




Amber “Call for Help” MacArthur attended last week’s OPML meetup, where she announce this week’s must-attend geek event in Accordion City: a TechTV gathering featuring her along with Leo Laporte, Andy Walker and Kevin Rose, with Techphile.ca’s Frank Linhares doing the podcast! Diggnation will also be making their first Canadian episode, as they’re coming up to shoot the event
The event takes place this Thursday, August 11th at 7:30 p.m. at No Regrets, a great resto-bar located just down the street from Tucows in Toronto’s Porn Distri…er, Liberty Village.
I plan to attend, as does the accordion.
More details here:

I’ve been working on some Blogrolling.com-related projects that should see the light of day soon. Can’t talk about them yet, but will be able to soon
Last Tuesday, Jason “Weblogs, Inc.” Calacanis wrote in his blog:
Well, I’m sick of the Technorati 100. Now, it’s good to have a list (more on this later), but we need a better list
that is more accurate and includes many more people, and both old-school and new-school bloggers.
… and I’m willing to pay for it—sort of (more details on that to come). 🙂
Some background: Having created what became an absurdly powerful 100 list with my last company, Silicon Alley
Reporter, I’ve seen the controversy, venom, and power such lists can create. I’ve got some mixed feelings about
them truth be told. These lists are really powerful at building an industry. They help define emerging spaces, and they
get new players press, readers, and clients (i.e. advertisers). So, a good list is good, and a bad list is—well—bad. We
have a bad list now and we need a good list.
…
Where is the Feedster 500, the Blogpulse 500, the Pubsub 500, the Yahoo Blog Search 500, the Bloglines 500, and the
IceRocket 500?
Well, we’ve got the Blogrolling Hot 500, located at hot.blogrolling.com!
The Blogrolling Hot 500 is list of the 500 weblogs most linked to by subscribers to Blogrolling.com’s
service. Yes, you’ll find the usual suspects on the Hot 500, but there
are a number of not-so-well-known blogs that make the list — I’ve
discovered dozens of blogs I’d never heard of before.
(Unfortunately, this blog doesn’t make the list. Poop.)
Someone observed that since the list’s ranking are determined by
outgoing links from Blogrolling.com users only, it is skewed in favour
of the blogosphere’s early adopters. We’d like to point out that two
thirds of Blogrolling’s user base joined after we purchased it in February 2004. Our Hot 500 engine is tracking some interesting data in the form of over 7 million outgoing link URLs.
If you’ve made the Top 500, feel free to take the “Hot 500” button
shown above. It’s the official Blogrolling Hot 500 button and was
whipped up by Yours Truly.
By the bye, Blogrolling.com’s service is still free for one blogroll,
and US$19.95 gets you a gold account, which lets you have up to ten
blogrolls and a number of advanced features.
In 1993, Dateline NBC ran an infamous piece on safety deficiencies in trucks. In that story, they performed an experiment that made it appear that certain GM Trucks’ side-mounted fuel tanks were prone to exploding if the truck were hit
from the side. It was revealed that they rigged the tank with model rocket engines that were triggered by remote control in order to ensure that an explosion took place during the experiment.
They had to make an embarrassing mea culpa, which included this statement:
NBC’s contractor did put incendiary devices under the trucks to ensure that there would be a fire if gasoline were released from the truck’s gas tank. NBC personnel knew this before we aired the program, but the public was not informed because consultants at the scene told us the devices did not start the fire. We agree with GM that we should have told our viewers about these devices. We acknowledge the placing of the incendiary devices under the truck was a bad idea from start to finish.
A dozen years later, Dateline NBC is still around, and they have retained their knack for — ah, how shall I phrase it? — being at variance with the truth. This time they’re doing a story on porn spam and LizVang points out how they have described the neighbourhood in which we both work:
There is one place in Toronto that might help us: It’s called Tucows.
That’s the place that registers those Web site names. It’s what led us to Toronto to begin with.
The receptionist is happy to look up the name “Spunkfarm” for us. We get another address, this one very nearby.
We discover that down these dingy alleys of old industrial buildings, and a man on the street tells us that the whole area here is all dot-coms.
“Mostly, mostly porn though,” he adds.
We’re at Toronto’s Internet porn district. The man takes us around back to the freight elevator and gives an idea what goes on inside this building. There are more companies that seem to see porn within the building.
I won’t challenge the statement that many of the offices in the Liberty Village area are occupied by people in the adult entertainment business. Neither will I challenge the fact that porn companies do register their domains with us (but via resellers, not
directly — see my earlier entry on our business model).
However, I take exception with the “dingy alleys” description of the area, a falsehood presumably used to underscore the fact that people are producing or distributing online porn.
Liberty Village, for those not familiar with the area, an old industrial park surrounding Liberty Street, hence the name. Liberty Village has a number of large brick buildings that were once factories and now function as hipster office complexes. Yes, there are a number of companies specializing in online porn, but like Tucows, there are also a number of companies that provide internet-based services of a less tittilating variety. In addition, there’s at least one recording label, the Corus group of television channels (including YTV, CMT and Scream), several good restaurants, a rock-climbing gym, an executive training centre, a book publisher, a couple of architectural firms, a Vespa dealership, a 24-hour grocery and living spaces (both “genuine” warehouse lofts and “loft-o-miniums”). Calling Liberty Village the “porn district” is like calling Central Park West between 70th and 80th Streets the “Beatle Death Zone”.
The “dingy alleys” of which Dateline NBC speaks are actually often-used walkways for all of us who work in the neighbourhood; they’re no dingier than the alleys between warehouses in New York’s South Street Seaport or Cleveland’s “Flats” (and considerably less dingy and poop-filled than most alleys in San Francisco’s SOMA). When Dave Winer came to Tucows to speak at the OPML Meetup we hosted last week, I took him through the alleys behind the old Carpet Factory Building, and he found them quaint and charming.

The Carpet Factory Building in Liberty Village.
Image taken from OneDegree.ca.
You needn’t take my word for it. I happen to have a collection of photos that I shot in the summer of 2003 when I first got my new Nikon Coolpix SQ camera. They’re a study of these allegedly dingy alleys; you be the judge. Some preview pictures are below:

Can’t you just see the sleaze oozing all over this alley? Check out the hot Volkswagen-on-Volkswagen action that’s about to transpire!

Gateway to porn!

The alleyway that connects Mowat and Fraser Avenues. You can’t tell, but that’s a K-Y Jelly delivery van.

One of the so-called dingy alleys ends with this seedy courtyard, the patio of a pornographic Italian bistro.
One Degree has more to say about the Dateline NBC story
If you haven’t yet seen Junku’s set of “airborne cat” pictures, make sure you do!

Click the photo to see the whole set of “airborne cat” pictures.
Do you know what would make these pictures cooler? Lightsabers!

“You’ve lost, Anakin! I have the high ground!
Like the great John Peel,
I’m not letting advancing age (I am a good sight closer to 40 than 30)
turn my iTunes library into a time capsule from my youth. Although you
won’t find much evidence on MTV, MuchMusic or standard radio, the world
of music is bigger than ever. Luckily, the ‘net lets you find the music
that’s just too quirky, too offbeat and just not generally palatable in
that pop pablum way that big hits are to get played on video stations
and standard radio.
You’ll find a list of the albums getting a lot of play on my iTunes
below. I “discovered” some of them by listening to internet
radio, where the selection is much wider and the programming less pusillanimous
than commercial media. Others were sent to me by friends and blog
readers with a “Hey! Thought you might like this!” message tacked on.
Aside from Beck and The Bravery, most of what’s on heavy rotation on my
iTunes won’t be found on standard radio, but it’s great music. I highly recommend them all.
Eels: Blinking Lights and Other Revelations
Vitalic: OK Cowboy
Polysics: Polysics or Die
Beck: Guero
The Decemberists: Picaresque
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah: Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
Hard-Fi: Stars of CCTV
The Knitters: The Modern Sounds of the Knitters
Danger Doom (that is, Danger Mouse and MF DOOM): The Mouse and the Mask (Not out yet. I got…er, an advance copy. Yeah.)
The Bravery: The Bravery
Sigur Rós: Takk (Also not yet released. It…um, fell from an Einstein-Rosen bridge that linked my current position in space-time to Penguin Music on the release date.)
Art Blakey: The Definitive (Okay, so this one’s not that current. But I hadn’t heard it in a long time, and it’s jazzalicious.)
Platinum Pied Pipers: Triple P
American Analog Set: Set Free (To be released September 20, when I plan to buy it.)
JR Ewing: Maelstrom (Available everywhere…in Norway!)
The Boy Least Likely To: The Best Party Ever
Ratatat: Ratatat
Architecture in Helsinki: Fingers Crossed
Based on this set of albums, is there anything you think I’d like? Feel free to make your recommendations in the comments.