Archive for the 'Web' Category

A List Apart: The Survey 2008

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

I Took It! And So Should You!

Jaiku

Tuesday, May 22nd, 2007

I’m going to try this micro-blogging thing for a bit, and neglect my regular blog. Check me out at the top of my sidebar, or at my Jaiku page.

We are The Machine

Wednesday, February 7th, 2007

Via Alt Text

Email Down

Wednesday, November 29th, 2006

My email will probably be down for a couple of days, since I’m changing hosts. If you send an email and it bounces back, try me at:

jesseross |DOT| com |AT| gmail |DOT| com.

You can use the real one again now.

I’m delicious

Saturday, October 21st, 2006

I also learned today that people think I’m worth bookmarking. Damn, that might be more pressure than I can take.

An insight…

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

The United States is the Internet Explorer of countries.

The Internet as Entertainment

Monday, April 10th, 2006

I love the Internet. I get so much from the Internet: not only does the Internet provide me a steady paycheck via a web-related job, the Internet also gives me outlets to satisfy my many curiosities and hobbies, as well as a way to just pass the time. While I still watch a lot of DVDs, and the occasional television show, I would still have to say that the Internet is my primary form of entertainment. But not only do I enjoy content distributed via the Internet, like Yacht Rock and ChinesePod and LugRadio, I enjoy content about the Internet.

Take my most recent addictions: Google Current and Rocketboom. I’m sure I’ve mentioned Rocketboom before, since it’s just a damn awesome show, but I’ve really gotten back into it, mostly since upgrading my system has allowed me to store more video and play it more smoothly. Google Current is a relatively recent addiction, but one which got me hooked right off the bat.

Both are news-ish shows. Rocketboom has a focus more on discussing topics that are currently causing a buzz around blogs and forums of the net. Google Current takes a search term that’s been popular on Google lately, and expands that to show what people are actually searching for (and finding) on the Internet. What’s really remarkable about both shows is that they share a similar format: short shows (4 – 7 minutes average), with multiple stories/topics within that timeframe, and a good dosage of reality and humor.

Both shows “get” the Internet, and “get” web attention spans, and “get” how to connect with a busy, but involved, audience. The hosts of both shows (Amanda Congdon on RB, and Conor Knighton and Kinga Philipps on GC) represent the web’s version of news anchors: they’re young, they goof around, and they have the right balance of geek and chic. Neither show is overtly glossy or rehearsed-feeling, although GC has a bit more of that, due to being backed by Current TV’s (and presumably Google’s) budget. Still, both shows feel like someone with the right equipment and time could have produced it out of their basement.

The Internet already has a lot of stories and myths, and a rich world-spanning history. It’s amazing to be at the beginning of this, and to see the formation of Entertainment around the Internet, as people start to tell (and broadcast) these stories. As the gypsies would say:

May you live in interesting times.

Indeed.

A Few Recent Thoughts

Friday, March 10th, 2006

Just a few thoughts I’ve had recently or that have come my way…

  • Via Sašo:

    In Terry Prattchet’s Discworld there was a nice sentence like “and then he was surprised like a man is surprised by something which he previously thought only happens to other people”.

  • The Internet is important for me, because, just as with other forms of publishing technology before it, the burden of remembering things is placed on the network, rather than the individual.
  • In my informal testing at work, between Firefox, Flock and Safari, Safari (with the Sogudi extension) wins in terms of just consumer satisfaction and comfort (for me anyway). The only thing I miss from Firefox and Flock are the “Type to search” feature (and, to a lesser extent, the live, incremental search via page indexing).
  • Lucid dreaming might just gain me an extra 6 hours or so of productivity a day. I think that’s worth running into walls for.
  • Flash is weird. Period.
  • Open source developers might just be good at copying the innovations of others, but at least they’re really good at it. [RealPlayer video]
  • It’s not important to take over the world — just leave a positive mark on it.
  • People like what I do.

Web 2.0 Fanboy

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

In the past two days, pretty much out of sheer boredom (although maybe there are some more noble intentions), I have managed to sign myself up to the following sites:

Flickr
Upcoming
43Things

I’ve subscribed to the following new feeds:

Microformats
RedHanded

And the following podcast:

Zoe’s Radio Show

Added 9 new entries to my del.icio.us account:

del.icio.us

And fallen in love with a new television network:

Current TV

My will is weak to the power of the internet.

Numero Uno

Saturday, December 10th, 2005

I’m number one again!

Man I love being number one!