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route99west.com/addendum
is an occasional journal of Oregon, from arts and books to public policy & transportation.
All content © 2006- by Alexander B. Craghead, except where otherwise noted.
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Review: Approaching Nowhere
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Bachelor's Special #1: Instant Noodles Review
Week in Review... in review.
Week in Review, Vol. XI
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Other Notable Blogs
Cafe Unknown
Travel, History and Portland Oregon by Dan Haneckow
Jack Bog's Blog
By Jack Bogdanski of Portland, Oregon. (Like he needs any other introduction by now? -- A.B.C.)
For Portlanders Only
"Why buy a mattress anywhere else?"
Good Stuff NW
Featuring stuff that is good in the NW
LOST Magazine
LOST Magazine is an online monthly magazine that combines elements of many other literary, online, and national magazines with a singular mission--to reclaim in writing lost people, places, and things.
Mapes on Politics
Way West of the Beltway
Outside Is America
A journal about photography, roadtrips, trains and life, with occasional detours into movies, baseball, music, family and more.
The Photographers' Railroad Page
Good photos usually have good stories to go with them.... The goal of The Photographers' Railroad Page is to provide an outlet for top quality photographs and their story.
Portland Food & Drink
Throwing Ourselves on the Grenade of Bad Food to Save You
Portland Transport Blog
A Conversation About Access & Mobility in the Portland/Vancouver Region
PowellsBooks.Blog
Authors, readers, critics, media -- and booksellers
RailPixCritic
One person's musings on railroad photography, focusing on discussions of specific images or groups of same
Rambling West
The musings of a farmer with a typewriter and camera
Stumptown Confidential
Documenting Portland, Oregon architecture, history, and culture through photos, postcards, and words.
The Unauthorized Observer
Observations on faith, photography, trains, baseball, the city where I live (Fullerton, Calif.), anything that I find funny (a lot of things) or irritating (some things) and various incidents involving friends and family.
Under the Weather
...the open road, fatherhood, family life, music, railroads, photography, popular and unpopular culture, sex, violence, religion, the oppression of consumerism and capitalism and the general bullshit that makes up modern life.
Urban Planning Overlord
A blog to counter the myths, lies, and demagoguery others use against sound city planning to further their own ends, fair and foul - but also to urge the profession itself to pull back from the occasional wretched PC exces.
VanPortlander
Living in Vancouver; working in Portland. I have some thoughts.
Whiskey, Texas
...life and experiences in Texas and the Southwest. Recurring themes: Photography, railroads, fading ads / ghost signs, fallen-flag railroad logos, boxcars, bicycling, Texas music, pop culture, sports, road trips, literature, kids and family.
World Scott
The Travel Writing and Photography of Scott Lothes
Blegs & Bargains
Amazon Book Wishlist
B&H Wishlist
My eBay Listings
Powell's Books Wishlist
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Friday, December 7, 2007
Feed Addition
Aaron over at VanPortlander wrote in this morning to ask if there are any RSS feeds.
I confess that The Addendum is a bit of a passive-aggressive blog. I have blogged before, sometimes quite intensely. Overall, though, I got tired of it. Aaron put up a post yesterday that outlined one of many reasons the blogging thing gets old. At some point it feels like a rat-race to be the first to post your opinion about whatever is going on, out there, out in the non-cyber world.
The entire route99west site, however, began its rebirth as an outlet for various artistic pursuits. I viewed (and continue to view) this site as an extended, web-based portfolio of my work. The Addendum grew into the project when I needed a place to put an occasional article or item that just didn't seem to merit the energy investment that a photo essay might. It's also a convenient place to plop some links to interesting stuff that is going on with others on the web.
My reaction against blogging continues. I know from previous experience I won't always have time for updating this page, so I'm trying not to get into the habit of posting to it on a crack-hyper squirrel pace. You'll probably see more Week in Review type posts.
So now, dear readers, you know my excuse for not having made site feeds available in the past. You can thank Aaron for prompting me to change that, however. You can find an atom-based feed here, and an RSS 2.0 feed here. I've also plunked links to both over at the left side of the page, under the heading "Feeds & Etc..."Labels: Blogging, Internet, Journalism, Media, Site News
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Monday, July 2, 2007
Cult of the Amateur
The New York Times this weekend published a review of Andrew Keen's new book, The Cult of the Amateur: How Today's Internet is Killing our Culture. (If the times asks you for a registration to read it, just go to http://www.bugmenot.com/view/www.nytimes.com and get a login set.)
Although the title alone suggests this will be an anti-digital rant bordering on the luddite, Keen's theory merits a second glance. Although he takes a few swipes at one of my favorite projects, Wikipedia, he makes a strong case for the gradual replacement of quality content with simple quantity. As Times reviewer Michiko Kakutani summarizes, Keen fears a destruction of truth:"Postings about political candidates, for instance, can be made by opponents disguising their motives; and propaganda can be passed off as news or information. For that matter, as Mr. Keen points out, the idea of objectivity is becoming increasingly passé in the relativistic realm of the Web, where bloggers cherry-pick information and promote speculation and spin as fact. Whereas historians and journalists traditionally strived to deliver the best available truth possible, many bloggers revel in their own subjectivity, and many Web 2.0 users simply use the Net, in Mr. Keen’s words, to confirm their “own partisan views and link to others with the same ideologies.” What’s more, as mutually agreed upon facts become more elusive, informed debate about important social and political issues of the day becomes more difficult as well." This subject is near and dear to my heart, and has become a centerpiece of some of my academic writing. In a paper entitled "Kuze's Theorem: New Media & The Emerging Solipsism", I pointed to a very similar effect:"The "democratization" of media through the establishment of websites, blogs, and so forth has enabled cults, extremists, and partisans at the expense of the more moderate, homogenized "traditional" media. This has created a networked society where whatever "news" an individual finds and likes can become for them a truth just as valid as any other -- even if it's no more than propaganda. We are in danger of losing ourselves in a sea of media "choice", of enveloping our society into fragmentary fits of what is known as solipsism." To hear these thoughts voiced and given attention in the Gray Lady certainly makes me feel a bit more secure. But to what avail? How many of the Myspace-friendster-Second Life-Facebook-Yahoo!-orkut-etc.... addicts will read it, and how many that do will care? What Keen is pointing out he is framing as some kind of social ill, implying that there is some action that can be taken to counter it. I view it more as a force of nature, as a kind of human tide. Keen seems to position himself as a modern King Canute, setting his thrown at the shore and ordering the tide back. Me I'm scrambling for some wood to build a raft with.Labels: Internet, Journalism, Media
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Thursday, June 21, 2007
Online slideshow navigation
Online Journalism Review has web-published a review of slideshow navigation for web image presentations. While this may be a bit dry at first, for many of us building web sites, this is very interesting research. The biggest surprise? Almost nobody in their study used thumbnails.Labels: Design, Internet, Media, Photography
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Sunday, May 20, 2007
Another one bites the dust?
I've mentioned before the transition that magazines in the railroad enthusiast or "railfan" field have been undergoing. Now, general historians will be mourning the loss of a publishing giant in their niche, American Heritage.
Founded in mid 1950s, American Heritage was a highly successful general history rag distributed on newsstands nationwide. According to the New York Times, who reported late last week about the magazine's closure:The circulation is currently 350,000, or as high as it has ever been, and hundreds of those readers can still be reliably counted on to write in arguing about the true causes of the Civil War or, as happened recently, to point out that the author of a World War II article doesn’t know the difference between the M-1 rifle and the M-16, which didn’t come in until Vietnam. Sound familiar at all? Might the term rivet counters come to mind?
Yet publisher Forbes put the magazine up for sale in January and has had no offers. In the light of this, the company is shutting down production with the June/July issue. For the moment, the staff will continue to maintain the magazine's web site, but there seems to be no clear vision of an all-digital American Heritage either. Indeed, the internet seems to be part of the problem. Editor Richard F. Snow, quoted by the Times story, stated the case like this: "We're really a general interest magazine.... We don’t play to a history buff in any narrow sense -- like the Civil War re-enactors, for example. They can go on the Web and get thousands and thousands of hits."
Again, any bells ringing? Skim the NYT story. Aging readership. Attempts to refocus the editorial direction to a younger audience. Internet incursion. Falling off advertising sales. Patient determined publishers carrying the water.Labels: Internet, Journalism, Media, Publishing
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