Linked from Anarchaia

My Friday afternoon tradition is to check out Anarchaia which is one of my favorite tumblelogs. I wait until Friday because invariably there will be many links for blog posts and papers that I want to read and doing so on the weekend is much better for my productivity.

I was pretty amazed to find myself being linked to last week though. It seems my post about Facebook’s new Chat application and the way they tested it hidden on the page was useful. It seems like a little thing but I’m pretty proud of it.

Why I Take the Train

Why I take the train!

I filled up the car last night on my way home. The good thing is only have to do this every two weeks but still, almost $50. The summer could be even worse and the train more crowded but I’m ok with that.

Shell History

Since everyone else is doing it:


a21772:~ jlucas$ history|awk '{a[$2]++} END{for(i in a){printf "%5d\t%s \n",a[i],i}}'|sort -rn|head
126 rake
121 svn
69 vi
57 ./script/console
21 ./script/server
17 cd
15 ssh
13 cap
10 ls
7 mysql

As you can see, most of my work lately has been Ruby / Rails. No complaints from me.

The Pothole Paradox

Last year, Steven Johnson wrote about the Pothole Paradox and why it matters for local news. In a nutshell, it goes like this:

1. Say you’ve got a particularly nasty pothole on your street that you’ve been scraping the undercarriage of your car against for a year. When the town or city finally decides to fix the pothole, that event is genuinely news in your world. And it is news that you’ll never get from your local paper, or TV affiliate, or radio station.

Obviously this is a great opportunity for a site like outside.in, where news of pothole repairs might easily trickle up from neighborhood bloggers. But it’s not that simple, alas — there’s a flip side to the pothole paradox:

2. News about a pothole repair just five blocks from your street is the least interesting thing you could possibly imagine.

This morning around 12:30, gunshots woke up me. Listening at the window, we tried to piece together what happened, sirens came and went and the helicopters were out in full force. Finally, sleep came but this morning I tried to find out more what happened. I checked the Times and the Pasadena Star-News without any luck. Next it was on to Google News searched for 91016. I found an article on cbs2.com and then a post on Topix.

This is a prime example of the paradox. If I lived down the street or in Arcadia, this story wouldn’t be as much to me as the fact that I couldn’t get out of my house today because of the police tape. Working for a newspaper which is trying to get better with its local coverage, this is the challenge and the opportunity.

Links for 1/30/08 [my NetNewsWire tabs]

2007++

Eiffel Tower

Since everyone else is creating wrap-up posts, I might as well join the parade. 2007 was an interesting year for me. Here are some highlights that I can remember…

  • Went to Advanced Rails training in Dallas
  • Left the country for the first time, spoke at XTech 2007 in Paris
  • Took the family to Washington DC over the 4th of July
  • Various other things which I’m sure I’ll remember as soon as I hit ‘Post’

Well, that isn’t quite true, I do remember one major change. I left EarthLink and started working at the Los Angeles Times. So far, I couldn’t be happier with the change. It’s amazing to be somewhere with so much history yet be part of a team which is hopefully helping move the company forward.

Finally, I’m making a tag line for 2008: Keep Moving Forward. That’s my plan. What’s yours?