Goodbye “Blog Sin Nombre”, Hello “strangeoutput”
Took a little poll (very little, but high quality) from a couple photographer/writer friends I’ve known for many years and whose creative judgement I trust, and they both liked (from the list I sent them), the name “strangeoutput” the most. “Something about ’strangeoutput’ amuses me.” Troy Paiva writes, and Larrie Thompson says “… Anyway, yeah, strangeoutput… Another vote in favor!”. I tend to agree. “Tend”? No, it’s more than a tendency, it’s a … something stronger than that anyway. A bone of… no, that’s ‘contention’. A boner? I have a boner for it? Nevermind. Like I said – or am about to say – the brain serves up strange output. In any case, it rings true - with what my girlfriend says about me and what the brain does. And it just sounds cool, and let’s face it, in this coollified medium, that’s what counts, eh?
And besides, “Blog Sin Nombre” is already taken - by a few Spanish-speaking bloggers in South America. There’s also a YouTube video by that name - (actually two) by some Spanish-speaking dude yabbering into the camera.
The subtitle of the newly-renamed blog, er “Tagline” (as if this were a movie - maybe it sorta is, with the way it “plays” on a screen, before the viewer’s eyes…), what immediately came to mind was “Missives from the edge”, which goes along with “strangeoutput”, since my tendency to think philosophically, or be interested in the edges of science, be skeptical about society, always reaching for some creative newness in art, photography, writing, inventions, ways of living, etc. … it all goes together. (If it all starts “going together” too much, it’s time to put me in the loony bin).
Now I just gotta be brave and sign up for the domain name, before somebody nabs it …
And if I do at some point, then I have to migrate all the posts, comments, etc. over to the new site. Then do a little trick so that the search engines don’t wipe me out of their listings because of duplicate content – this involves, from what I’ve read, putting a 301 redirect in the .ht … something or other. On the server. At the “root level”. You techfreaks can read about it here.
Yeah, I like it.
“We’re getting some strange output here,” the master technician said, staring at the monitor intently, tapping determinedly at the keyboard …
Indeed.
August 14, 2008 No Comments
On Blog Categories (and Tags)
As I re-do my blog, and very carefully re-create categories (they seemed haphazard and over-numerous in my old blog) I notice that categories multiply faster than actual blog entries (articles). How could this be? The answer is that each article can go in more than one category. In fact, I can often think of many categories that certain articles could potentially go into, but am not sure if there is a reason to actually create or use those categories.
For example, my article “The Future is in The CODE” clearly can be categorized under “science-biology”, and “computer science”, but also mentions a science-fiction author. Should I then also clasify it under “Science & Speculative Fiction”? That would probably be more appropriately a “tag”.
Another conceptual issue has to do with the hierarchy of categories. This is also related to the to a cultural issue: how we separate the “sciences” from the “humanities” and arts, even though, to my mind, they at minimum overlap, and many times are not truly separated in reality. There is much science and technology that goes into art. Depending on the person, this can be informal, learned-in-the-field technique, or well-researched and analyzed scientific approach to the materials and processes that one uses in their art-making. Likewise, there is much art in science.
This very article itself is an example of the issues involved: since it touches on both the humanities and the sciences, should I create a new blog category - “philosophy” - to cover that, as well as putting it under Writing/Literature/Publishing and “blogging”?
I’ll have to ponder this and perhaps do a little research…
Now, as far as Tags go, my impression is that tags are more particularized, whereas categories are more general and hierarchical. Think of a tag cloud: you can see how many posts have to do with a particular topic, and if you see some juicy fruit, you pick it - it’s a way of connecting that primate visual ability with that abstract linguistic human left-brain thing …
July 30, 2008 No Comments
Blog, Interrupted (But Resuscitated)
This is my newly re-done, resuscitated blog, which I haven’t used for over a year.
Improvements are:
- A new, better theme (neoclassical). Also created new photo headers for it from my photos.
- Upgraded WordPress (to 2.6 from around 2.2). (see more about this below)
- Got rid of articles I didn’t really like.
- Re-did the Categories from scratch
Regarding the WordPress 2.6 upgrade:
I upgraded because I wanted to make sure I was able to use new features and be compatible with themes, and it sounded like there was something called “widgets” that were part of the new deal. Unfortunately My categories were wiped out in the upgrade process (from I believe 2.2). I tried going into the MySQL tables, as suggested by this post by a programmer at another blog. However, there were more database rows than a Google cached page of my old blog categories showed, and it seemed tricky to sort out. so, I simply deleted all the old categories and started fresh. This turned out to be better anyway, because I was able to come up with better, clearer set of categories
Always aim for the simpler, more beautiful solution.
8/7/0
Update: I created a couple of blogs at Wordpress.com a couple of days ago thinking that would be a way to get more traffic to the site, since it was part of a large pooled domain of subdomains, and I’d noticed that many times my Google searches on various topics took me to www.blogname.wordpress.com sites. Well today I did some actual research in to the topic (using Google and the search terms “blog seo wordpress.com vs. self-hosting”) and discovered that there are good reasons for thinking self-hosting is actually the better solution. For example, this struck me:
“8. Better SEO (Wordpress) - You can use plugins to SEO your blog. You can use plugins like All-in-One SEO to SEO each post, link checker to check for dead links i.e. links that are not working.”
(http://www.quickonlinetips.com/archives/2008/08/self-hosting-your-blog/)
A number of commentators (bloggers) also mention a number of other compelling issues, such as control (e.g., plugins, coding), and the ability to advertise.
So… I deleted all the posts at quantumfrog and thequantumfrog blogs, as well as everything else except the “About” link (which links back to this site).
It was a learning experience (trying out wordpress.com), and not a big deal to create and delete them. I got to learn about export and import
in setting them up. There were only 8 posts, so it was not a big job to delete them and the three (static) pages.
I also renamed this blog to “Blog Sin Nombre”.
Had a little fun with the title of one of the defunct blogs, calling it “This Blog Does Not Exist” with the subtitle “except in your imagination”.
July 30, 2008 No Comments
First Posting: Why I Am Doing This
Why have a joined the Brave New World of Blogging? I avoided it for many years because I was concerned it would be too time-consuming. For starters, I already write in a journal every morning as part of my daily routine, and often write in it during the day (and night). So, I thought also writing in a blog would just add to the already long (non-money-making) list of things I do everyday, and I would be repeating content - writing double as it were - and I already felt a little guilty about all the time I get “distracted” by my curiosity, passions, interests and creative activities.
However, the reality is … more complex than that. (Reality often is). What happens is, I get interested in some topic, and spend time researching, thinking, surfing the web, saving notes and links, AND THEN, email friends about what I’ve discovered, uncovered, or created (such as photos or writings). This process of emailing different friends is repetitive: I don’t just cc: (”carbon copy”) the email, because different friends are different, with different interests, and I don’t want them to feel they were just part of a mass emailing anyway. That emailing process is repetitive of the journal writing anyway, and repetitive with the various emails I send to different audiences.
Not only that, but later I often want to find the reference to a link I sent to some friend, and have to sort or sift or search through old emails or journals to find it. Blogging software uses a database to save everything, and has search capabilities. Links are part of blog posts. As are photos. So it seems a natural solution.
I can also reach a much wider audience - both those people I already know, and anyone that finds their way here, or who I give the link to.
So … I investigated various Content Management Systems (CMS) besides WordPress (one of the two blogging packages my ISP offers to install for free), with names like Drupal, Joomla, and XOOPS. Sounds like the name of juicebars or candy, eh? I decided to stop messing around and try WordPress. I’ve tended to get bogged down in research in the past when I was looking into blogging and wanting to use a software package on my server instead of one of the services out there such as Blogger.
In the process of research I did get sidetracked this time – though in a good way – learning about such things as “cruft”, “Permalink” and the “MetaWeblog” API. I also saw terms that I’ve learned recently like “pingback” and “trackback” when I was researching “splogging”.
Why was I researching splogging? Well, that’s a long story.
June 19, 2007 2 Comments