constrained universe, it’s a killer app.

It’s the platform for synergy between the stakeholders and the journalists. He says. To limit it, by implication, which you do here by focusing on syndication as being the nub of what this is about, is self limiting in terms of understanding the new economic model that’s emerging here. Among other things.

He wants to respect :the disruptive nature of RSS.

This technlogy has already supplanted email as the core of your desktop. A conditional yes. On the other hand, my email is far more searchable, and manageable, and private and personal, which makes it highly significant, though hardly disruptive and therefore kinda irrelevant to this discussion. Of course, Steve points out, this won’t be the case “when RSS scoops up 80 or 90% of that functionality too.”

Gillmor then went on to write more about RSS in an article that basically says Apple and Sun are challenging Microsoft Outlook through the use of RSS. At least I believe it says this because, for the most part, I found it to be almost incomprehensible in its blind reverence for RSS.

But a disruptive technology is emerging that could change everything. For my money, it’s RSS (known alternately as Really Simple Syndication or Resource Description Framework Site Summary). I’m not talking about the embedded Outlook plug-in of today’s PC; I’m talking about a technology that could be as disruptive to personal computing as the digital video recorder has been to television.

I read Gillmor’s article three times and still couldn’t figure out exactly what he was enthusing about other than RSS is going to change the world. But it was one paragraph that finally gave me the clue:

It’s the combination of these system services that produces the RSS information router. IM presence can be used to signal users that important RSS items are available for immediate downloading, eliminating the latency of 30-minute RSS feed polling while shifting strategic information transfer out of e-mail and into collaborative groups.

What Gillmor is talking about is being wired to your machine. With RSS, not only can we skim more and more information resources, at faster paces, but we need not even be active in this effort – we can have the information resources notify us when we need to read them.

Rather than fight information overload, give in to it. Embrace it. Accept complete saturation as nothing less than that which is to be achieved. Apply the same practices to our consumption of information as we’ve applied to food and consumer goods and foreign policy, because we can never have too much.

After all this reading about RSS today, I finally get it. I finally understand the magic:

RSS is the both the McDonald’s and Wal-Mart of data.

Categories
Writing

Biting fair

Sheila has been linking to and writing about some wonderful stuff lately. For instance, she links to this article about a story that implodes the myth that American IT workers are so much more costly than using offshore workers. I wonder how many other companies are offshoring their work without even once taking a glance around to see the hungry workers in this country.

Just because CEOs are overpaid, doesn’t mean the rest of us are.

But there was another article earlier, Words that cut that really caught my attention. It’s about the story that rock critic Jim Washburn wrote expressing his regrets at taking a cheap shot at Steve Goodman. Sheila wrote:

It may have sounded bright and clever at the time, but for the rest of his life Washburn will wince at the memory of his cheap putdown of a man who mattered.

Doc also talked about this , and his early days as a fresh young journalist covering accidents. But he believes that’s why things are different in weblogging:

What strikes me about Washburn’s piece, however, is that there is still a sense of distance – one that’s very different than the one we sense here on the Net, where what we write is syndicated immediately into countless news aggregators, where every reader is an email or an instant message away, and where a high percentage of readers are also writers. There may be a sense of physical distance, but that’s about the only kind. There’s immediacy here. It’s personal, even if we only know the blogger as, say, Brian at bmoeasy. With a few notable exceptions, this sense of proximity, of sharing an almost (though not quite) social space, has an effect on manners. That’s why I believe, on the whole, that we’re a bit more civil here.

Doc is a remarkably positive person, and I do admire his ability to always see the glass half full when it comes to weblogging. However, spending any time out among the political weblogs quickly demonstrates that civility can, at times, be more scarce than women techs working with RSS or Atom.

I agree with both Sheila and Doc that being biting wit can just as easily bite the source as the target. But I’m not sure that there isn’t a time and a place for sarcasm, satire, or superciliousness. I think the key is to use such verbal techniques deliberately, and to always aim high.

When talking about his actions in slagging Steve Goodman, Washburn wrote:

People can drop dead at any time, and that’s no reason to gild their talents. But it should make us more cognizant of what we write, and whether we do it to be truthful or because being snide might make you look cool

Good advice, but more than that, though, is I think you have to exercise a sense of fairness. Just as we were taught in school not to pick on people smaller than us, we shouldn’t exercise our own biting wit at the expense of people who have less clout then ourselves.

Categories
Just Shelley

Glass half full kind of day

I am feeling particularly verbose today. Sun’s shining after several days of cloudy weather and it feels good coming in through the window. Zoe is stretched out on the desk next to me, turning her stomach to the sun like the brazen little hussy she is, every once in a while looking at me out of her green and orange eyes as if to say, “Don’t you wish you could have a pretty belly like mine?”

I’m playing with some old slides today, and listening to some fine music while I’m doing it. I’ve been in a mood for nicely ripe music lately – Petula Clark, the Supremes, Shangri-Las, Angels, Jan and Dean. I know that none of you will admit to listening to anything other than Bob Dylan or James Taylor, but I’m shameless – I love that wonderful old and funky rock n’ roll. Sitting in the sun, fooling around with old photos, and listening to good tunes with my sugar kitty next to me – sweet.

(What say, Jeneane – shall we boogie? We’ll get our home girls to join in.)

Speaking of contentment and home girls, I have enjoyed, immensely, the responses to the Blogs with best Female Spirit essay – especially from the nominated writers who took the awards in the, well, spirit in which they were intended.

And I have a funny for you – type the words ‘miserable failure’ into Google and push the “I feel lucky” button. (Found at Sam’s)

halffull3.jpg

Categories
Healthcare

Surgery Redux

I’ve decided to really get my money’s worth out of my various insurances, because I spent the morning in oral surgery and still a bit foggy from the gas and sedatives, and pain pills.

There must be an unwritten contract for surgeons in St. Louis, because the oral surgeon was just as nice as the surgeon that removed my gall bladder. However, I think I’ve about had a surfeit of nice surgeons, as well as lab x-rays and broken bones, surgery, pain pills and various other things.

Life, just because I now have insurance, doesn’t mean you you have to dump all those things you’ve been saving up on me all at once.

Still, everything that’s been treated is taken care of, never to return. My health is great, my blood pressure has never been better. Damme, kick my tires, I got miles to go, babies.

Categories
Semantics

Semantic web extreme goodness

Recovered from the Wayback Machine.

I had to add a whole new category just to reference these two resources.

First, an excellent summary of the recent semantic web discussions, annotated even, can be found at Themes and Metaphors in the Semantic Web. Thanks to Chris for pointing it out or I would have missed it.

What I like about it is the way it personalizes the discussion, which can’t help but make it more ‘meaningful’, pun not intended. Comments are here.

Secondly, a new weblogger has joined the semantic web effort at a blog called Big Fractal Tangle. Timothy Falconer is off to a good start with:

 

Before the Semantic Web can come close to delivering on its promise, we need to find ways to convince non-technical types into wanting to think abstractly. Academics, developers, and businessfolk are unusually organized compared to “the rest of us,” which is why this may be hard to see at first. Hell, forget annotation. We’ve got to find compelling and obvious reasons for them to want to use metadata.

 

Saying that the web will never be more intelligent than it is today is the height of arrogance. This is no different than saying that because we can’t create it today, or today’s dreamers can’t dream it today, or it can’t be touched and has no physical manifestations today, it can never happen. If we believed this in other science, we not only wouldn’t be on the moon, we wouldn’t be on this continent.

Having said this, however, the only way we’re going to convince grandma or Uncle Joe to use meta-data is for us to listen to what they want and need and then give it to them, slipping meta-data in through the seams. May not win a Nobel, but may give us the semantic web.