Wednesday, August 14, 2002

P.S. As editor, prior to 'turning the lights on' for the blog, I'll be able to delete these trial posts from the site, although I'm not sure I can from the archives...
Simon -
Welcome aboard!

Your post reproduced below, but not actually published under your name until you go with the "Post & Publish" option.

Yes 'Post' is an interim state, making the post visible only to those with read/write access. "Post & Publish" produces a globally accessible post...

Unrelated/related: I just sent Jonty a message regarding L+' web site and Monument.

Cheers!

--
Jon
easy to blog on! The archives sections are repetitive, so I figure this is just a simulation (and that's why I can't see the last five posts?). I will post this now, but what is the difference between "post" and "post and publish"? Is the former for your (editorial) eyes only?

Simon

Sunday, August 11, 2002

as mentioned, demo of hypertext link and html:

sample hypertext link:

Monument

sample picture display:

Sunday, July 28, 2002

second beta test post:

fyi/fya from today's New York Times Magazine
[and note: an absolute first for me to be quoting William Safire, quoting Peggy Noonan no less!]


ON LANGUAGE
Blog

By WILLIAM SAFIRE


In an upbeat Independence Day column in The Wall Street Journal, Peggy Noonan, the incurable optimist, wrote about all ''the lights that didn't fail'' America -- from cops and firemen to peach-growing farmers and cancer-curing scientists, from local churches to TV comedians to blogging.

Blogging? She explained the word as ''the 24/7 opinion sites that offer free speech at its straightest, truest, wildest, most uncensored, most thoughtful, most strange. Thousands of independent information entrepreneurs are informing, arguing, adding information.''

Blog is a shortening of Web log. It is a Web site belonging to some average but opinionated Joe or Josie who keeps what used to be called a ''commonplace book'' -- a collection of clippings, musings and other things like journal entries that strike one's fancy or titillate one's curiosity. What makes this online daybook different from the commonplace book is that this form of personal noodling or diary-writing is on the Internet, with links that take the reader around the world in pursuit of more about a topic.

To set one up (which I have not done because I don't want anyone to know what I think), you log on to a free service like blogger.com or xanga.com, fill out a form and let it create a Web site for you. Then you follow the instructions about how to post your thoughts, photos and clippings, making you an instant publisher. You then persuade or coerce your friends, family or colleagues to log on to you and write in their own loving or snide comments.

''Will the blogs kill old media?'' asked Newsweek, an old-media publication, perhaps a little worried about this disintermediation leading to an invasion of alien ad-snatchers. My answer is no; gossips like an old-fashioned party line, but most information seekers and opinion junkies will go for reliable old media in zingy new digital clothes. Be that as it may (a phrase to avoid the voguism that said), the noun blog is a useful addition to the lexicon.

Forget its earliest sense, perhaps related to grog, reported in 1982 in The Toronto Globe and Mail as ''a lethal fanzine punch concocted more or less at random out of any available alcoholic beverages.'' The first use I can find of the root of blog in its current sense was the 1999 ''Robot Wisdom Weblog,'' created by Jorn Barger of Chicago.

Then followed bloggers, for those who perform the act of blogging and -- to encompass the burgeoning world of Web logs -- blogistan as well as the coinage of William Quick on the blog he calls The Daily Pundit, the blogosphere. Sure to come: the blogiverse.


Looking forward to your initial and continuing contributions...

Saturday, July 20, 2002

beta test post:

Skip forward two hundred years into the Utopian
future... In the age when there is no manual labor and everyone is "educated," it
is hardly likely that Father will still be a rough man with enlarged hands who
likes to sit in shirt-sleeves...And there won't be a coal fire in the grate,
only some kind of invisible heater.




George Orwell, The Road to Wigan Pier 1937



The machines that keep us alive, and the machines
that make the machines, are all directly or indirectly
dependent on coal. The metabolism of the Western
world the coal-miner is second in importance only to
the man who ploughs the soil.



George Orwell, The Road to Wigan Pier 1937



MONUMENT