Safely Home

We arrived back in Grand Rapids yesterday evening after a long, cramped, but uneventful journey. The time in England was certainly worth the travelling and while every meeting was too short, we were glad to be able to catch up with so many friends and family members. Steve and Jude even blogged the occasions. I’ll be back for Greenbelt and hopefully we’ll both be back in September. And since email catchup went remarkably well today, I may even have new content for this blog tomorrow! ...

June 1, 2005

Away

I’m taking a few days off, home in the UK visiting family and friends. I may be posting, but have no fixed intentions. While I’m gone, I’d recommend checking out the first steps Gavin has taken in establishing socialdocuments.com.

May 25, 2005

Arriving Home

We arrived at Heathrow airport this morning, 377 days after I left the UK. It’s good to be home. The next few days promise to be a whirlwind of catching up with friends and family. This evening began it all at a relaxed pace at home with family, watching Channel 4 News.

May 25, 2005

We The Media

I’d been meaning to pick up Dan Gillmor’s " We The Media" ( amazon | read online), so the copy I received for my birthday last month was much appreciated. I’ve enjoyed reading Dan’s blog for quite some time and it was good to hear his thoughts expounded in longer form. For those who are well versed in the intersection of blogging, journalism, and politics, most of the book will have a familiar feel. The first two-thirds of the book is largely a summary of events that have led to the current state of play with grassroots media, moving deftly through phenomena and events such as indymedia, ohmynews, bloggers’ reports following September 11 2001, the Trent Lott scandal, and many others. While initially I worried that the familiar material would be too much, it was a well paced summary and is certainly likely to be an informative read for anyone who has not been quite so immersed in the development of that key part of blog culture. ...

May 24, 2005

They Work For You

I’ve referred in the past to the wonderful websites They Work For You and Write To Them. Built by a group of volunteers, these sites provide search tools for Hansard (the British parliamentary record) that allow users to keep track of the activities of members of parliament, monitor the occurrence of topics in parliament, share comments on sections of the transcript, and then contact any of their elected representatives (at local, national, or european level) to initiate or continue discussions with them. ...

May 23, 2005

Decemberists at the Intersection

Our introduction to the Decemberists was back in September on their last trip to Grand Rapids. Displaying a delightful eccentricity, deeply literate lyrics, and a panoply of instruments, they left little doubt that we’d be buying at least one album before too long. From Thursday night’s showing it’s clear that we weren’t alone in being impressed as 725 people flocked to the Intersection to catch the band out supporting their new album Picaresque. ...

May 22, 2005

Bush at Calvin: Wrapping Up

While we enjoyed the postponed Earth Day fair in Kalamazoo, the story that has dominated my blog entries of late came to its head and passed. I have yet to watch Bush’s speech in its entirety text | video, but most of those in attendance to whom I’ve spoken seem to agree it was uneventful. He began with some self-deprecating jokes about his own academic ineptitude, which some thought were in poor taste when celebrating graduates at an academically intensive institution. But it was not the crassly politicised speech that some of us had feared. ...

May 22, 2005

Calvin, Bush, "Debate"

When people ask me about the effects moving to the US has had on me, one thing that usually comes up is that I feel my appreciation of USian politics has become considerably more nuanced. In the circles I moved in in the UK, from the perspective of which the Democrats are generally a pretty right-wing party, it was hard to believe that any intelligent person would vote Republican. Since moving here, I’ve met quite a number of intelligent people who are open to divergent viewpoints and vote Republican. Sometimes their headline reason is “the abortion issue,” but usually there are economic philosophies and a belief in “small government” operating behind the scenes. ...

May 20, 2005

Life Down South

When it comes to vibrant social discourse and a search for innovative ideas of how participatory politics might progress, the global South is usually ahead of the more apathetic North. That was evidenced in The Take which I blogged about a couple of months ago, as well as being well documented in many other places. Lately, I’ve been really enjoying Nick’s observations about life in Bolivia, particularly the context he’s been providing on the disturbances that have greeted Bolivia’s new taxes on foreign gas companies. It is easy to observe that international trade regulations are of more immediate concern for those in the world’s poorest countries, but given how important they are to the lives of all of us, the level of awareness in South America puts many of us in richer lands to shame. ...

May 19, 2005

Learning By Copying, Conversing, and Interacting

Ryan’s been writing some thought provoking posts on microformats and related topics of late. In The Self Organized Web he pulled up this (two year old) quote from Tim Bray: RDF has ignored what I consider to be the central lesson of the World Wide Web, the “View Sourceâ€? lesson. The way the Web grew was, somebody pointed their browser at a URI, were impressed by what they saw, wondered “How’d they do that?â€?, hit View Source, and figured it out by trial and error. ...

May 18, 2005