Jun 30

Matt Staggs warms my soul:

Thanks to the internet connecting all of the great social tribes together we’re re-entering a “storytelling age,” where authenticity, experience and the ability to communicate ideas in a compelling manner matter more than the authoritarian mono-culture sponsored by corporate America. Those of us who can adapt to this new world - the creatives, the visionaries, we who would have been Skalds, Bards and Troubadours a few centuries ago - will thrive, assuming our place by the fire and our rightful position of importance in the new global tribe.

And blogs will be the campfires around which we huddle for stories, warmth and grog. Or ale. Depending.

written by Matt Mitchell \\ tags:

Jun 09

Did you know MIT posts all their course material online? And that it’s freely available to anyone on the internet (they call it MITOpenCourseWare)? If you want a little light summer reading, give it a try. This guy is, and he’s going to blog about the experience. It won’t count towards a degree, but if you’re just after the brainstuff, then why not. After all, knowledge is power, right? He’ll have plenty of knowledge once he’s done, I guess. His goal is to be able to pass the course ”Biological Systems in Nature and Medicine.” I think it’s a grand idea, and I’m looking forward to reading about it.

I’m going to have to cull some of my RSS feeds. It’s getting ridiculous. And to think: it wasn’t that long ago that I sent out a request for good blogs to read. I’ve gotten more than my fill now, thanks. Though, I have to say, if it’s really good, I’d love to have another ;-)

If you liked that post, then try these...

Tor on March 19th, 2008

Solar Blogging [in the woods] on April 22nd, 2008

Writer's Web on February 7th, 2008

Yahoo! Answers vs. Wikipedia on January 3rd, 2008

Telemarketers, Spammers and Dead Ends on April 29th, 2008

written by Matt Mitchell \\ tags: , , , , ,

Apr 29

I just got two consecutive automated telemarketing calls. Automated. As in, you answer the phone and they respond with a recording advising you to listen to their important message. And then one of them tried to sell me a carpet cleaning (which I don’t need or want). The other one tried to sell me health insurance (which I already have and likewise don’t need or want). I’m sure I don’t need to tell you this is infuriating. But what’s even worse, I listened to the spiel through to the end so I could politely ask them to remove me from their call list and both times, when it reached the end and said “Press one to connect to our operators” the call was ended. They didn’t know I was about to go postal on them, for all they knew I might have been a potential customer, but I never even had the chance to purchase their services. It went to static and then to a deadline and then: the fated dial tone. In both cases I tried the callback number as displayed on my caller ID, but the call went nowhere. Deadend.

I am on the donotcall list, proudly. Once I was added to that list my telemarketing calls dropped totally away. But now I’m starting to get them again, despite re-registering with donotcall.gov a year ago. I’ve gotten the call from the carpet cleaning joint three or four times now, and until today I’d just hang up when I realized who–or what–it was. But, you know, you get tired of it, and it is essentially harassment. I don’t buy anything from telemarketers. I never have and I can with all confidence say that I never will, which, of course, compounds my own frustration with the entire telemarketing industry. I’d just like them all to know that I am a dead end that will never result in a single sale. Ever. And yet, I believe they still would call.

It’s very much like spam. This site gets about thirty spam comments per day, as filtered by Akismet, a tool I thank the stars for. Like telemarketers, I’ve never purchased anything from spam, nor so much as clicked a link in a spam email. Again, I am a dead end, with no hope of ever procuring a sale. As for email, well, email is much easier. I just keep changing email addresses. Every time the spammers get wise to an address of mine, I abandon it and get a new one, usually via Yahoo! or Gmail, or I can just set one up through my hosting service. And I never use my primary email to register for anything. I use one of the old emails that already get slammed with spam. It amazes me how many sites I’ve registered for that have clear “We will use your email only for registration purposes” or “We will never sell your email address or send you unwanted emails” in their reg page text, that within 24 or 48 hours of registering I see a trickle of spam start hitting my inbox. Amazes me.

So it is with great joy today that I find that the notorious spammer Eddie Davidson is going to get 21 months of prison time in which I hope–I hope–that he is introduced as “the new girl” to the admiring prison deviant society.

If you liked that post, then try these...

Solar Blogging [in the woods] on April 22nd, 2008

MITOpenCourseWare on June 9th, 2008

Writer's Web on February 7th, 2008

Yahoo! Answers vs. Wikipedia on January 3rd, 2008

Tor on March 19th, 2008

written by Matt Mitchell \\ tags: , , ,

Apr 22

Joel Johnson over at BoingBoing is camping in the woods for a week–er, four days–in Harriman State Park in New York, with the intention of blogging using only solar power while he’s out. Sounds like fun to me. Keep up with his progress (or lack thereof) at BoingBoing.net as well as his Twitter account. He also has a Flickr account, so maybe he’ll photolog his journey as well.

This is an interesting project to me, and finally gave me reason enough to get a Twitter account of my own, even though I’m not much for texting…we’ll see how it goes. Follow me, or friend me if you like, on Twitter (as with every other social networking service on the internets) I am mattmitchell8

I’ve got two headlamps from Coghlan’s, the 0843 and the 0841.

I’ve got my Amazon Kindle with a copy of Walden on it. (Which I’ve never read.)

Got my knife. Got good socks. Have lightweight, silkie thermals for the evening. Have the most beat-up ball cap around. Have sunscreen. Have fire. Have cables, spare batteries, and trash bags just in case I need to cover something up.

Got my tent, the Hubba Solo, again on multiple recommendations from readers. I haven’t set it up yet, which means that it’s a certainty it will be missing parts or that I’ll have to do so in a freak Hudson Valley hurricane. Oh well — it’ll be good comedy, right?

I’ve got my camera and the Gorilla Pod.

I’ve got rhythm.

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written by Matt Mitchell \\ tags: , , , , ,

Mar 19

Okay; who else is excited about this? I’m getting free e-books in my email, free artwork, and, if you read the fine print in those emails or visit Tor.com nowadays you get this little message:

Something new is coming.

A science fiction and fantasy site not quite like any you’ve seen before, mixing news, commentary, original stories and art, your own comments and conversations, and more. A place on the net you may find yourself wanting to visit—and participate in—every day.

For days I’ve been watching this site. What’s it going to be? Is it going to redefine the SciFi presence on the web (something that is in dire need of redefining, if you ask me)? I’m tantalized beyond words. I am ready, Tor.

Make the internet better for us.

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Short Speculative Fiction Print Markets Doomed? on October 23rd, 2007

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Mermaid on November 13th, 2007

written by Matt Mitchell \\ tags: , , ,

Feb 07


Photo by thorinside

There are a couple of new writer’s websites I’m keeping my eye on.

Write to Done
This is an interesting website, attractively designed, with nice color pictures heading all their articles (much as I’ve begun doing of late). It has a very professional look, but that’s actually my main concern with the blog. It’s too pretty, and after a cursory glance at some of the articles–some of use and some, as you would expect, filler–I can tell that this blog is designed by a person who understands very well what it takes to make a blog attractive to readers, but is there really any meat at all? It’s maintained by the same guy who runs the Zen Habits blog, which is a Technorati Top 100 blog. So his writing is readable and definitely attractive, but it remains to be seen how useful Write to Done will be for a writer like me.

Write, write, write
Steven Brust and a couple of other writers are collaborating on this blog. It’s much less pretty than WtD, but at the same time there does seem to be some meat in some of their posts. There’s filler here, too, as the blog is run a bit more blog-like, with asides and commentary. And it’s written by writers, not bloggers; Steven Brust himself is an accomplished author who could have some good advice for us up-and-comers.

If you liked that post, then try these...

Tor on March 19th, 2008

Yahoo! Answers vs. Wikipedia on January 3rd, 2008

Return of the Troubadour on June 30th, 2008

Google Twin on February 5th, 2008

Telemarketers, Spammers and Dead Ends on April 29th, 2008

written by Matt Mitchell \\ tags: ,

Feb 05

I’m on your trail, evil Google Twin Matt Mitchell. I’ve had my eye on you for a while now, and I’m no longer as far behind you as I once was. Evidently, just so you know: I am also a comedian, an associate professor at the University of Iowa, a “musical microcosm,” and an actor (with an IMDB page!). Oh, and I’m also a eighteen-year-old gamer with the internet moniker “evil_keebler_elf.” Yeah, it’s pretty bad being me. Now you know why my website name has 32 characters–too many durn me’s in the world.

Here’s a fun game–Match the Matt Mitchell to the photo. These are all the Google Twins I still have in my way to being the number one Matt Mitchell on teh interwebs, plus me:

Matt Mitchell the writer.
Matt Mitchell the Comedian.
Matt Mitchell the “Musical Microcosm.”
Matt Mitchell the “evil_keebler_elf.”
Matt Mitchell the Associate Professor at the University of Iowa.

Photo #1:

Photo #2 (the guy on the left):

Photo #3:

Photo #4:

Photo #5:
mmactor.jpg

Photo #6:

If you liked that post, then try these...

Yahoo! Answers vs. Wikipedia on January 3rd, 2008

Return of the Troubadour on June 30th, 2008

Telemarketers, Spammers and Dead Ends on April 29th, 2008

MITOpenCourseWare on June 9th, 2008

Writer's Web on February 7th, 2008

written by Matt Mitchell

Jan 03

I’m liking the new Yahoo! Answers model. The internet mainstay for information has been Wikipedia for a few years now, but if you’re looking for a specific answer to an individual question, Yahoo! Answers is a better option. For instance, while researching for the second moon theory article I did, finding nothing on Wikipedia, I went over to Y!A and did a quick search there and got a load of info back.

Y!A is not so good for browsing. Y!A gives credits for questions asked, so there are a lot of filler questions, like “How cold is it where you are today?” or “What should I wear for my date tonite?” Yeah, there’s some stupid stuff, and I hate filler, but if you have a specific question in mind it can be a beneficial tool. I asked this morning “Why is Bombay now known as Mumbai?” and got a thoroughly sufficient answer:

The appellation Mumbai is an eponym, etymologically derived from Mumba or Maha-Amba the name of the Hindu goddess Mumbadevi, and Aai mother in Marathi. In the 16th century, the Portuguese named the area Bom Bahai (Good Bay), later corrupted to Bomam or Bombaim, by which it is still known in Portuguese. After the British gained possession, it was anglicised to Bombay, although it was known as Mumbai or Mambai to Marathi and Gujarati-speakers, and as Bambai in Hindi, Urdu, and Persian. The name was officially changed to Mumbai in 1995.

How accurate is it? Hell, I have no idea. But it sounds good enough for me. There are some wrong answers out there because,based on Yahoo!’s model, which awards people who ask questions, there are a lot of repeat questions. But it’s still possible to get a good answer for almost any question.

For me, I still like the name Bombay, but maybe Mumbai will grow on me.

If you liked that post, then try these...

Solar Blogging [in the woods] on April 22nd, 2008

Tor on March 19th, 2008

MITOpenCourseWare on June 9th, 2008

Return of the Troubadour on June 30th, 2008

Writer's Web on February 7th, 2008

written by Matt Mitchell