matthewmcvickar + internet   102

Anil Dash: Readability, Instapaper, the Network and the Price we Pay
Readability and Instapaper are two awesome reading tools that actually aren't in competition since Readability is mostly a network and Instapaper is mostly an app. But, foolish fanboy enthusiasm on both sides has got people choosing "sides" between the apps and turning legitimate feature debates into some sort of moral judgment of the people building the tools. Based on what I learned during a similar stage in the evolution of the blogging market, I fear these petty squabbles will hurt both tools and leave the market open only to the biggest, best-funded, most soulless competitors and that both these cool, innovative tools will lose.
instapaper  internet  readability 
2 days ago by matthewmcvickar
Mark Richardson: Resonant Frequency: Follow People If You Like Their Music (Pitchfork)
Our consciousness and memory are moving into the ether, so the need for our senses is diminished. And the interface for this transformation turned out to be text.
music  writing  technology  internet  history 
4 days ago by matthewmcvickar
Paul Ford: Why Facebook Has Not Already Peaked (New York Magazine)
Which brings us back to the question: Have we reached peak Facebook? And no, we haven’t. Even if Facebook never adds another user, it will keep growing: It has become a fundamental substrate, a difficult-to-avoid component of any site or app that requires users to register—making it essential to nearly every major web innovation now and in the future.

There’s a related question: Is Facebook ever going to be cool again? That’s like asking “Is the phone company cool?” The interface may not be exciting anymore, but the network is very, very cool, in the disruptively awesome way that enormous things are: volcanoes, aircraft carriers, the New Deal.
facebook  internet  web  technology 
7 days ago by matthewmcvickar
Mat Honan: How Yahoo Killed Flickr and Lost the Internet (Gizmodo)
Yahoo’s misplaced focus ruined every aspect of Flickr that was ahead of the curve, and so they became behind all of them.
business  flickr  photography  internet  web 
10 days ago by matthewmcvickar
The State Of Music: Part 47: Hawaii — Welwing (Choose My Music)
Hawaii was always going to be a tricky state to cover, detached from the mainland by some 2000 miles its music scene is naturally very insular. Of course I found the usual Ukulele music, but in my eyes no one plays the Uke as wonderfully as Elsa Rae. I also found a lot of hip hop, reggae, a little bit of indie and of course my Hawaii representative Welwing. The first and only instrumental entry into the State Of Music project, Welwing is a one man show headed by Matthew McVickar, a mainland exile doing his thing in the Pacific Ocean.
music  self  welwing  hawaii  internet 
5 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Paul Ford: Facebook and Instagram: When Your Favorite App Sells Out (New York Magazine)
Tens of millions of people made a decision to spend their time with the simple, mobile photo-sharing application that was not Facebook because they liked its subtle interface and little filters. And so Facebook bought the thing that is hardest to fake. It bought sincerity.
business  facebook  twitter  instagram  internet 
7 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Tim O'Reilly: Before Solving a Problem, Make Sure You've Got the Right Problem
I was pleased to see the measured tone of the White House response to the citizen petition about SOPA and PIPA, and yet I found myself profoundly disturbed by something that seems to me to go to the root of the problem in Washington: the failure to correctly diagnose the problem we are trying to solve, but instead to accept, seemingly uncritically, the claims of various interest groups.
internet  piracy  sopa  pipa  government  economics  media  film  music 
8 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Nitsuh Abebe: Why We Fight: On the Far Slope of the Uncanny Valley (Pitchfork)
On ‘mediated experiences’ and the ways that different types and generations of people experience them.
identity  music  millennials  phone  internet 
8 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Sarah Lai Stirland: Expert Labs: Putting The 'Public' Into Public Policy Wasn't Easy (TechPresident)
Two years and several reports later, we thought we’d try to look at how Expert Labs fared. The premise behind the project was that the federal government could and should engage in conversations with people on their existing social networks. The idea was to use existing commercial social networks to crowdsource policy decisions and to synthesize the responses in an intelligent manner.
government  internet  technology 
8 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Ben Brooks: Readability and Collection of Money for Others
Readability has no right collecting money in my name without my consent. Now, realistically, I have given Readability consent by signing up — but what about other publishers that have not only not signed up, but have actively chosen to not sign up? Is it still OK for Readability to be collecting money in their name? I think not. But how do you solve this problem? I don’t know, but it is a very real problem.
business  economics  publishing  readability  instapaper  internet  writing 
8 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Daniel B. Roberts: Much Ado About Whatever (The Morning News)
Tao Lin and his band of followers at Muumuu House are some of the most vehemently disliked—and discussed—writers on the internet. Critics call them hip. Haters call them frauds. But their fiction may be just what our digital lives deserve.
writing  internet  millenials  from instapaper
12 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
“Aaliyah would have been on Twitter. It is fucked up that she is dead.”: An Interview with Patricia Lockwood, Poet Laureate of Twitter (HTMLGIANT)
The art we like the best is generally the art that has the greatest access to us. So. This tweet has tremendous access to my feelings about Aaliyah. Aaliyah’s voice had tremendous access to me.
twitter  internet  humor  aaliyah  rnb  music  from instapaper
12 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Two Poems By Patricia Lockwood (The Awl)
He Marries the Stuffed Owl Exhibit
At the Indiana Welcome Center

and

The Feeling of Needing a Pen
poetry  internet  writing  from instapaper
12 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Tess Lynch: Who You Are and Who You Say You Are (The Morning News)
‘Anonymity is used as a way to stick your finger in a pot of something to see if it changes the flavor without taking responsibility for doing so.’
anonymity  identity  privacy  internet 
12 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Evgeny Morozov: The Death of the Cyberflâneur (NYTimes.com)
The flâneur would wander the streets, observing and sometimes recounting what he saw. Nowadays, no one ‘surfs’ the web anymore.
internet  society 
12 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Elan Morgan: We Can Become Known (Schmutzie.com)
‘In this light, a large portion of Pinterest's content starts to look largely like the great, white, suburban dreamscape of the 1950s pathologized, now crowd-sourced to showcase today's insecurity with the messier, dirtier, and much less wealthy lives we actually lead. It's an extension of the pleasure machines we've been trained to be: we please the perceived tastes of others with images of things that have little or no relation to who we actually are or what we do — most of which images are of things that are, in themselves, about creating pleasure for others — with hopes of little more than to continue being pleasing.’
society  pinterest  tumblr  reblog  internet  consumerism 
12 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Adrian Chen: How I Found the Human Being Behind Horse_ebooks, The Internet's Favorite Spambot (Gawker)
‘Alexey Kouznetsov is a 30-something Russian web developer. Kuznetsov has been designing websites since at least 2002, and on his portfolio site, he markets himself with this modest tagline: “If… you want your pages to be more impressive and dynamic than before, contact the author of this site to order elaboration, introduction and development of new graphic effects on your pages.”’
internet  twitter  russia 
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Digital Music News: The MegaUpload Shutdown Hasn't Reduced File-Trading at All...
‘In the moments immediately following the MegaUpload shutdown, global internet traffic dipped an astounding 2-3 percent. Unfortunately for the feds, that didn't last for long. According to an assessment recently published by DeepField Networks, file-trading volumes basically returned to 'normal' as rival services started picking up the slack. So, same volumes, less snappiness and cost-efficient delivery, at least in the short term. Or, maybe the long-term, depending on how over-the-top this anti-piracy enforcement campaign grows. But does that mean the shutdown was essentially useless? Outside of file-trading volumes and routing details, the 'ripple-effect' of policy changes and shutdowns is getting a lot of attention. Most recently, the shut-and-run list includes BitTorrent tracking giant BTjunkie, with others likely to follow.’
filesharing  internet 
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Susan P. Crawford: Internet Access and the New Divide (NYTimes.com)
‘Over the last 10 years, we have deregulated high-speed Internet access in the hope that competition among providers would protect consumers. The result? We now have neither a functioning competitive market for high-speed wired Internet access nor government oversight.’
government  internet  class  society 
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Coyote Tracks: The enemy of my enemy
‘There are a lot of stories out there which are genuine examples of terrible government overreach and/or the evils of the current copyright system. Megaupload’s story is not one of them. “The enemy of my enemy is my friend” is not a universal truth—and sometimes it puts you in the company of pretty crappy friends.’
piracy  internet  government 
january 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Paul Carr: Costolo is Right: Wikipedia’s SOPA Blackout is a Terrible Idea (PandoDaily)
‘The trouble with taking a political stance on one issue is that your silence on every issue becomes a stance. Human rights abuses in Libya? Not as important as SOPA. Roe v Wade? Not as important as SOPA. Everything else that’s happened in the world until now, and everything that will ever happen from this day forward? Not as important as SOPA. This Wednesday, with its quixotic yelp in support of the Internet community’s issue-du-jour, Wikipedia will do more damage to its independence than SOPA ever could.’
sopa  pipa  government  internet 
january 2012 by matthewmcvickar
M-Lab
‘Use these tools running on M-Lab to test your internet connection and perform diagnostics.’

Test connection speed, see if your ISP is throttling/blocking certain apps or traffic, or is traffic shaping, etc. etc.
internet  network 
january 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Giles Turnbull: Twitter by Post (The Morning News)
‘A letter back then might simply ask one question. The reply would answer it. Just that. A letter might describe a single event, or pass on a single piece of news. I’m pregnant. Your father is dying. I was sent on patrol last night, and I survived. I love you. I still love you. I no longer love you.’
twitter  mail  internet 
december 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Joshua Kopstein: Dear Congress, It's No Longer OK To Not Know How The Internet Works (Motherboard)
‘So it was as proponents of the Hollywood-funded bill curmudgeonly shot down all but two amendments proposed by its opponents, who fought to dramatically alter the document to preserve security and free speech on the net. But the chilling takeaway of this whole debacle was the irrefutable air of anti-intellectualism; that inescapable absurdity that we have members of Congress voting on a technical bill who do not posses any technical knowledge on the subject and do not find it imperative to recognize those who do.’
congress  internet  politics  government 
december 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Louis CK: Live at the Beacon Theater — Statement
Reflecting on his newly self-released $5 internet-only special.

‘I learned that money can be a lot of things. It can be something that is hoarded, fought over, protected, stolen and withheld. Or it can be like an energy, fueled by the desire, will, creative interest, need to laugh, of large groups of people. And it can be shuffled and pushed around and pooled together to fuel a common interest, jokes about garbage, penises and parenthood.’
business  comedy  economics  filesharing  internet 
december 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Maciej Ceglowski: Don’t Be a Free User
‘Like a service? Make them charge you or show you ads. If they won’t do it, clone them and do it yourself. Soon you’ll be the only game in town!’
internet  software  business  from instapaper
december 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Anil Dash: All in Favor
Why Anil favorites so much.

‘In short, favoriting or liking things for me is a performative act, but one that's accessible to me with the low threshold of a simple gesture. It's the sort of thing that can only happen online, but if I could smile at a person in the real world in a way that would radically increase the likelihood that others would smile at that person, too, then I'd be doing that all day long.’
sharing  social  internet  web 
november 2011 by matthewmcvickar
The Morning News: What I Didn’t Write About When I Wrote About Quitting Facebook
‘The emergence of the Social Media Exile essay has been swift and smug. A language expert dissects a genre while also being seduced by its allure.’
facebook  internet  writing 
november 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Expert Labs: The Democracy Gap
‘The Democracy Gap is a great chasm between this “hearing and deliberative” part of government (what people like to call “Washington”), and the rest of human civilization, and activists — left, right, and orthogonal are beginning to figure this out, and it’s beginning to really tick them off. People are using the internet to become increasingly more organized, but at the same time are becoming more and more disconnected from the mechanics of power inside Washington. Moreover, as the volume of voices grows louder, “Washington” becomes more disconnected — unable to hear the best solutions from the cacophony of noise.’
democracy  government  history  occupywallst  internet 
october 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Honolulu Pulse: Scene+Heard: The power of Kickstarter
Sabrina asked local bands about their experience with Kickstarter, including me for the ‘Gate’ EP project funded on the site.
self  cotq  kickstarter  hawaii  honolulu  music  internet 
october 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Matt Legend Gemmell: SEO for Non-dicks
‘I’m asked sometimes for advice on building an internet presence, and I usually have to fumble for an answer ± because I haven’t pursued any particular strategy beyond the glaringly obvious: create original, relevant content repeatedly.’
seo  webdevelopment  web  internet 
september 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Summer Time in Hell: Bowing Out
“This is not something I entirely want to do or say. After this year has ended, Coma Cinema will end it’s run as a recording and performing entity.”
music  indie  internet  quit 
september 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Topspin Media: Artist Spotlight: “IZ” Kamakawiwo’ole
This success story is almost entirely the result of efforts by my friend Mike Pooley, who works at Mountain Apple Company and is about to go free-lance to offer his digital marketing services to the world!

“These efforts are a great example of how an artist can capitalize on viral buzz. By linking to their free-download offer from the YouTube video, Mountain Apple Company harnessed the video’s exposure to increase their fan base. Their store is beautiful & well-designed, and their marketing efforts drove direct-to-fan sales around the globe.”
musicbusiness  internet  marketing  hawaii  music 
may 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Jonathan Coulton: On Snuggies and Business Models
“I should know better than to write this sort of post, because it will inevitably come across as a peevish and whiney response to being called a Snuggie. It probably is that to some extent, and I’m already sorry about it. I am really trying to transcend that though, because I think this stuff is so important. I wouldn’t have authorized Alex to reveal the horribly embarrassing revenue number that I can’t even comfortably mention here if I didn’t think that it would, to some extent, move this conversation past the point where people equate ‘Code Monkey’ with ‘Hamster Dance’ and call it a day. I’m disappointed that it did not. And it’s not about my personal ego. OK, maybe it is a little, but I truly believe that the sooner we all acknowledge the internet is not actually killing art, the sooner we can get back to making things that are awesome.”
musicbusiness  internet 
may 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Internet Society: World IPv6 Day
Michael designed the icons icons/badges/logos/banners for this.

“On 8 June, 2011, Google, Facebook, Yahoo!, Akamai and Limelight Networks will be amongst some of the major organisations that will offer their content over IPv6 for a 24-hour ‘test flight’. The goal of the Test Flight Day is to motivate organizations across the industry — Internet service providers, hardware makers, operating system vendors and web companies — to prepare their services for IPv6 to ensure a successful transition as IPv4 addresses run out.”
network  internet  ocupop 
may 2011 by matthewmcvickar
InfoVegan.com: Rebooting Public Notices
“Public notices and inquiries should be moved from the newspapers and the bowels of the web online to where we are: networks like Facebook and Twitter.”
internet  government 
may 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Teenage Art: Henry Rollins Wants to Do Comedy on 'The Paul Reiser Show'
“Criticism is only useful when it helps us see something we are having difficulty seeing on our own; it’s not helpful when it tells us to stop looking.

‘But what if everyone pays attention to the wrong things? We have to guide them to the right things!’ Well, eventually everyone stops paying attention to everything: time is pretty effective that way. With that in mind, we should only worry about pointing the good out, and not worrying about the bad. And in the age of the Internet, this dictum takes on added force. Think of it as the Paris Hilton effect: talking about the bad just encourages the bad. No one has ever cured a celebrity of anorexia by posting photographs of her on the Internet, or has helped Charlie Sheen get off alcohol by getting exasperated at his stupidity. Trashing bad people and bad art does not make you a good person.”
criticism  art  writing  internet  culture  celebrity 
april 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Disquiet: If You’re Thinking of Starting a Netlabel…
“20-plus proposed rules for how to give away music creatively and communally.”

This is great!
netlabel  music  internet  indie  diy 
april 2011 by matthewmcvickar
CircleID: Whois Masking Considered Harmful
“Suffice it to say that Whois masking not only doesn't provide any real benefits to the domain holder but actually adds an unacceptable amount of risk.”
domain  legal  internet 
april 2011 by matthewmcvickar
NYTimes.com: In Groupon’s $6 Billion Wake, a Wave of Start-Ups Follows Suit
Copying a successful business plan is safe, and tons of companies are copying Groupon. The differentiating strategies of the more successful copycats are interesting, as is the arms-race and recursion of deal aggregators. I find it fascinating that people sign up for this stuff, because I find it wasteful.

This is insane: “In just over two years, Groupon has accumulated 60 million subscribers, more than $1 billion in venture capital and $760 million in annual revenue to become the fastest-growing Web company ever. In December, it declined a $6 billion buyout offer from Google.”
consumerism  business  startups  internet  shopping 
march 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Caterina.net: FOMO and Social Media
FOMO is ‘Fear of Missing Out’ and it’s a major problem on the internet.

“There is a company that sells radar equipment to the police as well as radar detectors to the public. Clorox is one of the world’s worst polluters of water, and also sells Brita filters to get the bad stuff out of the water again. Lawyers create mazes that you have to hire a lawyer to escape. Similarly social software both creates and cures FOMO. If you didn’t know that party was going on, you’d be home contentedly reading your latest New Yorker. But since you do, you hungrily watch each new tweet.”
culture  internet  psychology  socialmedia  technology 
march 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Seth's Blog: Bring me stuff that's dead, please
“RSS is dead. Blogs are dead. The web is dead. Good. Dead means that they are no longer interesting to the drive-by technorati. Dead means that the curiousity factor has been satisfied, that people have gotten the joke.”
internet  creativity  technology  writing 
march 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Topspin Media: Getting Practical: A Step-By-Step Guide to Building an Online Marketing Plan That Works
‘Ian Roger’s presentation from New Music Seminar Los Angeles, February 2011.’

A great overview of how bands have used Topsin and online marketing to great success. Some good takeaways here: a) Don't sell anything until you have a few thousand people on your mailing list, b) Until that point, focus most of all on getting known, c) Do something small every week and something big every month, d) Communicate honestly and treat your fans well.
music  marketing  musicbusiness  internet 
march 2011 by matthewmcvickar
The New Yorker: How the Internet Gets Inside Us
Perspective on the perspectives on the internet: those of the Never-Betters, the Better-Nevers, and the Ever-Wasers. “…what made television so evil back when it was evil was not its essence but its omnipresence. Once it is not everything, it can be merely something. The real demon in the machine is the tirelessness of the user. A meatless Monday has advantages over enforced vegetarianism, because it helps release the pressure on the food system without making undue demands on the eaters. In the same way, an unplugged Sunday is a better idea than turning off the Internet completely, since it demonstrates that we can get along just fine without the screens, if only for a day.”
internet  society  psychology 
february 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Smarterware: How to Ditch GoDaddy (Redux)
Move to NameCheap, which is cheap, and there is a discount code.
domain  internet  webdevelopment  godaddy 
february 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Andrew McLaughlin: An Open Letter to Dr. Tarek Kamel, Minister of Communications and Information Technology of Egypt
Former White House Deputy Chief Technology Officer weighs in, urging Egypt’s Minister of IT to help the people of Egypt and to not ruin his legacy with a human rights violation that will overshadow all of his accomplishments.
egypt  2011  technology  internet  revolution  goverment  humanrights 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Anil Dash: Mom and Pop, at Web Scale
Anil explains how non-VC-funded, 'mom and pop'-style web startups have subverted the traditional path by cultivating slower, more manageable growth.
business  internet  startup 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
whywasnticonsulted.net
As Paul Ford says, “The fundamental question of the web.” Discussions about examples thereof, with Paul Ford himself contributing.
wwic  internet  socialmedia  opinion  community 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
waycooljnr: How to Get Your Music Reviewed on Pitchfork: An Interview with Scott Plagenhoef, Pitchfork’s Editor-in-Chief
“What do you recommend is the best process for getting my music reviewed on Pitchfork?

“The easiest way to contact us to email and mail something to me directly, not just to the office. I would also read some reviews, find out which writers might like what you’re doing, and try to contact them directly. Targeting people who seem open to your music is an easy way to help it along. If you do send CDs, I would expect that a one-sheet, while it could be read, is more likely going to be discarded, so if you send a promo CD you should make sure any information that anyone might want– your website, short bio if needed, contact info for booking or PR if you have it, is on the back of the CD case itself.”
pitchfork  musicbusiness  internet  criticism  interview 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
a grammer: internet paradox
Thoughts on the tendency of the internet to empower and break down niches.

“You can be a niche, but you’re a public niche, so you can’t expect to be left alone about it, or understood on your own terms. The internet makes niches possible, but it’s also a massive space in which loads of different people communicate — and spaces like that tend to pull everyone toward the middle, developing conventions and enforcing a cultural center. So far, this hasn’t stopped plenty of corners of the internet from getting extremely insular and specialized, but it’s still a form of cultural policing on this front.”
nitsuhabebe  writing  internet  society  culture  criticism  niche  via:paulford 
december 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Disquiet: Musicians Respond to Bandcamp.com “Pay-for-Free” System
A followup to the article 'Do Fees Rationalize/Incentivize Communal-Culture Ecommerce?' checks in with actual musicians using the site, and finds that they're more or less unfazed by the change, and don't think it's evil by any means.
bandcamp  music  musicbusiness  internet  money 
october 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Paul Graham: The Acceleration of Addictiveness
The world and the technology by which we take it in is becoming more and more "addictive" and what can we do about it? A concerted effort to stick to basics and saying no, says Paul Graham.
history  internet  culture  health  technology  psychology  evolution  future  addiction 
july 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Tweetage Wasteland: The Web’s Five Most Endangered Words
"Let me think about that." In other words: with a glut of information, we're trying to form opinions and take action on it all just as fast as it's coming in, and we're suffering for it.
society  technology  web  history  culture  media  internet  facebook  twitter  writing  opinion  thought  communication 
july 2010 by matthewmcvickar
NYTimes.com: Your Brain on Computers — Attached to Technology and Paying a Price
This guy seems to have some family issues that his addiction to incoming data via screens is severely aggravating. I experience, on a smaller scale, some of the problems outlined in this article, and, though none of this is particularly new to me, it's frightening to see these habits taken down the slippery slope.

Should all of us, and especially people like Kord, make a concerted effort to make screens less a part of our lives, lest we lose our humanity? Or is trying to avoid technology's increasing integration with our every second just being traditionally biased and counter-progressive? I think there is a middle ground where one can be hooked in and focused on doing work while still not ignoring ones' children. Food for thought.
society  technology  brain  computers  internet  culture  multitasking  neuroscience  distraction  focus  family  history 
june 2010 by matthewmcvickar
WIRED: Nicholas Carr: The Web Shatters Focus, Rewires Brains
Written with the opinion that this is necessarily a Bad Thing. Revisit; this is interesting.
brain  culture  health  internet  neuroscience  productivity  science 
june 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Ben Ward: Understand the Web
What 'the web' actually is, and why building desktop-class applications on it is not what it was built for.
adobe  apple  web  internet  html  css  webdevelopment  webstandards  history 
june 2010 by matthewmcvickar
The Atlantic: How to Save the News
"Everyone knows that Google is killing the news business. Few people know how hard Google is trying to bring it back to life, or why the company now considers journalism’s survival crucial to its own prospects."
news  journalism  google  internet  information  economics  media  newspaper 
may 2010 by matthewmcvickar
The New Yorker: Andrey Ternovskiy: Roulette Russian
The story of Chat Roulette's teenage creator. Where will it lead?
chatroulette  russia  webdevelopment  startup  internet 
may 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Nancy Baym: Why, despite myself, I am not leaving Facebook. Yet.
Because there's no alternative, and it is valuable. But its privacy practices are awful.
privacy  facebook  internet  media  socialnetworking  ethics  newmedia 
may 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Cultivated Play: Farmville
On what Farmville is (not a game) and what it means (nothing good).
culture  facebook  games  socialnetworking  society  sociology  web  politics  internet  corporate 
march 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Times Labs Blog: Do music artists fare better in a world with illegal file-sharing?
"The most immediate revelation, of course, is that at some point next year revenues from gigs payable to artists will for the first time overtake revenues accrued by labels from sales of recorded music."
music  business  internet  money  copyright  filesharing  piracy  economics  riaa  graph  chart 
november 2009 by matthewmcvickar
In Bb 2.0
"A collaborative music/spoken word project." A collection of YouTube videos of people playing various instruments all in the B-flat key. Start and stop and fade them each in any way at any time. This is awesome.
music  art  video  internet  mashup  youtube 
may 2009 by matthewmcvickar
HIPSTERRUNOFF: The Memefication of Your Band
Sifting through HRO's sorta-haughty satire is worth it for the occasion post like this, where whoever Carles is gets tired of mocking teenagers and writes something true and intriguing about the state of the music industry and popular music culture (at least for the indie set).
music  business  history  internet  branding 
april 2009 by matthewmcvickar
We Tell Stories: 'Hard Times' by Matt Mason & Nicholas Felton
A stylish, simple, infographical, curt, and summarily realistic at the world in which we currently live.
design  writing  web  culture  internet  typography  graphics  infographics  statistics  information  world  people 
march 2009 by matthewmcvickar
Clay Shirky: Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable
Basically: Publishing solves a problem that no longer exists, and we don't need newspapers; we need journalism. Amen.
history  technology  business  internet  media  news  journalism  information  print  newspaper  publishing 
march 2009 by matthewmcvickar
arc90 Lab: Readability
This bookmarklet makes reading things on the web very simple and thus enjoyable by removing all of the often-useless and often-flashing worthlessness surrounding the content.
design  web  internet  typography  usability  javascript  browser  clutter  useful 
march 2009 by matthewmcvickar
HTTP Client
"A Mac OS X Leopard developer tool for debugging HTTP services by graphically creating & inspecting complex HTTP messages."
software  osx  web  webdevelopment  opensource  internet  http 
december 2008 by matthewmcvickar
« earlier      

related tags

aaliyah  activism  addiction  adobe  advertising  advice  amazon  america  animals  anonymity  apple  art  bandcamp  blog  bookreview  brain  branding  browser  browserwars  bubble  business  cameramail  capitalism  cartoons  celebrity  censorship  chart  chatroulette  china  class  clutter  comedy  comics  communication  community  computers  congress  consumerism  copyright  corporate  cotq  creativity  criticism  crowdsourcing  css  culture  customerservice  debate  democracy  design  distraction  diy  domain  economics  economy  editing  egypt  english  ethics  evolution  facebook  family  feelings  filesharing  film  finance  flickr  focus  fundraising  funny  future  gallery  games  godaddy  google  goverment  government  graph  graphics  hacking  hawaii  health  history  honolulu  html  http  humanrights  humor  identity  identity20  illustration  images  indie  infographics  information  inspiration  instagram  instapaper  interface  internet  interview  iphone  javascript  journalism  kickstarter  language  legal  mail  manufacturing  marketing  mashup  media  millenials  millennials  minimalism  money  movies  multitasking  music  musicbusiness  netlabel  netneutrality  network  networking  neuroscience  newmedia  news  newspaper  niche  nitsuhabebe  obama  occupywallst  ocupop  openid  opensource  opinion  osx  people  phone  photography  pinterest  pipa  piracy  pitchfork  podcast  poetry  politics  pricing  print  privacy  productivity  psychology  publishing  quit  readability  reblog  reference  revolution  riaa  rnb  russia  satire  science  self  seo  sex  sharing  shopping  social  socialmedia  socialnetworking  society  sociology  software  sopa  spam  startup  startups  statistics  taste  technology  thought  tumblr  twitter  typography  ugc  usability  useful  via:paulford  video  viral  visualization  web  webapp  webdesign  webdevelopment  webstandards  welwing  world  writing  wwic  youtube  zefrank 

Copy this bookmark:



description:


tags: