One of those little gems…

I’d forgotten how much I enjoy Moby’s album “Play”. I bought it at the same time everyone else in the known universe did, and got sick of it being played to death by a) everyone else in the known universe, and b) every advert ever made, and so, like everyone else, I stopped listening to it. And then, for a long time, it reminded me of a slightly bleak period of living in hotel rooms and being generally a bit fucking down, so I never really listened to it again.

But for the first time in a few years, I’m listening to it now, as part of an attempt to listen to everything in my CD collection at least once this year, and y’know, I think I remember why everyone in the known universe bought it. It really is quite bloody good.

Spimes, Blogjects, And Other Buzzwords: A Primer

Spime is a pretty stupid sounding word (like most neologisms), but it describes an increasingly important concept – they are objects that can be digitally tracked through their entire life-cycle. There’s a little more to them than that, because the man that coined the term, Bruce Sterling, is a big techno-hippy, and felt the need to include ideas about their manufacturing process and some notions about recycling in there too. I’m reasonably sure that given time and usage, that part will fall away (and to be honest, since I am also a big techno-hippy, I’ll be sad about that) and we’ll be left with the specifically useful definition, of an object that generates a data cloud than can then be accessed by other objects.

To make the example more concrete, I’ll quote from the Wikipedia entry for spime – in a near future spimeworld, where your house has a Star Trek style voice activated computer, and all your possession are spimes, instead of spending a fruitless twenty minutes searching for your shoes in the morning, you will simply be able to say “Where are my shoes?” out loud and Majel Barrett will respond “Your shoes are under the bed”, because your household computer will be able to track the datacloud generated by your shoes and your bed, and combine it with in house mapping systems to work out their proximity. (Or, if you’re me, you’ll have ripped the Majel Barrett bit of the code out with claw hammers, and replaced it with something with a decent and attractive accent. Possibly something Scottish. But I digress…)

Which brings us to blogjects. Another word that practically clunks whenever it’s used, a blogject is exactly what you’d think: an object that blogs. An object that publishes data about itself to the web at intervals, without the intervention of a human. One might make the case, for instance, that I have turned my hi-fi into a blogject, because I have a set-up that produces a weekly top-ten type chart of music I’m listening to. It’s not strictly accurate, because it’s not the hi-fi itself that’s doing the playing, recording and publishing – I play all my music via iTunes on a PC, going out through the hi-fi, and it’s the PC doing the publishing, which is then interpreted by several intvening services and scripts. But it’s an example of what the future of things might look like.

And where it all gets really exciting/frightening is that almost everything you do will be generating data like this. Me, as much as it creeps me out a little, I think overall it has the potential to be interesting at least.

It’s part of the reason I run ala.sda.ir. Yes, it’s convenient for others (I hope), but it’s also a chance for me to slowly adjust to where I see the web going, the idea that people will continuously generate personal data, that will be available from central “personal portals”. At the moment, I’m choosing to provide it of my own free will, but there’ll come a point where it’s generated my my spimes automatically. For example, if my camera had a built in GPS device (and believe me, I’d love it if it did), all the photos on my photoblog could be geotagged, and (were I to publish enough photos) someone might be able to build up a reasonable picture of where I’ve been on a given day. That is, of course, if my weekly calendar were not enough – although what I’d quite like is something that would compare before-and-after the fact, so I could track how many of the things I book, I wind up doing, and then provide data about which of my friends I wind up cancelling plans with most often, or who I haven’t seen in a while, and so on…

My point is, that the systems I’ve build to do all this proto-spime stuff are slowly coming together, and becoming more accessible to everyone, and we need to start thinking about how we want to manage our privacy in this strange Doctrow-esque future. At the moment, my calendar will allow me to block stuff from public view, and several of my datafeeds allow me to toggle what turns up on the portal. We need to be sure we give users control over what data they expose to the general public.

Which leads in to another topic, identity management, that I’ll come back to another time.

This entry was originally published at my workblog.

Note to Self

The much-beloved last.fm expose a “top albums” feed (here) that provides amazon URLs to images. It doesn’t change enough to be worth tying directly in to my weekly “top ten” list on ala.sda.ir but it might be a useful data source, to then build a personal weekly top ten albums.

I’m thinking about this because I’ve conculded that tracks doesn’t work well enough to be interesting, since I tend to listen to new albums two or three times in a row per day for several days on the trot, so for example, last weeks top 10 was entirely made up of Dresen Dolls, despite the fact the an album chart would have been a more comprehensive sampler of my listening habits.

(Edit: Damn. Their “top tracks” feed doesn’t carry album data, so matching the two isn’t currently feasibly. Although I note they’ve got a weekly top albums feed on their web services pages, although it doesn’t currently hold data…)

This entry was originally published at my workblog.

Just a quick heads up…

I’m just about to change the DNS for my alasdair.biz domain. I’ve got everything set up at the new hosts already, but it’s possible that my email may be a little wonky at some point over the next few days, so if you’re mailing me in the next day or two, and don’t get a response, drop me a line to check that I’ve recieved your mail.

[Photography] I’m busy, but…

One for the London-based camera-owning nerds of this parish. Via thamshere, Shoot Shoreditch is on this Sunday. It’s an excuse to spend an afternoon wandering about a fairly photogenic bit of town, and possibly even win prizes for doing so. I’d go, if I didn’t already have plans, but I’m sure that others might be interested…

Weekend Gone.

Friday night, comedy at The Ship in Borough. A bit of photography on the way home, trying a few more ambitious tricks with long exposures, some of which worked, some of which didn’t. Pleasant start to the weekend

Saturday afternoon: The Tempest, Islington. Half the cast were weak, (mostly the King’s Party and Ferdinand), and I really didn’t feel there was much directorial vision there – I had no idea what I was supposed to take away from the play past Shakespeare’s original themes and intentions – it sort of felt like the number of unusual directorial choices (all of the major roles filled by women, starting with a plane crash rather than a shipwreck, despite the fact that none of the later dialogue was changed to reference this, a sudden attack of (entertaining, don’t get me wrong) belly dancing in Act 4) were done to be “modern” and “challenging” rather than because the director has a point to make. And the sound engineer should have been taken out and shot. When the sound effects make it impossible for people sat in the middle of the audience to hear most of Act 1 Scene 1 (and a few other points besides), then you know that someone doesn’t know what they’re doing.

Still, all that said: it was perfectly enjoyable. Prospero, Ariel and Caliban are my favourite characters in the play, and they were all more than up to the job, and I can listen to Shakespeare’s language and metaphor for hours.

Saturday evening: ewa‘s and nicklocking‘s respective birthday bashes. Drinking of cocktails, beer and sangria. Tapas. Mild drunkenness. Extremely good fun.

Sunday, daytime: catching up on sleep and emails. And then, in the evening, Jason’s gig.

He didn’t disappoint. I won’t go on about it, because I’m sure you’re all bored of me going on about him. I’ll just say thanks to those who came along – he’s deserved a London gig like that for years – and yah boo sucks to those that didn’t.

There was also a snake dancer, on after Jason, and I think I sort of understand how porn photographers (not that this was porn, but it’s an insight, anyway) do the job. Without the camera, I was watching a fairly attractive young woman wearing not very much cavorting on stage with a snake. With the camera between me and her, I was watching a collection of lines and curves and colours to be framed in the best manner possible. I was, I swear to god, honestly surprised at the huge difference in my responses with and without the camera.

This leads into something I was talking about the other week with alexdecampi and also with jhaelan – the idea that there’s an increasing number of people who do things in order to document, rather than to have the experience. I don’t think it’s necessarily bad, you understand, but I know that I’m often torn, at good gigs, between using the camera and watching the show. The difference isn’t as marked at most gigs as it was last night, but then, I’m generally taking photos of bands whose work I know more or less by heart, and I can listen to music at the same time. When I’m dealing with something that’s more, or even purely, visual, the photographic urge might well get quite badly in the way of the experience.

It might well also play in to my other interests in things like interface design and/or human/technological interaction. warren_ellis‘ Transmetropolitan comic, for example, features a protagonist with camera built in to his ever-present sunglasses. Would that be an elegant interface to prevent that disconnect, or would it do exactly the reverse, and keep that disconnect almost permanently in place?

Tonight, a five course dinner and wine tasting, for ewa‘s birthday meal out. Good comedy, theatre, company, music, photography, food and drink all in the space of a few days, and more of the same to come this week.

I don’t generally go a bundle on the metaphysical poets, but I have to say, I think George Herbert was right. Living well is the best revenge.

Final Reminder

Tonight, Jason Webley is playing South London Pacific. If you get there before 9, it will only cost you a fiver to get in, for an evening of cocktails and cabaret. (I’m planning on getting there at about 7:30/8-ish). There’s a happy hour before ten, so you can enjoy cheap tiki drinks, too.

I’m sure you’re all sick of me reminding you about this, but really, this is important to me. I won’t do the usual spiel about Jason’s act, and how good it is – you’ve all heard it. Instead, I will just reiterate that Jason’s a really first class guy, and I would like him to have a really good gig in London at long last. So please, come along if you can. It’ll be a different sort of night out, and I will, in all seriousness, refund your cost of entry if you get there before nine, and don’t enjoy his act.

ewa’s birthday drinks

She’s still in bed complaining of a hangover, so I’m being told to tell people:

ewa, elethe and jackie_brown will be drinking cocktials and being fabulous tonight in order to celebrate their various brithday’s.

Kick off here: http://www.redfort.co.uk/akbar/ Between 5:30 and 6.

(My apologies to nicklocking – I’ll try and stick my head round the door of the Crouch for a quick one at some point tonight…)