Studies in Semicolons

Month

January 2013

15 posts

The Year (or Month?) of the Penpal

Like many of you nerds, I spent an unusual amount of 2012 worrying about Twitter. API changes and App.net and client restrictions and character limits and cards and ads created this weird sort of anxiety about where my online life was going. I’ve long sense quit Facebook, and Twitter has been where it’s at for me online. And while I really value the friendships I’ve made there, I’m starting to worry about what it means to lock my friendships in that platform. Worse, I’m starting to worry what it says about my psyche that I’m reaching for the phone to post or to read on Twitter as a proxy for connecting with other human beings.

Seeing about separating the wheat from the chaff, I want to try a little experiment. Here’s the plan: e-mail me at chase@semicolons.net if you wanna chat about technology, academia, the personal growth stuff we tend to talk about on Dear Blank or really anything else. If we’re friends already? Awesome. If we’re not yet, I’m looking forward to becoming one.

I’m gonna try to keep up with those e-mails throughout January. One of e-mail’s many advantages: the messages can be a sentence long, or they can be five paragraphs. In the meantime, I’m gonna take a break from Twitter, pull the apps off the computer and the phone and see what happens. I’ll still be blogging here, and try to keep up with you crazy kids from time to time.

If January goes well, then we’ll see about February. Either way, I’m excited to try to engage more meaningfully in the stuff we all care about.

Jan 1, 20134 notes
#Twitter #penpal #social networks

December 2012

15 posts

The Power of Defaults & Intents in Android → mobile.theverge.com

Short version: It’s all about information sharing between apps.

Dec 28, 2012
#android
In Praise of Subjectivity

At Christmas Eve mass with my grandmother this year, I watched a priest read the full version of the Gospel of Matthew for the day, which lists in detail the 42 generations between Abraham and Jesus. As he did so, I remember thinking it odd, but not necessarily unusual or suspect. The priest’s homily, which followed, was a more dramatic departure from the spirit of the occasion: he chose to scold all of us for how bored and uninterested we must have been during the reading of these 42 names. The reading of the names of dead veterans and children in Connecticut were invoked as reasons why respect for such name reading is important. The message this priest chose for Christmas, then, was not only one which somehow ignored the spiritual significance of the Christian holiday, but was premised entirely on how he believed a group of people would feel without ever asking them.

As you may know, I’m a graduate student, nurturing a nascent career in qualitative research. I’m also a Christian and, as I’ve discussed elsewhere, in the midst of a transition from Catholic to Episcopalian, having started my adult faith life at Catholic University in Washington, DC. At Catholic, I met some of the smartest people I have ever known, people with deep backgrounds in philosophy and in science, people committed to a life of the mind. Many of those same smart people were the intolerant, judgmental sons of guns you may rightly assume would find themselves attracted to a small, private Catholic college less than a mile and a half from the US Capitol. They had received and developed some of the most complex epistemologies and ethical systems imaginable, yet they had become completely disconnected from the motivations and the limitations of the people those systems ostensibly applied to.

I don’t mean to pick on the religious in general, or Christians in particular. Catholic was also where I met people of great intellect and great compassion, who lived selflessly and integrated a life of the mind with a life of service. Still, as in most other realms of life, they were the exception. This is a danger we run into, I think, when we elevate knowledge over compassion. It’s the mistake people of faith make when they tell us to “love the sinner, and hate the sin,” as though the meaning of the action they call sin was completely unambiguous. It’s the mistake many critics of qualitative research make when they suggest subjective experiences have little to tell us about the nature of truth. It’s the mistake we make countless times in our politics and our culture, when we know people take unemployment because they don’t want to work, when we know video games cause kids to be violent, when we know why a friend or a partner has become so distant from us.

Paradoxically, the action at the center of that mistake–making an assumption in the absence of evidence–is antithetical to the very life of knowledge we believe we’re upholding and protecting. Our lack of knowledge about why people do what they do, why they think what they think, is an opportunity for academics and those in the life of the mind. It’s an opportunity to think about cutting edge forms of evidence. It’s an opportunity to design our inquiries differently. It’s an opportunity to ask questions. Those questions can be, should be, our lifeblood.

Dec 26, 20124 notes
#subjectivity #qualitative research #knowledge
GTD: Trigger List for Academics → docs.google.com

As part of my continued reinvigoration of my Getting Things Done system (more on that later), I’m trying to develop a version of David Allen’s incomplete triggers list especially for academics. It’s a Google Doc that’s completely editable so check it out and, if you’ve got stuff to add, please go do so.

Dec 24, 20124 notes
#GTD #getting things done #academia
Plain Text is the App

Android apps suck. Most of them, anyway. It pains me to say as much, as a regular Android user and sometimes evangelist, but it’s true. Google is doing some really promising things with Now and with its built in apps, and several cross platform mainstays like Instapaper and Comixology really shine on my Nexus 7, but for the most part, Android doesn’t have nearly the same healthy app ecosystem that iOS does. I know some of the reasons - Android users are less likely to pay for apps, developers are less willing or capable of developing for so many diverse devices, cell companies and device makers have been rather poor about keeping the OS on old devices up to date - but it still sucks.

About once a month, I confront this sucky reality when I go searching yet again for a new Android text editor. I’ve used Epistle for Android on my phone and tablet for years. Epistle is clean, it previews Markdown, it syncs effortlessly with Dropbox and it’s never given me problems in all the time I’ve used it. Still, it lacks some of the obvious shine and bonus features that apps like Nebulous Notes or Drafts have in iOS. And Epistle’s developer has gone completely AWOL: not only is the app not updated, I e-mailed him a month ago offering to send a little cash his way, and he has yet to write me back.

As beautiful and feature rich as those apps are, though, each month I’m left scratching my head trying to figure out what I need them for. I started using plain text, ostensibly, because the format was lightweight and didn’t require any one specific app or platform. Yet, here I am, searching for a complex, feature-rich solution for dealing with files designed to be simple and uncomplicated.

I wouldn’t give up my Macbook Pro, with all its text editors and scripts, for doing my work. Not for a minute. But when I’m on my phone? I’m opening files, referring to them, and occasionally adding or deleting things. When I’m on my tablet? I’m writing in exactly the environment where I don’t want the distractions of Microsoft Word, or even the distractions of my intensely agile favorite FoldingText.

There’s a niggling part of my brain that has yet to make peace with the inherent - at times the helpful - constraints of a software universe that can’t possibly deliver every single thing I want. That problem, the underlying problem, isn’t going to be solved by buying an iPhone 5.

Dec 21, 20121 note
#plain text #Android #apps #simplicity #workflow
“Where is your closest pad? Keep it closer.” —David Allen.
Dec 19, 20121 note
You're Not the Customer or the Product, You're the Client → powazek.com

Derek Powazek on how we can’t pay our way out of bad web services:

This blind “my way is the only right way” is a poison to innovation and destructive to those of us building free services that do have business plans. Some businesses require mass adoption to work because they depend on economies of scale or a large audience. There is nothing inherently wrong with that.

What’s inherently wrong is a company changing its terms of service to screw their users. What’s wrong is a company that sells your data without your consent. What’s wrong is a company that scales back customer service to save a buck, leaving its customers angry and frustrated.

But those things usually have nothing to do with whether you’re paying them or not. They have to do with the company’s leadership, their level of complacency, and their demonstrated respect for their customers.

The whole thing is good, and you should go read it. In short: money and privacy are just two of the many resources you should consider when giving yourself to an app; time and attention are others which are as, if not more, important. Before you sign up for something, consider whether the benefits outweigh the costs for you. If that equation changes, leave, and tell folks why. In general, pick companies that treat their users with fairness and respect. But don’t hold web companies to standards you wouldn’t hold your cable company, or your power company, or your landlord.

Dec 18, 20122 notes
#web services #cost
I Like Having Options → daringfireball.net

Via minimalmac, here’s Daring Fireball on writing on the iPad:

The scary part though, is that one recurrent theme I see in nearly every single “how I write on the iPad” story is Dropbox. It’s the linchpin in the workflow. Scary, because Dropbox is outside Apple’s control. Scary, because if not for Dropbox, many of these people would be using their iPads as much as they are. Scary, because Apple’s iCloud falls short of Dropbox.

Long-time readers know that I seldom opine that Apple should acquire other companies. But Apple should buy Dropbox.

The premise here is spot on. My conclusion, though, the exact opposite.

When nerds like me extol the virtues of working in plain text, we talk about portability: no matter what happens to computers or software over the coming years, we say, we’ll always be able to take our files and open and edit them somewhere else. It’s been that flexibility that’s allowed writers to feel comfortable working in one of the million billion iOS text editors without being locked into some proprietary format that’s costly or difficult to pry off the device.

Well, what’s good for the file format is good for the cloud service. If Dropbox goes away tomorrow, an iOS user can switch to iCloud. Or Google Drive. Or SugarSync. Or the sync service that would inevitably try to replace Dropbox’s core functionality. If worst comes to worst, that user will still be able to copy their text into an e-mail and send it to themselves. That flexibility provides the security, the security that means being able to work on something on whatever platform you like, whatever happens to that platform.

These are the virtues of text files, which are in turn the virtues of the file system, which Dropbox is probably the single strongest force for protecting in iOS. If that diversity goes away - if the objective of syncing platforms becomes being acquired by Apple in the same way Sparrow’s objective seemed to be being acquired by Google - then that flexibility goes away, and the tablet becomes a lot less like a tool and a lot more like a screen controlled by somebody else.

Dec 17, 201219 notes
#Dropbox #tablets #flexibility #writing
Why It's Okay to be a Google Fanboy
  • Because I understand the trade offs. I know that I lose a little privacy every time my phone tells Latitude where I am or my web searches are synced in a history associated with my account. But I get stuff, in exchange for giving that up. I get services, like having those searches synced across my devices, or using Google Now as an increasingly vital and interesting HUD of what’s going on in my world, that I probably couldn’t pay for without that information getting collected. And despite all those trade offs, Google Dashboard has kept me more aware of what Google knows and what it uses that data for than any other service I’ve ever encountered.

  • Because avoiding it is practically impossible. There’s a second copy of every e-mail I have ever sent or received being held by somebody who’s not me. Many of those people will continue to use Google services. My university’s intranet is completely back-ended by Google Apps. Even worse, many of those people won’t have implemented Google’s two-factor authentication and won’t have a secure password. E-mail isn’t private. Calendars aren’t really private either, unless you plan to keep yours on paper and locked with handcuffs to your person at all times. Privacy gets to be a big deal when we talk about stuff that can actually hurt people’s lives: their medical history, their mental health, their conversations with their priests or their spouses. Privacy over where I plan to go to lunch? Like many other problems, I’ve found the solution here is not to fret about maintaining something that’s unmaintainable, but to stop fretting.

  • Because they use my time, attention and money-making power to make cool things. Laugh all you want about the driver-less car and the space elevator, but … aren’t those things cool? Don’t you imagine we’ll have them someday? Doesn’t it mean something powerful and positive in the world of ideas for a tech company to hire Ray Kurtzweil? Doesn’t it remark on an incredible, intense vision to set out to scan every book in the world? Don’t get me wrong, I love that my computer gets shinier and lighter and thinner every year. But it’s worth something to me to have a tech company that’s about making more than computers and smartphones.

Dec 15, 2012
#google
“The pursuit of truth, properly considered, shouldn’t stop short of insanity.” —Errol Morris.
Dec 15, 20126 notes
#errol morris #truth #quote
“

He who learns must suffer

And even in our sleep pain that cannot forget

Falls drop by drop upon the heart,

And in our own despite, against our will,

Comes wisdom to us by the awful grace of God.

”
—Aeschylus.
Dec 14, 20123 notes
#quote #Aeschylus
Listen

Enough #180 - Areas of Intense Interest

In this week’s Enough, Patrick, Myke and Dave Caolo talk about the recent trend among bloggers to give up their smartphones, and the notion of the always-on data collection as a kind of happiness drug.

I keep thinking about taking the same step. I work every day with a Samsung Galaxy Nexus on a $30 month-to-month T-Mobile plan that offers me ample voice and texting, but a tiny amount of data that I use basically for emergency purposes only. And I’ve thought about the alternatives on both extremes: upgrading to an iPhone with a full data plan, and downgrading to a dumb phone and perhaps saving some money on the phone bill.

Here’s why, though, this is the perfect middle ground for me: all the data that gets synced to my phone on WiFi - my podcasts, my Instapaper feeds, my pictures, my music - these are all idea-rich, important parts of my life that it’s great to have always in my pocket. All the data that gets synced from my phone on WiFi - the pictures I take, the edits I make to my notes, etc. - that’s all stuff that makes me more productive or lets me connect with someone I couldn’t connect with without this technology. The constant updates and refreshing? That for me is the barrier to being in the moment. The other stuff, the content? That’s what makes sitting on the bus a richer experience than it would be otherwise. That’s the stuff I use technology for.

So I’ll do my best, for now, to manage with the midrange phone in my pocket and manage myself to make sure I use it at the right times.

See also: Patrick’s awesome post on why you might want to put your phone on Airplane mode, advice I try to take at least once a day.

Dec 11, 20121 note
#iphone #information #data
“I’ve just come to the conclusion that the ideal work-life balance is the one that you can make work. It’s not a magic bullet or philosopher’s stone. And realizing that it hasn’t worked as I thought it might is quite liberating, as it frees me up to try another approach.” —David Seah (via smarterthaniam)
Dec 6, 20123 notes
#work
Play
Dec 5, 2012
#The Onion #lifehacks
On Ask Metafilter, Silvertree asks how to take better notes → ask.metafilter.com
Dec 5, 2012
#notetaking #howto
“I like the Palm. It doesn’t over-promise, it doesn’t over-deliver.” —David Allen. (Now, laugh all you want. The Palm Pilot’s forever ago. But when was the last time you sat down in front of a piece of tech that didn’t over promise, especially where productivity is concerned?)
Dec 2, 20121 note
#david allen #getting things done #tools
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