on and off since mid-week, including a meeting up at Tremblant which went extremely well and included a fantastic trip whitewater rafting (team building, doncha know) and some great discussions with my American counterparts at work. Got back on Friday, but the weekend is mostly non-blogging time for me. Today’s my second Monday off in a row, thanks this time to Canada Day.
Did anyone notice that
Don McKellar‘s character in The Red Violin is named “Evan Williams”? I don’t know Evan the Blogger guy, but I read his site from time to time and I laughed out loud when I noticed the door plaque with his – their – name on it.
I came across
Jon Udell’s Telling A Story – The Weblog as a Project-Management Tool through calebos.org and CamWorld in the past couple of days, and as was the case with both of them, I found the article very compelling. I’ve frankly had enough of talking and thinking about grand schemes of leveraging heavy tech in the service of getting things done. It’s far preferable, to me, to bring things to the basic level: email and a simple website. Much more than that is overkill, and mitigates against adoption of whatever tool is under consideration – which makes it (whatever “it” might be) a no-go. As the article says so clearly, the tools are secondary, and I will add, boring. It’s the work, and more importantly the people doing the work, that are important. And the quickest, easiest possible way to help that happen is the best way to try. That’s the hidden power of weblogs for personal publishing and in this context, I think.
The biggest blog-world news
this weekend was that people learned that a hoax was perpetrated in the case a Kaycee Nicole, a young women who people thought had died of leukemia. It may still come out that there was some kernel of truth to the whole thing, but still – people who meant nothing but the best in such a (seemingly) sad situation were taken advantage of.
I don’t have much to add to the whole thing, since I didn’t really follow “Kaycee’s” blog at all. The only comment to make, perhaps, is that each new type of community on the web seems to have their very own betrayal/hoax experience. It might even be said to come with the turf. I’ve been involved in similar (roughly) situations in the past on old-school community sites – a couple of them. And from that experience, my only take-away was that in each case there were some who backed away from the communities at hand – and others deepened their links, consciously or not marking the hoax as an anomaly, and nothing to prompt total scepticism.
I hope something like that happens here. I do think there’s a broad community, of sorts, among people who keep weblogs, a certain amount of it focused on Matt’s excellent MetaFilter, where much of the present drama was played out.
The Brill’s Content cover
story on weblogs, Brill’s Content: Human Portals, has been posted on their site. It’s an interesting article. And interesting how the coverage of weblogs has been changing and expanding.
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