Fwd: World Without Oil – Update for Heroes

from: Eric Nguyen 8:09 pm (4 hours ago)
to: TitaniumDreads
date: May 22, 2007 8:09 PM
subject: Fwd: World Without Oil – Update for Heroes

To my various, cross-posted peeps:

So, I’ve been following this ambitious experiment called World
Without Oil. It’s ostensibly a game (a new kind, called an “alternate
reality game”), where players collectively imagine and create their
neighborhoods, work, relationships, etc. in a world where oil is
running out.

The month-long game is almost half over, but I have a really good
idea about how a bunch of us can play as a team for the last ten
days. Instead of creating the horror stories of that future (which a
lot of other players are focusing on), I want to be the team that
thinks up the solutions. The duct-tape-and-shoestring innovation that
happens when the world grinds to a halt. Those of you installing
solar panels with me this weekend may be involved, already :)

Email me if you’re interested. More info and a taste of WWO, below.

~e

> From: mPathytest
> Date: May 16, 2007 9:02:32 PM PDT
> To: “Netizen Heroes”
> Subject: {SPAM 03.6} World Without Oil – Update for Heroes
> Reply-To: mPathytest
>
> The oil shock hit on April 30 – and today, life is different
> everywhere.
>
> It’s not just that so many people have stopped driving. There are
> widespread power outages, food shortages, and airline passengers have
> been stranded around the world. More and more people are
> telecommuting,
> home schooling, and only going places they can walk or bike. It’s a
> reality we never could have imagined – until now.
>
> But since the shock hit, heroes like you from around the world have
> been documenting this new, strange reality with videos, blog posts,
> web
> comics, podcasts, photo sets, animations, and even games. We’ve
> collected over 1000 of your stories – and counting.
>
> It looks like the crisis is reaching a critical point – maybe even a
> turning point? We won’t know for sure until you tell us.
>
> If you haven’t told YOUR story yet, now is the time. Here are 3 easy
> ways you can get involved right now, in five minutes or less.
>
> 1) Walk somewhere instead of driving. While you’re walking, call the
> WWO hotline to hear news and leave us a message: 1-866-WWO-TSOC
> (1-866-996-8762). In your message, tell us where you are, where you’re
> going, how far you’re walking, and any other news from your corner of
> the crisis.
>
> 2) Gas is now over $7 a gallon. How many miles can you afford to drive
> a week at this rate? What will you cut out of your life to cut back on
> gas? Send us an email about it at wwo@worldwithoutoil.org
>
> 3) It’s not all bad, is it? If you have a blog or journal, write about
> one unexpected way your life is better in a world without oil. We bet
> you can really surprise us with this one. Submit the link to us at
> http://www.worldwithoutoil.org/addstory.aspx
>
> Of course, you can be creative – show us your new reality however you
> want. For inspiration, check out some of the most creative stories so
> far: http://www.worldwithoutoil.org/awards.aspx
>
> As always, you can catch up on gas prices, fuel availability and news
> headlines at http://www.worldwithoutoil.org
>
> That’s all for now. Thanks for helping us tell this story.
>
> – mPathytest, for the 8TSOC gang
>
>
>
> WORLD WITHOUT OIL will be live for two more weeks only! The story
> concludes on June 1, 2007.
>
> WORLD WITHOUT OIL is a month-long collaborative alternate reality that
> invites you to help simulate a global oil shock. It is produced by
> WRITERGUY, presented by ITVS Interactive (Independent Television
> Service), and funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. An
> Independent Lens Web-exclusive presentation (PBS), it is an ELECTRIC
> SHADOWS project (ITVS).
> ———————————————-
> World Without Oil.

What I Hate About Myspace #70,940

If you ever surf around on the “blogosphere” or the “blagosphere” or whatever the kids are calling it these days you’ll notice that nothing ever blows up from a myspace blog. I’m not familiar with someone posting something so trenchantly insightful or fall off your keyboard hilarious on a myspace blog that it’s gotten 10s of thousands of incoming links in 48 hours. I’ve never seen slashdot, digg, or reddit link to myspace.

This doesn’t really make a lot of sense to me, it seems like at least a few of the millions of myspace blogs should be saying something diggworthy. The first thing that comes to mind is that the highly personalized nature of blog posts has a limited appeal to any sort of greater audience (ie omg drama with the bf!!). That doesn’t really fly though because LiveJournal is also personalized but there are still fairly common blog explosions on the major aggregators. Given that Myspace has the largest userbase of any of the social networking sites (it’s the #5 most accessed english website on the internet according to alexa as of this writing) I have a hard time believing that myspacers aren’t writing brilliant and incisive blog posts about the state of the world. As the tagline of technorati says “70 Million blogs out there…some of them have to be good.” A view of technorati’s top 100 blogs shows that a few are hosted in blogger, typepad and wordpress the rest have dedicated domains but not a single one is hosted on myspace.

Closer inspection of my own blog on myspace may reveal the reason why. If you start at my myspace profile(myspace.com/titaniumdreads) and click on [view all blog entries] your taken to my blog page. the nonsensically long uri is

http://blog.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.ListAll&friendID

=10085330&MyToken=5acd4cbd-b0f5-46e3-96bc-03d97574275cML

myspaceblog.png

I did some logical inference hacking and discovered that I could get to the same page by going to
http://blog.myspace.com/titaniumdreads
. However, there is no indication anywhere on the page that it can be accessed with a simplified uri. In fact there isn’t even a permalink the permalink is disguised as a link in the time I made the post.
picture-9.png

The permalink is the mainstay of the blogger. If you expect to have people link to your posts you have to have a clear and concise uri. the permalink for my last entry is

http://blog.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendID

=10085330&blogID=231822843&Mytoken=DF89AAC4-40C9-4
676-A9DD4FCF97E8C98552665480

There is no fucking way that someone could type that. I believe that myspace is losing millions of dollars because they haven’t programmed their namespaces properly. If you could access my myspace blog through http://blog.myspace.com/titaniumdreads/?p=162 I might not have gone to the trouble to set up this website. Something this simple would be easy to forward around in email and on comments to other users. If you think that this isn’t a big deal you’re wrong. The weblogs inc network was the first to make over a million dollars in advertising with only a handful of blogs, myspace has at least 200 million users growing at a rate of 230,000 per fucking day (although most of those are probably like my friend ruthie). The creators of myspace sold it for 327 million dollars. Not long afterwards google paid 900 million for exclusive search rights. Myspace is currently working on expanding into the chinese market. this minor usability error is costing myspace hundreds of millions of dollars.

To me there’s a bigger issue here. AJ Liebling said that
Freedom of the Presses is for those that own one.” This minor programming error is holding back public discourse in a very significant way. The internet is destroying television and newspapers because *anyone* can have a voice not just the media monopolies that thrive on a cheap political system dominated by sound bites, fear-mongering, emotional appeals, and ad hominem attacks.

Myspace has the shittiest user interface but is the most popular social networking site because it gives users the freedom to create their own pages (myspace). Yet they’ve totally missed that most basic of points with their blogs. Give users the basic uri’s and the ability to embed html in blogs and myspace could make billions while invigorating the public sphere.

Why I Hate MySpace Reason #4,543 & #2450

New Friend Requests!!!

picture-2.png

If the profile no longer exists why do I have to deny their friend request?!?!? Shouldn’t this just disappear? gah!

dear ruthie, I totally think you’re a real person and not a porn fakesters* created by a sophisticated bot. what? you have a cam?!? only 5.99 a minute? I would have never guessed.

*see attack of the smartasses a great article from sf weekly when friendster was considered an “uber-chic” dating site.

Quick Thoughts -> To Do lists

To Do lists came up a couple times today in readings and conversation. It’s worth noting that simply having them isn’t always useful, they function best with certain kinds of items. I think these are some useful tips for constructing good to do lists

1. Items involve a physical action
2. Items can be accomplished in a single sitting
3. Make valuable progress towards recognized goals.

Dragon Skin

An NBC News investigation — including independent ballistics tests — suggests there may be something better called Dragon Skin. Military families and soldiers have tried to buy Dragon Skin believing it offers better protection. But the Army banned the armor last year even before formally testing it. The Army’s current body armor is called Interceptor. NBC News tracked down the man who designed Interceptor a decade ago, Jim Magee, a retired Marine colonel:

LISA MYERS
: What is the best body armor available today in your view?

JIM MAGEE:
Dragon Skin is the best out there, hands down. It’s better than the Interceptor. It is state of the art. In some cases, it’s two steps ahead of anything I’ve ever seen.

but why?!? …

He says that because Dragon Skin was not developed by the Army, some officials considered it a threat to funding of Interceptor and other Army programs.

:: Sensational? perhaps ::

So I looked up dragon armor on wikipedia and it seems that dragon skin has actually failed several tests. The article seems sensationalized but I’ve already gone to the trouble of blogging it. the truth is probably somewhere in between.