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Explaining Myself
2/5/06 22:30 - permalink - email - category: 2Secondfuse

When I participated in the Four Things meme worming its way across the Net, I did so because it seemed to fill an empty information space. I often over-analyze my own actions, but in this case, I think I'm on the money.

The background is important.

While the revelation slice of Four Things is minimal, I learned some interesting information by inference about the bloggers who filled in the quiz. Knowing something about the life behind the posts breathes greater dimension into their words. It's not pigeon-holing, it's my mind fleshing out their stories.

I'll be adding a few more sections to this site, adding links to the bar beneath the header image. One of them is an About page.

Four Things made me realize I need an informative About page, one which collects both basic facts and ongoing data to form a more three-dimensional image of the person writing this weblog. Concession to ego is tempting. I could simply tell readers exactly what I want them to know and how I want them to perceive me. No doubt, there will be some of this. It's unavoidable when writing about yourself. The structure I build to hang the ego on is the actual identity. It will collapse if not composed of solid facts: "I like to travel" must be backed up with a list of realms I've visited.

I'm imagining an About page in territory similar to the PIP presented by Mark Bernstein and the Lens concept currently in beta over at Squidoo, minus the relentless commercialism. Something dynamic and alive in the same way I am, because it represents a continually updated distillation of my ongoing activity.

It will be simple, basic information long-time readers of this weblog may already know about me. For those just clicking in, it provides a primer on just who this writer is, my focus, and why I write: the books which have most inspired and informed, past and upcoming travel destinations, an up-to-date .plan, a list of all open projects. It could go deeper, but I think concision is important in this case. Brief and information rich makes for a quick download of who I am.

Through 2Second(fuse), I guide and refine myself. An About page of the variety I'm envisioning may provide something of a control panel for my actions: a hot-wired, bird's eye view of my life.


In The House Of The Nonist
2/4/06 22:22 - permalink - email - category: 2Secondfuse

I've been anointed by The Nonist, a beautiful weblog of marvelous eclectica, amazing eccentrica and wondrously reborn ephemera. Thanks jmorrison... I will endeavor to make you proud in 2006.

Reproduced below is my fine check mark in the 2005 Bloggers Choice Awards (Nonist Edition):

Bloggers Choice Award 2005 (Nonist Edition)

My tied compatriot in the category is Wordshadows: The Imaginary Home Of Keith Ecklund. I've been reading Keith for months. He's thought provoking and always fun, even when the content is deep. I'm honored to share a Nonist award with him.


Break
12/20/05 10:30 - permalink - email - category: 2Secondfuse

I'm taking a year-end break from my current life to contemplate in depth: dreams, goals, fears, failures, relationships... rise and ruin.

Life has broken on an uncharted island. I am salt-washed and ground smooth, like the shards of sea glass strewn across this uninhabited shore. Somewhere far above my dot of land in endless blue surf hovers a castle in the sky. I'm throwing coconuts at it.

If you've come here to read, there are plenty of archives at hand. If you're looking for fresh words and a voice biased toward reason, swing over to Doug Miller's den of mischief. Doug's recently renewed his weblog and seems to have found the writer's equivalent of greasy kid stuff, because he's going gangbusters. He's turned me on to stacks of good fiction, political views and software opinions and entertained me with sharp wit and general curmudgeonry for some time. His original weblog was one of the inspirations for my own attempts.


Distributed Conversation
11/27/05 13:17 - permalink - email - category: 2Secondfuse

By design, this weblog has no comments. I mulled this over extensively before conclusively deciding against. This post will tell you why.

Thomas Crampton recently guest-posted Deconstructing Bloggers on joi.ito.com, categorizing the types of weblogs commonly seen. In the comments to Thomas' post, professional commenter-without-a-weblog Noel Guinane disparagingly opined: "Blogs that don't allow comments are not really blogs in my opinion. They're Spews; the people running them are spewing forth their opinion with no interest in hearing what anyone else has to say."

Weblogs are about identity, not ego. Ego and identity are linked, but identity is the core set of information that defines you when the world looks at your record. Ego is the gratification you feel while basking in the world's gaze.

To decry weblogs without comments as one-way founts of ego is to miss the point of the web. The web is inherently omni-directional. Anyone may link to anything, in any context. If you want the instant ego-gratification of seeing your words on the screen amidst the babble of multiple others, what you want is a forum. That's what a forum is for, and why most have moderators and rules for civil posting. A weblog is about the views of a specific person or group, which anyone may disagree with, and even make that disagreement public by posting their thoughts about it on their own weblog and linking back to the original.

In-blog comment threads are minimal, site-specific, inbred versions of what the entire blogosphere should be. To argue for them as necessary for true blogging is to argue for a dumbed-down web.

Some time ago, Mark Bernstein posted a short essay on why comments are not good for weblogs, the gist of which is "Weblog comments incite duels. Duels are bad for society. We should all forego comments and return to carefully blogging responses." Building on Mark's ideas, here are reasons why conversations spanning weblogs are the way to go, trumping the strengths of in-blog comment threads at every turn.

The idea goes farther - Inter-blog conversation is far more distributed than the mindspace occupied by comments in a single post of a single weblog. In-blog comments, if read at all, are generally read by the same cheerleading/flamebaiting crew who post in them. Inter-blog conversations, on the other hand, spread the idea far and wide to the readers of each weblog participating in the discussion, linking back and forth to each other as the topic progresses. Anyone is free to jump in and add to the discourse on their own blog.

Home-turf writing is well-wrought writing - Because your weblog is your identity, ideas you publish in its context are of higher quality than those spun off-the-cuff in the tiny confines of a comment in someone else's weblog. A top-level response post is much closer to the quality of an editorial or "letter to the editor" than the public masturbation and cock-waving found as comment threads degrade. You do your best because your identity is riding on every post.

Top-level posts keep the conversation in view - For those few of you carefully laboring over comments, remember as the owner of the weblog posts fresh material, the older post containing your carefully crafted statement of dissent or agreement scrolls off the index page and into the archives. If you comment in a swiftly updated weblog, your comment's eye time is proportional.

A conversation carried on across top-level posts of numerous weblogs over many days will last much longer, progress much farther, be seen by many more eyes than the pitiful stretch given to buried comments.

Top-level posts cannot be censored - If you comment in the weblog of someone who is not interested in your side of the debate for any reason, you may find your opinion deleted.

This can't happen if you post it to your own weblog.

Top-level posts have no added noise - An idea's terrain cannot be explored efficiently in comments. It's impossible to stay meaningful in a long thread of comments peppered with disparaging opinions, jokes and endless sidetracks... witness Slashdot, Dailykos, et al. Additionally, many weblogs with forum-style comments are heavily biased. If you post a liberal comment in a neocon weblog you won't even get a second look before you're dog-piled by the locals.

I'll spend an hour's time following quality inter-blog conversation across many weblogs linking to each other, but I will rarely waste 15 minutes crawling through the morass of "Me, too!" and "Mine's bigger!" or "Fuck you, Noel!" found in most comment threads just to find the lone gem of wisdom. The cost is too high.

In summation:

Using top-level posts across multiple weblogs as tools of group conversation is far superior to the minimal interaction afforded by an in-blog comment thread. Forums are more suitable for situations where lots of immediate interaction is a requirement, without concern over signal to noise ratio. Forums may give you immediacy, but immediacy leads to duels. Duels presuppose winners and losers, and that's not a healthy environment for bringing up ideas.

I'll take my web debates sans duels, thank you very much.

Be assured, I am very interested in what you have to say. I write this weblog because I like to communicate, because I value contact. I prefer my contact to be more direct than the noise-filled channels of a comment thread. This leaves time and mental space for developing working relationships, friendships, and honest human interaction. It allows ideas to grow rather than fade away.

An email link is at the top of every page in this journal. I usually have several conversations going by email at any one time, with cycles of ideas refined by all participating. Many conversations begin as emailed comments on my posts here at 2Second(fuse). Version Two of this weblog, due in the new year, will have an email link built into every post.

I can often be reached on AIM and iChat via the Screen Name on my LiveJournal info page, as many of you reading this can attest.

Best of all, if you post a reply to this in your own weblog, I'll respond to you, continuing the thread here.


2Second(badges)
5/2/05 14:35 - permalink - email - category: 2Secondfuse

Scott Price at (hyper)textuality.org recently emailed inquiring about the badges on 2Second(fuse). I've zipped up the photoshop layer files of all seven for easy downloading if anyone would like to use them: 2Secondfuse_badges.zip. The layer files will allow easy customization for your site's color scheme. Please pass them along to others who might like them.

Credit where credit's due: The individual logos are all shrunken versions from their owners' sites. Some unsung pixel hero implemented each of them, so a moment of silent honor as you place them on your weblog might be in order.

The Tinderbox badge is a shortened version of the original created by Adam Feuer. His popping out of the box design was my inspiration for all the rest.

FiveAngle is my friend Dave Johnson's hosting company. They're inexpensive, include all the bells and whistles, and Dave's a super-helpful and friendly guy. If you're looking for a webhost, check them out.

And thanks to Scott Price for giving me the nudge to do this. Scott also wins the award for best ever visual play on the term "blogosphere."


Internet Exploder
4/15/05 16:05 - permalink - email - category: 2Secondfuse

I've added two new badges to 2Second(fuse)'s left column.

The Livejournal badge links to 2Second(fuse)'s RSS feed syndicated on LJ, which can be added to Friends pages. I've added it to my own on vitruvius.livejournal.com and it works wonderfully. An interesting feature of Livejournal's implementation of feeds: comments are available on each post. True slickness would be had if LJ emailed comments to the author address listed in the feed itself.

Firefox badge. I debated adding this. I'm not interested in annoying Win users or being branded a software bigot. Here's the scoop: I've tested this site on every browser available on OSX, Win2k and WinXP (Linux tests coming soon) and the ONLY browser that doesn't render the CSS positioning properly is... you guessed it, Microsoft's Internet Explorer.

If you catch the site formatted a bit oddly, I'm pushing the CSS around in an attempt to find solutions which will render properly in IE. Of course, when it renders properly in IE it breaks in Safari, Firefox, Netscape and Opera.

Add in security and other flaws Internet Explorer is routinely roasted for and I can't in good conscience refrain from recommending Firefox. This is not bigotry. Cross-platform, stable, secure, standards compliant, fast, tabbed browsing: Firefox is simply a superior product.


The Fuse Is Lit
4/1/05 08:45 - permalink - email - category: 2Secondfuse

2Second(fuse) is:

A focusing mechanism for my many endeavors and interests

I'm highly interested in process and conscious design, so my intent is to make 2Second(fuse) an evolving mind-map, charting my course from past into future using present as pivot point.

An artistic process

Counter-balancing the above, "the map is not the territory." I'll be using my continually evolving map as an aid in exploring the actual terrain, digging into the details of creation and growth. The act of writing it down is a crucial part of thinking it through to manifestation. Upon manifestation, an artist returns, even if only subconsciously, to a piece's continuation. It's natural, a part of the process, so I'll be using this weblog to keep the process moving between "finished" works. A quote attributed to Da Vinci summarizes it perfectly, "Art is never finished, only abandoned." By fixing and linking my thoughts in whole cloth I'm cycling forward with all of them. I'm abandoning abandonment.

A springboard for ideas and communication

An idea I seem to mention often in my conversations with "sovereign" individuals: you can live your life in a way which may increase understanding and acceptance of your actions and make the world a better place for you and like-minded people to live in. If you don't talk to the wind, how can you ever expect it to answer back?

A sandbox

I'm an evolver, so count on 2Second(fuse) changing. I won't break any permalinks, but I'll be nudging CSS schemes/formating/visuals around, adding areas, breaking/fixing/dive-bombing/fixing the right way. 01 April 2005 is simply the starting point. I'm still cogitating some larger decisions: to add comments or not to add comments, perhaps roll in older entries from previous incarnations, image and sonic galleries, podcasting, randomization...

To suggest, comment or just say "hello," drop me an email. I'm particularly fond of suggestions and comments with a nice "hello" wrapped around them.

Hello!


the weblog of Vlad Spears
Chief Iconoclast - Daevlmakr Media
Designing Monsters - vitruvius.livejournal.com

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