The Guardian blogpost on open journalism…

The Guardian: a world of news at your fingertips | Help | The Guardian.

 

Lately, I’ve been trending more toward The Guardian over the NYTimes. Reason? Several–cultural accounts are more interesting, but also foreign reportage seems more complete, less recycling of the expected.

 

Why Nokia’s 3D-printing move embraces the future — Tech News and Analysis

Why Nokia’s 3D-printing move embraces the future — Tech News and Analysis.

An interesting and programmatic takedown. I’m still not entirely persuaded, as the account of France’s interest in Niger’s uranium seems persuasive: Niger and Mali abut each other. But the point made in this article is a good one: failure of state as a casus belli.

brucewhitehouse's avatarBridges from Bamako

Since the French military intervention in Mali, known as Operation Serval, began last week, the internet has been buzzing with talk about its motives. Is France really only trying to contain a terrorist threat, as it claims? Or do major world powers have other, more sinister interests at stake? At its root, what is the conflict in Mali about?

This discourse, generated largely by journalists, analysts and activists unfamiliar with Mali, has been far too speculative for my tastes. Let’s consider what we do and don’t know about the causes and effects of international interest in Mali.

1. Mineral rights

Many sources say that the main reason France, and Western countries more broadly, are getting involved in Mali is that these major world powers covet the country’s mineral resources. The website globalresearch.ca expresses this view bluntly: “the goal of this new war is no other than stripping yet another…

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New book: Campaign Communication and Political Marketing by Philippe J. Maarek « PSA Media and Politics Group

New book: Campaign Communication and Political Marketing by Philippe J. Maarek « PSA Media and Politics Group.

92,000 Dead in Mexico’s War on the Drug Cartels | Drug War 101

92,000 Dead in Mexico’s War on the Drug Cartels | Drug War 101.

 

A failed state? I mean Mexico. I’ve been wondering what even constitutes a successful state. During Calderon’s regime, especially in the last few years, Mexico’s GDP grew very quickly and there was a lot of foreign investment. Too obvious to write that the drug war provides the cover for a gross police state, including the supposedly rogue death squads and other paramilitary organizations…. (A police state of this magnitude serves to protect capital investment, such as factories and privileged retail areas.) Also, an incomplete summary and possibly misleading, as it would seem to suggest then that the drug gangs (they are not really cartels) represent the increasingly disenfranchised and generally poor/working class. But I would guess they do not and in fact do not “represent” any political body we normally would identify as a legitimate actor. But they are, in all likelihood, from what I’ve read, made up of the poor, disenfranchised.

 

Let’s fast forward and imagine that in a decade or so, this terrible nightmare of murder will have passed. What kind of public memory will be possible? Who will be held accountable? Even in Columbia, I don’t really see this: the claim is always that is over with, that the cocaine barons no longer represent a threat, they are no longer there. But  is that so?

How Older Parenthood Will Upend American Society

How Older Parenthood Will Upend American Society.

 

There is also a good interview by Terry Gross, of Fresh Air (NPR): http://www.npr.org/rss/podcast.php?id=13

 

Of course, the issue is not particular to American professional class parents. It affects all in a similar bind. The solution, interestingly, if not surprisingly, lies outside the US boundaries, in polities that seek to arrange work schedules to accommodate child bearers before (epi-)genetic risks become too high–and thus more costly to the society.

The Wealth of the Commons

The Wealth of the Commons.

Feds go overboard in prosecuting information activist | Ars Technica

Feds go overboard in prosecuting information activist | Ars Technica.

Information activist: Aaron Swartz. (Article pointed out to me by Jamie Love, who had reposted it to FB.)

Can Social Media Sell Soap?

Can Social Media Sell Soap? – NYTimes.com.

 

Notes: Been meaning to write on this idea, to investigate the rise/development of narrative models of representative persons, distinct from the legal category of “reasonable man,” but not alien to it. My sense of this notion of the representative person derives from American culture, as in Emerson’s essays, to be sure, but well before. Even the very idea of a democracy implies–no, is explicitly about–the idea that the man on the street is the like all others, with only degrees of difference distinguishing one from the other. Except, in the case of American culture (and it’s hardly unique), the quality of race affords a catastrophic decoupling of shared identity.

Or would, for those most committed to the idea, of any identity shared by all minus x, just as any number of other shibboleths drive difference into the bone of contentious identity.

But it still gives us the logic, of conceiving persons as plausible imaginations whom we can conjure out of wish and memory and hidden desires and impart with a logic like intention that in the telling persuades the reader that this is true.

The interesting thing to me is not that this operation of Western fiction, which has prevailed since pretty much after the first novels were sold, is decaying or is not decaying–it isn’t, for reasons that Auerbach argues–but that its currency is equally never stable, oscillatory with surface effects, the traces of identity scattered by the desires of others and not to be found in the history of the subject. (There is no subject, at least no unitary subject that is not in the end a fiction. Not that that makes any difference.)

So in this current frame, where the game of advertising and marketing and community–all fields I am now deeply in and by which I earn my living and whose discourse I find interesting to no end–the point is not to find the what women (or men or children) want, but to understand that the archive that makes up our collection of desires and actions and actionable desires and desirable actions is sometimes incoherent, held together by accidents of location, context, inertia; and sometimes fiercely, synthetically logical, and sometimes both. That the Victorian project of order is not irrelevant because it failed fully to account for the irrational and biological (that as always implicit) but a theatre that both retains its full power of ordering identity while … we continue to do what we otherwise do outside of that theatrical space, perhaps in another one.

And I’m reminded, again, of that very great novel, Trouble on Triton, by Delany. 3 billion on Earth killed by the spacers (as Asimov would have had them), by those outside of Earth: a genocide. The novel anticipates his later work, such as (again the reframing of Asimov), Stars in my pocket, where again, the genocide of cultures continues as a logical outcome of family structures that predicate identity on sharply drawn logical grounds. But this, as has also been noted, is simply the Enlightenment project carried to its terminus.

 

Readers’ Choice Awards 2012 | Linux Journal

Readers’ Choice Awards 2012 | Linux Journal.

So here’s a simple test I undergo from time to time: Create a simple, informative presentation with charts and images. Do this while travelling to the conference via plane or train. Assume that the venue will offer a rich choice of incompatibilities and idiosyncratic setups. So save it as a PDF, and, for fun, as a SWF file. Further, put it on a USB stick or, as I also do now, slot it into one of the many slide-sharing and storage sites.

And, if you are like me, the presentation is likely to be fairly skeletal and won’t include the language you use in the actual lecture. But the conference organizers (or panel organizers) will want that, and you may also want to stay on script, so you’ll need notes.

I am quite sure–no, actually, I’m just guessing–that one can do all this with Keynote or PowerPoint. But could you do it for free? No doubt, the experts among us could do it speedily. But my experiences with MSFT have been anything but speedy; the opposite. Whereas I have never really had frustrations with OpenOffice, though I’ve surely encountered oddities. But I’ve also encountered, and indeed helped to form, a community of sympathetic and friendly experts who have generously offered their help. And also created some terrifically useful templates–and then sent them to me, at 1 AM, when I really really needed them.