Keeping it weird

In summary – I believe you should be publishing something to the web, maybe an esoteric spreadsheet, perhaps an open source javascript library, a deep dive into semantic analysis of your favorite author? Who knows? Publish, but keep it weird and humble.

~ Tom Critchlow, from An alternative to the bullshit industrial complex

slip:4utobu1.

It’s probably confirmation bias, but I definitely agree with this sentiment. The internet enables an endless array of things. For me it’s mostly about me being enabled to share what I’m creating. Weird? Definitely. Humble? …uh, okay okay still working on that.

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#OpenSystems #PublishingPlatforms #TomCritchlow

Craig Constantine

Caution: Blogging. Randomly.

Craig Constantine

Publishing while maintaining perspective

This is perhaps the greatest conundrum of our current technological era: the desperate need to connect with one another, because it is our only hope of survival; combined with the fact that nearly all the means of connection available to us are deeply—possibly irredeemably—fucked. Syndication, as I am currently experimenting with it, is then an effort to try and navigate that terrain, to find some productive way to play in the outskirts, to let the work out into the world while (hopefully) minimizing the misery that is reflected back.

~ Mandy Brown, from A peasant woodland

slip:4uaowi9.

Yes, to everything from Brown (and not just this particular piece.) Beautiful thoughts therein around why one should “publish own site, syndicate elsewhere (POSSE)”—my methodology since the beginning.

Unfortunately, the Internet went from “publishing your own stuff is difficult”, straight to “it’s easy to publish on platforms other people control.” To this day, it is still quite difficult to get your own domain name and begin publishing in a way that you control your own content. Worse, we went from people discovered and read your stuff (back in the “publishing your own stuff is difficult” era) to the now where no one can find or read your stuff regardless where you publish it (unless you pay money to the platform brunch-lords.)

Fortunately, if you have a little bit of time and a little bit of curiosity, you can still find everything that people are publishing.

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#InternetTech #MandyBrown #PublishingPlatforms #RSS #SocialNetworks

Craig Constantine

Caution: Blogging. Randomly.

Craig Constantine
Learn how we can better support #ResearchIntegrity with @tonyRH Tim Vines (DataSeer) & John Willinsky (@PublicKnowledgeProject )in their #NISOPlus24 Global/Online session New Standards for #OpenScience: https://sched.co/1eNCh
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NISO Plus 2024 Global/Online: New Standards for Open Science: Research...

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