North Haven 2005

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In which someone turns 40, someone turns 39, someone works the road & refuses to wave. In which Maine is warmer & we sing less but dance more than in years past. In which the sky is clear and bright all weekend, & we once again escape the Fourth.

TagCloud

Folksonomy meets RSS: TagCloud.

Yes I know: ‘folksonomy’ is a particularly hideous neologism – it basically means metadata assigned by a non-hierarchical community. D-Lib let the word rattle and clunk around a rundown of ‘social bookmarking tools’ in April. Ever since it’s been nagging me – it’s just too unholy of a mix of populism and taxonomy.

TagCloud describes itself as an “automated folksonomy tool” – which I think is a particularly trendy/tortured way of saying: it scans RSS feeds for frequency of terms, then display the most prominent terms in text that is scaled to represent frequency. You know, like Flickr’s tags.

It’s a work in progress, and Danny Sullivan has written about some of its limitations in SearchEngineWatch. But TagCloud seems like a good way to get a torrent of RSS-fed information into some kind of visual handle on the user end. You know, where folks live.

Wikinews

Tail-chasing in news: after running across a story in the Boston Globe about the inevitable newWikinews (actually, after enduring a splash ad & then running into the story), I wondered how a venture like this (so amateur, so unauthoritative, so doe-eyed Internet) would actually work.

So I picked a story that might well attract obliteration of just-the-facts-ma’m: Wikinews coverage of the Supreme Court uanimous slapdown of file sharing – with the intention of comparing it to ‘real’ news coverage.

Surprisingly, the New York Times had nothing about this story on its home page – the NYT was consumed, instead, with the covering the Court’s refusal to consider saving Judith Miller from going to jail for protecting her sources.

So I next turned to CNET’s coverage of the file-swapping ruling . It was a more extensive than the Wikinews treatment – but, as of right now, the tone seems similar; both writeups of the story are balanced and neutral in tone. Of course, the Wikinews entry could and will change.

Fluidity make a return visit to the same story on Wikinews interesting – this kind of news is its own development. And, at least in this case, it swamps the ‘story’, newssharing over filesharing.

Spring changes

Thanks for coming by; please excuse the transience.

It’s spring, and Clayfox is in an awkward budding stage. It’s getting a WordPress overhaul, in fact. Several years ago I half-heartedly launched a blog here, but couldn’t overcome shyness & deference & the funk of who-really-cares.

What’s different now? Sexier, open-source tools, fresh appreciation for the play of categorization, freer conditions of life, an explosion of blogs into the unremarkable. I’ll be talking to myself here, it’ll be something of a scratchpad.