Thursday, January 12, 2006
BoingBoing Doublepost: Mark vs. Cory
An interesting coincidence of simulposting over at BoingBoing this evening provides a nifty opportunity to explore the difference in posting styles of fellow BBhosts and all-around amazing gentlemen Mark Frauenfelder and Cory Doctorow. Analysis follows, but first, just in case it goes away, a look at the doublepost in question:
Subtle differences abound. Some of the more obvious:
- The blogentry titles are significantly different. Cory’s post title celebrates the cookbook itself; Mark’s refers to a "scanned copy OF" the cookbook. Meanwhile, Mark uses and capitalizes the actual name of the cookbook, and the longform of the year (1950s) while Cory shortens both, making for a shorter title overall
- Note the different choice of pic. Given the same source info, Mark went for the oddest inside-the-book pic, thus reinforcing Cypher’s language (and a WHOLE SECTION just for…) while Cory goes for the equally weird but much more colorful cover. Shape and layout come into play here, too -- wide vs. tall pics frame the text differently; I wonder if either choice was made with visual impact of the overall entry in the larger context of the page itself in mind?
- Given the same information, Cory provides a backlink w/thanks to the poster and also a link to the material posted, though they are arguably/ultimately from the same sourcehuman. Mark, on the other hand, provides no such double-link to Cypher, though his site is not the same as the ground meat cookbook site.
- Mark eliminates the redundant wordage (ground meat, from the 50s) from the content, since it’s in the title. Cory allows the redundancy, thus preserving (we assume) Cypher's original quote.
- Cory capitalizes the sender’s name, and uses the ubercool “sez” to introduce Cypher’s original language. Mark uses actual English words but does not capitalize "cypher".
Also worth including, if anyone decided to take this up as a thesis topic, would be the context, both before and after. Has this happened before? Is there some protocol for Mark and Cory to follow from here? Once the incident has come to the attention of the four bloggers over at BoingBoing, will the two posts be mashed-up into one single post, or will one ultimately be dropped by someone -- and, if the latter, by whom: the original poster, the "other guy," or perhaps a third party, such as Xeni?
With or without such aftermath-watching, a more detailed, thesis-level analysis would necessarily note that much of the difference in style is consistent with the obvious difference in perspective that both Mark and Cory bring to the table. There are few surprises, in fact -- stylistically, these differences could have been predicted by us regular BoingBoing readers with some accuracy.
In closing, then: the opportunity to close-read this massively popular web compendium is priceless; glad we could be there to see it.
And a caveat: No disrespect or even critique of either Cory or Mark is intended herein. Each is enjoyable -- incredible, I daresay, and inspirational to boot -- in his own way, both on BoingBoing and in other ventures, digital and non-. It wouldn't be BoingBoing without them. I'm just glad they're each unique.
UPDATE: 2:56 am:
If my read of posting times is accurate, Cory -- who was online anyway, posting other material -- seems to have withdrawn his post. Happily, the screenshot above is going nowhere. Now: will the folks at BoingBoing think this worthy of passing along to their readers?
posted by boyhowdy |
2:23 AM |
Comments:
Cool...just about what I was guessing, given the way your post disappeared so soon. Incidentally: though a newbie fan (as of this summer), I have very much enjoyed reading your (Cory's)fiction. "Down and Out" makes great beach reading; "Comes to Town" deserved reading thrice. And congrats on quitting your "day job" -- as I said in my blog earlier, if today's earlier long-form post is any indication, the world will surely benefit. /suckup. I can't believe I'm practically gushing to someone else in a blog comment on my own blog. Okay, I'll stop now.
# posted by boyhowdy : 3:30 AM, January 12, 2006
This is great! Thanks for posting this. I laughed heartily. I would like to bake a lamb loaf for you one day.
# posted by : 1:18 AM, January 13, 2006
Happy you liked it, Mark. I'll take that lamb loaf anytime -- mmm, mmm, good! As with Cory, I'm a big admirer -- thanks for YOUR good work, too, Mark. I gave my father a copy of The World's Worst on our way to a John Gorka concert just after it came out; he was so happy with it he had trouble staying focused on the show. I really appreciate y'all stopping in. Keep up the great writing and thinking! - a fan
# posted by boyhowdy : 1:42 AM, January 13, 2006
|
About Boyhowdy
Cybersociologist. Father.
Teacher. Poet. Audiophile.
Pondering media, education, communications, parenting, culture, community and
self on the web since 2002.
ongoing
All the Concerts I've Ever Attended a lifetime of music, updated regularly
a year ago
Becoming Santa
two years ago
Poor Sick Baby
three years ago
Road Trip
four years ago
Living In The Past
story of the year
The Ladybug Who Had No Spots
poem(s) of the month
Heat Sonnet
Today, A Sonnet
Warm Winter
rethinking media literacy
>What If He Is Right, Too?
>Spam A Lot
>Uncyclopedia: The Anti-Wiki
>The Bibliography As Medium
>Calendars As Mass Media
>The F Word In The Faculty Lounge
>On Documentary "Truth"
>Writing Media: That Extra Space
>On Teen Suffrage
>I M Fine
>Child As Medium
>Sign Of The Times
>Now That's Media Exposure
>Second Self / Second Self, Updated
>Muppets Go Global
>Missing Molly: On Virtual Absence
>Is PowerPoint The Devil?
>A Curricular Epiphany
>Rethinking Media Literacy: A Rant
>It's Pronounced peeps
blog as medium
>Bleached Blanket Blogosphere
>Blog, In A Nutshell
>Oblogatory
>Making Public The Lost Segue
>Grasping At Blogs
>A Definitive Definition
>Romancing The Blog
>The Dichotomies List
>You Know You're A Blogger When...
>Everyone Loves A Blog
>Deep Thoughts, Shallow Paragraphs
or Atom Feed
|
|
coming soon |
|
12/31 New Year's Eve in Northfield
1/1 Last "Hangover Special" Breakfast for the Siblings in Newfane, VT
1/14 You Say It's Your Birthday (34 Isn't That Old, Is It?)
2/16 - 2/24 Bermuda!
|
|
now listening |
|
|
|
tinyblog |
|
aka remaindered linkstinyblog archive
boyhowdy's tinyblog is powered by del.icio.us + javascripted by Alan Levine
|
|
archives |
|
2002 november: 17
24
december: 01
08
15
22
29
2003 january: 05
12
19
26
february: 02
09
16
23
march: 02
09
16
23
30
april: 06
13
20
27
may: 04
11
18
25
june: 01
08
15
22
29
july: 06
13
20
27
august: 03
10
17
24
31
september: 07
14
21
28
october: 05
12
19
26
november: 02
09
16
23
30
december: 07
14
21
28
2004 january: 04
11
18
25
february: 01
08
15
22
29
march: 07
14
21
28
april: 04
11
18
25
may: 02
09
16
23
30
june: 06
13
20
27
july: 04
11
18
25
august: 01
08
15
22
29
september: 05
12
19
26
october: 03
10
17
24
31
november: 07
14
21
28
december: 05
12
19
26
2005 january: 02
09
16
23
30
february: 06
13
20
27
march: 06
13
20
27
april: 03
10
17
24
may: 01
08
15
22
29
june: 05
12
19
26
july: 03
10
17
24
31
august: 07
14
21
28
september: 04
11
18
25
october: 02
09
16
23
30
november: 06
13
20
27
december: 04
11
18
25
2006 january: 01
08
15
22
29
february: 05
12
19
26
march: 05
12
19
26
april: 02
09
16
23
30
may: 07
14
21
28
june: 04
11
18
25
july: 02
09
16
23
30
august: 06
13
20
27
september: 03
10
17
24
october: 01
08
15
22
29
november: 05
12
19
26
december: 03
10
17
24
03
2007 january:
current
|
|
about |
|
oldwork Northfield Mount Hermon School
>MED/SOC 221: Media Literacy
>HIS 321: Modern American Culture
>MED 05: Mass Media Messages
>MED 06: Ed Tech 101
>MED 08: Advanced Web Design
school Marlboro College
>BA, Cyberstudies
>MAT, Teaching w/ Technology
play
Watermelon Pickle Poems (broken)
Rethinking Media Literacy
Reading The Future
see me / contact me / give me stuff
guestmap / hitcounter
|
|
links |
|
loci City Year
Boston Museum of Science
Falcon Ridge Folk Festival
The Iron Horse
highbrow Kairos
Utne
McSweeney's
Daily Jigsaw Puzzle
nobrow Fark
Boing Boing
American Feed
Customers Suck
The Onion / A.V. Club
|
|
blogs |
|
+abraxas
+alex halavais
+alterego
+amish tech support
+amitai etzioni
+blogatron
+brokentype
+bumptious
+burnt toast
+dave barry
+don't link to us
+everyone shut up...
+fnord: essence of being
+i want to hug kafka
+life - listed chronologically
+liloia.com
+media yenta
+mrs_fezziwig
+next-to-last song
+parenting isn't pretty
+the shifted librarian
+there are no more tickets...
+tvtattle
+universal rule
+webraw
+zack, a livejournal
<< ?
new england blogs # >>
<< ? edublog # >>
<<
?
blogging mommies
#
>>
<<
?
verbosity
#
>>
<<
?
jewish bloggers
#
>>
-Anthroblog social anthropologist's blog on blogging
-Anti-Bloggies.com yearly blog awards with real prizes
-The Blog A Day Tour Lawrence posts in other people's blogs
-The Blogproject student research on blogs, cyberidentity, and hypertexts
-Blogger Unofficial FAQ blog fix blog problems
-Recently Changed Weblogs recently changed weblogs
=blogger bloghosting
=bravenet guestmap
=reinvigorate counter, hit-tracker
=enetation comments
=online bonsai icons tree
--> blogroll me
|
|
quotes |
|
I hate quotations. Tell me what you know. - Ralph Waldo Emerson
And you know, when you study the semiotics of Through the Looking Glass or watch every episode of Star Trek, you've got to make it pay off, so you throw a lot of study references into whatever you do later in life. - Matt Groening
She wrote secret web pages with gentle empty spaces where the universe could creep in and rest when it got overwhelmed. - Robin Williams
Cable news networks...often act as if the best way to present information is to serve the viewer two opposing advocates battling it out. But in many instances, this ends up confusing rather than illuminating. Not every fact is debatable, not every opinion equal -- or worth equal time. - David Corn
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. - Arthur C. Clarke
This "telephone" has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently of no use to us. - Western Union internal memo, 1876
The wireless music box has no imaginable commercial value. Who would pay for a message sent to nobody in particular? - David Sarnoff's associates, in response to his urging for investment in radio, 1920s
Computers in the future may weigh no more than 1.5 tons. - Popular Mechanics, 1949
There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home. - Ken Olson, President and founder of Digital, 1977
|
|
Subject: HIGH TECHNIQUE ELECTRICAL HOME APPLIANCES---COMPUTERIZE GAS KITCHEN
Date: Mon, 7 Jan 2002 08:53:27 +0000 (UTC)
From: "MRS WANG"
Organization: FUJIAN HUALI TECHNOLOGY CREATING CO,LTD
Do you like to comprehend a computer housemaid ? Do you like to own a blue soldier ? Today , SHIELD gives you the answer .
SHIELD is a computerize gas kitchen which is controlled automatically and intelligently. It is a world wide invention , is a new generation of the gas kitchen..
What is the benefits that SHIELD brings to us ? Firstly , it will relieve you out of the kitchen ,you shouldn't be in when you cook the food .Second ,it solved the problem that the food would be burned ,the soup be out and the gas be leaked .And it will make your family safer and healthier.
Do you want to understand much more merits about SHIELD? Please see the followings:
1. amounts and the kinds of food (boiling water, porridge, rice , soup ,fish ,meat ,medicine), SHIELD will regulate the temperature and time to cook automatically ,and the soap won't be out ,the food won't be burned .It will turn off the electric and gas source by itself ,and tell you by springing out the music .
2. when needing and you can set five times to light fire .
3. ,it will send out a big fire ,and when the temperature reached 100 ,it would change the flame .If the temperature is below 100 ,it will turn to be a big fire ,and keep the flame blue .The containing of CO is less than 0.04% of total .(standard :less than 0.05%) . And then it reduced the pollute .
4. B"CAutomatically limit the time of offering gas :It is 30 minutes that offering the gas. When cooking ,it won't be out whenever it is blew or watered .Because when the fire is out , it will light automatically. When the gas leaked ,the density reached up a level or the temperature of the platform is over 80 ,SHIELD will warn you and turn off the electric and gas source .
5. need ,it can set the temperature and heat the food by itself .
6. according to the container .
7. 70.51%(standard :higher than 55%).Comparing to the common gas kitchen ,it can save more than 40%source of total .
8. natural gas and marsh gas to cook , also can use many kinds of pans, such as iron pan ,aluminum pan and high pressured pan. SHIELD computerize gas kitchen is a housemaid , is a soldier .Is there anything more important than the safety and health of your family ?
Let us share more happy in our lives .Not to bore for the burned food, not to be sad for no time for cooking .For you love your family ,please begin with SHIELD .Possessing SHIELD is possessing love .
-Spam E-mail for a Home Appliance "published" at We Made Out In A Tree And This Old Guy Sat And Watched Us,
submitted by Jeremy Sacco
|
|
|
|