Posts Tagged: O’Reilly


13
Aug 10

I Like Maps

The Set Up:

For as long as I can remember I have loved maps. I can clearly remember getting an atlas of the world as a Christmas gift one year and being totally awestruck. I can remember taking long car trips with my parents (prior to their divorce) and flipping the pages of the Rand McNally.

Why do I find maps so engaging? Why do I adore them so much? Don’t really know, to tell you the truth… and I stopped asking why a long time ago.

One of the things the internet has shown me is that I’m not the only non-cartographer map enthusiast in the world. I am, in fact, one person in a somewhat large (but widely dispersed) subculture.

And it is as a member of this map-head subculture that I bring you…

Four Links for Map-Heads:

1. A very good list of links to interesting maps via Kottle.org. Jason Kottle is one of those early bloggers who continues to put out really interesting stuff via his “liberal arts 2.0″ blog. This list of maps is one of the many great things you will find there on a daily basis. If you enjoy this list you should consider becoming a regular reader of Kottle.org.

One of the mpas ffrom the list at Kottke.org's "Ahoy maps" post.

2. The Strange Maps site of Frank Jacobs is rather awesome. From the about page of that site…

Frank Jacobs loves maps, but finds most atlases too predictable. He collects and comments on all kinds of intriguing maps—real, fictional, and what-if ones—and has been writing the Strange Maps blog since 2006, first on WordPress and now for Big Think. His map “US States Renamed For Countries With Similar GDPs” has been viewed more than 587,000 times.

Via: Strange Maps

3. The KICKMap is something that I heard about via one of the many RSS fees I read.  It is something that is truly wonderful.

From the about the KICKMap page…

The Kick Map is designed to get more people to ride New York City’s subway system. Created with clarity and ease of use, it allows riders to navigate this vast system easily and without uncertainty. The subway map is the key to understanding this most complex subway in the world, which has 26 separate lines and 468 stations. A well-designed map not only welcomes and empowers novices to use the subway but also encourages additional use for regular “home-to-work-only” commuters to use the subway for recreational destinations where they might otherwise take a car. For this reason the design of the subway map can directly influence ridership numbers and can indirectly have an effect on New York’s traffic congestion and pollution. In short, a better-designed subway map will make our subway system more open and accessible.

This can be downloaded as an iPhone app.  There is a “lite” free version and a “full” paid version, and even though I don’t live anywhere near New York City, I bought it.  Why?  Because I’m a map-head.  I’m totally blown away by how great this map is, and I wish that there was a KICKMap for Chicago.

KICKMap

If you find the idea of effectively mapping complex cities (or maps in general) even remotely interesting you should at the very least look at the map comparison section of the KICKMap site.

4. The last thing I want to link to is a book from O’Reilly Media called Beautiful Visualization.

Book cover of Beautiful Visualization

From the discription of this book…

With contributions from more than two dozen experts, this book demonstrates why visualizations are beautiful not only for their aesthetic design, but also for elegant layers of detail that efficiently generate insight and new understanding. Think of the familiar map of the New York City subway system, or a diagram of the human brain. These older examples have been surpassed artists, designers, commentators, scientists, analysts, statisticians, and others who show how visualizations using today’s digital capabilities can help us make sense of the world.

Maps take many forms but are essentially visualizations of information.  This is a really interesting book if you are a map-head.

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29
Jul 10

Book Nerd! [Links]

~1~

Today I read a wonderful post over at INDX//mb.  The post states:

I have been trying to decide who I should link to when I link to books — Wikipedia? Kobo? Google? Who links where reminds me of what a powerhouse Amazon’s affiliate program is. I wonder if their first mover advantage is insurmountable? It seems so. No other retailer is even trying to build inbound links from across the web. And if a new entrant needs 10x the money and effort to unseat the incumbent, then the B&Ns, Indigos, and Borders of this world can’t afford it.

As a reader who blogs, this question resonated with me.  Most the time when I’m talking about a book I link to Amazon, and when I’m talking about a writer I link to Wikipedia.  But is there a better source of information about books / authors?  Later on in the same INDEX//mb post this appears:

Which brings me to The Open Library. There stated mission is “One web page for every book.” I am keen to link to TOL and I am eager to contribute edits where I can. The problem I have with it is the lack of a canonical page for the work rather than the book or the edition… For now, and perhaps forever, I will be linking to the best attempt at the canonical page on the net, at LibraryThing.com. (I just wish they added a TOL-style wiki.)

I spent some time poking around The Open Library site, and I’m kind of fascinated by it.

~2~

The second item I wanted to call some attention to is a post over at the O’Reilly Tools Of Change blog about something that I think is a bit of very exciting technology created by a company called Ricoh Innovations.  The post states:

How It Works
According to Jamey Graham, Distinguished Research Engineer at Ricoh, RI’s technology is similar to that of QR codes, but uses the natural patterns of an object or a page as opposed to a barcode. “Over the last few years we’ve developed algorithms for indexing & recognizing visual patterns. Using an Android or iPhone device, readers can snap a picture of a region on the page (text or images, or a combination) and they will be presented with online material just as if they’d scanned a barcode.”

With RI’s visual search system, areas of a page are mapped and linked to corresponding content. RI has developed both cloud and mobile versions of their device recognition engines, and are hoping that publishers will recognize the opportunity that their particular approach to visual search can offer to the reading experience — bridging the physical book with online media.

Ricoh recently launched their first app to accompany the soon-to-be-released novel by Matt Stewart, The French Revolution (Soft Skull). The app, dubbed the “French Rev,” links pages in the book with web-based content including videos, recipes, and music. Geo location data alerts readers to mapped locations from events in the book (set in San Francisco) such as Coit Tower, Pier 39, and the Golden Gate Bridge.

http://toc.oreilly.com/french%20rev%202.jpg

The linked nature of the web seems to be finding its way into traditional printed text.  The linking of text in books to information about real life locations and web based information is something that I think people should really be keeping an eye on.  This is the kind of locative media coming to life that William Gibson wrote about in his novel Spook Country.  Very exciting stuff.

~3~

The Penguin Blog wrote about their reissue of The Spy Who Came In From The Cold by John le Carré as a Penguin Modern Classics.  The blog states:

First published 47 years ago, and being reissued today in Penguin Modern Classics, le Carré’s ‘Spy’ still has the power to make you uncomfortably aware of the mechanics operating in the pit of your stomach. His relentless, unflinching and unforgiving vision of the world reminded me of the moral wasteland that permeates McCarthy’s scalpathon ‘Blood Meridian’ and leaves you with an overwhelming sense that no matter how good the good guys are; the bad guys will always win.

I’ve never read anything by le Carre but this discription, and the beautiful cover art (seen below) of the reissue has made me want to give him a try ASAP.

9780141194523

This cover art is really amazing.  It is simple and has a very classic look to it.  As I was scanning (rather than reading) the blog, it was this cover art that drew my attention.

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23
Jul 10

Internet Superstars Julien Smith & Clay Shirky on “Filter Failure”.

I recently read a post titled “The Prefect Watchtower” by Julien Smith (of Trust Agents fame).  In the post Julien says the following…

Productivity people talk all the time about how you have to stop checking email, you have to stop checking Twitter, in order to start doing real work. I’m not sure checking email is the problem. I think improper filters are.

Let me say it another way. Since the invention of the web, the real-time web has been kind of inevitable. So many updates, so fast, mean updates must get shorter, which in turn means they must be updated faster, and so on. Endless cycle, leading to endless updates.

What we really need to be working on right now is proper filtering methods for this always-on web.

As I read the post it reminded me of a video I had see of Clay Shirky giving a presentation called Information Overload is Filter Failure at the O’Reilly Web2.0 Conference in 2008.

The gist of Sharky’s argument is that prior to the internet there was a larger amount of RISK associated with PUBLISHING information. Publishers took on that risk, and thus they acted as filters. Now-a-days the internet has made it easy for everyone to pump out content / information in MANY different formats (blogging, podcasting, vloging, pictures, etc) with virtually no risk whatsoever. Thus there is a lot of content being “published” which lacks quality, and people need to become better consumers of content / information by developing their own effective filters.

To see for yourself watch the video below.

It seems to me that Julien is making the same point as Shirky, and seeing as how they are both very intelligent people saying more or less the same thing, I think it is important to take note.

My Thoughts:

In short: I agree with the argument that people NEED to become better consumers of information.  However, just because there is a need does not mean that (the masses of people called) ”the public” will heed said need.  In fact history is filled with examples of the general public of many civilizations ignoring a need in favor of convenience, which is what I fear will happen in this case.

What I would like to see happen is a major paradigm shift in the way that people perceive their personal responsibility to adequately vet content / information.

I can’t say that I know how to make such a sea change occur, but I’m guessing that the first step is making it as much a part of the public discourse talking about it when we can.

Side note (and some pointless self promotion):

As of late I’ve been (attempting) blogging about “style”.  One thing I’ve started to notice since starting the style blog is how many tech / social media savvy people don’t seem under stand the  distinction between dressing up and dressing well, and I want to give mad style points to Julien because (as anyone who has hung out with him can attest to) he is one of the people who DOES understand this distinction.

And while I love Mr. Shirky’s ideas… well… he could (in my very humble opinion) stand to take a play or two from Julien’s style book.

Other Relvant Links:

1. Clay Shirky’s internet writings.
2. Clay Shirky on Twitter.
3. Julien Smith on Twitter.
4. Chris Brogan co-author of Trust Agents.

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20
Jul 10

What I’m Reading: The Art of Community.

I just started the book “The Art of Community” by Juno Bacon. Publishd by O’Reilly Media.

The very first four sentences of this book’s foreword (which is by Leo Laport) hooked me…

“From ants to anteaters, bees, to beekeeper, community is a fundamental part of our life on the planet. We thrive when we are immersed in it, suffer when deprived of it, and wherever humans go we create it. We define ourselves by our communities: tribe, family, work, clubs, schools, churches, andtemples, these are who we are. We are born into community, and if we’re lucky we’ll ed our days surrounded by it.”

I’ve been reading the hell out of this thing for almost an hour (the hour flew by due to how interesting the content is) and I can’t recommend this book enough.

If you’re interested you can of course buy the book from Amazon or O’Reilly, but (thanks to a Creative Commons license) you can also download a .PDF of the book for free.

If you think you could be interested, but you’re not sure, bounce over to The Art of Community’s own online community and poke around. I think doing so will convice you.

Sidenote 1:
Mashable recently posted a top ten books “must have books on social media” list, and The Art of Community was number two on that list.

Sidenote 2:
Whenever I buy an O’Reilly book I buy the eBook versions (rather than dead tree versions), because I have access to the book in ePub, .mobi, and PDF formats which can be downloaded at any time in perpetuity.

There are a great deals at the time of this writing: If you buy a O’Reilly eBook via the Stanza app you get it at a 40% discount. (coupon code STANZA).

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