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Rocket Bomber - Links and Thoughts

Rocket Bomber - Links and Thoughts

Links and Thoughts 19: 4 June 2014

filed under , 4 June 2014, 00:57 by

Stevie Wonder Talkbox : Sure, everybody knows Frampton, but Stevie does it just as well.

Good Afternoon.

Economics:
“Curiously, economists don’t tend to find much interest in such questions—really fundamental things about values, for instance, or broader political or social questions about what people’s lives are actually like. They rarely have much to say about them if left to their own devices. It’s only when some non-economist begins proposing social or political explanations for the rise of apparently meaningless administrative and managerial positions, that they jump in and say “No, no, we could have explained that perfectly well in economic terms,” and make something up.
“After my piece came out, for instance, The Economist rushed out a response just a day or two later. It was an incredibly weakly argued piece, full of obvious logical fallacies. But the main thrust of it was: well, there might be far less people involved in producing, transporting, and maintaining products than there used to be, but it makes sense that we have three times as many administrators because globalization has meant that the process of doing so is now much more complicated. You have computers where the circuitry is designed in California, produced in China, assembled in Saipan, put in boxes in some prison in Nevada, shipped through Amazon overnight to God-knows-where… It sounds convincing enough until you really think about it. But then you realize: If that’s so, why has the same thing happened in universities? Because you have exactly the same endless accretion of layer on layer of administrative jobs there, too. Has the process of teaching become three times more complicated than it was in the 1930s? And if not, why did the same thing happen? So most of the economic explanations make no sense.”
Spotlight on the financial sector did make apparent just how bizarrely skewed our economy is in terms of who gets rewarded: David Graeber explains why the more your job helps others, the less you get paid : Salon

Misc.:
The Food Politics of Pokémon : Modern Farmer

Cities and Citizens:
“It is a user experience where we are the chefs and our city is the restaurant. As planners, we try to create great recipes and menus for our city—mixed-use here, open space there, retail here, and then sprinkle in a little streetscape. Then other chefs, like developers and business owners, come in and use our recipes to create a dish, or developments and neighborhoods. Each restaurant has multiple and unique dishes, just like cities have multiple and unique neighborhoods.”
The Case for Neighborhood Bars : Planetizen

Cities and Citizens:
“Similarly, to every designer who says ‘I talk to the people’ we should say ‘You’re supposed to talk to people!’ The people make our market. Who are we planning, designing, and building for if not the public? Rule number one is to avoid insulting them by calling them idiots, NIMBYs, crackpots, crazies, or the like, in any public forum.”
Placemaking begins and ends with the people: The secret of success for urbanists is to listen more and strive to connect with the folks that we serve.

Tech:
“Those five stages — technical possibility, social adoption, regulatory reaction, civil disobedience, and negotiated settlement — argued Shirky, are likely going to echo throughout the sharing economy over the next few years.”
Finish This Sentence: Napster Is to iTunes as Airbnb Is to What? : Next City

Tech:
Apple’s two-hour WWDC keynote in 10 minutes : The Verge
see also:

“Apple offered features and services to counter Google on nearly every level yesterday, and it’s going to be more than a little interesting to see how Google reacts.”
Apple’s war against Google has finally gotten interesting : Geek.com

##

Today’s Book Recommendation is Clay Shirky, Here Comes Everybody, isbn 9780143114949 (paperback, 2009 reprint)

“With accelerating velocity, our age’s new technologies of social networking are evolving, and evolving us, into new groups doing new things in new ways, and old and new groups alike doing the old things better and more easily. You don’t have to have a MySpace page to know that the times they are a changin’. Hierarchical structures that exist to manage the work of groups are seeing their raisons d’tre swiftly eroded by the rising technological tide. Business models are being destroyed, transformed, born at dizzying speeds, and the larger social impact is profound.”

At today’s rate-of-change, perhaps we need to consider it as a historical document. [myspace! *chuckle*]

I’ll get my to-buy links sorted out eventually. In the meantime, you can still use most readers’ preferred option.

##

Diary entry for 4 June:


It hasn’t been even quite 4 weeks yet since I had that thought, which became an plan, which became a set of posts (sloppy in format; because of that, ‘easy’ in execution) but of course the real problem is that a reliance on links (most people expect those to be served up fresh) means the buffer is, at most, one day.

Still, every batch of would-have-been-tweets that I turn into a blog post makes my site richer, as opposed to Twitter’s.

Jeremy Keith added a neat feature to his site, Adactio — taking the microblogging back to his own blogging platform, with some magic on the back-end to Tweet his short posts — but the notes live on his site, the tweets are just copies. It’s a neat application of available resources, though in-actual-use I don’t know if I’d have the discipline to tweet, um, quite so formally.

Though maybe I should. —M.

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Links and Thoughts 18: 30 May 2014

filed under , 30 May 2014, 08:05 by

The Sweet – Little Willy

Good Morning.

##

Today’s Book Recommendation is I’m Just Here for the Food by noted, um, notable Alton Brown. Alton, by his own admission, is not a chef as we now know them (celebrities and restaurant entrepreneurs) – but I would argue that he is an educator (and… well, I guess he’s a minor food-grade celebrity too, for a certain chunk of the internet)

It’s still too early to pick one book by Alton; he has a food encyclopedia in him, but that hasn’t seen print yet. There is, of course, the Epic Good Eats Trilogy [isbns: 9781584797951, 9781584798576, 9781584799030] though this hardcover set will run you about $80 and it is a massive making of… the TV show. Food is of course covered comprehensively (as that is also the topic of the TV show) but still it seems like the recipes are incidental to the Eats (if that makes sense).

Of his other books, two stand out: I’m Just Here For the Food (v2.0 9781584795599) and I’m Just Here For More Food (9781584793410) which is the first book except baking.

You are either a fan of Alton, or not (no judgments here), but even fans need occasional reminders that Alton isn’t just on TV and YouTube.

I’ll get my to-buy links sorted out eventually. In the meantime, you can still use most readers’ preferred option.

##

*Tech:” …um, Tech? …Food? both? neither? (…People?)
The Psychology of Soylent : Ars Technica

Media:
“The old question for tech platforms like Google and Yahoo was: Are you a platform or a publisher? For upstart Medium, the answer is clearly both.
“The blogging platform, founded by Twitter CEO Ev Williams, continues to blur the line between platform and publisher. While the likes of Condé Nast Traveler and Entertainment Weekly are playing platform, Medium has gone in the opposite direction and built its own internal editorial arm alongside its larger mission of being a platform for user-generated content.”
Platform or publisher? Medium keeps blurring the line : Digiday

Tech and Culture: Two from Medium -
Diary of a Corporate Sellout: The rise and fall and rise of Upcoming.org
Let’s Stop Building Products That Make us Feel Like Shit

Cities and Citizens:
[yes, I found my tag for that ]
“While some Main Streets seem well past their prime, others – like Corning’s – remain thriving to this day. Why? A lot of it has to do with the towns and cities in which they are located, of course; it’s hard to have a well-functioning Main Street in a down-and-out community. But there are also elements of design and context that matter.”
What makes a good Main Street work? : Better Cities & Towns

Cities and Citizens:
“Cleveland could have a superstar neighborhood surrounded by a sea of distressed neighborhoods with ample supply. The city and the metro are drowning in vacant houses. The population in city and metro is in decline. Northeast Ohio has a gentrification problem.”
Turning Real Estate Market Fundamentals on Their Head : Pacific Standard

Cities and Citizens:
No one wants to host the Olympics anymore.
The Bidding For The 2022 Olympics Is A Disaster Because Everyone Figured Out That Hosting Is A Total Waste : Business Insider

##

Diary entry for 30 May:
[see next] :) —M.

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Links and Thoughts 17: 29 May 2014

filed under , 29 May 2014, 08:05 by

Tommy James – Draggin’ the Line

Good Morning.

##

Still recommending cookbooks this week; Today’s Book Recommendation is a two-fer, call it an author rec rather than a book rec:

Ratio: The Simple Codes Behind the Craft of Everyday Cooking – Michael Ruhlman (2009), paperback ISBN 9781416571728
Ruhlman’s Twenty: 20 Techniques, 100 Recipes, A Cook’s Manifesto – also by Michael Ruhlman (2011), hardcover ISBN 9780811876438

I’ll get my to-buy links sorted out eventually. In the meantime, you can still use most readers’ preferred option.

##

Media:
Why Vox (and other news orgs) could use a librarian : Nieman Journalism Lab

Media:
The Challenge of Measuring Multi-Platform Success for Print Magazines : PBS Mediashift

Books:
“Is it really necessary that retailers and publishers should view one another as war-like adversaries, or as predator and prey?”
Amazon’s Hachette Dispute Foreshadows What’s Next for Indie Authors : Smashwords

Tech:
[newsreel]“…and battery technology marches on!” [/newsreel]
A Battery Made of Iron Could Improve the Economics of Solar and Wind Power : MIT Technology Review
see also: Storing the Sun – and for more follow the links in both

Tech:
The cold logic behind Elon Musk’s $5 billion gigafactory gamble : Quartz

Couch Potatoes:
“Access to sports content of various sorts has always been a sticky subject for cord-cutters — those who eschew traditional cable for set-top boxes and video streaming services. For NFL fans, that issue has been addressed in part by the National Football League, which today revealed that both Roku and Amazon has become distribution partners for NFL Now.”
Roku, Kindle and Fire TV get NFL Now access : SlashGear

Amazon’s Robot Army:
I can’t make this stuff up : The Verge

Perspective:
“Walmart is the world’s largest company. With fiscal year 2014 revenue of $473 billion, its annual sales easily top those of Apple, Google and Amazon combined.”
Walmart CEO: Amazon Teaches World What’s Possible, But Physical Stores Here to Stay : Re|Code

Surveillance State:
Court upholds ‘First Amendment’ right to film police : Ars Technica

##

Diary entry for 29 May:
Since our last visit together, not one but two opinion pieces posted to the site:

“Amazon’s Generosity should not be taken for granted, or assumed to be limitless. I suppose the advice to authors should be: get in now, while the getting is good, and hope you can make your roll before the rules change and Amazon, in its great indifference, rolls over you.” : Amazon’s Generosity, 26 May

The 2nd piece is much longer (6400 words, 25min) though there is a shortcut option that lets you skip to the end and read just the conclusions (1700 words, 7min)

“I think it’s fine to use Amazon, but one shouldn’t be enamored by it. In the current publishing landscape, Amazon has every potential to become a de-facto book monopoly — a utility like AT&T, maybe, something you don’t notice and with flat rates that everyone gets accustomed to using — but being a comfortable and familiar monopoly doesn’t make it less of one. If you think of Kindle Direct Publishing as a book utility service (which is more of a poetic analogy than a direct one, but I find it fits) and recall the abuses of pre-breakup AT&T, or perhaps that other de-facto monopoly, your local cable company — maybe you’ll pause for just a moment before encouraging everyone to jump on board.” : A Once-in-a-Century Opportunity to Re-invent Publishing, and Books, 28 May

For me, that certainly feels like enough writing, so I’m not doing a dairy entry today. —M.

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Links and Thoughts 16: 26 May 2014

filed under , 26 May 2014, 10:34 by

Graham Central Station – The Jam

Good Morning.

##

What kind of cookbook would you get if you wrote it like a computer how-to manual? To rephrase the question: what kind of cookbook would you get from tech publisher O’Reilly?

Today’s Book Recommendation is Cooking for Geeks: Real Science, Great Hacks, and Good Food by Jeff Potter. from the publisher:
“More than just a cookbook, Cooking for Geeks applies your curiosity to discovery, inspiration, and invention in the kitchen. Why is medium-rare steak so popular? Why do we bake some things at 350 F/175 C and others at 375 F/190 C? And how quickly does a pizza cook if we overclock an oven to 1,000 F/540 C? …
“This book is an excellent and intriguing resource for anyone who wants to experiment with cooking, even if you don’t consider yourself a geek. …
“Gain firsthand insights from interviews with researchers, food scientists, knife experts, chefs, writers, and more, including author Harold McGee, TV personality Adam Savage, chemist Hervé This, and xkcd”

…Practically sells itself.

##

Tech: Disrupting a 6.2 billion dollar industry -
Will Driverless Cars Spell Doom for Law Enforcement Budgets? : Planetizen

Policy:
Net neutrality is as critical for art as it is for commerce : Daily Kos

Amazon:
Amazon’s Tactics Confirm Its Critics Worst Suspicions : New York Times’ Bits Blog

Counterpoint:
“Amazon offered a choice. Not just for writers, but for consumers who wanted larger selections and didn’t want to pay luxury prices for books. (Publishers didn’t just control who got published, they also controlled the prices of their titles. What other industry prints a price on its product?)”
Turow & Patterson: A Plateful of Fail with Extra Helpings of Stupid

Diary entry for 26 May:
ended up being it’s own column. —M.

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Links and Thoughts 15: 25 May 2014

filed under , 25 May 2014, 08:05 by

RIP SLYME – Galaxy

Good Morning.

##

I think, just for a change of pace, I’ll do a set of themed book recommendations (all week) that have nothing to do with the rest of the links — those rec’s are good too (and feel like a good use for the feature) —but let’s get back to basics. This week the topic is cookbooks (but probably not what you’re thinking).

Today’s Book Recommendation is On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen by Harold McGee.

OK, First: this is a food book and not an index-of-recipes (what we usually mean when we say ‘cookbook’) and I’ve owned my copy since the revised edition came out in 2004. Second, one would not be far off to describe this not as a cookbook but instead, as a comprehensive reference for ingredients — the stuff we cook — a gastronomic education (if not a revelation) for the common cook.

“[F]or its twentieth anniversary, Harold McGee has prepared a new, fully revised and updated edition of On Food and Cooking. He has rewritten the text almost completely, expanded it by two-thirds, and commissioned more than 100 new illustrations. As compulsively readable and engaging as ever, the new On Food and Cooking provides countless eye-opening insights into food, its preparation, and its enjoyment.”

If you are more of an engineer, and not an academic, McGee’s most recent offering Keys to Good Cooking is also recommended. Or both. Both is good.

##

Media [consumption]:
“The majority of consumers who watch pirated films — some 94 percent — say they also buy legitimate copies. Those who only occasionally watch unauthorized versions of movies, or stream them because it’s convenient, can be most readily coaxed to pay, the study found.
“Occasional and convenience streamers account for about one-third of unauthorized viewing. These consumers say they prefer to watch a legitimate copy of a film, but they’ll watch the black-market version when the opportunity presents itself or when their subscription services don’t have the title they’re seeking.”
Movie Pirates Can Be Converted, Study Finds : Re|Code

Politics:
So, here’s a theory: The post-2008 Republican Party is just a long con that isn’t interested in ‘winning’, or the presidency, but instead is waging a war of attrition on the Federal level while aggressively and opportunistically spamming the legal codes on the state level.

GOP’s ‘Happy Loser’ Syndrome: Why the Right May Not Want the White House : AlterNet

‘Free Market Solutions’:
“Though Houston is not quite as unplanned as its reputation — it doesn’t have zoning, but it does have a number of other planning rules — the city’s generations-long pattern of growing outward without densifying the core is starting to reverse itself.”
Sprawltastic Houston Is Densifying and the Courts Can’t Stop It : Next City

If you don’t, I will:
“Many adults can’t stand kids. The tragic thing is that some of them are already parents.”
Do You Hate Your Children? : Acculturated

even Facts and Math are offensive:
…when the facts and the math are against you.

“This week, the Chamber of Commerce released a report claiming that a new requirement under the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform bill that corporations calculate and disclose the ratio of CEO pay to an average worker’s pay is ‘egregious.’
“The report notes that the Securities and Exchange Commission, which has to issue the regulation, estimated that the new rule would require an average of just 190 extra hours of paperwork each year per company, costing an extra $18,000.”

…in related news, adding $180,000, $1,800,000, or $18,000,000 to a CEO salary is business as usual and not worthy of comment. Spending $18,000 to report on CEO pay is tantamount to communism, calumny, and catastrophe. Actually raising an average worker’s pay by $1800 annually is unthinkable. (apparently you need an MBA to understand the math on that.)

Chamber Of Commerce Claims Calculating How Much More CEOs Make Than Their Workers Is ‘Egregious’ : Think Progress

Some Speech is More Free than Other Speech:
…I guess it depends on who paid for it.

“If you can’t recall any Tea Party protests in 2009 and 2010 being broken up by baton-wielding, pepper-spraying cops in riot gear, that’s because it didn’t happen.”
Law Enforcement vs. the Hippies : Mother Jones

The other theory is that one side assumes we are all one society and that the proper functioning of democracy requires discussion — to say nothing of basic decency, respect, and common courtesy — and the other side wants to pepper-spray me in the face.

##

Diary entry for 25 May:

“The modus operandi is to LOUDLY accuse the other side of whatever it is we’ve been doing, for years – and without a single shred of self-awareness or remorse, and to DEFIANTLY proclaim that this constitutes a betrayal, a change in the agreed-upon rules, and dirty-underhanded-tricks.
“Because how dare the opposition stoop to the crap we’ve relied upon for decades. If they are going to resort to such base tactics, we *demand* they be smeared, besmirched, and potentially, forever handicapped in the future – for daring to use our own methods against us.”

I won’t tell you which side I’m talking about, but I think we all know, and that really says something. —M.

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Links and Thoughts 14: 23 May 2014

filed under , 23 May 2014, 08:05 by

Grimes – Oblivion

Good Morning.

I need a good tag for sociology and urban studies:
“This trend is particularly pronounced in the United States where innovative companies are spurning isolated corporate campuses in favor of collaborative, dense urban spaces, forming innovation districts in cities.” …
“These companies are urbanizing because they need to be close to talented workers who favor places that are walkable, bike-able and connected by transit, and because they want to be near other knowledge intensive firms”
Forget big suburban campuses, innovative corporations are moving downtown : Quartz

Does a bear post status updates in the woods?:
Why the Pope is on Twitter but not Facebook : Quartz

Tech, but also a candidate for the to-be-named Urban Studies tag:
“Living in the majority of civilization where Google Fiber isn’t available, we unfortunate souls have to pretend it doesn’t exist.”
Google Fiber is the best internet service – it’s not even a competition : Geek.com

ibid.:
“I’ve long argued that the real reason sprawl, or suburban development as we’ve been practicing it, is a problem isn’t because it’s ugly, environmentally damaging, racist, or some other form of evil. The more fundamental problem is that it’s a long term financial loser. The numbers just don’t add up over the long term when you take a lifecycle view of it.”
When Sprawl Hits the Wall : The Urbanophile

##

Diary entry for 23 May:
I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but I read quite a bit on cities and livability, largely focusing on in-town living, sustainable density, and transit options — and that leaks into in the links I share and post.

We Don’t All Need Doctorates to solve these problems; in fact, the best solutions are intuitive and easy, because they work. [note: often the way we currently live does *not* reflect the best solutions, just inertia and failures of imagination.] We may not need graduate degrees, but I strongly feel that the choices we make need to be considered choices, not just thoughtlessly following ‘what we always do’ or letting one single economic aspect of a choice dictate our lives, and we could all use the flexibility to change our mind later and not let a single decision color or govern the rest of our lives, forever.

  • I strongly believe in choice. You want to live in the suburbs and drive 60 miles round trip every day? OK.
  • But I also believe in options. Many of us don’t have options, and that’s sad.
  • I believe in collective action – on a local scale: that’s a PTA, a neighborhood association, a country club* — but even I believe even more strongly in regional transit, interstate cooperation, and federal infrastructure projects. If you think you can dictate how often your neighbor has to cut his grass but balk when services and projects that would benefit millions happens to offended nothing more than your prejudices, preconceptions, and uneducated opinion — without any appreciation of the rich, fatty irony — then that is where we disagree. “Not In My Back Yard” begins and *ends* in your actual back yard, and I’m sick of good ideas and progress being stopped by myopic assholes. [Additionally, it’s a shame ‘Not In My Back Yard’ doesn’t apply equally to fracking, coal ash, industrial discharges into our water supply, mountaintop removal, or exploding fertilizer plants. Call me partisan.]

* clarification: an association of assholes does not make the whole less asshole-ish, nor does it make anyone less of an asshole if they hide behind such fronts… but I still respect your choices. What I can’t stand, though, are folks who act like dictators on the local scale but aggrieved victims if anyone tries to treat them like they routinely treat others. The wording on that is intentional; I invite the religious among you to ponder why I might use such parallel language.

I have made choices myself (see: http://www.rocketbomber.com/2011/03/06/the-local) so I know about trade-offs: I thought living in-town has more benefits than acreage and square feet, and being *able* to walk (when I choose to) matters more than being required to drive.

But I had the choice. I had options.

And this is where city planning intersects with social action: Manhattan and San Francisco are fantastic places to live, but what happens when they become gated communities and theme parks for only the wealthiest among us?

I’ll stick with urban studies, though, and try to avoid the sociology where I can: telling people what is possible usually works better then telling them the whole world they live in is a façade and past the paper-thin walls they surround themselves in, there is a seething mass of humanity — and the innovation, technical progress, and political force is on our side of the paper screen, not theirs. Some of the privileged few know this already — which is why the spend so much money trying to shape public thought, and retrenching the institutions that support that wall. [The wall is thin but the approaches to the wall are mined, moated, fenced, and intentionally labyrinthine. Increasingly, the wall is guarded as well].

[that went dark quick…]

Anyway, since I live in a city, and cities are where more than half of us live, and cities are the engines that drive our economy — and since the Federal government is gridlocked and running on autopilot, while the state governments are partisan and running on stupid, Our Cities are increasingly the only government we have that works (when they work; the partisanship and stupidity often finds stuff that works to be the *absolute worst offense* against whatever god it is they worship, and so the rest of us have to suffer).

…and so: I read quite a bit on cities and livability, largely focusing on in-town living, sustainable density, and transit options — and that leaks into in the links I share and post. —M.

##

Today’s Book Recommendation is Cities and the Wealth of Nations by Jane Jacobs. Jane Jacobs is better known for The Death and Life of Great American Cities — which is a classic book that describes the American City was, from 1870 to 1961, the year of its publication. Cities and the Wealth of Nations is a prescient book that tells us what our path can be. I have found it very instructive to return to Jacobs following the emergence of 21st century global trade, the success of Silicon Valley [the place; not the collection of companies], and the new cities we now live in. The reprint of this book is from 1985; none of these issues are new.

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Links and Thoughts 13: 22 May 2014

filed under , 22 May 2014, 08:05 by

Pentatonix – Love Again

Good Morning.

[It’s an open secret that I’m a big fan of Pentatonix – here’s a little something I put together for myself, if you need an introduction (2hrs40min) – yes, there is some cheese in there, but the music is worth trudging through the reality show framing]

##

I need a good tag for sociology and urban studies:
“Just a few miles from my house, right across the Maryland border from Washington, DC, sits a partially restored old amusement park dating from the Art Deco era. The old carousel still runs in season and delights kids; you can still buy cotton candy there. But it’s not really an amusement park today – there’s no roller coaster, and the old bumper car pavilion is now an occasionally used music hall. It is certainly unlike any amusement park I ever knew.
“Instead, today it exists as a place of respite for adults and of play for kids, and as an evocation of an amusement facility rather than a fully-functioning real one. It challenges visitors to bring our imaginations with us and meet it halfway, as a partial expression of the past and of a culture that no longer exists in the same way.”
Older buildings, continuity of place, and the human experience : Better! Cities & Towns

Media:
Want better online comments? Moderate, moderate, moderate, moderate : Nieman Journalism Lab

Music:
“Compositions have been protected by US federal copyright laws since the 1800′s. Sound recordings only became protected in 1972, around the time that technology—notably, good-quality cassette tapes—made it possible to bootleg music at scale. But this change was never applied retroactively, so recordings made before 1972 aren’t protected.
“That wasn’t an issue up until relatively recently, because there wasn’t much money in these old recordings. Terrestrial radio stations don’t pay royalties on sound recordings, from before 1972 or after; they only pay composition royalties (i.e., to publishers and songwriters).
“But under a federal law passed in 1995, digital music services—such as Pandora and Spotify, as well as digital radio like Sirius XM—do pay sound recording royalties. In fact they’re Pandora Media’s single biggest cost.”
The future of digital music may hinge on Elvis : Quartz

see also: “a dispute that is four decades in the making” – Record Labels Seek to Punish SiriusXM Over Pre-1972 Music : Hollywood, Esq. @ The Hollywood Reporter

##

Today’s Book Recommendation is The Death & Life of the Music Industry in the Digital Age by Jim Rogers. The most interesting assertion of the book is that independent record stores weren’t killed by the internet, but rather by price predation by Wal-mart and the like: a $5 CD hurts more than a digital-single download, because people who buy just the single and the market for Albums were and are different. Once the idea that a CD only costs $5-10 took root, the economics for record stores collapsed. If you want a counter to the usual drumbeat of music-internet-nonsense (or at least, a different point of view) Roger’s book is worth checking out. The link above is to a book review — I’m sure you can find places to buy it.

##

Diary entry for 22 May:
If patterns held, I would take the music links above and take this opportunity to start riffing about digital music, or the byzantine nature copyright laws. Either topic is too big to tackle in my three-paragraphs-and-a-snark format, so I’ll let it rest.

Too many projects demand my attention. It’s back to work. —M.

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Links and Thoughts 12: 21 May 2014

filed under , 21 May 2014, 08:05 by

Net Neutrality in the US: Now What?

Good Morning.
…yes, I know, that YouTube video isn’t music. I hope you watched it anyway. If you really miss the music, keep reading to the end. [I’d previous written about Net Neutrality from my point of view on Saturday, 17 May.]

Books: Smashwords, OverDrive Ink Distribution Deal : Publisher’s Weekly

Confusingly, OverDrive’s books are available on Kindle but authors who use the Kindle Direct Publishing [Select] program can’t get their books into OverDrive, which means no KDP-exclusive books through local libraries’ ebook lending programs. [I think that’s correct?] If I were a self-published author, I’d take a second look at Smashwords. (still, it’s hard to say no to some of KDP Select’s incentives)

The Jokes Write Themselves:
“Facebook spends $2 Billion to push Oculus Rift to new frontiers… your local Chuck E. Cheese!”
“Chuck E. Cheese now has two ways to induce nausea!”
“Details leak on Oculus’s planned billion person VR MMO: endless ball pits, skee-ball, claw machines, and 50 trillion virtual paper tickets — which can of course be swapped for virtual crap at the virtual exchange counter.”
“Virtual animatronic band described by survivors as ‘harrowing’, ‘even more soulless than the original’”
Oculus Rift is coming to Chuck E. Cheese : The Verge

Tech:
“The Tablet that Can Replace Your Laptop” — or basically, a laptop. The future lies somewhere in the intersection between the Surface Pro and a Macbook Air, I think:
Microsoft Announces Surface Pro 3 : Tested
see also: Hands-on: Using Microsoft’s Surface Pro 3 as a laptop—on my lap : Ars Technica

##

Diary entry for 21 May:

Yesterday I wrote a pretty long piece (well, long because it has a lot of block quotes from wikipedia and at least a dozen embeds. However, there was a fair amount of opinion in it (key quote: “I come to bury Disco, not to praise it.”) and some nice side-by-side comparisons and analysis on the border between Funk and Disco – I think I’ll let that one stand as this morning’s diary. —M.

Archie Bell and The Drells – I Can’t Stop Dancing (1968)

##

And following on that — Today’s Book Recommendation is Turn the Beat Around: The Secret History of Disco.
from the publisher:
“Disco may be the most universally derided musical form to come about in the past forty years. Yet, like its pop cultural peers punk and hip hop, it was born of a period of profound social and economic upheaval. In Turn the Beat Around, critic and journalist Peter Shapiro traces the history of disco music and culture. From the outset, disco was essentially a shotgun marriage between a newly out and proud gay sexuality and the first generation of post-civil rights African Americans, all to the serenade of the recently developed synthesizer. Shapiro maps out these converging influences, as well as disco’s cultural antecedents in Europe, looks at the history of DJing, explores the mainstream disco craze at it’s apex, and details the long shadow cast by disco’s performers and devotees on today’s musical landscape.”

#and now I am *done* with disco for a while.

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Links and Thoughts 11: 20 May 2014

filed under , 20 May 2014, 08:05 by

The music embed today is mildly NSFW (both for content, and because you might emulate the actor’s actions). Good Morning.

Avicii vs Nicky Romero – I Could Be The One

Each post is dated (because everything needs a best-before freshness date) but there is a reason I decided to number these as well; I knew in advance that I’d want or need a day off every now and then, even from the blog.

…and also: instead of rounding up three-to-five links just to make a quota, sometimes it’s better to skip a day. Not everything deserves a link, and we all know there are plenty of places to find content on the internet. On to the links:

Dum Dum Dada Dum Dum Dada Dum Dum:
The Ultimate Chart Tracking What Happens To Each Game Of Thrones House : Fishfinger via io9

Daaaa Daaa dadada Daaaaa Da dadada Daaaaa Da, dadada dum:
The Clone Wars Is Essential Star Wars. I Was A Fool To Ignore Them. : Ain’t It Cool News

You won’t recognize the theme so I won’t do it a third time: [go listen; James Horner, good stuff]
Looking Back at Krull : Den of Geek

Did they factor in user hand size as a variable?:
Phablet Use Distinct From Smartphones, Tablets : Re|Code

Gaming: A new genre/descriptor is needed, perhaps. Video Board Games? Civ IV designer takes RTS in a new direction with Offworld Trading Company : Ars Technica

Business:
A lot of digital ink is being lavished on the AT&T/DirecTV and YouTube/Twitch [potential] deals — each in their own right is bigger than Apple buying Beats Audio. …Since I feel coverage out there is more than sufficient, I won’t bother to link to any one specific article or analysis. (I trust that if you’re interested, you’ve seen what I’ve seen on those fronts.) What landed yesterday morning are rumors that Twitter was looking into buying SoundCloud — and rumors are the most we can say about the deal at this point.

Tech companies get snatched up all the time — in fact, for many start-ups, getting bought out by one of the Bigs is the goal and raison d’être. When a venture capitalist asks a slouchtrepreneur about his (or her, but usually his) ‘exit strategy’, the VC wants to hear Facebook-Instagram-Billion-Dollar-Style, not about an eventual IPO and a decade or two of hard work.

And while the likes of Apple and Google can afford tens of millions (pocket change) just to buy the talent and tank the product, Amazon is much more focused in their acquisitions, Facebook will buy any small competitor that gets popular, and Microsoft is… clueless? is clueless too strong a word?

I have a longer draft in the works on how the Big 5 [Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, and Microsoft] are squaring off for a battle royale —
Yes, I know when we talk about Tech, we are referring to a whole lot more than just those five — but could you honestly include Sony and Yahoo in such a list? How about eBay? How about *Samsung*? It’s not just the pieces on the board, but how you play them — and which boards you play on, because the game is multi-dimensional.

And that’s all before we start talking about China.

So it’s a big… thing. I’ve been working on that draft for a while.

##

And building on the business news — Today’s Book Recommendation is The Age of the Platform by Phil Simon. It was published in October of 2011 (so it missed even the Facebook/Instagram deal two years ago, by about 6 months) but for those of you still working with a 90s-era-MBA mindset—or worse—Simon’s book is going to be worth your time. (Plus, unlike a lot of dot-com-bubble, new-economy ‘tech’ books, this one is more about What Has Worked, and not about speculation or utopian-internet dreams)

##

Diary entry for 20 May:
I follow the world of business as an outside observer (as much as any consumer can be ‘outside’ of something that affects our daily lives) and occasionally, some of my ideas on business are going to be too “out there” and Blue Sky for anyone to take seriously.

Sometimes, though, the outside perspective is exactly what you need, especially if you’re looking at present events and don’t have the benefit of historical hindsight. What might be called a Tocquevillien Observer, if I’m allowed to coin that term. Sure, you need to be able to read a P&L statement and know the difference between net & gross — and corporate annual reports can contain a wealth of information, if you can stay awake long enough to read through one. But increasingly, the real story of business is not in the financials, but in the communities: user bases, subscribers, audience — not what the application does but more importantly, who is using it. Every company is a media company, every company is a tech company, and what we need are not MBAs but degrees in psychology, sociology — and English, damn it, because in the end—no matter what you’re selling—if you can’t get the customer to buy into your story you have nothing. The favorite brands are the ones that tell a story, and help us tell a story about ourselves. That right there is engagement, and customer investment, and repeat business — for email, photos, phones, and sharing as much as for cars, booze, bread, music, books, deodorant, or household appliances.

Don’t believe me? Ask someone about their Vitamix.

So maybe what we need in business reporting are more multidisciplinarians and outsiders, and fewer publications like Forbes, Business Insider, Seeking Alpha, and Motley Fool. Some tech-oriented websites seem to be getting it right, but few enough support longform journalism (I see a lot of summaries, and link posts). Maybe Rolling Stone could add a couple more pages for business coverage.

And now, if you’ll excuse me, I think I’ll chip away a little more on that draft. —M.

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Yes, all the links are broken.

On June 1, 2015 (after 6 years and 11 months) I needed to relaunch/restart this blog, or at least rekindle my interest in maintaining and updating it.

Rather than delete and discard the whole thing, I instead moved the blog -- database, cms, files, archives, and all -- to this subdomain. When you encounter broken links (and you will encounter broken links) just change the URL in the address bar from www.rocketbomber.com to archive.rocketbomber.com.

I know this is inconvenient, and for that I apologise. In addition to breaking tens of thousands of links, this also adversely affects the blog visibility on search engines -- but that, I'm willing to live with. Between the Wayback Machine at Archive.org and my own half-hearted preservation efforts (which you are currently reading) I feel nothing has been lost, though you may have to dig a bit harder for it.

As always, thank you for reading. Writing version 1.0 of Rocket Bomber was a blast. For those that would like to follow me on the 2.0 - I'll see you back on the main site.

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