Accupuncture: Rat’s View

I got my second accupuncture treatment for my stuffy nose this morning.  They were overbooked so the doctor used much shorter needles which allowed me to go home right away.  Looking down my nose, I now got a rat's view of the world.  Driving home with eight short needles stuck to my nose was weird, but it was worth it.

Is accupuncture effective for stuffy nose?  Heck, yeah.  I can now keep my windows open and take deep satisfying breaths.  You have to find a good accupunturist though.  There are too many quacks out there.

If I had the time, I want to learn accupuncture.  Imagine being stranded in a paradise of an island, bursting with food, flower, beautiful girls, and a bad case of pollen allergy.  With accupuncture skill, I just need a few needles to treat most minor illnesses.

Daily Pointers

Daily Pointers is just that, brief pointers to interesting blog articles for that day.  Most of "Dave" blog entries are daily pointers, but I am not setup to do that.  So I'll bunch these little pointers into a single article updated throughout the day.  Let me know if this annoys you.

Ross Mayfield drew a simply wonderful diagram showing the Dynamics of a Blogsphere Story at a glance.

Tim Bray revisits history of RDF, spells out its problems, and issues a challenge.  It's a classic Tim Bray: nice and snappy.  Although I don't think his RPV syntax is much better than the RDF syntax, just marginally better, I enjoyed these comments:

  • The RDF version [of RSS] is harder to read, harder to write, and doesn't offer enough payback to make this worthwhile.
  • I don't know how to fix the no-killer-apps problem, but I'm pretty sure it's not worth trying until we fix the uglified-syntax problem.

The design of upcoming TypePad looks pretty nice.

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Nature of Blogging

It is difficult to describe what blogs are.  I can describe how blogs generally look like: it looks like personal journal with a monthly calendar for navigation.  I can talk about how blogs are linked together for communities.  I can also talk about how ease of use and interactions with other bloggers make blogging an enjoyable and rewarding habit.  Still, most people don't understand how blogs differs from other websites.

Here is another effort to find the true nature of blogging.  First, I started with people's tendency to associate blogs with news.  News is, literally speaking, anything new.  People are attracted to all kinds of news.  Once we have news, we feel compelled to share it with others we meet.  Attraction to news and compulsion to disseminate news are so strong that I suspect that they are survival instincts common to pack animals.

Based on above line of thinking,

blog is both a source of and a mean for dissemination of news.  A blogger is a pack animal foraging for and sharing news via his/her blog.  A blog community is a pack of bloggers who regularly share news.

This is not complete since same set of description can be applied to mailing lists and Wikis.  The missing ingredient that blogs have and others don't is this: promise of more.  Like your local baker, each blogger implicitly makes a promise to write more soon.  This promise of more is what draws others to the blogs like the way Cheese does in Who Moved My Cheese?

Hmm.  I am not sure if I got anywhere.  I am more likely to start a religion than find a simpler description of blogs if I continue this line of thinking.

Update: The head mongoose, standing at top of the mound, screamed "A bomb exploded Wednesday in a mail room at the Yale University law school."  Now pass it on, my fellow mongooses.

Help Wanted

A friend of mine is looking for a good principal engineer.  You will be working for a medium size public company in the Bay Area.  Did I say you have to be good?  These are his words:

"Basically I am looking for a 15 on a scale of 1 – 10. Strong C++/OO, Java, J2EE and Middleware exper. They should have a strong enterprise software background."

I was asked fill the position, but I need to be in a position where I have power to initiate and define new products and technologies.  Right now, consulting and independent development fills that need.  Anyway, send me your resume and I'll forward it to the right person.

Thinking about Bursty Evolution of Blogspace

Update: With help from Ray, I was able to register and access the paper.  When you see the message "If you are an ACM or SIG Member, enter your member number before you click CONTINUE", just click CONTINUE.  While the message is logically correct, its confusing.  My stupidity did help either.  Yes, anyone can access the paper after free registeration.

Since I am not an ACM member and don't feel like joining it, I can only ponder about what might be in the "On the Bursty Evolution of Blogspace" paper mentioned by Ray Ozzie today.  Here is an excerpt from its abstract:

"We propose two new tools to address the evolution of hyperlinked corpora. First, we define time graphs to extend the traditional notion of an evolving directed graph, capturing link creation as a point phenomenon in time. Second, we develop definitions and algorithms for time-dense community tracking, to crystallize the notion of community evolution."

I propose that, while people appear intelligent and have complex behaviors individually, people get dumber and their behavior simpler as group gets larger.  If this is true, then given a large enough group of people, group behavior will be indistinguishable from the behavior of a buffalo herd.  True or not, its a curiously shaped wedge for prying open other interesting thoughts.

Do bursts of activity happen in a buffalo herd?  Most of the time, a herd of buffalo will just wander around a location or stroll in one direction forming small subgroups.  Once in a while the herd activity picks up, usually in response external threats but occasionally prompted by actions of the leading buffalo.  Does this behavior match that of bloggers?  I believe it does, not exactly since bloggers would make rather unruly buffalos, but similarity is there.

What about growth of the herd?  Here the buffalo analogy breaks down.  With buffalos, only female buffalos can reproduce and once a year.  With bloggers, every blogger can reproduce year round without any limits to the number of offsprings.  We are worse than rats or rabbits.  We are worse than SARS.  We are the Borgs.

Public Speaking 101

Last night, I bought some books on public speaking because, well, I simply suck in front of the crowd.  I got a long road ahead, starting with overcoming stage fright, going blank, and talking too fast.  Admitting that I suck is the first step.  Why do I go to all this trouble?  Because I think I got some great stuff hiding inside the shell that will knock people out.  No, I don't mean my gas problem.  Wish me luck.

Update: Since one of the goals I have for my blog is to be more informative, here is the list of books I am reading.

  • Smart Speaking – nice collection of short pieces addressing individual problems.
  • How to Say It: with Your Voice – strong in voice training.  I know that a good voice affects not only the listeners, but also the speaker, so this is good.
  • You Public Best – this one is for media training (as in TV appearances) but it has some unique tips I found interesting.

If you have a book suggestion, let me know.

Excellence in Shitty Software

"Dave" released what he has been teasing recently about.  Its a blog search service that builds on Google.  Its different from other blog search services in that it searches with a specific blog as context.  Another key idea is that results are sorted by date.  His demo searchs Scripting News blog.  Nice.  If this is shitty software as Dave claims, we'll soon see it mentioned in Tom Peters' new edition of "In Search of Excellence."  Now.  I hope UserLand offers it as a service just like the Radio comment facility so people can search my blog.