Balance

The nun who taught English my freshman year of high school was fond of saying "You are not your grade." Some of the high achievers in my class needed to be reminded of this, but it's a lesson I quickly took to heart. I was fortunate in my academic career to have a pretty good memory and above average language skills, so I was able to earn decent grades without much effort. I participated in drama, and goofed around with friends, and never obsessed about my grades. Throughout college I remembered that "I was not my grade." As I entered the professional world, I comfortably adjusted that mantra into "I am not my job."

It might seem quite obvious, but it's important to me to remember to pursue balance in my life. I don't want to be consumed by any one thing in my life. I don't want one single thing to absolutely identify me. I've been thinking a lot about this lately, largely in response to many of the people I've met and the events I've attended this year.

For example, while at Nokia World, I spent most of my time with gadget and phone bloggers. These were all interesting people, but I sometimes felt that the conversation was a bit myopic: there we were in beautiful Barcelona, Spain and yet almost all of our conversations involved phones, cellular technology, or mobile software solutions. On the one hand, this makes sense as it was our shared interest in these things that had brought us together in the first place, so it was natural that we should engage one another on these things. And, I suspect, gadget and phone bloggers don't often get to really geek out with other gadget and phone bloggers, so there was a natural release of enthusiasm as we met and interacted with kindred souls.

Toward the end of that trip, I had begun to learn things about my traveling companions beyond the gadget and phone focus, and that's when I really started to like the people I was with. They were a diverse and interesting crowd, and I'm glad I met them. Most of them, at any rate. There was at least one person who never switched off, and it wasn't until this trip that I really began to identify a lot of vague unease from previous events.

At PodCamp Ohio, blogOrlando, and barcamp Philly, there were sessions focusing on monetization of your life online. The advice was pretty much the same at all of them: apply yourself 100% to the task of making your "personal brand". It's easy enough to leverage social networks, ping.fm and other broadcast services to get your name in front of people. Your job is to make yourself known: comment on blogs, friend everyone, and update your own blog(s) as often as you can, being sure to use valuable key words as part of your SEO strategy.

It finally hit me: almost all of the people successfully making a "personal brand" online are Type A personalities: they're "time-conscious, insecure about their status, highly competitive". Many of the people making a living telling other people how to make a living on the internet seem to miss the fact that personality type is an important element of their success online. If I were a highly motivated, energized Type A personality, I would probably already be doing all the things these people tell you to do to make a living online.

Without a doubt the internet provides a unique and ideal opportunity for Type A personalities to thrive. You get easy-to-track statistics about how popular you are, immediately feeding your ego. You also get easy to obtain statistics about other people, making it an effortless thing to compare your popularity against other's. Modest effort can yield enormous results, if you're willing to focus yourself to the task.

And therein lies the rub. Many of the people I've met at conferences who espouse these techniques are, frankly, boring. Or worse, they're boorish. Their focus is on their brand, not their personality, and discussions with them are one-sided. They want to "friend" you on social networking services not because they want to keep in touch with you, but because they want to have another person who knows about them, somehow magically improving their "social capital".

I remember in middle school a lecture on the difference between being selfless, self-centered, and selfish-centered. The latter two were clearly differentiated from one another: what most folks call "self-centered" is what the lecturer called "selfish-centered". It's an absolute focus on the individual; whereas "self-centered" was described as a healthy middle ground between selfless and selfish-centered: a recognition of the things that are important to the self, but not focused to the exclusion of all else.

It occurred to me that many internet power users may be selfish-centered: they make decisions and actions that benefit their own self without much balance for rewarding others. They use other people to increase their own sense of value, without really valuing the contributions of others. What do these people produce, on their own? Most often, it's buzz -- links and aggregation to content created elsewhere-- and little else. These folks act as aggregation points for new information, but rarely produce new information on their own.

I mentioned above that one of the people I met at Nokia World never shut off. Every time he spoke it was "Me, me, me," and I was, frankly, supremely uninterested in speaking with him because he was a jackass. He showed an incredible lack of balance: everything he did was for and about him, and as a result he was a bore to be around. I understand fully why this was: the man was propagating his personal brand. He was famous for being famous, and the moment he stopped putting his name in front of people was the moment his fame dwindled. He was living proof of the old adage "asking for permission is asking to be told no": he never asked if he could do things, he simply did them. If there were negative consequences to his boorish behavior, they were minor in comparison to the propagation of his name and personal brand. After all, if people were talking about him, his brand was strong ("there's no such thing as bad publicity", right?)

I suppose the internet is somewhat tangential in this guy's case. He could be a perfectly successful jackass without the internet's help. The internet just gives him more immediate access to a larger audience of people willing to indulge him.

Despite the overly negative tone of this little rant, I generally don't have a problem with such "internet celebrity". In the information age, such people can provide real value to smaller venues which might not otherwise get sufficient exposure in the public consciousness. The internet celebrity's act of aggregation and dissemination can be a good opportunity to find audiences you might not normally reach. The real problem I have is when these internet celebrities begin taking themselves too seriously. They throw around terms like "thought leader" -- a notion that always makes me cringe, for the sheer Orwellianness of it -- and think that their opinions are somehow more valuable than the opinions of the "common" person. Aggregating lots of information does not necessarily provide you with superior insight into the relative value of that information.

They're inundated with new stuff, both cool and not-so-cool, and they have access to goods and services well before most consumers have access to them. Living on the cutting edge, where purchase price usually isn't a factor, tends to distort one's impressions. When things are given to you specifically because you might talk about it, rather than you having to make a conscious consumer decision based on need and price, your opinion of things changes. I've experienced this reviewing products for CrunchGear, and I try to be aware of the shift in opinion so that I can approach products from a consumer point of view.

I see clearly the formula to follow for relative success online -- indeed, just do what the Type A personality "internet celebrity" types do! -- but I willfully choose to reject it. It lacks the balance I so greatly value. It devalues the importance of legitimate interaction, and people become stepping stones on which one trods as they pursue fame and fortune, rather than unique individuals whose own experiences and insights can greatly improve one's own life, and sense of balance. I don't seek celebrity, and I'm not out to create a personal brand for myself. I don't want to be a one-trick pony, but a well-rounded person who can participate meaningfully in a multitude of environments. A friend once remarked of me that "The pond is wide, but not very deep," indicating that I was knowledgeable about a great many things, but not an expert at any of them. I'm comfortable with that.

Communicator

A coworker purchased a Nokia 770 Internet tablet some moons ago, and I thought it was a pretty clever little device when he let me play with it. For him, it was a good option for reasonably mobile email access, since a Blackberry or Palm Treo was too small and too complicated and too expensive to use. He could take the 770 with him to and from work, and access email, the web, and internet radio from anywhere he could get a WiFi signal.

Time passed, and he slowly stopped using the device. I hadn't thought about it at all since I first played with it, but for some reason I asked him if he still had it. He confirmed this, and asked whether I was interested in it -- he was willing to sell it for cheap since it wasn't doing him any real good.

I picked up the unit from him today and spent some time on and off through the day playing with it. I still think it's a clever little gadget, but my interest has cooled a bit after using it. First of all, too much screen space is consumed by the built-in interface. Web pages are too small to read comfortably on the space left over for applications. The system is slow, but I wasn't expecting any kind of blazing performance. The default software load is pretty modest, but there are plenty of Internet tablet applications available for installation.

The really attractive thing about the Nokia 770 is its support for Google Chat and Google Talk, allowing for IM and VoIP communications. To my surprise, there's also a Gizmo client available! I got my dad and sister using Gizmo over Skype, so I'm happy to see that supported on the Nokia. Using the Nokia 770, I can (theoretically) engage in VoIP conversations with anyone using Google Talk or Gizmo.

While it's not terribly useful as a general purpose internet device, the idea of using it as a portable communications device does have a lot of appeal. I'm strongly considering taking this with me on my trip abroad next month, so that I can keep in touch with $work without having to dig out and boot up my laptop. All I'll need is an open WiFi connection somewhere, which ought not be too hard to find (famous last words...)

This certainly won't replace my Palm Treo smartphone, which affords me the ability to check my email in the absence of a WiFi signal. I deeply wish that my Treo could use a WiFi connection were it available. My boss recently got a T-Mobile Blackberry 8320, which supports both cellular and VoIP calling, and I'm insanely envious. When in range of a WiFi connection, his phone will use that to initiate a VoIP call, which uses none of his plan's minutes. When no WiFi signal is available, it'll use the cellular network. I keep hoping that Sprint (my cellular provider) will come out with a cell/WiFi phone soon, but realistically I don't expect to see any such device in the near future. The combination of Treo + Nokia 770 rudely approximates the features, but falls far short in terms of size and convenience.

Google Reader Trends

I just noticed that Google Reader has a "trends" link. I don't recall seeing that before; though I admit that I don't often look at the interface for Google Reader, as I'm too focused on the news content it is displaying to me.

From your 83 subscriptions, over the last 30 days you read 4,730 items

I haven't starred, shared, or emailed any items. I'm not much for social networking functionality, which explains why I haven't shared or emailed anything.

What's really interesting in the trends is both my personal reading habits, and the posting habits of the sites I read. I read more items between 7 and 9 AM than at any other time through the day. This makes sense, since all the news that has accumulated overnight is waiting for me. And for some reason, I read more items on Wednesdays than any other day of the week.

BoingBoing and Slashdot both post about 20 items per day. The feed for my Flickr contacts is running around 15 items per day, while the Flickr feed for the tag "skippy" is about five items per day.

Ultimately, all of these stats are completely meaningless, and not particularly useful to me. I don't really care how often sites publish, or what percentage of their posts I read, or when I read news the most. I care about reading the news, not reading metadata plotting trends about me reading the news. That said, I'm now interested in subscribing to a variety of feeds to which I wouldn't normally subscribe, just to see what sort of trends might develop.

Collateral Damage

One popular technique to counter spam email from filling one's inbox is to require would-be correspondents to "authenticate" themselves prior to the delivery of an email message. For example, the first time yo send email to a particular recipient, that recipient's system sends back an email to you saying "Please click this link within 24 hours." If you click the link, then the system reasonably assumes you're a human being who read the message and followed the directions. The email you sent is now delivered to the recipient, and all future emails from you to that recipient will be sent without any additional intervention. 0spam is a purveyor of this kind of technique.

I personally think this is an invasive solution to the problem, and feel that it causes more problems than it solves. For example, I can't count the number of times someone has contacted me by email, to which I reply, only to have my reply delayed until I jump through this authentication hoop. I used to jump through the hoops, thinking "Hey, this person deserves a response to their question." But I've just dealt with this for the last time: I will no longer authenticate myself to any of these anti-spam systems when I'm merely trying to reply to a message sent first by the person who uses such a mechanism.

Here's a clue: if you use such an anti-spam system, you should probably add my email address to your whitelist before you send me an email, if you expect me to reply.

Google Poisoning

I have long railed against the notion of "Search Engine Optimization". I consider it to be nothing more than scam artistry. To try to make one's living by luring legitimate search traffic to your shady business operation is a very slimy thing to do.

Today, I had a problem getting a workstation to obtain a DHCP address via DHCP relay to a different subnet while using a Symantec Ghost boot disk. I turned to Google, with the specific terms "ghost pxe boot dhcp relay".

I found nothing immediately useful, but kept paging through the results, hoping for some buried gem. On page 9 of my search results, I saw these (which have been obfuscated and unlinked to prevent additional Google Juice going their way):

Welcome to MORTGAGEBUYER.MOC
dedicated server free Pxe Boot server

Welcome to CHARLIECREATIONS.MOC
rackmount server what is a volume server free Pxe Boot server

Welcome to DRIVINGINSTRUCTION.MOC
in windows license servers on the network free Pxe Boot server free news

Welcome to MUSIC-DB.MOC
print server parallel netvigator smtp server free Pxe Boot server file server

Welcome to TRAFFICHITTER.MOC
... email address terminal server licensing port ghost 8.2 pxe server can see ... coast virtual private server providers free Pxe Boot server proxy server ...

Who really thinks that someone looking for Ghost PXE boot information is going to click on a link to a mortgage site? Or a driving instruction site? I know I've occasionally been misled by search results to click a spammer's clever link; but the links above are in no way confusing: they're blatantly false.

I hate Search Engine Optimization, and I have zero respect for those who pursue it. They make the internet harder to use for everyone in the short-sighted pursuit of their own venal goals.

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