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February 28, 2006

But wait, he wrote it anyway

Boing Boing: Montreal airport denies electricity to laptop users:
Cory Doctorow, muckraking journalist...(emphasis mine)

I'd just spent £13 on WiFi, so I kept arguing, demanding that they give me a quote I could publish in a magazine column about their policy...

or blogging bully? This sounds very much like "do you know who I write for?" How much trouble would a NYT reporter get in if he/she started throwing their weight around like this? Can you say "fired?" Yet another fine meritocracy difference....

February 21, 2006

InfoRooter - laden with shit.

Attention Thieves | Steve Gillmor's InfoRouter | ZDNet.com:
Well, Steve Shillmore has outdone himself, crushing his past standard of sheer naked hackery to well, atoms, with his latest "article" which crassly abandons any pretense to argument in favor of coy advocacy so lacking in the balls to say anything outright that it calls to mind the great "funky feed" compulsion of syndication shitfests past. This is truly a journalistic achievement - brown-nosing so blatant that it may actually be self-disclosing. Bravo.

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February 8, 2006

Next up: citizen surgeons

Techdirt:The Real Estate Dot Com Bubble? (emphasis mine):

The article suggests that their business model is to sell ads, but it seems like they'd need to sell an awful lot of advertising to make this worthwhile -- and seeing the reaction of some real estate agents in the article (who seem to think only they can accurately determine a home's value), this may be an uphill battle.

Finally citizen appraisers will be able to make estimation transparent and a conversation, instead of leaving it in the hands of the real estate priesthood. MSREA (mainstream real estate appraisal) as we know it is doomed, a dinosaur.

Update: Well as usual, Jarvis buys into this hook, line and sinker and comes pretty close to seriously saying what I've snarked here. You'll notice, though, that he didn't go to a "citizen doctor" for his ablation - oh, content to leave the doctoring in the hands of the medical priesthood, eh?

February 2, 2006

Where I've Been

I've been coming back up for air gradually, and I realize that I've been posting with a frequency that could be most charitably described as sporadic. There's been quite a few reasons for this, and usually they're none of your damn business, but I thought I'd make an exception just this once.

The past few months have been very difficult. In late October I got a call informing me that my father had been suddenly hospitalized, and without going into too much detail, there were other very disturbing circumstances behind that. This proved to be disruptive in many ways necessitating my shuttling back and forth between RI and NY on a weekly basis. I was losing income from my job; they were very understanding about my absences, even though I had switched to part-time status at the beginning of October.

But another big change in my life was disrupted as well. I started classes this past October for state certification as a library media specialist. As I think anyone who comes to this blog not looking for panda pictures knows, I have been pretty dissatisfied with the state of the tech world, and most especially its blogging outpost, for some time now. It's just not as exciting for me anymore. Given all that has happened to me over the past couple of years, and especially given the events of the past 3 months, I can no longer muster the enthusiasm to push bits around as your standard-issue corporate developer drone. I don't have the 50-60 hour weeks in me anymore, I never did very well with the "Go team!" aspect, and I have absolutely no interest at all in management. I did that once, and it was ok, but I have no desire to sit in endless meetings with the kind of people who would put an ad on your back button if they could. Am I still interested in programming? Yes. Leaving tech has freed me up, oddly enough. I can play with lisp without worrying about whether it's marketable or not.

What pretty much sealed the deal was that my father died in early December. I had to take incompletes in 2 of my classes. There were, as there always are, a lot of issues, but what I will say here is that it made me realize the importance of the family I do have now, and most importantly the need to spend time with them rather than being unhappy in a cubicle.

A long time ago, when I was a callow youth casting about for something more stable than bartending, I was steered towards the profession of librarianship. I got a paraprofessional job in a rare books academic library, and earned my MLS part-time at night in Boston. When I hit the job market, there was nothing to be found, or I didn't know how to sell myself (never been very good at that,) or probably a combination of the two. So, having had an amateur interest in coding for a while, I went to Columbia at night, got "certified" (ha) in C programming, and it was off to the races.

But now I am ready to return to libraries. I left my last tech job 2 weeks ago. I'm working part time at my local public library, and going to classes at night again. I take my son to school every morning and pick him up every afternoon, and we are both much happier for it. I'm done with Metro-North.

As for all this blogginess, I've been debating what to do. This month marks the 6th anniversary of this blog, such as it is. I still read the yammifications of the SCAL, and they still annoy the hell out of me, but I may no longer have the energy to remark upon the Emperor's unbecoming nudity. Besides, Dave Rogers is commenting far more intelligently (and calmly) on that subject than I ever have, or probably could. I've started blogs in a couple other places, and I may start writing more there about the world of library technology, which, while it has its share of irrational techzooberance (Library 2.0), also tempers it a bit. Or so it seems. I may still keep writing here, but I feel like I'm the asshole under the long tail. But anyway.

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