Indie Web Wishlist

I’d like to self-host everything, and then broadcast those materials out to the relevant locations (rather than vice versa). With that in mind, these are my wish list services I want to replicate in a self-host+broadcast method:

  • Status Updates — broadcast automagically to Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, and Google+, including long-form article notification
  • Gallery (media management) — with broadcasting to 500px and flickr.
  • Bookmarking — with broadcasting to delicious and google bookmarks
  • Identity management — tracking what services I’m connected to, with notes as to which are broadcast TO, and which are still broadcast FROM (plus aggregation of all these services into one self-hosted spot wherever possible)

Some Backend Work

I’ve migrated to a different web host. I liked my old web host, but I wanted a bit more space for a bit less money, and ultimately decided to be pragmatic about it. If you notice anything funky on the site, please let me know!

A real post will be forthcoming soon. Promise.

Spinning Wheels

This is mostly a note-keeping post for my own purposes. I’m making it public to keep me honest and in case anyone is curious what’s happening in my life currently. I’ve been thinking more about where I want to be in 5 years, and what I need to do to get there, and it’s a little daunting and amorphous with regard to what steps to take.

High Priority

  • Get a handle on depression and motivation: This has been a recurring theme in my life for years: spurts of energy and productivity, followed by falling into ruts and depressive funks that put my momentum back to zero. I’m tired of it, I don’t have time for it, and so this is a big priority for me to start fixing SOON.
  • Start writing again: I’ve fallen off the writing wagon, and haven’t written anything but self-indulgent blog posts in a while. I want to get back to writing, both critical non-fiction and fiction.
  • Start reading again: This goes hand in hand with writing — reading drives writing, both in terms of research and in terms of sparking critical thought and ideas. I used to keep at least a paperback and a few pulp scifi magazines like Asimov’s and Analog in my bag at all times. Now, I have half a dozen books I’ve started reading and then haven’t touched in months. This bothers me.
  • Get back to photography: More than just taking more photographs, one of the reasons I “fell off the wagon” with my photography in the past few years is that I no longer felt like I was progressing (possibly even regressing), and wasn’t doing anything with the work I had. So when I say “get back to photography,” I mean photographing more, but also doing more post-processing work and actually putting some prints up for sale (whether individually, as a book, or a calendar, I don’t know and don’t really care — maybe all three).
  • Get healthy: I’ve always been more of a sedate person, preferring sitting in a hammock and reading over playing sports. (Don’t get me wrong, I like swimming and hiking and skiing and other activities, but all of those I listed tend to be more reflective and self-paced.) I’ve been lucky in that my metabolism and eating habits have largely kept abreast of this sedate lifestyle, but as I’ve gotten older (and taken a desk job), this balance has started to slip, and I’m feeling markedly less healthy than in the past. So, getting into an exercise routine that I can enjoy is becoming essential. (Still not going to get into sports, though.)
  • Passive Income: I’ve always been a gadget freak. I don’t want to even begin counting how much money I’ve spent on electronics, but suffice it to say, if I’d taken even half that much and invested it in dividend bearing stocks (let alone getting in early on some stock’s meteoric rise, like Apple), I’d be able to buy a steady trickle of toys now on the interest. Instead, I’m down to a 6 year old laptop and my camera. The reality is that I can’t afford a gadget habit right now. So instead I want to look into ways to generate passive/surplus income in my spare time. Maybe this will be writing, maybe photography, maybe both. Maybe programming will finally “click” and I’ll make a few apps I can sell in the Mac/iOS App Stores. SOMETHING. It doesn’t have to pay the bills, but it’d be nice to get to the point where I have some “fun” money I don’t feel guilty about spending.
  • Grad School: I got into University of Denver’s Digital Media program last year, but deferred due to costs and life factors. I can’t make it this year, either. Instead I’m applying to Georgia Tech’s program. Solid school, great program (several of the researchers I cited in my online communities thesis are still professors there), and literally a quarter of the cost of DU. The question I’m mulling right now is to shoot high and aim for the Ph.D program, or gun for the M.S. and get out and using my degree sooner.

Low(er) Priority

  • Update my web site design: I set myself a goal of not screwing with my site design for at least a year. I’ve done this. I want to update the site soon, and then don’t touch it again for at least a year. Things on my list: make the interface a bit more dynamic (not reinventing the wheel, just make use of jQuery and other UI tricks that exist now); make better utilization of microdata, RDFa, and HTML5 to make it more semantic; leverage the newer features in WordPress — the only features I can think of that I’ve been currently making use of that are newer than 1.6 (Maybe 2.0) are dynamic menus and widgets, neither of which I’m making great use of.
  • Launch Wanderlu.st: If Critical Games is my game industry + academic blog, and Critical Self is my personal blog, I want Wanderlu.st to be my portfolio and outlet for my creative output. I’ve been pondering for a while how to do this, but every time I feel like I’m getting ahead of myself and need to get my output GOING before I worry too much about the site. Hence, this being a lower priority than getting back on the productivity wagon.
  • User Groups, Dammit: At least right now, I live in Portland Fucking Oregon. We have amazing resources for finding like minded people to discuss geeky/technical things, like ePDX. I’ve made it to some events, and they’ve not been bad, if perhaps a little cliquish (but that, ultimately, comes down to how willing you are to engage and insert yourself, rather than have others come and draw you in). I don’t go to any regularly, though, due to introversion, some mild social anxiety, and scheduling conflicts. This is something I’d like to correct, but I don’t really see my schedule opening up enough to really “DO” this until fall.
  • Programming: I’ve got a sheaf of application ideas, and an entire shelf of programming books, but I’ve yet to make what I read/practice stick. At some point I suppose I should just drop it and accept that it’s not my forte/focus and move on, focus on design and development and just commission programmers when I need ’em, but after this many classes and books and attempts, it’s become a matter of pride: I’m going to grok programming enough to put out at least one original application if it kills me.

I may expand this list later, but it seems like it covers the core things on my mind right now. Comments, suggestions, and advice are welcome.

Checking In, May 2011

It’s been a few months, again, since my last post. I must admit, I’m a bit rusty and out of the habit of writing. Out of the habit of most creative endeavors, to be perfectly honest. The very thought of creating anything, putting words to paper (or screen, as the case may be) sort of fills me with dread right now. It’s like this: there are a number of projects I want to do. I know what I need to do for most of them. The idea of doing what I need to do for them leaves me tired and filled with anxiety.

So, new thing I need to do: get past my block. Everything else will come.

Lions, Dashboards, and Calculators (Oh My!)

This summer, Apple is planning to release their next iteration of Mac OS X, 10.7 (codenamed “Lion”). From the looks of things, their primary focus this time around is interface improvements to make the user experience more fluid and effective. In general, I’m liking what I’ve been seeing, though looking at the system requirements that have been coming out suggests that I’ll be on the hairy edge of being able to run it at all (a Core 2 Duo or higher is required, of which I’m running the first Core 2 Duo Macbook Pro they offered), so I’m not sure how much real benefit I’ll be seeing in the near future. That said, one of the design changes they’re making seems like a horrible idea: they’re moving the Dashboard into its own space, rather than continuing to work as an overlay over whatever screen you’re on.

Given that the dashboard is for quick-reach, simple widgets, this seems remarkably backwards, and more like something you’d do to get people to not use it so it can be phased out of a later release. Think about it for a second: widgets are meant to show information at a glance, i.e. without significantly interfering or distracting the user from their task at hand. While several widgets seem like simply a bad idea to be shoved into their own space, there are a few that will have their usefulness significantly reduced, most notably the calculator.

To be clear, the dashboard calculator is not especially robust. It has no history or “tape”, no special functions, just your basic arithmetic. About the extent of its bells and whistles is that it accepts numeric input instead of being forced to use the buttons. But you know what? That’s the point. It’s a simple calculator for when you want to run some numbers really quickly, without interfering with the rest of your workflow. More often than not, these numbers will be pulled off a website or email, or chat. You aren’t particularly invested in running the numbers, you just want to check them really quickly. This, specifically, is the value of the dashboard calculator: just pull up the dashboard, and you can punch in the numbers, which are still visible, into the calculator for a quick total, without going through the process of loading up a separate application. I don’t want to have to constantly page back and forth between two screens just to run a quick number check. At that point, why not just use the actual Calculator app?

I doubt I’ll ever know, but I would love to find who made this particular design decision and ask them what on earth they were thinking.

It’s Been So Long Since We Had a Parade

[Including the lyrics on this one, because they are important.]

Dear brothers and sisters,
Dear enemies and friends,
Why are we all so alone here?
All we need is a little more hope, a little more joy;
All we need is a little more light, a little less weight, a little more freedom.
If we were an army, and if we believed that we were an army,
And we believed that everyone was scared like little lost children in their grown up clothes and poses,
So we ended up alone here floating through long wasted days, or great tribulations.
While everything felt wrong.
Good words, strong words, words that could’ve moved mountains!
Words that no one ever said.
We were all waiting to hear those words and no one ever said them.
And the tactics never hatched,
And the plans were never mapped,
And we all learned not to believe.
And strange lonesome monsters loafed through the hills wondering why…
And it is best to never ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever ever wonder why.
So tangle – oh tangle us up in bright red ribbons!
Let’s have a parade.
It’s been so long since we had a parade, so let’s have a parade!
Let’s invite all our friends
And all our friends’ friends!
Let’s promenade down the boulevards with terrific pride and light in our eyes
Twelve feet tall and staggering
Sick with joy with the angels there and light in our eyes
Brothers and sisters, hope still waits in the wings like a bitter spinster
Impatient, lonely and shivering, waiting to build her glorious fires
It’s because of our plans man; our beautiful ridiculous plans
Let’s launch them like careening jetplanes
Let’s crash all our planes in the river
Let’s build strange and radiant machines at this jericho waiting to fall.
Thee Silver Mt Zion, “Built then Burnt (Hurrah! Hurrah!)”