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In Praise of Quitting Your Job

I had to link to this simply because I can identify with it.

(Sorry I can’t remember the via, the post was in a window of tabs opened over the last week or so. I’ll update when I find it.)

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Saw this on Flickr this afternoon and felt compelled to share it. One thing I don’t post often enough is imagery, so when I see something as awe-inspiring as this I’ve decided I should share it.

Saw this on Flickr this afternoon and felt compelled to share it. One thing I don’t post often enough is imagery, so when I see something as awe-inspiring as this I’ve decided I should share it.

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Thoughts On Commenting

A lot of the blogs I read don’t offer comments and generally I don’t miss it. The few that do allow comments, I read the post and try to read the comments if I’m interested in the topic. Thanks to the way I try to control the blogs I read, the comments that I do read usually leave me feeling like it was worth while and added value to the initial post. On the larger blogs, which have really become more than blogs in the traditional sense of the word, the comments usually descend into anarchy and trolling. I never read the comments on these blogs, and in all honesty mostly just skim over the post unless it really grabs me in the first paragraph or two.

You can easily draw the conclusion from this that there is more than one form of comment to a blog post. There is the considered comment that adds to the conversation and there is the noisy comment which adds to the general din. In my experience, and disappointingly so, the noisy comment that adds to the general din is the most common. People don’t have the time to offer up something more considered, and those that would make the comments worth reading are so busy that they don’t comment at all. It’s understandably easy, rightly or wrongly, to draw the conclusion that commenting is on it’s way out. Which is why when I read this paragraph in the newly launched Cognition, aka The Happy Cog Blog, I was intrigued.

Speaking of experiments, there’s our comments section. Everybody knows inline blog comments are going the way of the BBS and Gopher sites of yore. We’re not ready to say “comments are dead” (we’ll leave that for Wired Magazine’s next cover story) but we have noticed the smell, and we’re doing something about it.

It seems that they, along with a lot of you, have noticed what I have spoken about above. I read on with interest to see what new system they had thought of was, in the hope that it could potentially bring a shift from noisy comments to conversational comments.

Kids today are more likely to respond to a blog post on Twitter than in the article’s comments section; so we’ve collocated our comments on Twitter. Share a tweet-length response here, and, with your permission, it will go there.

Upon reading their solution I was disappointed. It turns out their solution is the ability to comment via Twitter. From the post there is a tweet box, you give permission and your tweet goes out to the world. At the same time it’s added to the post, in the same manner as a conventional comment using a conventional form.

Straight away I wondered what’s the difference between a noisy comment and using the method Happy Cog have gone with to comment? The comment still has to be made from their page for it to appear in the right place. The display of comments is still the same, ie. a big long list that takes lots of scrolling to read. The only difference really is a low barrier to entry–because I’m already logged into Twitter–, a limit of 120 characters1 and a tweet that appears as a comment to the post as well as appearing out of context in my Twitter stream. Whilst the traditional comment form is open to abuse, and any mildly popular post can play host to trolls and the like, it did at least give potential for intelligent debate.

I can understand the appeal behind trying to develop new ways of commenting, but I question the use of Twitter as a solution. The number of tweets I see in relation to a post are limited, most tweets of this kind offer a link to a post as a quick way of sharing, maybe with a sentence to sum up or offer a quick off the cuff remark. Is this really the type of conversation that should be encouraged? Shouldn’t we instead be looking for a more robust method of commenting? If a post is worth commenting on, surely it deserves more than 120 characters that can easily be lost in a sea of other 120 character remarks? The traditional sense of commenting at least allows those who have put thought and consideration to stand out from the crowd in the fact that their often long comment will stick out above the short one liners that generally occur.

Of course there will always be the oldest form of commenting on the web in the form of a post on your own blog.

If you are moved to respond with more than 140 characters, post the response on your website, and it will show up here.

That’s the solution we should be encouraging more of.

  1. I know a tweet is 140 characters, but Happy Cog have to attach their URL to your tweet.
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Excellent piece of identity design by Danish studio Make. The word mark by itself is excellent, the implementation simply reinforces it.

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"This grace is unrelenting. This grace has no intention of giving up. This grace will not be satisfied with the status quo. This grace does not get discouraged. It will never compromise. It will never become bitter or cynical. This is loving, patient, perseverant, powerful grace."

Paul Tripp

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"Its time to stop feeling sorry for ourselves because we think no one is listening and start doing what we love: creating things that change peoples lives, even in the tiniest little ways."

Joshua Brewer

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"If feeling you’re going to succeed makes you work harder, that probably improves your chances of succeeding, but if feeling you’re going to fail makes you stop working, that practically guarantees you’ll fail."

Paul Graham

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A very interesting and thought provoking read about productivity from Scott Belsky of Behance. As a bit of a technology geek I’m always drawn to electronic tools that could help me do things more productively, I’m a big fan of Things, but interestingly I often find myself with a notebook and a list of tasks. I’ve always put it down to my creative side which enjoys a sketchbook and a pencil, but perhaps it has something to do with the processing that occurs when you have to write something down rather than read it off a screen.

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Sunday afternoons can’t get much better than settling down after lunch to watch the Grand Prix. It’s been even better since the BBC took over coverage in the UK and I enjoy reading Jake Humphrey’s blog after each event. This time he’s included a video of what it’s like filming the opening segments, with feeds from all camera’s up against the actual broadcast. It make’s for fascinating viewing.

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During one of my let’s look at fonts on the internet sessions (for a project I have in mind), I remembered a little beauty released earlier in the year called Brandon Grotesque. A quick Google led me to the creators website, an interestingly laid out site that I felt needed to be brought to people’s attention. I’m not sure I like the scroll anywhere feel to it, but it’s certainly a different take on showing off your catalogue.

Tags: fonts design web