1. I look around… I look around and see a lot of new faces. Which means a lot of you have been insulated from recession layoffs.

    I see in our community some the smartest, most creative people alive. I see all this beautiful amazing potential, and I see it squandered.

    God dammit, an entire generation selling online advertisements or building the walled garden social network; subordinates with conference t-shirts and free snacks.

    We’re the middle children of internet history. No privacy or place. We have no Space Race. No Great Depression. Our Space Race is for eyeballs… our Great Depression is our careers.

    Advertising has us chasing the latest gadgets and IPOs, working jobs we hate, so we can buy shit we don’t need.

    We were raised on the web to believe that we’d all be millionaires from stock options, made into blockbuster movies, internet meme rock stars, but we won’t. And we’re starting to figure that out.

    I look around this room and I see a lot of courage. And it gives me strength. We give each other strength.

    Nod to Tyler.

    Inspired by Neven Mrgan’s post about how iOS’s iMessages has affected his text message use, I looked into mine.

    The AT&T site does not make it easy to go find historical data of message use. They do provide a chart of data use, but not SMS/MMS use. What I had to do was go through each month’s bill and find the values, put them in a text file, then create a chart. I used Keynote to bang out a quick and dirty chart. I’ve included the raw data in a table below.

    My Text Message Usage Chart (on AT&T) from 08/10 - 12/11

    Month Texts count
    08/10 469
    09/10 941
    10/10 723
    11/10 464
    12/10 743
    01/11 820
    02/11 1032
    03/11 2128
    04/11 1042
    05/11 1490
    06/11 1758
    07/11 1518
    08/11 952
    09/11 929
    10/11 689
    11/11 612
    12/11 307
    12/12 612
    01/12 307
    02/12 511
    03/12 232
    04/12 171
    05/12 284
    06/12 150

    Comma Separated Values

    month,texts
    08/10, 469
    09/10, 941
    10/10, 723
    11/10, 464
    12/10, 743
    01/11, 820
    02/11, 1032
    03/11, 2128
    04/11, 1042
    05/11, 1490
    06/11, 1758
    07/11, 1518
    08/11, 952
    09/11, 929
    10/11, 689
    11/11, 612
    12/11, 307
    12/12, 612
    01/12, 307
    02/12, 511
    03/12, 232
    04/12, 171
    05/12, 284
    06/12, 150
    

    So. When a few more of my friends A) get an iPhone 2) upgrade to iOS 5 and 3) turn on iMessages, I’ll be able to turn off my text messaging package. Get to it, friends.

    Update: 2012-06-19: added more usage data to illustrate further decline. 2012-06-19: removed my messaging package from my cell service bill. Now I pay $0.30 / message.

    Me, Carol and Coni at my going away dinner party in Santiago, Chile.

    I’ve been listening to Planet Money since the beginning. Actually since before the beginning, since the This American Life episode. I love it. The most recent episode about the life span of a t-shirt moved me to leave my first comment. It went like this…

    While visiting Chile for a month in 2009, I experienced a similar sort of moment in the Long Story of a T-Shirt.

    I was staying with some kids who were kind enough to put me up for month even though we had just met. They took me around to see all the stuff in their life. One of the stuffs was a weekly illegal market in one of Santiago’s big parks. It was like a flea market without tables. Everyone used blankets on the ground because you could quickly hide it when the cops came by. But it was HUGE… probably 5 blocks long and 2 wide. Sincerely.

    So we walked around for a good while and I saw lots of stuff that would’ve been fine gifts for friends who enjoy knick knacks and trinkets. I was living out of my backpack and didn’t want to add weight to my very spartan inventory (~10 pounds).

    But then I saw it: a D.A.R.E. t-shirt.

    Not just any D.A.R.E. t-shirt, mind you. It was the original design from when the tagline was still “To Keep Kids Off Drugs” before they changed it to “To Resist Drugs and Violence”.

    I went to Catholic schools as a kid and we never had the D.A.R.E. program. That meant I never had an old D.A.R.E. t-shirt lying around in box in the basement when I got older and involved in the straightedge scene. That D.A.R.E. t-shirt was super popular in that scene and I always wanted one. And now after all that time, there it was.

    I still have that shirt now. I wear it often. It’s soft and worn in a way that new clothes can’t match (even the pre-distressed ones).

    Here’s the hilarious thing, it cost me fifty cents (whatever the conversion was at the time). 50 cents and 15 years and 6,000 miles.

    There was a time when “having a website” meant you owned a website that you could do anything you wanted with. Any kind of content. Any kind of structure. Any kind of software. You were truly the Master of Your Domain. But in all fairness, it was sometimes hard to be that (web)master.

    If you just wanted to put pictures of your cat on the internet, but didn’t know anything about HTML and FTP, let alone chmod and unix, you were in for a world of hurt.

    And then came Blogger (amongst other things).

    It was like Twitter without the 140 character ceiling. Just type stuff into the box and press the button. That was it! You just published stuff on the Internet. There weren’t even post titles in the beginning. After that we would see a flood of hosted web services that enabled people to publish stuff on the Internet very easily.

    Before we knew it, all of our content was being hosted by these web services. Flickr, Picasa and Photobucket had our photos. Typepad, Wordpress, Blogspot (and a slew of others) had our long form writing… called “blog posts”. Delicious and Magnolia had our bookmarks and read later lists. YouTube, Vimeo and heaps of video sites had our movies. Slideshare had our presentations.

    It all seemed like a good idea. Let someone else worry about uptime, backups, redundancy, bandwidth bills, etc. And for a time, things were good.

    Then as we published all of our content on other services, we became dependent on them. We became digital sharecroppers. Which maybe wasn’t so bad. But then… Magnolia lost all of its data. Six Apart bought Pownce and closed down the site providing no export option — or even much warning. URL shorteners cropped up, got popular and went away in the shortest of time, taking all of their short to long URL mappings with them.

    And of course, there’s Geocities. With all of its neon colors, tiled backgrounds, sparkly text and animated gifs, Geocities was a ghetto. But it was a huge ghetto. And now that Yahoo turned it off, it’s gone. Imagine if every ghetto, barrio, favela and shanty town was literally taken away in one moment. That’s a lot of very homeless people (even more homeless than before).

    Enough already!

    It’s time for something better. It’s time for a web where any person can easily create a website and publish all kinds of content there. It’s time for us to own all of our data, beholden to no one. It’s time that our personal diy rolled websites play nice and integrate closely into external services. It’s time for a real sense of privacy, where not only is our data “protected” from others seeing it, it’s also encrypted at the source so that even if seized by criminals or government alike it’d do them no good. It’s time for easy granular sharing controls allowing to grant access to some content to some people, not all content to all people or to no one.

    There will come a time in the not too distant future where having a website will be considered a birthright. It’s time that we start building the tools that will make that a possibility.

    Instead of sharecroppers, we must become homesteaders.

    Some Additional Thoughts

    As a person I want

    • to have a website
    • to own all of my data
    • to participate in online communities

    As a user I want

    • to publish everything to my website
    • my website to syndicate my content to other sites
    • my syndicated content to link back to my site
    • to choose which sites to syndicate to

    As a developer I want

    • to add outbound sites easily with a plugin
    • to add inbound formats to publish with

    Extra

    • Installation should be easy, at least as easy as Wordpress
    • Setup should short and simple
    • Existing tools should publish to my website

    New Blog Post Workflow

    • I open MarsEdit
    • I write a post
    • I publish it (via MetaWeblog API / AtomPub)
    • My website receives my post
    • My post is available on my website ( http://veganstraightedge.com/articles/2010/9/12/1/the-setup )
    • My website algorithmically generates a short url for the post ( http://sbb.me/b47j1 )
    • My website updates its Atom feed
    • My website alerts its subscribers that a new update is available (via PubSubHubbub)
    • My website syndicates a copy of my post with the short url at the end to Wordpress, Tumblr, gist.github.com, etc
    • My website posts the short url and title to Twitter, Facebook, status.net, etc

    New Note Update Workflow

    • I open Tweetie
    • I write my tweet
    • I publish it (via JSON to Twitter api clone)
    • My website receives my update
    • My note is available on my website ( http://veganstraightedge.com/notes/2010/10/5/2 )
    • My website generates a short url for the note ( http://sbb.me/n4872 )
    • My website updates its Atom feed
    • My website alerts its subscribers that a new update is available (via PubSubHubbub)
    • My website posts the short url and content to Twitter, Facebook, status.net, etc

    There’s surely stuff that I’ve thought about but am not thinking of right now. I’ll write more as it comes to me. It’s also worth noting that while I had a lot of these thoughts independent of talking with others, it turns out that more people are thinking roughly the same stuff. Discussions with Tantek really helped my thoughts coalesce, especially the personal url shortener work that he’s done. He’s using ttk.me with a one letter namespace, 3 character base60 number of days since epoch and one digit nth item of that type on that day. I am too. I jacked that all from him and ported his JavaScript / PHP version to Ruby. Thanks, Tantek. I’ve also talked a fair bit with Brian Ford and Rich Kilmer about all this stuff. Both had the idea of bundling the software package up into a VM instance that one could just throw at some server and hit the ground running. I hadn’t thought of that before. Thanks for that, you two.

    Let’s get together and make this thing. Get into it.

    Originally published at: http://sbb.me/b48f1

    The Setup is a bunch of nerdy interviews about “What do people use to get the job done?”. They’re all fairly high profile nerd folks. I’ve read this blog since the beginning and love it. There’s next to no chance that @waferbaby would interview me, because honestly, who am I? So, I’m doing my own Setup interview.

    The Setup

    Some of my favorites are Michael Lopp, Amy Hoy, Khoi Vinh, Violet Blue, _why The Lucky Stiff and John Gruber. But really, they’re all great. You should subscribe.

    Here goes.

    Me (doing something... who know?) at Runyon Canyon Park in Los Angeles, CA


    Who are you, and what do you do?

    My name is Shane Becker. I make websites. I first saw the web in Mosaic on an SGI running some flavor of Unix when I was a freshman in high school late one night at the Eli Lilly headquarters in Indianapolis, IN. There was no looking back.

    I currently work for The Man™ at a Fortune 10 company. It has its perks. I have lotsa (too many, really) side personal projects and I’m currently trying to cut down the list. I made Zine Distro (with help from Eli Duke, Bookis, Emily and Brooke), ListYourList (with Eli), The Resistance Army (with Bookis), the Rubinius site, the Seattle.rb site and co-founded LA.rb (with Evan Phoenix).

    And one time I got a bit of attention for taking a photo of an ATM.

    What hardware are you using?

    I have a 13” Unibody MacBook Pro, probably the best laptop ever made. I expect I’ll swap out the spinny hard drive with the non-spinny kind and bump the RAM to 8gb. I type on the Apple Wireless Keyboard (which just eats through AA batteries) and scroll with the Magic Mouse. My desktop background says &ldqou;Debt is slavery. Get free.&rdqou; to keep me focused on my student loans (currently only $13,000 left).

    The iPad is thing a beauty. My iPad&rsqou;s name is &ldqou;Jet Pack&rdqou;. I read a lot more than I ever did before. Books, feeds, twitter and comics. Lotsa comics. (In the picture, I was reading The Eternals by Neil Gaiman) I use the keyboard dock with it for longer globs of text. My home screen is the last image from Fighting in a New Terrain: What’s Changed Since the 20th Century.

    I have an iPhone 3GS as my pocket computer that makes phone calls. Its name is &ldqou;2001&rdqou;. It’s also my only camera. I used to have a Ricoh GRD which took the best pictures I’ve seen, but decided on the camera that was with me over the better camera.

    Sound plays out of Harman Kardon Sound Sticks and iSub. Pages and old negatives are scanned with a Canoscan LiDE 700f.

    My desk is pink and too low. It also is an inbox for physical tasks (currently: get drivers license renewed, develop super 8 film). My chair is black, grey and adequate. My dry erase board is ceramic, within arm’s reach and still leaves hints of erased notes.

    And what software?

    OS X

    TextMate, lots and lots of TextMate. Sure do wish version 2 would ship. PeepOpen. Safari. Mail.app (backed by gmail). Adium. VLC. Tweetie, but I wish it’d get updated to work with natives retweets, geo stuff and annotations. Terminal. Acorn. Name Mangler. Xtorrent. Adobe Illustrator. iTunes. Things. QuickSilver Quick Search Box. Dropbox. Skitch. Cinch. Fuzzy Clock. QuickCursor. iCal. Ruby. Ruby on Rails. git.

    Web

    GMail. Ta-da List. Wikipedia. Google. Github. Google Reader. Twitter. Heroku. Last.fm.

    iPhone

    Maps. Messages. Camera. Phone. Mail. Safari. iPod. Things. Tweetie Twitter for iPhone. Foursquare. Gowalla. Both via Check.in. Nezumi. Elements. Reeder.

    iPad

    Comixology. Marvel Comics. Graphic.ly. I wish there was a standard e-comic format and purchases could be read in any app. CloudReaders. Reeder. Kindle. Wikipanion. Instapaper. Twitter for iPad. Things. Elements. Draft.

    What would be your dream setup?

    Somewhere between Ewok Village and the Sherwood Forest from Prince of Thieves. Sincerely.