Category: Internet/Blogging
01/06/10
My latest article on Technorati. Please visit.
I have an article on Technorati. Check it out here.
12/19/09
Many civilians aren't aware of the crucial role bloggers play in our national security. Living in near-total social isolation allows us to monitor current trends, anticipate threats, and develop counter-measures. I've taken this task seriously, but the V miniseries has really injected a sense of urgency into the project. Friends, followers, buddies, fans: It's time to build the Asymmetric underground network. .
If something does go down on December 9, 2012 or there's an EMP/Red Dawn/V scenario, free people are going to want to get together; for comfort at first, then to survive, form some kind of makeshift governing authority, and strike back, if necessary. Totalitarian despots and brutal warlords would never expect their fatal enemy to organize on Facebook.
We'd slipstream into whatever nightmare society awaits us, ready to mobilize at a single tweet ("the birdie has landed").
What say you? Will you join me?
No? Don't see the need? Shiny magnets.
OK, great!
How will it work?
My friend Adam invented the very fun game Yikerz! (reviewed here), and he's generously agreed to donate three Yikerz! games to give away to people who sign up on my blog. I also have bunches of books, bumper stickers, and Cds (don't expect my Michael Bolton SACD- there's a limit to my generosity) that I can give away.
All you have to do to be eligible is connect with me on one of my social thingies. Each one is a chance to win, so if you sign up on Twitter and Facebook, you have two entries.
Then, let me know by commenting on this post. That's it! The stuff is below.
You can sign up on my blog software, here.
Google Friend Connect, Twitter, my personal Facebook, and the Asymmetric Facebook Page are right below. These are the ones I'm kind of trying to grow, as they're related to the blog. Below that is a bunch of social stuff that I've joined in the past three years. You're more than welcome to join those as well.
I'm running this until the end of January. Thanks, and good luck.
Oh, and if you're using Microsoft Internet Explorer, the Google Friend Connect link might not work. Just use the one at the bottom of the right sidebar.
12/16/09
When Pajamas Media decided to shed its blog network model- of which I was a part- I wrote why I thought it hadn't achieved the success of a Daily Kos or Huffington Post and why I was skeptical of its prospects. Their hiring of Joe the Plumber as a foreign correspondent seemed to confirm the latter, in my eyes.
After hearing Roger Simon on Prager and Medved today, I decided to check out the site.
It looked good. The organization was more functional and its Pajamas X-press blogs were easily accessed and from quality writers. I still couldn't recognize the contributors from TV or radio, and I didn't feel compelled to click on the the TV clips.
I checked Alexa (I know, dubious, but it's something). Wow! It's grown from mid tens of thousands in popularity to 8000-something, which means it's doubled or tripled its traffic. If you compare it to the con big-boys, it's a little behind Townhall, Michelle Malkin, Hot Air, and National Review Online, but way ahead of Weekly Standard and Spectator.
So, DO NOT hire me a web consultant.
12/14/09
I love Google and use many of its products including the Android OS in my Motorola Droid, Reader, Docs, Analytics, Adsense, and Sites. Not that a slight tilt would make me leave Google, but I thought it'd be interesting to see how the company leans, politically.
Their homepage cartoons are mostly innocuous middle-of-the-road fare, and some of the demands- a 9/11 pic, Christ on Christmas- go against its policy against religion and politics, I think. They did feature an image of that new monkey-like fossil, which some people take as anti-religious as evidenced by those Darwin car stickers (religion gives avowed atheists' lives meaning). Still, no big deal.
I decided to see their feed recommendations for Reader.
News:
BBC News - World Edition
Google News
L.A. Times - California | Local News
Breaking News
LAist
New York Times
The Orange County Register: Homepage
LA Observed
Guardian.co.uk
The OC Register is there. Fox is a notable omission. They picked the liberal UK paper.
Politics:
Daily Kos
Talking Points Memo
The Politico
Wonkette
Think Progress
washingtonpost.com - Politics
Eschaton
Foul! No Corner, AmSpec, Powerline? Weirdly, the politics section has less entries than the knitting feeds.
The Catholic blogs are all faithful to Rome. Good. The philosophy and "Thinkers" feed groups don't have too much of a bias except for Salon (they don't come to mind first when I hear "thinkers;" the last article I saw there was a woman struggling with an impotent husband). There's a Theology group. I learned that smart people don't talk about movies, but "film."
Google blocks conservative sites concerned about homosexual curriculum in school, like Massresistance.
So, just a slight bias. Could be much worse, and to that, I'm grateful. Why isn't it worse? Well, there's this reality slap, experienced during Google's infancy:
Both Brin and Page [Google's founders] had been against using advertising pop-ups in a search engine, or an "advertising funded search engines" model, and they wrote a research paper in 1998 on the topic while still students. However, they soon changed their minds and early on allowed simple text ads.
12/07/09
I must have done something to get on Yovia's mailing list because I get an email from them every couple of weeks. I decided to follow a link from one of those messages the other day, just to see who the heck they were. It turns out that Yovia's a "blog network," a collection of blogs centered around one master blog that aggregates the posts from all of the member blogs. This is different from Google's Blogger or Wordpress where blogs are completely separate from each other.
Joining a network seems like a good way to get people to see your blog immediately. A blog completely separate from all other blogs, like Asymmetric, has to wait to show up on search engines and acquire links while weblogs on a network get instant eyeballs.
The downside to a network is that you can't build your own domain name and don't have complete control over design and content (Yovia requires you to pick one of its avatars). This must be attractive to those who just want to write and prefer to avoid all of the hustling involved in standing up a new blog.
These networks also help out with Twitter, Facebook, and other hip social media stuff.
I'm glad I went the independent route, but there are times I wish I didn't have to worry about hosting issues, software updates, or any other things that've caused me grief, the three worst examples that I can think of being when Google de-listed me because somebody injected spam code into my files, the time my site couldn't handle the traffic from my most popular post ever (it would have reached over a thousand on Digg), and when Bluehost kicked me off because of CPU usage.
Anyways, Yovia came up with a blogger's calendar to help its members blog about things sure to receive a lot of search inquiries. They call it their "Social Media Calendar." It's a good idea, as it lets you can prepare blog posts a couple of days in advance. You can have them send it to you from here.
I gotta go. I only have a few weeks before "Women Rock Day."
12/01/09
I've criticized Little Green Footballs a couple of times (here and here), but I've mostly ignored Charles Johnson's blog because 1. Johnson used to be my boss at Pajamas Media and 2. I would glance at it about once a year.
I didn't read LGF because it always seemed the shallowest of popular blogs. Compare LGF to a blog like Powerline, and you'll notice that while the smart folks at Powerline offer smart commentary; LGF, at least from the posts I've read, gives us little more than "Look at this!" extended tweets, with zero original thought or analysis; self-promoting nothings; and bad music. That he would only allow people to register on certain weekends and the rich-mistress-hand-me-down "open threads," was obnoxiously self-aggrandizing to me ("self" is the operative word here).
Johnson's thoughtless stream of anti-Muslim news offended even this Christian conservative.
The only reason people read him, I concluded, was because he was one of the first blogs, and he helped make known the fakery involved in the Army letter promoted by Dan Rather and the faux photograph used against Israel by Palestinians.
LGF is now a liberal or, more accurately, an anti-conservative blog now.
I'd like to forward the idea that LGF really hasn't changed at all: Instead of dumb posts against Muslims, Johnson now posts dumber posts against conservatives. All he did was change hatreds.
I went there today and read this today:
I’m kind of obsessive when I get interested in a subject. (OK, not “kind of” — “definitely.”)
Uhh, yeah.
Then, he offers this intellectual trifle explaining why he left conservatism (my commentary inserted):
11/21/09
The difference is definitely that Facebook has won a reputation as the mature person's social networking site. There's only so many teens and even many teens want to interact with people who care about more than partying.
PermalinkCategories: Computers, Internet/Blogging :: Leave a comment »
11/08/09
When one of my high school students asked for help with her resume, I sat down with her in front of the computer and searched for templates. Templates are an OK way of doing resumes: you download one, highlight the included text, and substitute your own information.
I'm fortunate that I haven't had to do a resume for a few years. When I needed them, in the mid-nineties to early 2000s, I would use resume software which would automatically format my input. I don't remember the exact name, but it was pretty easy to use and must have looked OK since I haven't stopped working. Anyways, that's the best way to do it.
Now, we live in a country where many computer-related non-hardware things are free. There's free software for almost anything you want to do and sometimes you can even do what you need to do online, Google Docs being an excellent example.
There's a new website for people who want the ease-of-use of resume software, but don't want to pay for it or bother with installations. It's called "Free Resume Builder."
I went through and made a resume. It's a step-by-step process that should provide acceptable results. I made a mock resume here. It took me only a few minutes.
I like that RB...:
...makes a little web page for you.
...has built-in links to social media like Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace (as if potential employers wouldn't look you up anyways).
...is simple to use.
I'm not so thrilled that RB...:
...doesn't seem to have any options when it comes to formatting, for either an online resume or a paper copy.
...is a little under-built at this time. The resumes and samples, eh.
So, if you need a resume quick and don't care about very personal formatting, Free Resume Builder will serve your needs.
You can go on their site and check out there resume samples and resume templates.
PermalinkCategories: Software, Internet/Blogging :: 1 comment »
10/27/09
Some web ideas are DOA (flooz). Others sound good, but fail (webvan). I'm surprised by the success of web sites like Twitter ("I'm at Starbucks.").
There's a new web concept in town.
eDivvy is an internet service that combines online shopping and social networking.
How it works:
Somebody shops for an item and then invites others to help pay for it (functioning similar to the government, therefore). It's a variation of a registry that one might start for a wedding or baby shower except that instead of directing people to many different products, the person who starts the "eDivvy" invites many people to help purchase one product.
The advantage of this system is that one can buy more expensive gifts. This might come in handy for an office, say, that wants one presentation-worthy present for a co-worker.
One potential drawback of the service is the price of the items. I doubt that anybody would be willing to pay more just to have the convenience of not asking people directly for money. This isn't the case: the gifts are from reputable online merchants like Dell, Target, and Amazon and the price of the products are the same as on the vendors' site. To this price, one adds an eDivvy fee to alert the purchasers.

Just to check, I searched for a product I recently purchased, the Garmin Nuvi 255. The lowest price that came up was $129.00 from Amazon, which is in line with what I paid. An additional $12.99 would have allowed me to "divvy" the purchase between 10 people, by entering their emails.
eDivvy groups can purchase gift cards, send care packages to military personnel, and give to charities.
The worst part of eDivvy is that it continues the trend of starting product names with lower-case letters. If the world does end in 2012, this will be the reason.
Will it work? I give eDivvy at least an even chance because it's an online way of doing something people do anyways and easy to use.
Oh, and send me your email if you'd like to help purchase me a Kindle. Well, it's not really for me; it's for you- so that I can bring you more informative commentary and analysis.
Gift ideas:









