Entries Tagged as ''

Dot “com” or dot “org”?

I used to like "whereIstand.org" because it makes the site sound less commercial. But I went ahead and bought "whereIstand.com" some time ago to make sure I had the flexibility to change over later if I wanted to.

Right now, I’m moving the site to a bigger, faster, stronger, more well-connected, hunka-hunka-burnin’ love of a Web server. In the process… I’m going to switch over to using whereIstand.com.

Obviously, ".com" is much more well-known. Already, if you went to ".com" you’d be redirected to ".org". I pretty much changed my mind and decided ".com" is the way to go.

What think?

whereIstand Tags

Creating or Reviving Topics

Thanks, Donovan.

Did you click the "all" link in the topics header on the front page? Right now it just lists the hierarchy of topics without any other info. But I’m going to eventually put a lot more information and functionality in here. You’ll be able to search for topics, etc.

I’m going to look to add a Google site search too… maybe when you go to add a topic, I’ll list out for you the ones that may be relevant already and ask you first to confirm that what you want to write about isn’t in there.

The process for creating new topics that I’m planning is one where anyone can create one but it is tentative until a given number of other people have weighed in, a certain number of issues have been proposed and approved, etc. There will be constraints, of course. More on this when it becomes necessary. For now, if you have a new topic you want to discuss (and it’s not movies) send me an e-mail with your proposed topic description.

whereIstand Tags

What’s a “Top Ranked Topic” anyway?

You probably wondered at the order of the topics listed on the front page as "top ranked". They showed up nicely in order and all that… the order in which they were created on the site. Not a very good ranking, huh?

Well, I finally updated this. First, I have to flag topics as "front page topics". Only I can do this.

I’m the king of the world!

Right, then… for "front page topics", there is a three part calculation that figures out the percentile values for the number of users, the participation or involvement of those users, and the number and timeliness of blogs.

The timeliness is an inverse of the weeks since a blogger blogged in that topic. The score is weighted by the inverse of the weeks… two weeks ago gets 1/2 the value… three weeks ago gets 1/3 the value. So if people stop blogging in a topic, it will quickly lose ground. If people all jump into a topic, it should climb quickly too. However, any single blogger going nuts in a topic does not increase the topic score more than a single post that week would.

I’ll probably revise this later… but I thought I’d let everyone know how it’s happening right now. Keep in mind that blogger ranking is still not factoring timeliness…I’ll get to that at some point.

whereIstand Tags

Francis, we hardly knew ya!

Isn’t Fukuyama on the right?

We do not know what outcome we will face in Iraq. We do know that four years after 9/11, our whole foreign policy seems destined to rise or fall on the outcome of a war only marginally related to the source of what befell us on that day. There was nothing inevitable about this. There is everything to be regretted about it.

This article is much more about Bush’s recklessness and deception than it is about Iraq - in my opinion. I propose the article for Guy Catelli who thinks that invading Iraq could somehow have been beneficial for the U.S. interests in the Middle East.

whereIstand Tags

Movie and book reviews a-comin’ up!

I expect it will take me until Monday or Tuesday (maybe slightly more) to put this out there. I’m trying some things with the designs because I want to take myself out of the loop if possible… meanwhile, I have a few other things I need to finish migrating from the old to the new user interfaces.

Just wanted to remind that I haven’t forgotten about movies… just that I want to work them in in particular ways….

whereIstand Tags

Zen Riddle #2: Why aren’t there any witty Christian riddles?

Answer: "Jesus Christ! Can you guys stop bringing religion into everything??? Look whacha did to poor old JoeC already….sheesh!"

Ahh, for the nostalgia of the Yahoo original 1995-era version sans search engine

But it’s not nostalgia I’m after. All of Donovan’s points are very well taken. I know there are difficulties to surmount in doing this the way I want. But the point is that I really do want to make it where people give much thought to what they are posting and to the relevance that this will have to a reader. I know writers often want to write so that they can be read. But here I’m hoping that people’s desire to "change the world" is what eventually drives them.

I know I need to do a bunch of stuff to improve the organization of the site in order to achieve what I’m trying to get at. The focus of the site is the reader…the person who needs reassurance of his positions or is doubting them. You may be someone that thinks it’s important to "take a stand" on whether Elvis is really alive or dead and that’s awesome… but when I’m reading what you think he’s alive, I don’t need to read about how Elvis changed your life. Not that I won’t want to read that too…so if you give me a link to where you wrote about it…cool.

I do want the site to promote shorter posts that are more to the point of furthering the discussion along. There is nothing negative about doing this. It’s true that blogs don’t normally work this way… not that I know of anyway… and this is why I’m taking the Cartesian approach here: doubt everything but that which I have consciously decided will get me closer to my goals.

How does that strike you guys? Keep in mind… I know very well that the site design does not yet encourage these things. I believe peer pressure and the desire for prominence will eventually bear down to making people "play by the rules". People always learn to do this where it’s reasonable and the goals seem worthwhile.

So, riddle #3 becomes: What is the best way to encourage the bloggers to put their focus on succinct arguments to further a better understanding and see if either party decides to give a little ground in their positions? You can’t change the world if we’re all just screaming on soap boxes. If we find a way to remove the barriers that exist to average Joe’s having a constructive dialogue, we would have achieved something.

All of that is not to say that there is no glory in soap boxes…Here, from a Soap Box Derby we stumbled upon near Brooklyn Heights a month or so ago: (I also have close-up awesome video of the collision between Wheeled-Chair guy and Nordic-Trak Boy and the mayhem that ensued…let me know if anyone is interested and I’ll post that too.)

whereIstand Tags

Could there be a behavioral solution to a pernicious problem?

Donovan gives me the ol’ friendly suggestion here to remove some of the site’s rigidity as to classification of information.

Here’s the chain of events…

1. Things were said…

2. Donovan responds in the same topic/issue where the things were said.

3. Nick responds…but in a different topic and issue — the one about philosophical diffs between left and right – because the comment I wanted to make was really based on something that more properly fit over there.

4. Donovan responds in the same place, but with a comment that rightfully belongs in the "designs and presentation of whereIstand" issue.

Since the person writing knows what he intends to write and can reference anything written anywhere on the site, it’s not impossible to first pick where it should go and then write it in there. Now, granted, the user interface is still a ways away from facilitating this… but you get the idea, right? Suppose you want to talk about how this post you are right now reading is really important to justifying the war in Iraq… you’d go to that issue and write over there with a reference to this post.

I really think that’s a much better way than the way Donovan suggests. This way, everything has a "home" which is where the blogger thought it should go…and who better to decide this? Also, whenver a post is deemed relevant to other things by other people, when they go to write, they decide where it’s most relevant to put it… it all links back automatically and eventually, I can show the chain from one to the other somewhere on the page.

Is it so confusing? I mean, I know it takes a little getting used to… it’s tradition, you  now, for new people on a site to have to learn certain conventions. I’m not beyond having that happen here… I’d just like to eventually have little messages explaining them rather than making people learn them the hard way.

whereIstand Tags

More to the point

By now you’ve come to realize that I like to link to NY Times OpEds. Unfortunately these go stale fairly quickly… so get them while supplies last!

The article in question is linked here. It’s a work I may as well have commissioned for this purpose. Take this choice nugget:

The focus on intelligent design has, paradoxically, obscured something else: genuine scientific controversies about evolution that abound. In just about every field there are challenges to one established theory or another. The legitimate way to stir up such a storm is to come up with an alternative theory that makes a prediction that is crisply denied by the reigning theory - but that turns out to be true, or that explains something that has been baffling defenders of the status quo, or that unifies two distant theories at the cost of some element of the currently accepted view.

To date, the proponents of intelligent design have not produced anything like that. No experiments with results that challenge any mainstream biological understanding. No observations from the fossil record or genomics or biogeography or comparative anatomy that undermine standard evolutionary thinking.

Instead, the proponents of intelligent design use a ploy that works something like this. First you misuse or misdescribe some scientist’s work. Then you get an angry rebuttal. Then, instead of dealing forthrightly with the charges leveled, you cite the rebuttal as evidence that there is a "controversy" to teach.

Note that the trick is content-free. You can use it on any topic. "Smith’s work in geology supports my argument that the earth is flat," you say, misrepresenting Smith’s work. When Smith responds with a denunciation of your misuse of her work, you respond, saying something like: "See what a controversy we have here? Professor Smith and I are locked in a titanic scientific debate. We should teach the controversy in the classrooms." And here is the delicious part: you can often exploit the very technicality of the issues to your own advantage, counting on most of us to miss the point in all the difficult details.

Or this one:

It’s worth pointing out that there are plenty of substantive scientific controversies in biology that are not yet in the textbooks or the classrooms. The scientific participants in these arguments vie for acceptance among the relevant expert communities in peer-reviewed journals, and the writers and editors of textbooks grapple with judgments about which findings have risen to the level of acceptance - not yet truth - to make them worth serious consideration by undergraduates and high school students.

SO get in line, intelligent designers. Get in line behind the hypothesis that life started on Mars and was blown here by a cosmic impact. Get in line behind the aquatic ape hypothesis, the gestural origin of language hypothesis and the theory that singing came before language, to mention just a few of the enticing hypotheses that are actively defended but still insufficiently supported by hard facts.

And finally:

 The Discovery Institute, the conservative organization that has helped to put intelligent design on the map, complains that its members face hostility from the established scientific journals. But establishment hostility is not the real hurdle to intelligent design. If intelligent design were a scientific idea whose time had come, young scientists would be dashing around their labs, vying to win the Nobel Prizes that surely are in store for anybody who can overturn any significant proposition of contemporary evolutionary biology.

I think this gentleman makes a very well-rounded argument - you can’t just propose something and call it a theory. His attempt at forming a true Intelligent Design hypothesis grandly illuminates the absurdity of the matter.

OK… here’s my appeal… has anyone else come to the conclusion that there are standards that have to be met? Not every argument is worthy of being presented. I’ll remain an elitist on this matter.

JoeC… where are you?

whereIstand Tags

Screwed up links…[Update: Fixed]

I screwed up a few links with the latest changes that I made. I should have them fixed fairly soon.

Should be fixed now… if you find any crashes, please let me know.

whereIstand Tags

Couple of small things

If you click a topic from the "front page" or click one of those links that say "topic front" or "issue front", you’ll now see the same "blogs" header that I put up a day or two ago on the front page.

The settings are consistent for the topic. I know this is confusing…but it’s the first pass. Hopefully, you’ll be able to catch up with what’s happened a little bit more easily with these display options. Also, I will soon bring back the feature whereby you can see how many posts you haven’t read yet. I think this makes it much easier to see where there is new stuff without having to navigate around looking for it.

whereIstand Tags