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March 26, 2008
Rise of the Geo-Social Web
There's a real trend these days towards tying some of the advantages of the modern "web," such as it is, to actual physical spots on the planet. You heard it here first. (Hey, it was news to me when I thought of it this morning.) I started digging yesterday for something that would connect Twitter, currently my worst online addiction, to place. Twitter creates such a cloud of really touching information about people you know and want to know. But as things stand, there's no easy way to connect that data to my geographical location on the planet. That a good friend of mine is having coffee somewhere on 7th Avenue here in Park Slope is mixed in with the news that an acquaintance in Nairobi is contemplating the new power-sharing arrangement there.
I haven't managed to dig up any sort of app or tool that really ties Twitter to geography in a way that makes all that information useful to me as I go about my day. But I expect something like that is on more than one developer's drawing board, and will see it very soon.
But even in the absence of a useful geo-Twitter app, we do see on the horizon an embracing of geography as useful and meaningful. Outside.in is an online aggregator that pulls blogs in blog posts that have some sort of location information embedded or tagged. And then there's Fire Eagle. This new tool from Yahoo is still in the invite-only stage, but what it does is to collect an update on my location status from me either via the web, SMS, or third-party applications (in much the same ways that Twitter can be pinged.) Outside.in is launching a new feature called On My Radar that uses Fire Eagle to create a stream of information connected, they say, down to the very block you're standing on at the moment. And both Outside.in and Yahoo are partners in the new OpenSocial Foundation that launched yesterday, laying a foundation for a lot more of these place-tied web projects.
Of course, while I was never much into Dodgeball, that was an early attempt to tie digital info to geography. I'm not sure why it never took off. But this next round of tools is probably more welcomed today with people more accustomed -- because of Twitter, Facebook status lines, and the like -- to informing the web what they're up to on a regular basis. (Photo thx practicalowl.)
UPDATE: Ah, just stumbled upon Fireball: Twitter + Fire Eagle = Fireball. Exactly. Off to play with it...
UPDATE DOS: Carlo Scannella writes to say that Outside.in's Steven Johnson was talking up Twitter integration at a session at Parsons last week...
Steven Johnson, Twitter
January 7, 2008
My Year in Cities, 2007
I'm inspired my one of my favorite bloggers, Jason Kottke, and favorite writers, Steven Johnson, to write up my own list of the cities where I spent time this past year. It's funny -- thinking through where I've been while in the shower this morning reminded me that 2007 was a particularly odd, and home-bound, one. When I year began, I had just finished up as a staffer on Mark Warner's (pre-)presidential campaign. I started out the year doing some freelance projects, took a job blogging at Air America, left Air America, and am now back freelancing. It was, in truth, a little chaotic a year, but all in all a fantastic one.
With Jane still in law school, our personal travel has been minimal for the last couple of years. But we're planning a big passport-requiring trip for August, when she's done with the bar.
New York City
Jackson, MS
Missoula, MT
Baltimore, MD
Southampton, NY (4)
Chicago, IL (2)
Washington, DC
Saratoga Springs, NY
Amherst, MA
Philadelphia, PA (2)
Scranton, PA
New Orleans, LA
Monroeville, AL
Mobile, AL
San Diego, CA
Los Angeles, CA (2)
Austin, TX
Boston, MA
Steven Johnson
April 14, 2007
Screening of Brooklyn Matters
When did this become at New York City events blog? Oh vell. This Wednesday at 7:30 at the Old First Reformed Church at the corner of Carroll and 7th Ave here in Park Slope there will be a free showing of the new documentary "Brooklyn Matters." The subject of the film is the much-contested proposed 22-acre (I have not run out of compound adjectives yet) Frank Gehry-designed Atlantic Yards development project in north Park Slope and Prospect Heights. Amazing, isn't it, that a proposed development plan has its very own Wikipedia entry?
But you know what would be really cool? If someone built a 3-D model of Atlantic Yards in Google Earth.
UPDATE: Ha, ask and you shall receive: Invisibleman's Jon Keegan's Google Earth model of the Yards. You can even download his placemark layer and add it to your own Google Earth. Here's a view of the same model looking from Brooklyn and lower Manhattan. At right is the view I captured from the Grand Army Plaza subway stop, just north of Prospect Park.
For what it's worth, Steven Johnson wonders whether the project perhaps isn't such a bad thing. The end result would be to have a developed corridor running from the Yards to downtown, replacing what is now sort of an echoing chasm and introducing a touch of big-building urbanism to brownstone Brooklyn. Of course, many of us in the most recent wave of Brooklynites choose to live in this outer borough exactly to escape big-building urbanism. Johnson cites Jane Jacobs to argue that the charm of human-scaled urban places is tied to the fact that they exist in the same environment as more massive development. Exactly. That's why Brooklyn is so darn charming today. There's already a ready contrast to the livable scale of our borough. It's called Manhattan.
documentary, Steven Johnson
November 21, 2006
Steven Johnson's Urban Planet
Steven Johnson could drunkenly scratch haikus onto the side of a cardboard box and I'd read them, because whether I agree with what he writes or not, it makes me think in new ways. Lucky for me he's got a new Times Select kinda-blog/kinda-column thing called Urban Planet.
Today's entry says that we should think less about red vs. blue and more about country vs. city. I will say that while I don't disagree with that premise, Johnson glosses over the question of suburbs and exurbs. As I read the geographic break-down -- and honestly, after spending sometime digging through census.gov, I'm not sure even the Census Bureau really has a firm grasp on it -- while 80% of Americans do live in metropolitan areas, only 30% actually live in the "central city" that makes the it count as a metro area in the first place. So it's not as if only 1 out of 5 of us is living way out in the sticks, and the other four of us are pounding the pavement in Chelsea or Nob Hill each day.
2, electoral politics, Steven Johnson
April 21, 2006
Brrooklyn

While I certainly agree with Steven Johnson that Park Slope is generally lovely in the springtime, today it happened to be damn cold. So much so that when I went outside this afternoon to practice my new hobby of picture taking, the flowers (tulips? dunno) that were so ready-for-their-closeup yesterday were all curled up into themselves, the petals huddled together for warmth. Still, I thought that the colors turned out nice in this, but the framing and focus need a lot of work.
, photos, Steven Johnson
May 5, 2008
Emergence on Radiolab
I stumbled across this 2005 episode of Radiolab that probes the science of emergence, featuring E.O. Wilson, Steven Johnson, and a lovely word painting of fireflies displaying synchronism along the banks of a Thai river.
emergence, Steven Johnson
March 19, 2008
Johnson vs. Manjoo on Truth
Steven Johnson disagrees with the central premise of Farhad Manjoo's new book on the modern mediascape as a greenhouse for lies and distortions, making for a lively (if slightly disjointed) debate between the two.
Steven Johnson
October 29, 2006
Steven Johnson on the Google tricks of public intellectuals.
Steven Johnson on the Google tricks of public intellectuals.
Steven Johnson
August 2, 2006
Jesse James Garrett's fantastic interview with Steven Johnson continues.
Jesse James Garrett's fantastic interview with Steven Johnson continues. Johnson talks the future of interface design and software as cultural artifact.
Steven Johnson
March 31, 2006
Lost
Rocking good post on why Lost -- the show itself and that which is created around it -- is "genuinely new media" (via Steven Johnson).
Lost, Steven Johnson
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