tomorrow here in Montreal, and the beer tent is just around the corner from my place so I expect to be going by quite a bit in the next week or so. If you’re curious, they have a really nice website this year, design by Black Eye, development by the good people at Plank Design.
Web aficionados everywhere
will join me in congratulating Heather on 5 years of Jezebel. Newbies may be interested in checking out the Jezebel time line to learn that yes, there is hope. As well, it strikes me that Heather herself has made the perfect means of congratulating her: send a Jezebel postcard!
More truth-telling
from Mr. Zeldman in The End of the World As We Know It: “The Web is not in trouble. Big businesses are, when they think they can own or master it.
Bye-bye, Big Content. Adieu, global agencies. Thanks for stopping by. Now step away, and let those whove always understood this medium take it where it needs to.”
Via MetaFilter
Via MetaFilter comes the sad news that Automatic Media has fired all of its employees – employees who have reportedly gone unpaid for several months. As anyone who reads here regularly knows, Automatic Media is the parent of Feed, Suck, and Plastic. Someone pointed to today’s Hit & Run at MeFi as well, where I found the following prescient (or foreshadowing) quote: But – and this is a lesson that’s bound to sink into our tiny little heads at some point – content is hard, time is valuable and neither love nor money can make the Web matter more than a good night’s sleep.
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.
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