Back in July 2022, Dave Winer said he never suggested people should run their own web server. However, in the last week, he tweeted a link to this post from 2015 where he says “If you’re a journalism educator, please make sure every new journalist you graduate has the ability to run a server, install blogging and river software”. Just saying…let’s be consistent…
August 2022
I love this post from Gary Teter about the Mar-A-Lago search – I laughed for days after I first read it, and it still brings a smile today!
Like Frank McPherson and Ken Smith, I have also signed up for TweetFeed. I added several of the feeds to a river of tweets I created using the Granary tool, the TweetFeed tweets definitely look cleaner in the flow. It sounds like there is more to come, so I will be watching! Dave Winer did create a tool some time ago (tweetsToRss) to create RSS feeds of tweets, here is an example river of the output from that tool.
Explainers on Donald Trump legal troubles
In an earlier post, I gave some examples of explainers (a form of journalism that provides the essential background knowledge necessary to follow events in the news). Recently, I have seen some good examples concerning Donald Trump and his legal troubles.
Axios.com – Presidential Records Act and Trump search explained
JustSecurity.org – Expert Backgrounder: Criminal Statutes that Could Apply to Trump’s Retention of Government Documents
CNN.com – Opinion: Trump is worried after FBI search — and he should be
A tale of pizza shops – then and now
When I was in college (early to mid 1980s), I remember that Domino’s Pizza’s big selling point was “Delivered in 30 minutes or it’s free”. I did not eat a lot of Domino’s, or have much pizza delivered, but I saw a lot of their ads. I don’t remember ever getting a pizza in more than 30 minutes. Another watchword was “don’t order without a coupon”. Paying full price was a pretty significant hit. Every pizza I ever got from Domino’s had a sheet of coupons glued to the top of the box, and I saved those for my future purchases. It wasn’t the greatest pizza, but it was fast.
Now, fast forward to today’s Domino’s Pizza. In my town, there is one Domino’s, along with Pizza Hut, Little Caesars, Papa Murphy’s, and a local chain, Abby’s Pizza. You can see that we are covered pretty well for pizza, and that they are all doing well. I have seen 6 cars at a time at Little Caesars waiting to get their “Hot and Ready” pizza. Anyway, this summer we have been taking advantage of ordering Domino’s Pizza online and picking it up at the store. The average order time is 20-25 minutes. Every time I have picked up pizza, and been there long enough for them to answer a phone order, they tell the person that it is a two hour wait for delivery. And some people still order the pizza! So much for fast delivery. The coupon rule is still a good one. The online site tells me how much I am saving versus the regular price (almost 50% most of the time). When someone walks up to order pizza, and doesn’t have a coupon, the “specials” that the employee tells the customer are considerably more expensive than ordering online. Oh well…some things never change. From my observations, most of the orders are online for takeout.
As a cross-check, I got some pizza from Abby’s Pizza this past week (the local chain). Before they started accepting online orders, you either had to go there or call ahead. Sometimes, I had to call up to 10 times before I could get someone on the phone (kept getting a busy signal). They are a pretty popular pizza place, and could always use a few more employees. After making my online order, I headed over to the restaurant. Their standard time for pizza orders is “ready in 30 minutes”. The pizza was ready within 30 minutes, but I had to wait for them to make a sandwich. While I waited, the next four people to come to the counter were all picking up online orders. Yep – online ordering is the current wave, all right.
I added another example OPML file to the OPML Includes demo app (a subscription list from Ton Zijlstra). He had an include of another OPML file which appears to render correctly. I tried a second file from Ton that had a “circular include”, that one seemed to have a problem, so I removed it for further analysis.
Resources for writing
In organizing information for use, writing skills can be particularly helpful, especially in trying to summarize topics. Here are some resources I recently came across:
How To Make Notes and Write by Dan Allosso and S. F. Allosso – Learn to make effective notes on sources and your interpretations, then turn those into clear and compelling output. This link is to a website version of the book, an ePub version can also be downloaded.
The Documentation System from Divio – A theory of documentation composed of four types (tutorials, how-to guides, technical reference and explanation) with excellent explanation of the differences and examples on how to create these four types of documentation effectively.
When Dave Winer wrote about his recent trip to Utopia Bagels, I decided to take a look at Portland and Salem (Oregon) to see if there were any bagel shops of note, and found this Eater.com list of Portland shops, and one shop in Salem. Yummy times ahead!
Resources for explainers
In an earlier post, I mentioned work that Jay Rosen and his Studio 20 journalism program did in 2010-2011 on the subject of explainers (a form of journalism that provides the essential background knowledge necessary to follow events in the news). Here are links that I did not include in the post:
PressThink: National Explainer: A Job for Journalists on the Demand Side of News – Jay Rosen’s initial post about the “Giant Pool of Money” podcast that helped explain the sub-prime mortgage crisis, contains analysis of why it was excellent, and pointers to explainers (2008)
PressThink: John Ashcroft: National Explainer – why US Attorney General John Ashcroft felt justified in only talking to television news, and not print news (2003)
PressThink: Normalizing Trump (2017)
Explainer.net: The Explainer Awards, a look at the best explainers on the net (2011)
Resources for organizing information
I have compiled some links on how to better organize information:
Lifehack.org – Use the LATCH principle (Location, Alphabet, Time, Category, or Hierarchy), Mind Mapping, Create Lists, Create Collections, Place Priority on Key Information
The Visual Communication Guy – Gives examples of using the LATCH principle listed above
UXPin – How to Organize Information Effectively: What You Can Learn From Information Architecture
- Create systems for classification, labeling, navigation and search
- Information architecture is affected by content, context, and user
- Article continues by providing more specific example
ASBMB.org – How to gather and organize information
- Describes a method to assist someone performing research to write an academic paper