Blog

  • Magazine quote

    I got an email today from someone from the online magazine Preservation Online wanting to get a quote from me about the Crane Shed demolition, since I wrote a bunch about it. Cool. I wrote back letting them know I’d be happy to give a quote, or they could just quote my blog. Since I haven’t heard back from them, I assume they’ll quote my blog.

  • Ewwww

    How’s this for disturbing?

    I was just at the Evergreen Village (Bellevue) Safeway this morning, doing my little shopping thing. I was late — I usually do it on the weekend. While wandering around getting my goods, I noticed that the shelves in the produce aisle were looking a bit empty. I didn’t think much of it. I never come in on Mondays. Maybe this is what things look like after a weekend rush. Maybe they’re expecting a delivery soon. Maybe they had taken all the little fruits and vegetables on a field trip (AHAHAHA).

     

    Well, just heard on the news, the reason the shelves were empty was because they found (and I quote) “a pile of fecal matter was discovered on top of some produce” (from NWCN channel) on Sunday night between 7:30 and 10:30PM. Safeway immediately shut down the produce section, turfed out the produce, disinfected the shelves, and brought new produce in. They’re also offering refunds on produce purchased last night.

    Via Metroblogging Seattle.

  • San Diego or bust

    We’ll be on the road all next week—well, starting this week, really, since we’re leaving Friday night—on our way to visit my brother in San Diego. Road trip!

    From Bend, San Diego is about a 16 or 17 hour drive. Since the kids are little, we’re spreading that over three days each way, taking it easier than just plowing on through. Of course, the portable DVD player we bought for the car should help out, too.

    Needless to say, I’ll be mostly offline for nine or ten days, starting Friday afternoon. I have a slightly older laptop computer that I’m taking, but I just got it and it doesn’t have network access, either Ethernet or wireless (has the slots for them, though). I may be able to get it set up for network before we go, otherwise I’ll just rely on the modem in a pinch.

    Or not. We’ll just see.

  • More on trackbacks

    Some more on trackbacks. To my mind, they are simply another form of comment, so that’s exactly how I’m treating them. You won’t see a special “Trackback” down there next to the “Comments” link. Instead, they’ll just be integrated with the comments in chronological order.

    I think I saw Sam Ruby doing this first, and it makes much more sense to me to treat trackbacks this way.

  • Trackback is on

    I’ve finally bitten the bullet and implemented Trackback here—well, half of it, anyway. My site should now be able to handle Trackback pings from other sites. I even implemented the RDF autodiscovery crap, but added a bonus: a new meta tag like so:

    <meta name="trackback.ping" content="Trackback URL for a particular entry">

    So maybe I can influence client software development in some small way with this.

    I haven’t implemented outgoing Trackback pings yet—i.e., me pinging others’ sites when I link to them. I’ll get around to it at some point.

  • On writing

    For a long time I’ve wanted to be a writer, and ultimately make a living writing. My biggest problem with that, however, is actually making myself write. I’m great at thinking about writing, though, and I’ve been doing a lot of thinking lately. Herewith some of my thoughts, in no particular format, just rambling (i.e., expect no conclusions).

    What defines a “writer”? For a long, long time (well before I discovered the internet), I distinguished between two types of writing: amateur and professional. To my mind (and maybe to many others as well, I don’t know), the only one that really “counted” was the Professional Writer. This was the writer that got paid to write, and had their work published. For extra points, you were truly a Pro if you not only sold your work, but had an Editor as well (as opposed to selling your work as-is for peanuts—if even that—to the various independent and/or struggling ‘zines that floated around).

    That distinction—amateur versus professional—still lingers in my mind. But with the advent of the internet, and now especially blogs, literally anyone with access to a computer can be a published writer; the lines are blurring. And, they can be paid, too, after a fashion: anyone running AdSense on their blog can make money for their writing. Does that make them Professional Writers? I don’t know, truly. My notion of what delineates writers has been pretty much trashed anymore.

    Yes, there’s irony in that I’m writing about writing on this blog after what I just wrote. There’s more irony in that, for all my procrastination in making time to write, I actually spend a fair amount of time writing here. Maybe I’m motivated by the instant gratification and feedback that blogging offers; maybe I like cutting out the middleman—in this case submitting stories, going through the reject/acceptance cycle, waiting for them to actually appear in print. Who knows?

    What I do know is that I love to write. I do. I get a charge out of it, it’s refreshing, energizing. I always sort of “rediscover” this after I write a bit (like I’m doing now). But I’m the absolute worst at violating the number one rule of writing: Write! That’s always my first and main piece of advice to anyone who wants to be a writer: make the time to write. Write, no matter what. Heh. Talk about irony.

    (Actually, when I was younger—late teens and early twenties—I used to write quite a bit. Usually late at night; probably one of the most productive writing times of my life was when I was working swing shift at the particle board plant—I’d get home by one in the morning and start writing. By hand, of course.)

    Fiction was what I always wanted to write, “professionally.” Well, science fiction mostly (big surprise there). That’s changed over the last few years; I still want to write fiction, but I find I’m also interested in writing on other things—and that’s pretty much all I’ve done since starting this blog. It’s a maturing process. It’s definitely a good way to find your voice and develop style, better than just sticking to one type of thing.

    Obviously, looking at my previous post about blogs and money I’m thinking a lot about writing online (and making money from it). It’s an attractive idea, but I wonder: could you make money publishing fiction online? Or is the online model more suited to an article model, like niche blogging? I’m thinking the latter. I’m not sure if there’s a model for selling fiction online that doesn’t involve ebooks or DRM or something; somehow attaching ads to a piece of fiction seems doomed to fail. (Although, maybe I’ll post a piece of free fiction from Gutenberg and see what happens to it with AdSense; now there’s an experiment.)

    But what’s crazy is that even though I could (hypothetically) make a career writing online, it still doesn’t feel to me like I would have accomplished anything—like I’m not a Professional Writer. Somehow it’s more validating to me as a writer to have my work printed that to just have it published online. It feels like cheating, somehow. Can I allow myself to be called a “Writer” if I didn’t have someone edit my work? If it didn’t show up in print?

    But it doesn’t really matter, does it? Well, yes, it does in certain ways. I’m sure no one would argue that a story is better with editing and review that the “traditional” publishing model provides. But—and this just occurred to me—when you publish stuff online (as with blogs), having an ecosystem of readers that can provide feedback and comments on what you write is probably a better edit/review system that the traditional channels can provide. Interesting.

    I wonder about writing books anymore; 99.9% of writers are of the struggling artist variety, that is, they might be able to scratch out a living from writing, but they’re barely getting by. There’s a glut of books out there all vying for publication, and it gets worse each year, so that there are more and more books competing for fewer and fewer publication slots. So, when I could release everything online, in any format I want, for anyone to download—isn’t that more validating that struggling to sell a book that may not even be published for years, and will most likely never print more than a first run? More satisfying?

    I think I’m mostly past the printed-as-validation snobbery, despite going on about it here. Blogging played a part in that, no doubt. I wonder how the next generation handles/will handle it. (Those that write and fancy themselves writers, anyway.) Will there be a perceived rift for them? Likely not; blogging and writing online will probably be second nature, par for the course.

    The next step, of course, is to write. No matter what.

  • Blog money

    So I observe over on Ensight that Jeremy has basically sold his blog for something in the neighborhood of $15,000 (Canadian or USD?), and still got a sweetheart deal:

    I am effectively considering bidding closed. I have a deal on the table. It’s substantial, is from a longtime Ensight reader, allows me to keep editorial control and turns me into a paid blogger.

    Right on! It’s the blogging brass ring. I’ve been thinking lately of ways to make money doing this whole blogging/”nanopublishing” thing, and in addition to this highly apropos example, I’ve been poking around the Weblogs, Inc. sites to get a feel for what they’re doing and how.

    I’m not necessarily talking about writing in general—that’s a whole different topic that I will actually address sometime soon—but rather how to leverage some of these trends and technologies in weblogs toward money. It seems to me that if you can’t get someone to pay you to blog, then the best bet is to bootstrap yourself via advertising (Google’s AdSense and/or other?), like what the Weblogs, Inc. guys (and guys like Nick Denton) are doing. And perhaps via the “tip jar” method: accepting PayPal donations and the like. And of course this doesn’t even address RSS…

    Not to say I’m ready to give up blogging if I can’t make money at it; I’m not, of course, there’s too much of the writing bug in me. But I’ve got some ideas in mind and I’m wondering, can it be done?

    Thoughts?

  • Bend Bulletin RSS feed

    Quick public service announcement: I’ve hacked together an RSS feed for the Bend Bulletin. It’s a first-pass, I’m scraping their Local, Business and Sports pages and building a summary feed only. If I have time, I may go one step further and pull each article on those pages, and provide a full-text feed.

    Either way, here’s the RSS feed link [ed. note: no longer valid]. Enjoy!

  • Life lessons…

    I don’t remember where I originally read this, but it was awhile ago, from a list of “life lessons” that someone had compiled. The only one that stuck out in my head is insanely funny to me:

    Never lick a steak knife.

  • Cooking for engineers

    I discovered this site via Slashdot the other day, and given my current fixation on cooking geekery via Alton Brown, I find it pretty cool: Cooking For Engineers. I especially like the nifty recipe tables… very creative use of HTML tables.

    In other odd-yet-apropos geek cooking news, Meg Hourihan, the co-founder of Blogger, is giving up the computer life to be a chef. Quite a leap.