Category Archives: Blogging

Kinesthetic learning online?

Tina writes – Kinesthetic Learners: Why Old Media Should Never Die:

…..Many classrooms, however, don’t offer this type of kinesthetic learning. The hands-on learner is left to fend for themselves and more often than not the only physical interaction they get is with the learning material itself.
You’ve seen them before. Sometimes, it’s a student whose fingers trace the words as they read them. Or the highlighter: the student who makes a colored mosaic of their text as they try to physically interact with the material. Even note-taking is a kinesthetic activity. In a variety of subtle ways, the kinesthetic learner can physically interact with their learning material.
Now, imagine these same students trying to physically interact with ‘new’ media. The method of consuming learning material is physically no different than consuming entertainment material. Your fingers and eyes make the same motions, there is no easy way to physically differentiate material, much less to physically interact with it.
Obviously, there are ways that new media can be superior. Video offers the best chance to reach all learning types. For example, a step-by-step video of a science experiment caters to visual and auditory senses while leaving the hands free to actually perform the experiment.
But for straight information consumption, new media leaves the kinesthetic learner out in the cold.

Videos. Like JoVE and SciVee.tv?
What about joysticks and Wii?

LOLNobel

Krugman goes to Stockholm to get a Nobel and give a speech, posts his slides on his blog and apologizes for “light blogging lately” using a LOLcat.
The future is bright….

Pulitzers for online reporting

Pulitzer Prizes Broadened to Include Online-Only Publications Primarily Devoted to Original News Reporting:

New York, Dec. 8, 2008 – The Pulitzer Prizes in journalism, which honor the work of American newspapers appearing in print, have been expanded to include many text-based newspapers and news organizations that publish only on the Internet, the Pulitzer Prize Board announced today. [Who defines “newspaper” and “news organization”? Can I claim “A Blog Around The Clock” as one of those if I call it that way? If not, why not? Who decides?]
The Board also has decided to allow entries made up entirely of online content to be submitted in all 14 Pulitzer journalism categories. [Including for Commentary?]
While broadening the competition, the Board stressed that all entered material — whether online or in print — should come from United States newspapers or news organizations that publish at least weekly,[Is 8.2 times a day enough?] that are “primarily dedicated to original news reporting [That’s tough, but many bloggers have done it, and some do it on a regular basis.] and coverage of ongoing stories,” [Every blogger in the world.] and that “adhere to the highest journalistic principles.[Oooops! So NYTimes and WaPo are not eligible?]”
Consistent with its historic focus on daily and weekly newspapers, the Board will continue to exclude entries from printed magazines and broadcast media and their respective Web sites.[What is the difference between a weekly newspaper and a magazine? Are the Atlantic bloggers, like Sullivan, excluded because Atlantic gets printed on paper?]
“This is an important step forward, reflecting our continued commitment to American newspapers as well as our willingness to adapt to the remarkable growth of online journalism,” said Sig Gissler, administrator of the Prizes. “The new rules enlarge the Pulitzer tent and recognize more fully the role of the Web, while underscoring the enduring value of words and of serious reporting.”
The Board will continue to monitor the impact of the Internet, Gissler said.[Better later than never, I guess….]
Beginning in 2006, online content from newspaper Web sites was permitted in all Pulitzer journalism categories, but online-only newspapers were not allowed to submit entries, and entirely-online entries were permitted in only two categories, breaking news coverage and breaking-news photography.
In addition to text stories, the competition will continue to allow a full range of online content, such as interactive graphics and video, in nearly all categories. [No photoblogs?] Two photography categories will continue to restrict entries to still images.
The Board adopted the changes at its November meeting at Columbia University after a lengthy study by a committee.[This sounds like something written by a committee….]
The Board also refined the definition for its prize on Local Reporting of Breaking News. To emphasize immediacy, the new definition states that “special emphasis” will be given to “the speed and accuracy of the initial coverage.”[Someone on Twitter will win every time!]
The Board, Gissler said, hopes that this will encourage the submission of more online material in the category. [OK, guys, we’ll nominate and we’ll be watching you!]

A little more detail here: At Last: Pulitzer Prizes Expand to Include Web-Only News Outlets
Update:They asked Dan Gillmor for advice, but did not listen to a word of what he told them. Read his entire response.

Why Doesn’t Anyone Comment on Your Blog?

Nina Simon explains:

Getting a good comment is like getting a million puppies in the mail. I am so so so grateful whenever you write back and share your thoughts with all those faceless people and with me. But I’ve also learned not to rely on or have an unhealthy relationship with that gratitude. I’m ecstatic when you comment. I’m thrilled when someone links to me. I’m elated by reader numbers. But what keeps me going is an interest in writing, learning, and sharing

Read the whole thing – it is detailed and good.

Triangle Blogger Meetup

Triangle bloggers will meet at Carrboro Creative Coworking on Wednesday, December 10th at 6pm. Please join us if you can.

Twelve Months of A Blog Around The Clock

Thanks to DrugMonkey for the reminder. We do this meme every year in December – the only rule is to “post the link and first sentence from the first blog entry for each month of the past year.” Here we go (ClockQuotes are usually the first post of the day and thus of the month, so there is not much in terms of my own words):
January:

A man may fail many times, but he isn’t a failure until he begins to blame someone else.

February:

I have called this principle, by which, each slight variation, if useful, is preserved, by the term of Natural Selection.

March:

Two things are aesthetically perfect in the world – the clock and the cat.

April:

People spend too much time finding other people to blame, too much energy finding excuses for not being what they are capable of being, and not enough energy putting themselves on the line, growing out of the past, and getting on with their lives.

May:

After a lovely flight, Catriona met me at the airport.

June:

The important thing in science is not so much to obtain new facts as to discover new ways of thinking about them.

July:

Mammalian Clock Protein Responds Directly To Light: We all know that light effects the growth and development of plants, but what effect does light have on humans and animals?

August:

I hope you have not been leading a double life, pretending to be wicked, and being really good all the time. That would be hypocrisy.

September:

The individual woman is required … a thousand times a day to choose either to accept her appointed role and thereby rescue her good disposition out of the wreckage of her self-respect, or else follow an independent line of behavior and rescue her self-respect out of the wreckage of her good disposition.

October:

Failure is simply the opportunity to begin again, this time more intelligently.

November:

You don’t tell deliberate lies, but sometimes you have to be evasive.

December:

Checking one’s incoming links on Sitemeter, Technorati and Google Blogsearch is essential tool for a blogger – it allows one to notice responses to one’s posts in approximately real time, so the blog-to-blog conversation can continue fluently.

Managing your online persona like a Superhero

Michelle asks: What Kind of Online Superhero Are You?

The easiest way to think of this is through superheroes, of course. In many comics such as Superman, Spiderman, and Batman, the protagonist has double life. The characters seem to cherish both roles-the closeness of relationships with others in the standard life and the power and responsibility of the superhero life. In other comics such as X Men, the hero and the person are the same. Wolverine, although sometimes escaping into solitude as Logan, is always a Mutant. Jean Grey is always Jean Grey and Storm is always Storm. There is no separation of character and alter ego here.
Do you use the internet world to escape or improve your current life? Do you have a deadbeat job and use it as an outlet for your talent? Or do you use it to show what you do on a day to day basis, with no need to escape your current situation? Which superhero are you when you are online?

I was told that Coturnix is just like real me in real life. I am online everywhere under my own name AND my handle. But then, my job is to be online 24/7 and promote myself in order to be able to promote the brand.
Others have very different personalities online and offline. They surprise you when you finally meet them in person. They even nurture that well-known difference, e.g., PZ Myers who is fiery online and very quiet and shy in person.
Then, some have two personalities even online. Perhaps they write under their own names on a personal blog where they post the pictures of kids so grandma can see them, and at the same time blogging pseudonymously on a political blog. And trying really hard to make sure nobody connects the dots.
But really, why shouldn’t passionate online advocates also be gentle family people and parents? Humans are not so one-dimensional.
A lot of nervousness about pseudonymity comes from the clash of cultures (“generations” in terms of worldview and technical modernity, not age) – how will one’s online presence affect one’s personal or professional life?
But in a couple of decades, this clash of cultures will be gone. The people hiring will be of the Facebook generation themselves. Seeing drunken party pictures on Facebook profiles of potential employees will be perfectly OK as that is what everyone has. No big deal. Actually, people who have no drunken party pictures online will be suspect – what are they hiding; why are they hyper-managing their online presence so much? That would be a red flag!
If you are not online, you do not exist. But if you are online, you have to manage your online persona. Don’t let others do it for you, because that may hurt you. Do what you need to do to make sure that the drunken party pictures are there, but only in the second 100 hits on Google, not right at the top. Make sure that what Google brings about you first is your best stuff and your best face. But don’t worry about the mere and inevitable presence of bad stuff (e.g., someone smearing you in a blog post) – it will be OK in the near future.
So, are you Superman or Wolverine?

SciBlings Abbie and Ed on Blogginheads.tv

erv and Ed Yong discuss science, blogging, science communication, HIV, and, er, vampires….

Top 100 Anthropology Blogs

Not so long ago, the four existing anthropology bloggers were wondering “where are the others?” Now, there are so many that one can pick the Top 100 and still leave some excellent blogs out! Check them out. Who is missing from the list?

Inter-connectedness of science blogs

Euan analyzed connectivity of science blogs using their blogrolls, revealing a Big Head, a Skinny Neck and a Long Tail, as expected in every community. Linkfests, carnivals, aggregators, commenting on each other’s blogs, signing up for ResearchBlogging.org, showing up at meetups and conferences – all of these are methods for people to move from the end of the Long Tail into the neck and head.
Christina did something similar and her lecture on this will be live video streamed on Wednesday (Dec.10th) from 14:15 till 14:45 American Eastern Standard Time (EST).
This also depends on the definition of a “science blog” – I bet that subgroups tend to link to each other, e.g., medical blogs will mostly link to each other, nature blogs, lab-life blogs, women-in-science blogs, skeptical blogs, etc, would all link more within than between each other’s niche.

2008 Edublog Awards – time to vote

Nomination for 2008 Edublog Awards is now closed and you can now go and vote.
Go and check them all out – there are some great edublogs there I was not aware of from before. This is how I voted:
1. Best individual blog
Using Blogs in Science Education
2. Best group blog
360
3. Best new blog
Teaching in Second Life
4. Best resource sharing blog
Discovering Biology in a Digital World
5. Most influential blog post
THE MACGYVER PROJECT
6. Best teacher blog
Endless Forms Most Beautiful
7. Best librarian / library blog
Blue Skunk Blog
8. Best educational tech support blog
JoeWoodOnline
9. Best elearning / corporate education blog
Presentation Zen
10. Best educational use of audio
Project Xiphos
11. Best educational use of video / visual
Steve Spangler blog
12. Best educational wiki
Miss Baker’s Biology Class Wiki
13. Best educational use of a social networking service
Principles of Biology
14. Best educational use of a virtual world
Drexel Island on Second Life
15. Best class blog
Extreme Biology
16. Lifetime achievement
David Warlick
Now go and do the same thing – check them all out and vote for your picks.

The Millionth Comment Contest Winner has landed

Remember the Millionth Comment Contest? Remember that Peggy Kolm won it?
Well, she is in NYCity now on her winner’s trip and blogging about it. Stay tuned over there, as this is just the first of four days…

Five-Fiftysix meme – solutions to the puzzle

I promised solutions in 24 hours, and it’s been a little more than that now, so here are the sources:

1. I suppose that the mere fact that I was in the company of two friends itself proves that I wasn’t actually some kind of hermit when it came to my rat studies.

Rats by Robert Sullivan (not a blogger, as far as I know)

2. They’re screwing the security guards in the bathroom.

The Wisdom of Whores by Elizabeth Pisani

3. By the end of the nineteenth century, organic synthesis was widely accepted and the vital force theory was abandoned.

Tomorrow’s Table by Pamela Ronald

4. Cyanobacteria actually can tell time using a mechanism similar to our circadian clock, from the Latin meaning “about a day”.

The Carbon Age by Eric Roston

5. Half blind, I picked myself up and ran and ran and ran.

It’s Every Monkey For Themselves by Vanessa Woods

6. The idea that the transmission of news via paper might become a bad idea, that all those huge, noisy printing presses might be like steam engines in the age of internal combustion, was almost impossible to grasp.

The Revolution Will Not Be Televised by Joe Trippi

7. Born in 1769, the twenty-year-old seminary student had weathered the French revolution by working at the Jardin des Plantes in Paris with the dashing eccentric zoological genius Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hillaire.

Siege of Stars by Henry Gee

8. Males place packets of sperm everywhere on the female’s head or tentacles.

Dr. Tatiana’s Sex Advice to All Creation by Olivia Judson

9. Escoffier begins with the browning of beef and veal bones in the oven.

Proust Was a Neuroscientist by Jonah Lehrer

10. The bourgeoisie, during its rule of scarce one hundred years, has created more massive and more colossal productive forces than have all preceding generations together.

The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, who, I think, are not bloggers….

Five-Fiftysix meme

It started with Henry who was bored with the simplicity of the “pick the nearest book” meme and decided to make it really hard!
Mike picked it up and tagged a few people, including me and Wilkins.
So, what are the rules? Hey, Henry came up with this, so feel free to make the rules as you go. After all, what’s he gonna do – release calcium from intracellular stores?
OK, pick not one but TEN books. They don’t need to be the closest to you – take your time and make good picks. It’s not easy – you want people to work hard, but still figure out the sources eventually. Goldilocks Principle applies – not too obvious, not too obscure. Or whatever you prefer – make it easy so everyone can have fun, or make it so darned hard nobody gets it and you can gloat about your sophistication!
The unalterable rule: take ten books, and transcribe the fifth sentence from page fifty six.
If you want, you can have five of them be fiction, but you can change that as well.
If you want, you can provide hints, but you don’t have to.
Then tag six people, or some other number (including zero) as you wish. As Wilkins notes, memes are supposed to mutate and evolve, so don’t be a stickler for the rules. Just have fun!
OK – here are my ten:
1. I suppose that the mere fact that I was in the company of two friends itself proves that I wasn’t actually some kind of hermit when it came to my rat studies.
2. They’re screwing the security guards in the bathroom.
3. By the end of the nineteenth century, organic synthesis was widely accepted and the vital force theory was abandoned.
4. Cyanobacteria actually can tell time using a mechanism similar to our circadian clock, from the Latin meaning “about a day”.
5. Half blind, I picked myself up and ran and ran and ran.
6. The idea that the transmission of news via paper might become a bad idea, that all those huge, noisy printing presses might be like steam engines in the age of internal combustion, was almost impossible to grasp.
7. Born in 1769, the twenty-year-old seminary student had weathered the French revolution by working at the Jardin des Plantes in Paris with the dashing eccentric zoological genius Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hillaire.
8. Males place packets of sperm everywhere on the female’s head or tentacles.
9. Escoffier begins with the browning of beef and veal bones in the oven.
10. The bourgeoisie, during its rule of scarce one hundred years, has created more massive and more colossal productive forces than have all preceding generations together.
Hints: 8 of the 10 authors also write blogs.
I tag:
John McKay
Peggy Kolm
Tom Levenson
Dr.Isis
Carl Zimmer
Brian Switek
Honor system – refrain from Google for 24 hours. Post your best guesses in the comments. I will post the solutions to the riddle in 24 hours in the comments here.

The Best of November

For those of you too busy to read this blog daily and who did not have time to check out each of 233 posts I published on this blog in November, here is a sampling of some of the posts you may like to check out now:
Spring Forward, Fall Back – should you watch out tomorrow morning?
Semlin Judenlager
I have voted. Have you?
Roosevelts on Toilets
Transition and the new Cabinet
Post-election thoughts
Republicans? Who’s that?
The Science Blog Meme
Will there be new communication channels in the Obama administration?
The map is in the bag, but the sequence may yet reveal if kangaroos have jumping genes
Science by press release – you are doing it wrong
Advice for potential graduate students
Obama’s Transition
Mining the Web for the patterns in the Real World
Science and Science Fiction
What is wrong with the picture?
Why does Impact Factor persist most strongly in smaller countries
The Open Laboratory 2008 – you have 34 hours left!
Twilight

What’s wrong with Google Blogsearch?

Checking one’s incoming links on Sitemeter, Technorati and Google Blogsearch is essential tool for a blogger – it allows one to notice responses to one’s posts in approximately real time, so the blog-to-blog conversation can continue fluently.
But, for a couple of weeks now, Google Blogsearch has been useless. They have changed the algorithm so, instead of picking up only links from individual blog posts, it picks up links from all sorts of widgets, blogrolls, etc. and thus floods the search with tons of useless hits. I have no idea who just posted a blog response to something I said, and who just updated the blog and the blogroll got updated with it.
This is more than useless. Anyone at Google listening? I am sure they must be flooded with protest messages! How hard it would be to revert to the old algorithm while working on a better one behind the scenes?

The summary of the Science Blogging Meme

Martin Fenner started it all, so Martin also put together a summary of most frequent, most interesting and funniest responses. Take a look.
And here is the Worldle summary of the Question #1 and here for Question #2.

Why Blog? Science Online Students Answer (video)

2008 Edublog Awards – time to start nominations

This is what you need to do:

2008 Nominations Contact Form
In order to nominate blogs for the 2008 Edublog Awards you have to link to them first!
So, follow these two simple steps to nominate (nominations made without links or without correct submission will not be counted)
1. Write a post on your blog linking to a. The 2008 Nomination page & b The blogs & sites that you want to nominate (must be linked to!)
You can nominate for as many categories as you like, but only one nomination per category, and not yourself 🙂 You can nominate a blog (or site) for more than one category)
2. Use the form below to contact us, please include a genuine email address (spam free, just in case we need to confirm identity) and the link to your nominations post.

1. Best individual blog
Using Blogs in Science Education
2. Best group blog
Extreme Biology
3. Best new blog
4. Best resource sharing blog
Discovering Biology in a Digital World
5. Most influential blog post
THE MACGYVER PROJECT: GENOMIC DNA EXTRACTION AND GEL ELECTROPHORESIS EXPERIMENTS USING EVERYDAY MATERIALS
6. Best teacher blog
Endless Forms Most Beautiful
7. Best librarian / library blog
Confessions of a Science Librarian
8. Best educational tech support blog
Class Blogmeister
9. Best elearning / corporate education blog
SciVee.tv
10. Best educational use of audio
Connect Learning, with David Warlick
11. Best educational use of video / visual
B(io)log(y) Videos & Slideshows
12. Best educational wiki
Miss Baker’s Biology Class Wiki
13. Best educational use of a social networking service
Principles of Biology
14. Best educational use of a virtual world
Drexel Island on Second Life
15. Best class blog
Extreme Biology
16. Lifetime achievement
David Warlick
I can’t suggest my own blog, and I don’t think it is that great (mostly a way to get my notes up online and students can add comments, links, questions….) – but if you are interested, here it is.
Now go and do the same thing.

Donation drive hits the number 10!

The online drive has already produced 10 donors. Let’s see if we can up that number a little….

National Day of Listening

StoryCorps is declaring November 28, 2008 the first annual National Day of Listening:

This holiday season, ask the people around you about their lives — it could be your grandmother, a teacher, or someone from the neighborhood. By listening to their stories, you will be telling them that they matter and they won’t ever be forgotten. It may be the most meaningful time you spend this year.

Open Game Table

Inspired by The Open Laboratory, the Gamers in the blogosphere are planning to do something similar – the Open Game Table.
If you are a gaming blogger, take a look and participate….

‘Academeology’ review in Nature

Peggy Kolm wrote a book review in Nature of Academeology by Female Science Professor.
My copy arrived some weeks ago, but it will have to wait until I read at least three other books I promised to review….eh. Anyway, Peggy says:

FSP’s stories of being a woman in a male-dominated field are engrossing. She describes the casual sexism, such as being ignored or treated as a secretary by visiting scientists, or having male colleagues comment that she received an award “because she is a woman”. These tales might be disheartening to some. But FSP also relates her successes as a scientist and in navigating difficulties as one half of a scientist couple who began her academic career with a young child. Never claiming that her experiences are universal or that her path has been easy, FSP shows that it is possible to have both a career as a scientist and a life outside of science.

The Millionth Comment Winner is….

….drumroll….
Peggy Kolm! You can find Peggy on Biology in Science Fiction and Women in Science blogs.
The prize is a trip to NYCity, a brunch with bloggers, museum trips, lab tours and a big SciBlings-made gift basket.
Congratulations!

What’s New in Life Science Research

Scienceblogs.com is…

…hosting a limited-run group blog called What’s New in Life Science Research, which will cover four separate topics in biotechnology: stem cells, cloning, biodefense, and genetically modified organisms. The blog is sponsored by Invitrogen, but like the Shell-sponsored Next Generation Energy blog, the bloggers (including our own Janet Stemwedel and Mike the Mad Biologist) will have complete editorial control over the content of their posts – we will merely provide questions about each topic to guide the conversation.

Go forth and comment….

Public Intellectuals R Us – Discuss….

Daniel Drezner: Public Intellectual 2.0:

“…..The pessimism about public intellectuals is reflected in attitudes about how the rise of the Internet in general, and blogs in particular, affects intellectual output. Alan Wolfe claims that “the way we argue now has been shaped by cable news and Weblogs; it’s all ‘gotcha’ commentary and attributions of bad faith. No emotion can be too angry and no exaggeration too incredible.” David Frum complains that “the blogosphere takes on the scale and reality of an alternative world whose controversies and feuds are … absorbing.” David Brooks laments, “People in the 1950s used to earnestly debate the role of the intellectual in modern politics. But the Lionel Trilling authority figure has been displaced by the mass class of blog-writing culture producers.”
But these critics fail to recognize how the growth of blogs and other forms of online writing has partially reversed a trend that many cultural critics have decried — what Russell Jacoby called the “professionalization and academization” of public intellectuals. In fact, the growth of the blogosphere breaks down — or at least erodes — the barriers erected by a professionalized academy.
Most of the obituaries for the public intellectual suffer from the cognitive bias and conceptual fuzziness that come from comparing the annals of history to the present day……
————————–
….The proliferation of blogs reverses those trends in several ways. Blogs have facilitated the rise of a new class of nonacademic intellectuals. Writing a successful blog has provided a launching pad for aspiring writers to obtain jobs from general-interest magazines. The premier general-interest magazines and journals in the country either sponsor individual bloggers or have developed their own in-house blogs.
For academics aspiring to be public intellectuals, blogs allow networks to develop that cross the disciplinary and hierarchical strictures of academe. Provided one can write jargon-free prose, a blog can attract readers from all walks of life — including, most importantly, people beyond the ivory tower. (The distribution of traffic and links in the blogosphere is highly skewed, and academics and magazine writers make up a fair number of the most popular bloggers.) Indeed, because of the informal and accessible nature of the blog format, citizens will tend to view academic bloggers that they encounter online as more accessible than would be the case in a face-to-face interaction, increasing the likelihood of a fruitful exchange of views about culture, criticism, and politics with individuals whom academics might not otherwise meet. Furthermore, as a longtime blogger, I can attest that such interactions permit one to play with ideas in a way that is ill suited for more-academic publishing venues. A blog functions like an intellectual fishing net, catching and preserving the embryonic ideas that merit further time and effort.
Perhaps the most-useful function of bloggers, however, is when they engage in the quality control of other public intellectuals. Posner believes that public intellectuals are in decline because there is no market discipline for poor quality. Even if public intellectuals royally screw up, he argues, the mass public is sufficiently uninterested and disengaged for it not to matter. Bloggers are changing that dynamic, however. If Michael Ignatieff, Paul Krugman, or William Kristol pen substandard essays, blogs have and will provide a wide spectrum of critical feedback…..”

Robert Cottrell: Isaiah, chapter 100:

…….The term “public intellectual” gained currency 20 years ago, describing a writer or academic who commanded public notice, especially when accepted as an authority in many fields. There was nothing new about such “brand-extension” in the humanities. Like Plato, Goethe or Berlin, writers and philosophers had long drifted in and out of public view, holding forth on life in general. But when nuclear weapons, environmentalism and genetics began to perturb Western public opinion in the 1960s, so more scientists followed Albert Einstein out of the academy and into the public arena. Richard Feynman, James Watson and Jacob Bronowski produced bestselling books without diluting their reputations. Freeman Dyson and Steven Weinberg wrote regularly for the New York Review of Books. Noam Chomsky’s left-wing politics eclipsed his scholarly work in linguistics……….
———————————-
……But the rise of blogs has greatly enlarged and confused the market. A disparager would say that anybody can be a blogger, and anything can be a blog: is this not proof of low standards? And yet, top bloggers include academics and commentators whose work would qualify them as public intellectuals by any traditional measure–for example, Tyler Cowen, Daniel Drezner, James Fallows, Steven Levitt, Lawrence Lessig and Andrew Sullivan. Indeed, it seems fair to say that if you have the quick wit and the pithy turn of phrase traditionally needed to succeed as a public intellectual, then you are one of nature’s bloggers. If you cannot quite imagine Berlin posting to Twitter, then think how well he would put, say, Hannah Arendt in her place, on bloggingheads.tv……
——————————-
….Whatever their provenance, the public intellectuals of 2009 will want to be fluent in the obvious issues of the moment: environment and energy, market turmoil, China, Russia, Islam. On that basis it looks like another good year for established stars such as Thomas Friedman, Martin Wolf, Bjorn Lomborg and Minxin Pei. But a rising generation of bloggers is terrifyingly young and bright: expect to hear more from Ezra Klein, Megan McArdle, Will Wilkinson and Matthew Yglesias.

Daniel Drezner: Trapped in a recursive loop on public intellectuals:

Of course, the really funny thing about this is that Klein, McArdle, Wilkinson and Yglesias all dwarf my traffic flows.

Finally succumbed….

….to Twitter

How rumors spread….

NYTimes:

Eliminating daylight time would thus accord with President-elect Barack Obama’s stated goals of conserving resources, saving money, promoting energy security and reducing climate change.

Eugene Sandhu:

In order to conserve energy, President-elect Barak Obama should eliminate daylight saving time.

Boing Boing:

President-elect Obama wants to get rid of daylight saving time in the United States to conserve energy.

The game of broken telephones? Or lack of reading comprehension, or just wishful thinking? I though we were the Reality-Based Community.
More….

Perhaps they should ask Ted Stevens about a series of tubes…

The geriatric leaders of the government of Italy are making fools of themselves by trying to regulate bloggers, i.e., get them to register with the government, pay taxes, be liable for what they write, etc.:

The law’s impact would turn all bloggers in Italy into potential outlaws. This could be great for their traffic, I realise, but hell on the business aspirations of an Italian web start-up, not to mention any tech company that wants to sell its blog-publishing software in Italy, or open a social network here. In addition to driving out potential tech jobs, the stifling of free speech also can have a dramatic chilling effect on all forms of free expression, the arts and scholarship.

Or, to keep it simple:

Only someone who is utterly clueless on how the internet works, or even what it is, could come up with such an idea.

Will there be new communication channels in the Obama administration?

There is quite a lot of chatter around the intertubes about changes in the communication environment that happened between the last and this election and how those changes may be affecting the way the new White House communicates to people as well as how the new White House will receive communications from the people.
A lot of people are impatient – they want to see everything in place right this moment. Easy, guys! The inauguration is on January 20th. Until that time, Bush is the President and the Obama communications folks have time to think through, design and implement communication channels that we will definitely NOT see until the inauguration or a little bit later. So, you can pore over Change.org all you want in search for hints of the future, but it is unlikely you will see anything truly informative until January 20th at the earliest.
But in the meantime, speculation abounds.
This NYTimes article lays down the arguments pro and con (and check out the FriendFeed discussion as well – quite telling to see how some techie folks do not understand this is not a technological problem at all).
The problem is this: if a President says or writes something that is recordable – and technology is irrelevant, it could be handwriting, a magnetophone or an 8-track – it can be subpoenad by Congress. The article explores the tensions between the need for a President to have confidentiality about important matters of the state, and the need to open up new mode of communications fit for the 21st century mindset of the Facebook generation (Note: “facebook generation” has nothing to do with the actual Facebook site, or with a particular age – it is a frequently-used shorthand term for a mindset of continuity and openness in communication).
This is why Bush stopped using e-mail the day he became the President. Everything that the President says or writes becomes official record. New technology allows one to communicate too much and too informally. Chatting with friends over e-mail becomes a potential liability for the officials of such high ranking.
What is new is that Obama is the first President with that “facebook generation” mindset of constant, open communication, as opposed to a bubble-boy, smoke-filled back-rooms, secretive types that the previous 43 Presidents were. The laws, customs and trappings of his new job are going to be conflicting with his modern instincts towards openness. And people are starting to talk about a potential need to alter these out-dated laws in order to allow Obama to lead a more transparent government.
We shall see what actually happens, but we can expect, at least until/unless there are legal changes, that all the e-mailing will be done by staffers and not Obama himself. He is also going to be the first President in history to keep a laptop on the Oval Office desk (doesn’t this sound quaint?)! He will likely use the computer not to broadcast or communicate anything himself, but only to get informed (perhaps via an RSS Feed).
Another confusion in online chatter about potentially new communication is that people do not make a distinction between centrifugal (broadcasting, outwards) communication and centripetal (listening, inwards) communication.
The best example is probably this Slate article. I think Disckerson is confused. The new Prez will experiment with a number of new ways to communicate. Some of it is inside out, some is outside in. Posting the radio address on YouTube is the part of inside out. It is not the only tool and should not be looked at in isolation. Yes, it is part of his PR, but it is targeted to a set of people who past Presidents did not and could not reach: exactly the same people who are the most likely to use OTHER channels of communication to talk back to him. What Dickerson did in this text was sorta like focusing on a Food Chain and not seeing the Food Web (or forest for the trees, choose your own metaphor) – a lack of ecological thinking by a member of an old media class that thinks too linearly.
Brian Solis has collected probably some of the best ideas on the entire issue, and you should also read the various links and ideas in Josh Bernoff’s post and Lidija Davis’ post.
Obama’s first radio address was also filmed. The movie was posted on Change.org, and also on YouTube:

People like Dan Farber and Allen Stern are worried about favouritism – why YouTube and not other video services? Answer: if the only place they place a video is Change.org, then someone else will put it on YouTube, perhaps edited, with open comments, who knows what else. By posting it on YouTube themselves, the Obama comms folks are putting a degree of control over the message. In the next few months, they may decide to do the same on several other video-hosting services. This was just the first address, and YouTube, being such an 6000lbs gorilla (or is it an elephant in the room?), is the obvious place to go and test the waters first before embarking on a more ambitious program.
Also, a more ambitious program requires building the communications team. Which requires hiring people, including a Chief Conversation Officer, perhaps this guy (or me – I can do it, that’s my job right now anyway). That process has just started. People like Secretary of State are much more important positions to fill first. So, have some patience….

The Science Blog Meme

The meme started here, so if you decide to do it yourself, please post a link to that as well (so your post can be tracked).
A number of people have already posted their responses – some quite thought-provoking – so take your time to read them and reflect. Then write your own.
See responses by:
Eva Amsen
Henry Gee
Clare Dudman
Steffi Suhr
Stephen Curry
Martin Fenner
Massimo Pinto
Larry Moran
Kristi Vogel
Maxine Clarke
T. Ryan Gregory
Mike Haubrich
John Wilkins
Paulo Nuin
Heather Etchevers
Lee Turnpenny
Ricardo Vidal
Bob O’Hara
Andrew Perry
Pedro Beltrao
Shirley Wu
Deepak Singh
Thomas Soderqvist
Duncan Hull
Nils Reinton
Now, my responses:
1. What is your blog about?
I wish I knew! Everything and anything that strikes my interest: science, meta-science, politics, the Web, media, education, funny cartoons, cute animal pictures, etc. It used to be different – I had three blogs: one about politics, one about chronobiology, one about education. Now it is all mixed up.
2. What will you never write about?
About stuff people don’t want to see publicized – personal gossip, for instance, or confidential information.
About various aspects of my own personal and family life, though “nobody cares what you had for breakfast” is not true – several of my blogfriends are food bloggers and they get excited if I eat something interesting, take a picture and post it on my blog.
About yet-to-be-published, embargoed papers that I routinely read as a part of my job.
3. Have you ever considered leaving science?
Leaving research – yes, I already did that. Leaving science – never. Being a scientist is a mindset, not a profession, so: once a scientist, always a scientist.
4. What would you do instead?
Sleep all day. I already do three science-related things that excite me: I work for PLoS, trying to revolutionize the world of publishing; I blog at scienceblogs.com, trying to make blogging respectable; and I teach BIO101 to adults, trying to change minds one person at a time. But I could have been a veterinarian, or a zookeeper, or an animal trainer in a circus, or a horse trainer, or a farmer, or an architect – too late to switch to any of those alternative career paths.
5. What do you think will science blogging be like in 5 years?
Five years is about a millennium in the Web world, so predictions at such long timescales are almost certain to be wrong. A blog is just a platform – a piece of software. A science blog is whatever the author wants it to be (there is no one true way to be a science blogger). So, scientists and people interested in science will use the platform (or something like it) in the future, but exactly how – nobody can predict. A lot of the original use for blogs – the linkfests and brief communication – has now moved to services like Twitter and FriendFeed, but the blog will remain important for longer, more thoughtful pieces that cannot be reduced to 140 characters.
6. What is the most extraordinary thing that happened to you because of blogging?
Lots and lots of good things – meeting and befriending a lot of interesting people; getting invited to SciFoo, to Science FEST in Trieste and some other cool meetings; getting a job with PLoS in the comments of one of my posts; organizing 3 science blogging conferences and editing 3 science blogging anthologies (and getting media interviews about them), etc.
7. Did you write a blog post or comment you later regretted?
Thousands! My posts are clogging the intertubes and will eventually cause a global Internet heart attack! But joking aside, yes, especially early on when I wrote mostly about politics and got into heated arguments with other people – that was a waste of time more than anything else. Also, try googling my name – it is all over the internets, so I will never get a job with the Obama administration 😉
8. When did you first learn about science blogging?
I was already blogging about politics first. Some aspects of politics are related to science, e.g, science policy, climate change, creationists’ shenanigans, etc. So that is how I bumped into Chris Mooney’s Intersection. At the time, there were very few science blogs in existence, and all ten of them were on Chris’ blogroll, including Deltoid, Pharyngula, Panda’s Thumb, Cosmic Variance, Bad Astronomy, etc. I went from there….started ‘Circadiana’ and the rest is history.
9. What do your colleagues at work say about your blogging?
At PLoS – that’s what they are paying me for and I hope they are happy.
At Seed – that’s what they are paying me for and I hope they are happy.
Where I teach – occasionally a student discovers my blog before the course is over, usually with a positive attitude. I also use blogging software as a teaching tool there.
People in my old department – What is a blog? Why would anyone read one person’s writings? (ask Shakespeare that question next time).
10. Extra credit: are you able to write an entry to your blog that takes the form of a poem about your research?
No!

Do the blog survey

There are two large and influential annual blogosphere surveys – one done by Technorati, and the other one by Blogads.
Henry Copeland has just started the (fourth?) annual Blogads survey. More people respond and more diverse the responders, more representative and trustworthy their data will be.
So, I encourage you to spend the next 12 minutes filling up their survey.
I guess there will be some more information about it on the survey blog later on.

Have you voted for Brian yet?

That is, for Brian Switek, scienceblogger extraordinaire? If not, do it now. Takes just a second.

We can haz Not Exactly Rockit Science?

Yes, we can!
My SciBling Ed Yong has collected some of his best posts from the last year and published them as a book. Yes, I already bought a copy for myself. And you should, too – just order it here.
Ed says:

I started Not Exactly Rocket Science as a way of reaching out to people with no specialist knowledge and only a passing interest in science. The book is meant to help draw in people who don’t really read blogs so if you have any friends who are interested in science, why not tell them about it or buy them a copy in time for Christmas?

Carl Zimmer wrote a blurb:

“Few blogs make a smooth transition from computer to paper. Not Exactly Rocket Science is one of them. Ed Yong writes elegantly yet engagingly about all manner of biology, from yawning dogs to viruses of viruses. Turn off the laptop for a while, and crack open this book. You will be pleased you did.”

Buy the book here.

2008 Blogging Scholarship Finalists

Go here right now and vote for Brian.

The Goddess has landed

Some people say that Scienceblogs.com is all godless crowd. But no, it can’t be – we have and worship our own Goddess! Yes, Goddess Isis has moved in here (from here to here) this morning. Go bow at her feet.

Why crash an internet poll?

Simon Owens just published a nice article on PBS’ MediaShift about crashing internet polls. My SciBlings PZ Myers and Greg Laden were interviewed for the article and have said some smart things with which I agree.

Roosevelts on Toilets

Poop%20on%20the%20Potty.jpg
If you are wondering why I posted this picture and what it all (including the title of this post) means, you need to read the comment threads on these posts:
The Transition to Daylight Savings Time and the Risk of Myocardial Infarction
The Response from Janszky and Ljung — Dr. Isis Defends the Blogosphere
What is ‘the normal way to debate and discuss scientific findings’ anyway?
Spring Forward, Fall Back – should you watch out tomorrow morning?
Notes of importance
Bora is the Most Brilliant Man Ever and I Love Him
Pseudonimity, scientific criticism and respect on the blogs…
Discourse give me hives
The Pseudonymity Laboratory: When Authors and Bloggers Collide
Letter to the Editor as a mechanism of post-publication scientific discussion
Cadres vertueux
Update – there’s more:
On Caricature
Getting the roles of blogs and journals straight
Bring in da light, bring in da snark
On the Need for Women to Defend Women in Science…

Power of the online community?

Let’s see if social web services can be used for the science and research causes? Please read: MacBook for me – the power of Web!
I’d like to see her use that MacBook when she comes to ScienceOnline09 in January….

The Best of October

The monthly recap of posts I liked, but you may have missed. Lotsa politics, understandably, but not all – I did manage to post some other cool stuff as well. Where are the SuperReaders when one needs them?!
From Telecommuting to Coworking
Bloggers at the Zoo – movies #10
Offal is Good
Wikipedia, just like an Organism: clock genes wiki pages
Politics of Animal Protection
What insect is this?
Carrboro Citizen – a model for the newspaper of the future
The Nobel Prize conundrum
Open Access Day – the blog posts
And the Winner is…..!
Quick ConvergeSouth08 recap
Obama-McCain race – a Serbian parallel lesson?
Clay Shirky: It’s Not Information Overload. It’s Filter Failure.
Smoke Signals, Blogs, and the Future of Politics
Publishing and Communicating Science
Palin, autism and fruitflies – it does not add up
Lawrence Lessig for Copyright Czar!
Small Town Fear Itself – the Zombie Attack!
Information vs. Knowledge vs. Expertise
In today’s ‘Guardian’
Reading Recommendation for today
Atheists – the last U.S. minority that can be openly maligned without consequence
Open Laboratory 2008 – just one month left for your entries!

A month for writing

Choose one:
NaNoWriMo
InaDWriMo
NaBloPoMo
Then sit down and write something every day – a novel, an academic piece, or a blog post.

UnderTheMicroscope

ScienceWoman gives us a heads-up on a new and interesting organization – UnderTheMicroscope.com:

The Feminist Press with IBM have just launched UnderTheMicroscope.com, a new site to involve young women in science and to encourage them to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering and math. The site is part of the Women Writing Science, a project initiated by The Feminist Press at the City University of New York and funded by the National Science Foundation.
The site features personal stories of women scientists, role models, and mentors; tips for parents and teachers; links to related women and science sites; videos; and networking. Some of these features are available now, and others will come later this year as noted in the press release below

On the website they have also started a promising-looking blog.

Survey on science blogging

Tamara Fletcher is currently studying science communication at the University of Queensland. As part of her course she is conducting a research project under the supervision of Dr Joan Leach from the School of English, Media Studies and Art History and she needs your help:

The form of the project is a short survey and analysis of scientists’ perceptions of scientific blogging. As your participation in science blogging suggests you are aware, it is important to explore as blogging has the potential to act as a medium for two-way dialogue between scientists and the public, without intermediaries such as professional communicators or journalists, and is an ever growing area of communication
.
Many possible factors contribute to how blogging is perceived. The way in which scientists perceive science blogs the will ultimately determine the use of this medium as a mainstream tool of science communication.
As such I am seeking science bloggers (as well as academic staff and graduate students in various schools in science at UQ) to complete the short survey, at the following url:
http://www.surveymethods.com/EndUser.aspx?9DB9D5CA9DDECACA
Its really important to be able to compare and contrast bloggers and non-bloggers, and as such I would be especially grateful to anyone at scienceblogs.com who can give up <10 minutes of their time to complete the survey.

So, if you are a science blogger, please do the survey – it is really short and fast. Just click on “scienceblogs.com” when given the choices at the beginning.

The currently most popular independent political websites

The latest press release from ComScore – Huffington Post and Politico Lead Wave of Explosive Growth at Independent Political Blogs and News Sites this Election Season – has all sorts of interesting statistics about relative traffic, etc., of the top independent (i.e., unaffiliated with MSM) websites and blogs. One tidbit I found particularly interesting:

Looking at the demographic profiles for the top three sites, HuffingtonPost.com, Politico.com and DrudgeReport.com, one can conclude that visitors to these sites tend to be older, wealthier, and more likely to be male than the average U.S. Internet user.
Of the three sites, Politico.com skewed the oldest with 23 percent of its visitors age 55 and older, while DrudgeReport.com skewed wealthiest, with 40 percent of its visitors earning at least $100,000 a year, and had the highest concentration of males at 57 percent. HuffingtonPost.com, the site with the largest audience, was the most similar of the three when compared to the overall U.S. Internet audience.

Politico.com has the most old-timey look, DrudgeReport.com is read by the DC circle-jerk including the MSM pundits who were duped into thinking that Drudge is trustworthy (and I am glad to see it slipping down), and Huffington Post is a mix of some of the best opinion with some of the worst that one can find on the Left – blatant sexism (especially towards Palin), anti-vaccination woo, animal rights crap, New Age medical quackery and such – not a place I visit often as it represents the worst of the Left (and exposes that not everyone who is liberal is actually a member of the Reality Community).
Glad to see that Talkingpointsmemo.com, Crooksandliars.com and Fivethirtyeight.com are high and rising – that is some of the best New Journalism out there.

Smoke Signals, Blogs, and the Future of Politics

Smoke Signals, Blogs, and the Future of PoliticsThis I first posted on June 24, 2004 on http://www.jregrassroots.org, then republished on August 23, 2004 on Science And Politics. I love re-posting this one every now and then, just to check how much the world has changed. What do you think? Was I too rosy-eyed? Prophetic?

Continue reading

If you are relatively new here….

…you may not know that you can also find me on:
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College Blogging Scholarship

Remember the College Blogging Scholarship? The one that Shelley almost won two years in a row? Well, it is happening again. The prize is $10,000. The deadline for submission is very tight – October 30th 2008, so you need to hurry up.
Among else, you need to know that each entrant has to be:
# U.S. citizen or permanent resident;
# Currently attending full-time in post-secondary education in the United States;
If you are an undergraduate or graduate student, sign up. If you read and like a blogger who is a student, sign her/him up.
Of course, I would like to see a science blogger win this time.
Brian Switek has already applied.
I have no idea how the panel of judges will determine who the finalists will be, but I assume that multiple nominations may help. So, nominate Brian again.
And, since there is no limitation to only one nomination, think of others. I am about to go and nominate Brian again, and also Anne-Marie Hodge (see her interview) and Samia.
Anyone else?
And if one of our science blogging nominees makes it into the finals, we can all support that person by voting and asking friends to vote.
Go to the submission form for the College Blogging Scholarship now!

Clay Shirky: It’s Not Information Overload. It’s Filter Failure.

Quick ConvergeSouth08 recap

I am back from the 4th ConvergeSouth, the do-not-miss Greensboro conference about the Web, blogging, journalism and community (and the model/inspiration for our own science blogging conferences, including the third one) . Big kudos to Sue Polinsky, Ed Cone and the cast of thousands for putting together the meeting again, making it better and better every year. And of course, thanks to Dave Hoggard for hosting the legendary BBQ with (even more legendary) banana pudding.
I rode to Greensboro with Kirk Ross and came back home with Anton Zuiker, having interesting conversations with each.
Dave Slusher and I found a common interest beside blogging – animal domestication!
Pam Spaulding was on two panels, and did a great job liveblogging the conference. Melody Watson also has interesting thoughts on it all.
At the BBQ, Anton and I talked with Anil Dash (also here) whose SixApart runs MoveableType which is the platform on which scienceblogs.com is hosted. Of course, scienceblogs.com is a complex site, with much more than just a bunch of blogs, and Anil gave kudos to Tim, the tech guru of Seed, for his amazing ability to build, fix and run our platform. We also talked about the ability of the blogosphere to effect change (e.g., in Washington). Something Anil said in a panel discussion lit a lightbulb in my head. He said that until about two years ago or so, it was very unusual for a Congressman or a Senator to receive many phone calls from the constituents. But with blogs (either big blogs like DailyKos or lots of smaller blogs acting in unison), this changed. Suddenly, the blogs can turn the ‘on switch’ and send thousands of people to ring the phone in the offices on The Hill – something for which the offices are not prepared. Instead of a few letters, or some e-mails, suddenly, for a day or two, the phone is ringing off the hook and prevents all other business from getting done over the phone. This is an element of surprise to them and thus they tend to sit up and listen! This may explain why the blogosphere-wide action to defeat PRISM was so successful (and it was so thoroughly defeated that the ridicule even outside of science blogs was widespread). I heard that SPARC got a number of call from various senatorial offices, pretty much saying “call off the dogs, we got it, we understand the issue now and will vote Yes, and please, we need to use the phones again!” As a result, despite being voted on twice (Bush vetoed the bill the first time around), the NIH mandate language remained unaltered and the bill became the law.
After the initial talk by Chris Rabb and the morning panel, I first went to a session on Social Networking for Bloggers led by Kelby Carr. That was quite an interesting discussion about do’s and dont’s of social networking behavior, etiquette, dividing personal from professional, etc. It fed nicely to what someone at the closing panel said (and I’ve been saying for a long time) – that in the age of the Web, the criteria for ‘proper behavior’ for getting a job or running for office will change, as the Facebook generation takes over, knowing that everyone has drunk pictures on Facebook and that it is OK, so let’s look at what really matters about the person, not such superficalities that insult old puritanical norms stemming from the times when such behavior, while ubiquitous, could be safely hidden from the public. Soon enough, we can stop pretending to be mortally insulted that someone, gasp, had a beer at a college party or did/said something silly or stupid at some time in the past.
My own session was small – but that was good. Those who came were interested in the science side of things, so I could quickly dispose of the more general stuff about people being active on Facebook, twitter, FriendFeed or blogs, and focus more on commenting behavior (and specifically psychological barriers to commenting) on science-related content online, be it science posts on blogs or peer-reviewed papers. I got a lot of useful feedback on this which may help me both here on the blog and at work on PLoS.
Next, I went to hear Kirk Ross on “Slow News”. As you already know, I am a big fan of Carrboro Citizen and the concept that guides its publishing model. While the panic – “OMG! The newspapers are dying!” – may well apply to large metro, state and national papers, the small, hyperlocal newspapers are doing just fine and will probably continue to do so. I am constantly online, constantly scouting for news – about science, science publishing, U.S. electoral politics, Serbia, etc. – which is a ‘pull’ model. I am interested in particular topics and actively search for them at places I trust. Thus, I may be missing something interesting which is outside of the realm of topics I actively look for. This includes news about the happenings in my own town and neighborhood (if I spent less time online and more walking the streets, I may get such news the old, from-the-horses-mouth way). For this, I need to occasionally succumb to the ‘push’ model, which I do every Thursday when I go to La Vita Dolce, get a mocha (‘Bora’s style, please’), sit back and enjoy the new edition of Carrboro Citizen. I learn which cool plant is in bloom right now, what is the controversial issue at the Town Hall this week, what is going on at my kids’ school, and what the candidates for local elections are saying. And it is all written with no rush (digest the news first, don’t rush to print) and no heed for the he-said-she-said false-equivalence mode of journalism that has been poisoning the A.S. media for decades. See, for instance, this editorial from this week’s edition (this is just the ending paragraph – read the entire thing – well worth your time):
For The Record:

This has not been lost on many. In fact, in a recent local candidate forum, a member of the GOP — yes, there are a few here in Orange County — acknowledged that it appears there are programs or missions where government actually does a better job than the private sector. Such acknowledgements are rare, but increasing. It will take years, though, for the poison injected into our political discourse to be metabolized. People will still rail about big government and taxes. But there’s a difference between pushing back in order to insist on efficiency, transparency and fairness and simply attracting the system for ideological or political gain.
In a recent New York Times column, Thomas Friedman recalled Oliver Wendell Holmes remark that “I like paying taxes. With them I am buying civilization.”
We’re a far cry from that sentiment but perhaps a little closer to understanding the role of government and how dangerous it is to entrust the whole of civilization solely to those out to profit from it.

Now, if you are a partisan Democrat you will love this piece, if you are a partisan Republican, you will hate it. But if you are unbiased in any way, you will recognize that the piece has no ideological axe to grind – it is a mix of stuff you should have learned in high school Civics and what you have learned in college freshman Economics 101, plus recent statements from the two presidential campaigns. It provides you a baseline expert consensus on what the Reality is, so you can compare the party platforms, proposals and rhetoric to the Reality and decide for yourself which party tends to better consult with Reality when designing their campaign promises, i.e., this is how journalism should be committed.
The final panel compared the roles of the Web and technology between the 2004 and 2008 elections. The two-way communication between campaign and volunteers in real time, texting, ads on games, real-time updates of the voter databases – none of those were possible in 2004, but are ably used by the Obama campaign this year (McCain campaign is relying mainly on old-style techniques: nasty robocalls, racist flyers, and negative TV and radio ads). But the main difference between the two years is video – as soon as someone does or says something on TV or a campaign event, it immediately shows up on YouTube for everyone to see. The video of the ‘macaca’ moment that millions saw in 2006 did not so much show Sen. Allen as a racist as much as a jerk – someone you do not want to vote for. The videos this year are really making the opinions change – when you see the behavior of supporters at McCain/Palin rallies, when you watch the racist, dishonest and nasty ads they are putting out, when you watch the conventions and debates (and important moments from them), when you watch Obama’s rallies, ads and speeches in contrast, when you watch GOP operatives openly lying on TV, and you watch all of that over and over again – it is easy to make up your mind.
Finally, it was so much fun meeting and chatting with Ginny Skalski and Wayne Sutton (of 30Threads), Matt Gross, Lenore Ramm, Heather Solos (you can find her here, here and here), Dan Conover and Janet Edens, Jim Buie, Robert Scoble, Ruby Sinreich, Nancy Shepherd, Lauren Polinsky, Dennis Meredith, Donna Fryer, Ilina Ewen, Vera Hannaford, Jay Ovittore, Andrea Novicki and many others.
You can see more pictures from ConvergeSouth here and more discussions here. See you all next year – same time, same place.

ConvergeSouth08

Back from ConvergeSouth. Energized but exhausted. Time for bed. Forgot I had a camera with me so I only had one picture taken – this one, with Robert Scoble and myself, trying to make the FriendFeed logo with our fingers:
Bora%20and%20Scoble%20at%20ConvergeSouth.jpg
More ConvergeSouth microblogging on FriendFeed can be found here.