To Be Titled

Striving to be a good dad, a good husband, a good son/brother, a good political scientist, a good photographer, a good cook and a good homo universalis.
Always good but one of the better—monster tweets. [via The Joy of Tech]

Always good but one of the better—monster tweets. [via The Joy of Tech]

Shopping: Keeping It Local

Whether the reasons are environmental or economic, the movement toward shopping local stuff has both a progressive side and a regressive side. The movement is purportedly for improving local and global welfare but doing so in a way that turns communities less interdependent and more autarkic. [From The Economist]

Japanese Couples Rely on Fake Friends

Japanese couples, too busy for a normal social life, are increasingly turning to actors to play their friends on the most important days of their lives.

Something has gone awry in Japan. If I didn’t have enough close friends to come to my wedding/funeral, I would seriously examine the priorities in my life rather than hiring a company to research me and send me fake friends.

Ignite and APSA

Henry Farrell draws some obvious contrasts between Ignite conferences and APSA (American Political Science Association) conferences:

Ignite gives you precisely (and only) five minutes to speak - your Powerpoint/Keynote or similar presentation has 20 slides that advance inexorably every fifteen seconds. What’s nice about it is that it forces people to cut to the chase.

I’ve only recently found out about Ignite. It seems to be a great way to share knowledge and experience within communities, and I hope to participate at some point in the future. Farrell continues:

I don’t think I have ever seen a conference presentation at APSA that couldn’t have been improved by being cut down to five minutes with inexorable advance, requirement for advance planning over what you actually want to say and so on.

I think the APSA presentations I have seen recently are a lot better than the ones I saw in previous years. (I may simply be doing a better job of choosing panels with better presenters.) But I still see some horrible presentations as well. Presenters should not have more than 5-6 slides for a 12-minute presentation. Ignite format for APSA would be interesting.

Are Good Manners Out of Style?

The recent spates with Joe Wilson, Serena Williams and Kanye West left some people wondering if America lost its civility. If you enjoy pop culture or politics it may seem that way.

I try to have good manners—be polite, civil and friendly to both people I do not know as well as my friends and family members. I think it makes the world a better place and is important. [HT: MFM]



I see no end in sight for this meme, but it’s funny. [via sabbatical]

I see no end in sight for this meme, but it’s funny. [via sabbatical]

“So you think Twitter’s modern? The Edwardians were doing it 100 years ago - using postcards instead of computers” (via ThatWhichMatter)

“So you think Twitter’s modern? The Edwardians were doing it 100 years ago - using postcards instead of computers” (via ThatWhichMatter)

This is Xander’s favorite Sesame Street video du jour. For the non-parents, that means he will want to watch it at least 6-7 times in a row per session, several sessions a day. The video’s cute for now, but I will see how long it lasts. My favorite part is “I’ve got one daddy / I’ve got two….”

Clay Shirky on collaborative arrangements replacing traditional institutions—e.g. firms, journalists, etc.—given the right information infrastructure. What he argues is happening at the domestic level seems to be how international institutions (e.g. the GATT/WTO) have long functioned—by decentralizing implementation and enforcement. In that sense, international institutions have always been closer to collaborative arrangements than traditional institutions at the domestic level. This is especially true since whatever collective outcomes that international institutions seek to generate, the state-level behaviors have to be self-enforcing like Flickr users voluntarily choosing to tag their photos with certain keywords in Shirky’s example.

An interesting question is whether international institutions will better utilize the information technology infrastructure that has emerged and is evolving. The best example so far of such an attempt seems to be http://www.globaltradealert.org/

Making the Clackity Noise

Okay, so, that’s what was in my keyboard just now. I didn’t know it was in there when I sat down to compliment Buffering on his 105 words that made me think about how I love little stories. This is why writing is fucked up and awesome and makes a 42-year-old man cry about cigarettes and Pete Rose and an ugly green car on a perfectly temperate Sunday afternoon.

Your keyboard will have different things in it than mine does, of course. But, it’s impossible to know what’s in there until you’ve made the clackity noise for a few minutes. You think you know what’s in there. But you don’t. It’s not your brain that makes the clackity noise, it’s your fingers.

This is a take by Merlin Mann that pulls together 1) the importance of collecting stories (by Jonathan Harris) and 2) the fleeting/uncertain nature of creative writing (by Elizabeth Gilbert). I agree with his call for changing the culture of banality online. [Via Kung Fu Grippe; HT marco]

FP Passport | State Department intervened with Twitter over Iran

I assumed Twitter had delayed their scheduled maintenance on their own accord yesterday. But it sounds like there was at least some nudging, independently consequential or not:

The US government asked Twitter to delay maintenance plans in order to allow Iranians to communicate while their government banned other media following elections, a US official said Tuesday.

Study: TV May Inhibit Babies’ Language Development

As most parents of small children will reluctantly admit, nothing can occupy a child quite like television. Unfortunately, the scientific evidence suggests that using the boob tube as a babysitter has its price: the more time babies spend sitting in front of the screen, the more their social, cognitive and language development may suffer. Recent studies show that TV-viewing tends to decrease babies’ likelihood of learning new words, talking, playing and otherwise interacting with others.
I’m glad that we disconnected our TV service. Having the TV on in the background, even passively, is so easy and becomes a second nature. [Via TIME]

Local Network Effects in Tumblr

So, Tumblr introduced a great feature that many social networking sites have. Put in your e-mail address/credentials and then it will comb through your address book to see if anyone you know is using Tumblr. I tried that this morning, and ended up with one contact. Only one among my 200+ contacts in my address book has a Tumblr account, and that person isn’t even using it.

The local networks effects on social networking sites are well known, and my experience this morning with Tumblr exemplifies that perfectly. There might be millions of people using Tumblr, but if I don’t personally know any of them, then no one is following me and I’m not following anyone (unless I choose to follow someone I don’t personally know). There is no single Tumblr community.

For what it’s worth, I’m trying to get people I know off Facebook and into Twitter.