Categories
Uncategorized

Oy!

Hey, it’s a comic I can forward to both Wendy (she’s Jewish) and Scott (who thinks he’s a robot): ShaBot 6000!

From the “About” page:

ShaBot 6000 is the continuing cartoon saga of a
pious Jew…

…who purchases a robot

…to work as Shabbos Goy for
his household. The inquisitive robot, ShaBot, decides
that he is Jewish, and is therefore unable to fulfill his duties as
servant. ShaBot spends his days asking questions about Judaism, trying
to find logic in a religion that sometimes DOES NOT COMPUTE.

ShaBot 6000 is unlike any other Jewish themed cartoon.
In fact, the only other Jewish cartoon worth mentioning is Yaakov Kirschen’s Dry
Bones
, a venerable comic strip which has been in syndication since
the 1970’s! Whereas Dry Bones is mostly about Israel and Middle Eastern
politics, ShaBot 6000 is more about Jewish faith. ShaBot 6000 looks
at the lighter side of kashrut, parshat
ha-shavuah
, Talmud,
interfaith and more, often challenging Jewish principles that most
would never dare question. ShaBot 6000 is a comic strip for
the 21st century modern Jew!

Trust me — it’s pretty amusing. I may be a goy, but since five I know from funny!

Categories
It Happened to Me

Chill out, Richard, I was being ironic

Richard, in his Simpsons-quoting blog Improvident Lackwit, shows his great dislike the title of my entry about local businesses offering disparate services in a very bloggy way: via trackback.

Chill, dude.

Categories
Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Any Senior Web Designers Out There?

Radiant Core Career Opportunity DSN04

Title: Senior Designer

Location: Toronto, ON, Canada. Candidate must be local.

Description:
Our Senior Designer is an integral part of our growing team. You will
be responsible for overseeing all creative produced by Radiant Core for
web, print, and corporate identities. You feel at home in a
self-directed team environment and love producing work that pleases
both you and your clients. You are comfortable with Adobe Photoshop and
Illustrator, XHTML and CSS, and are not adverse to building the
occasional Macromedia Flash movie. You understand the importance of web
standards and are often heard muttering about validation and
cross-browser compliance testing. You love to love your job and are
dedicated to making it that way.

Responsibilities:
You will work very closely with our Developers and Human Factors
Specialist as a member of our Professional Services Team. You will, at
first, provide all creative components of our engagements but are
comfortable growing into a Creative Director role as we hire more
designers.

Required Skills/Education:
    • Three or more years experience designing and building
       standards-compliant websites (XHTML 1.0 Strict, CSS2.0)
    • Portfolio of corporate identity design
    • Experience in a client-service environment and an understanding
       of the politics of client work
    • Expertise in design software and web tools on Mac OS: Photoshop,
       Illustrator
    • Knowledge of cross-browser and cross-platform issues and workarounds
    • Ability to work quickly and efficiently in a self-directed environment and a
       willingness to learn new things
    • Bachelor degree or equivalent from a related program (Fine Arts,
       New Media, etc.)

Would Be Really Nice To Have Skills:
    • Print design experience
    • Working knowledge of Macromedia Flash and ActionScript
    • Familiarity with JavaScript and JSP-related technologies
    • Familiarity with team development environments including CVS, etc.

Compensation:
This is a full-time position. Our competitive compensation package will
be based on your experience level and will include a fixed salary and
an equity-position in the company. Additional benefits include flexible
hours, relaxed working environment, prime downtown location, and the
use of a PowerBook G4.

How To Apply:
Please send your resume, in an electronic format (e.g.: Microsoft Word,
PDF), along with a link to your portfolio site, to
careers@radiantcore.com. Please reference job code DSN04 in your
subject line. Applications will be accepted until 5pm on Friday, August
20th, 2004.

About Radiant Core:
Radiant Core, Inc. is a leading Toronto-based provider of web design
and development services. Their industry-proven Website Platform,
Foundation, provides a full range of web-based publishing and
productivity tools including content and asset management,
demographically-targeted emails, and photo galleries. Radiant Core was
founded in 2003 by Jason Boyer, Jay Goldman, Michael Glenn, and Sean
Martell. Please visit our website for more information:
www.radiantcore.com.

Categories
It Happened to Me Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Leveraging Synergies

This morning, I had breakfast at my favourite new cafe, Scene It.
Scene It is two businesses in one, being both a cafe and a travel
agency. The front portion is what’s you’d expect in a cafe: tables and
chairs, comfortable couches and a countert serving coffee and food.

There are some bonuses that although novel, aren’t completely
unexpected in a cafe: a gelato counter featuring the best cappucino
gelato in the area, bookshelves with travel magazines and the largest
library of Lonely Planet travel guides I’ve ever seen, computers which you can use for a small hourly fee and free WiFi.

What you wouldn’t expect in a cafe is travel agency. As you move from
the front to the back of the room, there’s makes a transition from cafe
to office. There’s a desk at the back of the room where you can make
travel arrangements as if you were at a regular travel agency — and
while having a coffee and biscotti!

They use their cafe setting to their advantage: they often have
information nights where someone does a presentation about a travel
destination. It’s the perfect location; after all, would you rather do
it in a stuffy travel agency boardroom or a nice cafe?


Scene It isn’t the first place in the area to run two types of businesses under the same roof.

Tequila Bookworm, located across the street, has been around for years and is a cafe-meets-magazine shop-meets-bouquiniste (a French term for “seller of used books”).

The Chinatown Centre at Sullivan and Spadina
has a computer store that also doubles as an internet cafe in the
basement level. You can buy computer parts and play networked games on
their machines. They do a pretty brisk business with kids, mot of whom
like to play networked first-person shooters and MMORPGs.

R Squared at King and Spadina is a “furniture cafe”:  furniture store (mostly stuff you’d expect to find in Wallpaper* magazine) and cafe all in one.

I haven’t been to Cinecycle in ages. I know that they’re still a movie theatre, but do they still do bike repair too?

Although not technically a single business offering two different services, the nearby Chapters bookstore (Richmond and John Streets) incorporates a Starbucks and will sell you internet access for a fee.

e zone at Queen and Spadina
has the zaniest combination: it’s a bubble tea lounge and hair salon
that also carries a combination of Chinese, Korean and Japanese food.
They’re a little more separate than the other combinations: the hair
salon is downstairs, while the lounge is upstairs.


And finally, one spot that isn’t in my neighbourhood (in fact, it’s not even in Toronto): near 7th and Folsom in San Francsico, almost across the street from the old OpenCola office,
there was a place that was both a bike shop and an arcade specializing
in classic 80’s videogames. When I lived in San Francisco, I bought my
bike there and played far too many games of “Mr. Do”. Is it still there, and does anyone know what it was called?


As you can probably tell, I’m fond of these quirky “synergistic” establishments. Are there any others in Accordion City, or do you have favourites in your town?

Categories
It Happened to Me

We were Harold and Kumar before “Harold and Kumar”

How can you not want to see a movie whose unofficial tagline is:

“The Asian guy from American Pie and the Indian guy from Van Wilder. By the white guy who directed Dude, Where’s My Car?


Back at Crazy Go Nuts University,
Dhimant Patel was a crazy chemistry masters student, I was enjoying a
second undergrad career as a computer science undergrad, and we
specialized in hanging out at the local alt-rock club, doing goofy-ass
things, secretly lusting after Zoe the cute local Satanist chick and
other Harold and Kumar-ish things that I shall not elaborate at this
time.

(Despite both being outgoing, extroverted guys, neither of us did ask
Zoe out. She was a little young, had a big, mean boyfriend, and hey:
there’s the whole “she’d probably turn you into a human sacrifice”
thing. We both ended up dating cute girls without allegiances to scary
ritualistic freakshows.)

Here’s a photo of us from last year at our friend Derek Walker’s stag party:

Other “Harold and Kumar” references online include the latest Secret Asian Man comic:

…as well as…

…also, in the blogosphere…

and last, but certainly not least, Wikipedia’s entry for White Castle and the official site of the White Castle hamburger chain.

Categories
Uncategorized

The OTHER Secret Swings

Accordion City is not the only place with a secret swing documented online.

Beal City has one:

Youlgrave has a secret swing set:

Categories
Uncategorized

The Wrap-up Session

Jeff Jarvis

  • A range of words heard today:
    • Resistance
    • Concern
    • Curiosity
    • Enthusiasm
  • “Journalism is broken”
    • Who agrees?
    • Are citizens the fix?
  • A recurring theme: control
    • Journalists as the gatekeepers of information
    • Journalists as verifiers
    • Blurred lines
  • What value do journalists add to news?
  • Another theme: teaching
    • Journalists
    • students
    • audience
  • Technology needs to be easy to use
  • Community: It’s all about bringing it back to the level of people
  • Respect/listening/disrespect
    • Do journalists respect their public?
    • Does the public respect journalists?
  • Business
    • Touched upon only slightly in the discussions
  • “I’m a visitor, and I’m grateful that you had me over.”

Jay Rosen

  • When I got involved in public journalism, it started with an
    observation of mine that was shared by a number of others: it’s summed
    up with the word “disconnect” — there’s a perception of disconnect
    between the press and the public
  • Many causes for the disconnect, many symptoms, caused concern
  • We tried to operate on the sense of duty and conscience —
    “experimenting as many peopl ein the movement were doing” — an
    “attempt to reform the official press”
  • Talk to people more; use a citizen’s agenda
  • All an effort to get professional journalists to reach across the divide
  • During that time, I always thought it was about journalists and
    getting them to change. It dawned upon me to change citizens to change
    and move toward the press.
  • Blames himself for lacking the imagination to come to that
    citizen-focused approach, but also says that they also didn’t offer
    grants for citizen-focused efforts
  • Now it’s citizen focused: they’re talking to each other, talking
    to the press, starting their own papers/web sites/radio stations/TV
    channels
  • It’s no longer “Are you going to reach out?” but “What are you going to do under the current conditions?”
  • The spread of not only technology, but ideas, has led us to this point in public journalism
  • It’s
    one more chapter in a very long — 300 to 400 years — history of the
    enfranchisement of people: to speak freely, to own property, to worship
    freely, to move freely. “That’s what self-publishing is: it’s
    enfranchisement of people in the media.”
  • The point is not that everyone will do so, it’s that everyone has the opportunity to do so, if they want.
  • The idea is that people can handle the world themselves. “They are competent to understand the world. “
  • Invoked Whitman and Jefferson
  • Lew Friedman is our resident researcher: a social scientist that
    asks questions that journalists normally wouldn’t, and knows how to
    apply tests that they wouldn’t

Lew Friedman

  • “I am a sociologist, and I play one on TV.”
  • It’s how I see the world
  • We’re in a world that consists of networks and institutions
  • The world that Jeff and Jay have described is a world of networks. Anyone that can connect can join, and it’s a fluid world.
  • Institutions are different: they’re filters of knowledge, talent
    and power. A set of people, rules and professional routines. The press
    is an institution. It has become systematically disconnected from the
    public.
  • The problem: networks may be extremely open, but they may also be
    extremely fragmented. People can connect, but there can be ways that
    they can connect that make little difference.
  • Power Laws: those that have more, get more.
  • The world of web sites mirrors the network world and the world of
    publishing. There’s a concentration of power. Jeff said that it wasn’t
    true in the blogpshere: he’s right and he’s wrong:
    • Right: A blogger doesn’t have to have all the readers — just
      enough to support what s/he is doing. New knowledge can be formed where
      ideas keep ideas and people out.
    • Wrong: The blogosphere — populated largely by people like
      myself: the symbolic analyst class — people who produce and analyse
      symbols and interpret them for other people. We work at jobs more
      privileged than other people. We need the institution of the press to
      make sense of the world, to distill it. Not everyone knows about blogs.
  • Journalism: “a conversation of democracy”
    • A sphere in which many people talk amongst themselves, and in a smaller degree, to the world at large
  • My hope: to find the relationship between the two spheres.

Every time I hear talk of spheres, I am remind of Gideon Strauss, who talks often of spheres and “sphere sovereignty”.

  • Hoder: Question to canadian bloggers — why aren’t blogs as popular in Canada as they are in the US and UK?
  • David Akin: It’s not that — it’s that it isn’t a big story among Canadian journalists
  • Jim Elve: It’s the fact that we have 10% of the population of the
    US. The market is smaller, so getting x hits here is like getting x
    times 10 hits in the US

  • Gil: For a long time, a lot of us have been trying to create a
    vigorous public square — with a bazaar of info with a lot of vendors
    that retained a civility. We now see fragmentation of the media where
    consumers are choosing their vendor based on whether that vendor
    supports their world view. Isn’t blogging a further fragmentation
    rather than part of a solution to create a public place?
  • Jay: Blogging in and of itself does not solve any problems. It’s
    a matter of what happens when you “sow seeds on fertile ground”. It’s
    what happens when you empower people. It’s the further evolution of the
    media. 3 million people decided that they wanted a page so that the
    whole world could see. Fragmentation? Echo chamber? Yeah. I’m tired of
    it too, and it happens everywhere. The blogosphere is an elite.because
    its people have the skills to use it.
  • Jeff Jarvis: To turn it around, fragmentation is about control.
    Fragmentation is people getting what they want means that. It’s bad
    news for big media. It’s a good thing for consumers.
  • Marti
    Stephenson: Technology has allowed the people to become the press. We
    have been accused of hogging the spotlight. One thing I learned: we
    know more together than we know alone. One concern: a danger that
    blogging become a facility for people to react than come together — to
    fall victim to the same problems that befell media. Invoked James Cox
    from Dayton, Ohio. Are bloggers simply saying “my opinions are right,
    and I’m going to tell you what they are” or are they conversing and
    learning? We must keep true to those roots that keeping people talking
    and learning from each other is what’s important.
  • Nikhil
    Moro: There seems to be confusion between our understanding of blogging
    and participatory journalism. Blogging is a tool of participatory
    journalism, but blogging is not journalism — you cannot define a large
    group of readers…
  • Jeff: Not true — a mass audience is not
    the point. You can do journalism and serve only 10 people. It’s no
    longer the mass market as a mass of niches.
  • David Akin: Isn’t journalism a process?
  • Jeff Jarvis: If it informs the world, it’s journalism.
  • David Akin: The root words of journalism is “journal”. It’s a
    regualr, repeated process. Why do bloggers want to be called
    journalists? Readers decide who journalists are.
  • Jay Rosen: The title “journalist” gets you access. Oftentimes,
    information is witheld from the general public and made available to
    members of the press. I don’t try to define blogging as journalism in
    the abstract, but on a situational basis. It’s not so simple as a yes
    or no question.
  • David Akin: We had an interesting discussion. Is Michael Moore a journalist? Is Bill O’Reilly?
  • Unknown person: Is a journalist accountable? Is a blogger
    accountable? Journalists have all kinds of written self-policing
    mechanisms — do bloggers?
  • Lew Friedman: What was journalism but people writing on
    broadsheets in coffeehouses. That evolved into the press as we know it
    today. If people read you, you’re a journalist. There is a certain
    sense that there are institutions that have resources and credentials
    and are held accountable to certain standards of truth. That, in some
    sense, is the line separating journalistic institutions from bloggers.
    Bloggers are not accountable to the same rules even thought they speak
    in the same public sphere as journalists. This isn’t necessarily bad —
    it speaks to the public right to free speech. The blogosphere expands
    the public sphere and therefore citizen’s right, which I think is
    marvelous. The public is that space in which citizens come together and
    make the rules.
  • Jay Rosen: Reputational capital divides the institution of the
    press from the bloggers. A new blogger starts with zero reputational
    capital, but a new journalist at the Globe and Mail inherits the reputational capital built up from the Globe’s
    long existence, even though s/he has not yet contributed to that
    reputation. Bloggers can build up their reputational capital — but in
    a way that’s different from the way traditional sources get theirs.
  • Len Witt: many of us have cast blogs as an “evil empire”, a “screaming rabble”. It’s no more evil than a town hall meeting.
  • Marti Stepehenson: Bloggers have the same relationship to their
    readers that traditional journalists do. You can have the best public
    service blog in the world, but if it doesn’t create conversation,
    you’re in the same boat we were 15 years ago.

  • Jack Rosenberg: Are weblogs about the public sphere, or small groups?
  • Jay Rosen: They are about the public sphere when they ask the big
    questions. They widen the group of participants in the discussion of
    matters of the nation.
  • Lew Friedman: The fragmentation of the public sphere is not the
    fault of weblogs: the media institutions and parties are not holding
    people together anymore. Public journalism in “the old days” was about
    building and sustaining public participation.

  • Len Witt: This conversation was all possible because of a weblog.
  • Jay Rosen: Thos eof you with weblogs had better write about this conference, otherwise you’re not doing your job!