Jun 17, 2011
Can't say I saw this coming, but I'm glad it was Virgin America upping their geek cred.
As my coworker Nils put it best: "Enough is enough! I have had it with these mutha****in' hashtags on this mutha****in' plane. #samueljackson"
Several months ago I was interviewed by Ashley Parker for a piece in the New York Times on hashtags. The piece is live and though it may not provide Twitterers with much new information, it does put the concept and practice in front of a much larger audience.
Kris Cheng (who just graduated from Stanford) shot the photo at Google a couple weeks ago with a couple friends (the hand in the photo belongs to a Miss Fontaine Foxworth).
Oh, and for full measure, Ashley just launched her new column "#trendingNYC" today.
Jun 7, 2011
I wrote about the results of my first three months at Core Performance in February. I've now got the results from the second three months (i.e. a total of six months!) and I'm still making progress, which is gratifying to see:
| Dec 3, 2010 | Feb 22, 2011 | June 5, 2011 | Delta | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weight (lb): | 168.4 | 164.2 | 164.2 | 0 lb |
| Body Fat %: | 22.91 | 17.66 | 15.56 | -2.1% |
| Lean Mass (lb): | 129.82 | 135.20 | 138.65 | +3.45 lb |
| Fat Mass (lb): | 38.58 | 29.00 | 25.55 | -3.45 lb |
| Waist (in): | 37.5 | 37.25 | 36.25 | -1.0 in |
| Hip (in): | 41.5 | 39.75 | 39.25 | -0.5 in |
Note that the delta is since the last measurement, not over all time.
Even though my weight didn't change, I exchanged 3.45 pounds of fat mass for lean muscle — which is why it's never sufficient to just weigh yourself to gauge progress!
Admittedly I've slacked off a bit recently from working out as often as I should — due to a number of things (boredom and schedule conflicts primarily) so I'm hoping I can keep myself motivated as the summer kicks off...
I love that Path is sharing the results of some of their internal hackathons. Their latest "short" is called "With", a free iPhone app that integrates Twitter identity for "a fun, simple way to share who you are with."
In January, I wrote about the significance of the preposition "with" — and Brynn helped me re-realize this today: "With is the most important preposition of 2011." Yes!
Dave Morin further explains: "as we continue our quest to build new types of networks which maintain their quality over time, we have been fascinated by the idea of an interaction network. Or, as we enjoy calling it, the With Graph."
I continue to believe that capturing and expressing this kind of information through social media will be where the next big innovation in social networking will emerge. Path seems to be headed down the right ... path!
Jun 5, 2011
Our drug policy is on drugs. It's apparently as simple as that. Consider these stats (from the report):
| Opiates | Cocaine | Cannabis | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | 12.9 million | 13.4 million | 147.4 million |
| 2008 | 17.35 million | 17 million | 160 million |
| % Increase | 34.5% | 27% | 8.5% |
We're not making progress. We're regressing and failing.
The Executive Summary of the report has some strong recommendations, and (who I am to say?) it seems high time we changed course (emphasis added):
Our principles and recommendations can be summarized as follows:
End the criminalization, marginalization and stigmatization of people who use drugs but who do no harm to others. Challenge rather than reinforce common misconceptions about drug markets, drug use and drug dependence.
Encourage experimentation by governments with models of legal regulation of drugs to undermine the power of organized crime and safeguard the health and security of their citizens. This recommendation applies especially to cannabis, but we also encourage other experiments in decriminalization and legal regulation that can accomplish these objectives and provide models for others.
Offer health and treatment services to those in need. Ensure that a variety of treatment modalities are available, including not just methadone and buprenorphine treatment but also the heroin-assisted treatment programs that have proven successful in many European countries and Canada. Implement syringe access and other harm reduction measures that have proven effective in reducing transmission of HIV and other blood-borne infections as well as fatal overdoses. Respect the human rights of people who use drugs. Abolish abusive practices carried out in the name of treatment – such as forced detention, forced labor, and physical or psychological abuse – that contravene human rights standards and norms or that remove the right to self-determination.
Apply much the same principles and policies stated above to people involved in the lower ends of illegal drug markets, such as farmers, couriers and petty sellers. Many are themselves victims of violence and intimidation or are drug dependent. Arresting and incarcerating tens of millions of these people in recent decades has filled prisons and destroyed lives and families without reducing the availability of illicit drugs or the power of criminal organizations. There appears to be almost no limit to the number of people willing to engage in such activities to better their lives, provide for their families, or otherwise escape poverty. Drug control resources are better directed elsewhere.
Invest in activities that can both prevent young people from taking drugs in the first place and also prevent those who do use drugs from developing more serious problems. Eschew simplistic ‘just say no’ messages and ‘zero tolerance’ policies in favor of educational efforts grounded in credible information and prevention programs that focus on social skills and peer influences. The most successful prevention efforts may be those targeted at specific at-risk groups.
Focus repressive actions on violent criminal organizations, but do so in ways that undermine their power and reach while prioritizing the reduction of violence and intimidation. Law enforcement efforts should focus not on reducing drug markets per se but rather on reducing their harms to individuals, communities and national security.
Begin the transformation of the global drug prohibition regime. Replace drug policies and strategies driven by ideology and political convenience with fiscally responsible policies and strategies grounded in science, health, security and human rights – and adopt appropriate criteria for their evaluation. Review the scheduling of drugs that has resulted in obvious anomalies like the flawed categorization of cannabis, coca leaf and MDMA. Ensure that the international conventions are interpreted and/or revised to accommodate robust experimentation with harm reduction, decriminalization and legal regulatory policies.
Break the taboo on debate and reform. The time for action is now.
Apr 3, 2011
Austin Kleon (of Newspaper Blackout) has published the transcript to a talk he recently gave, complete with illustrative slides. I really like what he has to say, and think this advice (which he wishes he could give to earlier versions of himself) is worth keeping in mind.
Mar 6, 2011

This past week we (Google) launched an updated design for Google profiles. Aside from a visual refresh, we made some changes to the structure of the page, including changes to the attributes you can set to express more about yourself. Though I like these changes, they are only the beginning of what I expect will be a series of constant improvements and iterations.
Writing about these changes, Gina Tripani called out the limitations of expressing one's relationship and gender statuses in predefined list-based dropdown menus:
She writes:
For me, relationship status is a minefield of potential misunderstanding, because if I select "married," people often assume I'm heterosexually married. If I could answer this question in an open text field, I'd fill in "gay-married." That's how I want to characterize and specify my relationship status, not the overly cutesy and vague "it's complicated," or the doesn't-give-us-enough-credit-for-all-the-crap-we-went-through-to-get-legally-married "In a relationship."
"Why not just choose married?" a few people have asked. That's the response I ultimately (and begrudgingly) chose. Yes: married is married is married. But I like to be specific, because the majority of marriages are heterosexual, so when people know I'm female and find out I'm married, they assume I have a husband. My "married" identity can eclipse my "gay" identity. The fact that I'm legally gay-married in California, one of only 19,000 couples in the U.S., is something I'm proud of, and a way I like to identify myself and my relationship. Isn't Google Profiles' whole purpose to provide a way for me to publicly identify myself?
There's something fundamental in what Gina's expressing here. At once she forces an examination of the purpose of a profile — while drawing attention to the rather obvious question of what should go in a profile. If the purpose of a profile is to enable personal expression, how much control over the information presented is necessary to establish a feeling of true ownership of it? Do name/value pairs really do justice to the complex personalities and personas we inhabit in different contexts of our lives?
Explaining the changes to the profiles, Greg Marra writes "We think this new design helps highlight the information that’s most important to you, making it easier for people who visit your profile to get to know you."
But today's profile only represents a smattering of facts and details without context — which leads me to three observations:
Activity-based profiles are, admittedly, harder to create than static fact-based profiles — especially when your audience is as diverse as Google's, simply because it requires you to capture a record of what someone did, and then to somehow categorize their actions into a newsfeed of some sort, using metadata.
For example, my Flickr tagcloud gives you a very good sense for the subject of the images that I upload, since I'm a madman when it comes to tagging my screenshots:
If you compare this list with Ade's, for instance, you can see that our foci are very different:
If you asked either Ade or myself to try to come up with the top 150 tags that describe our interests, I imagine we'd have a hard time doing so. If instead you tracked our behavior and data stream over a period of months or years, I bet you'd have a much clearer picture (pun intended) of what's proven to capture our fancy.
And that brings me back to Gina and her very valid complaint about the Google Profiles gender and relationship fields: a reductionist approach to one's gender identity or "primary relationship" status is bound to introduce some skew between what works for most people and what works for all people. And it's that finite gulf between most and all where real communities of interest form.
Now, I don't think it was top of mind when I proposed the hashtag, but looking back now, and considering all the hashtags I've used on Twitter (and now elsewhere), it occurs to me that hashtags can do both a good job of capturing a gestalt of one's profile over time, and — more importantly — can unite people with shared interests by implicitly serving as public tokens offering commonality.
These tokens each have their own social gravity, which accrues and wanes over time (for the individual and the collective). Thus introducing a hashtag into the stream is like stage diving — sometimes the meme will be adopted (see also: #winning from @charliesheen), and other times it'll be dropped on the floor. So perhaps profile attributes should inherit some of the dynamics that inspire flocking behavior around hashtags.
In Gina's case, the limited set of options in the gender and relationship fields kept her from expressing her own truth — preventing her from connecting with other people who may share a similar truth. Had Gina been able to express these traits in her own words — or as TheJeremyP put it, "let [her] explain" — she may have been able to build out her identity as a platform for new and meaningful interactions with people who think about themselves similar to the way she does.
So, perhaps in a future version of the profile, Gina will be able to record her relationship status as #gay-married and gender as #tomboy, and be recognized for these hard-won traits that she believes truly define her.
Mar 5, 2011
I friggin' love Manhattans. FWIW, I think I make a pretty mean one myself, but recently I came up with a pretty great recipe that you can use to impress your friends (or your own palette).
It goes something like this:
Golden Manhattan
Mix all of those elements in a tumbler, shake with ice, and then pour in a proper glass over an organic maraschino cherry.
Enjoy.
Feb 25, 2011
For some reason, I'm really digging the sounds of Eskmo's latest album. Do, do check it out.
Feb 22, 2011
Fitness is my themeword for 2011 and since I'm now 30, I've begun to reassess where I'm at, how I'm doing, and have started to devote some energy to becoming even better.
To that end, I've starting working out three times a week for an hour in December at a Google-subsidized program called Core Performance.
Though I've been tracking my weight and BMI nearly daily using my Withings WiFI scale, I prefer to rely on the body composition measurements taken manually by Core Performance staff. Today I got my body comp results for my first three months and the good news is that I'm making considerable progress:
| Dec 3, 2010 | Feb 22, 2011 | Delta | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weight (lb): | 168.4 | 164.2 | -4.2 lb |
| Body Fat %: | 22.91 | 17.66 | -5.25% |
| Lean Mass (lb): | 129.82 | 135.20 | +5.38 lb |
| Fat Mass (lb): | 38.58 | 29.00 | -9.58 lb |
| Waist (in): | 37.5 | 37.25 | -0.25 in |
| Hip (in): | 41.5 | 39.75 | -1.75 in |
Apart from the weekly workouts, I've also become more proactive in my water intake, and monitoring what I eat and when (i.e. I now eat a banana and peanut butter an hour before I work out). I've been using Healthmonth and so far its gameified featureset is definitely helping keep me honest.
Now I just need to practice getting more sleep!