In the works, I have a contribution to another site and some information on tasers in Los Angeles.
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Busy
In the works, I have a contribution to another site and some information on tasers in Los Angeles.
Saturday, May 10, 2008
Coming
I'll provide a link to my Flickr account for those people who want to see what I've been up to with my camera, but I won't be blogging much about general topics.
Sunday, February 03, 2008
Happy Blogroll Amnesty Day
One this date in 2007, a widely-read blogger implemented a blogrolling policy under which people only need link to blogs that they read and are free, on this day, to remove unread, or unworthy, blogs from their blogrolls.
At the time, I didn't communicate with many other bloggers - I still don't really, but am starting to - and had a small blogroll myself. So, I didn't see much of an issue with the widely-read blogger's wish to prune his links. Who doesn't want a clean blog?
However, I was stunned by the blogger's desire to "shoot people in the face" for complaining about being unlinked. I commented on his strange desire:
Wow, that's a long post.
I like to click through the sites I link at least a few times a week. So, I don't have a ton of sites linked.
But, like I said last time this came up, it's odd to read someone so widely read complain about people complaining that they aren't.
I wonder what it is about this that gets Atrios angry. After all's said and done, he's in the driver's seat wrt his links section.
I think it was that comment that led Jon Swift to contact me and offer me a link to his views on the blogrolling amnesty topic. At the time, I still held the provincial view that there is no harm in deleting unread blogs from your blogroll. I couldn't quite understand why people were getting so heated about linking to, or unlinking from, each other. I responded to Jon with a quickly written and unintentionally naive note:
I had read through some of your post, as linked by Eschaton, before you contacted me. I love your post on Conservapedia. I'm happy to blogroll you.
I have a couple of thoughts on the blog amnesty issue. First, I think it's a bit odd that Atrios considered the reworking of his blogroll something that warranted not just an announcement, but an entire day, for all to observe. I'm not sure he intended such a grandiose gesture. Maybe he was making a remark that would otherwise be considered "off the cuff" were it not immortalized by the web.
It's also curious that he is so aggravated by people trying to get traffic and expressing concern that they aren't. He's posted more than a few notes complaining that people are complaining to him about not getting links from him, traffic, etc. If he considers sending an email complaining about such things annoying, you'd think he'd consider blogging complaints about such complaints insult on injury.
I actually don't understand his annoyance.
If I had been him, I probably would have added a "Things I'm Reading Now" section to my sidebar.
All of that said, I haven't been one of the folks making arguments against amnesty day or complaining that I'm not getting traffic. I blog for my own satisfaction. If people read me, that's nice. If not, that's less nice, but ok. Complaints from me would also be hypocritical given the small size of my links section. I add blogs and sources that I read almost daily. I tend to click all of my links on a daily basis.
Mostly, I find his angst/drama over who he links and who complains about it curious. I would figure him thicker skinned.
I didn't have a well-developed understanding of the tradition of networking and traffic generation that smaller bloggers (and if people like Jon are smaller, I'm micro!) had worked hard to cultivate. Without meaning to, I was dismissing a very cool thing: many people with small voices coming together to form a loud voice. Jon's original post on the subject and the post he's written this year are both nice pieces outlining why links from other bloggers are important.
As of this post, and in celebration of this high holiday, I am officially changing to a policy of blogrolling anyone who blogrolls me. Actually, I've kind of had this policy all along. I can't remember refusing to link to someone who's asked me to. But as I said above, I'm not all that outgoing in the blogosphere. The difference for me now will be my openness about my policy and an admittance that I was wrong in not understanding peoples' hurt feelings and decreased traffic due to the amnesty day. Exceptions to my new overt linking policy will include denying links to evil people and marketers.
I've been wondering what I can do to commemorate this day. My rambling statement above is part of what I've decided to do, but I've also thought of something else. Since I'm not great at contacting people, I thought I'd make a list of people I have contacted, either through email or the comments on their blogs, and discovered good people on the other end of the great tubes. To a large part, it's the decency of these folks that's kept me open to linking to and communicating with other bloggers. In the spirit of this holiday, here's my top-four most accessible bloggers:
1. Jon Swift - One of the nicest people I've corresponded with in the blogosphere. Jon's satirical posts are always worth reading.
2. Pam Spaulding - Pam is one of the most simultaneously logical and passionate bloggers out there. Her posts and appearances on CNN make me proud to be a regular commenter, and occasional diarist, at her site.
3. Jonathan Schwarz - Author of a great blog that offers alternative and sharp-witted views on politics and corporate media.
4. Dennis Perrin - Dennis is a straight guy whose posts make me rightly question my knee-jerk distrust of straight guys. This goes for Jonathan as well.
I suppose that I could have created a list of bloggers I've contacted and received either zero or negative communications with. But that wouldn't really be in keeping with the holiday.
Sunday, January 06, 2008
Posting At Another Site
Posted by
Nate
at
10:13 AM
|
Labels: blogger, comics, gays and straights, LGBT

Friday, December 28, 2007
A Swift List
Oh and one of my crappy posts is on his list, a turd among diamonds.
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Updating
PostBlog: I've completed a few changes to this blog. If anyone has trouble viewing the new three column implementation, let me know.
PostBlog2: God, why do template changes take so much effort? It's likely linked to my ability to understand and implement html/xml. At any rate, besides trying to fix a lack of labels on the posts, the changes are mostly done. Let me know (nicely) what you think.
Saturday, December 01, 2007
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
Blog Off
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
New Stuff
I've added a section to the left for things I've recently found via StumbleUpon and elsewhere. I'll be updating it regularly with new things.
Thursday, March 22, 2007
Fonts
Bigger fonts are now here. I'll update my older posts as I get chances to do so. Things should be a bit more readable now. I'm not sure how long my militant polka dots will hang around either. They'll probably be here until I find, or make (I made the dots) something I like more.
Sunday, March 18, 2007
Blogger!
Why oh why is formatting text so fubar in blogger? I'm going to have to stop using the blockquote feature. It destroys spacing and layout every time I try to use it, without exception. Scroll through my posts. You'll see what I mean.
PostBlog: I did a bit of digging in the Google and found a post by Chuck (and its comments) detailing a template workaround (of course) that seems to have helped my bizarro Blogger spacing issues. Thank you Chuck!
Wednesday, March 14, 2007
Tell Me
I've been modifying the look of my blogger template significantly in the past few weeks. If you see readability or organizational issues, I'd love your feedback.
Saturday, March 10, 2007
Go Blogger Go
I updated my template this morning. I hope it takes care of some of the loading errors my blog was having. The blog should now also stretch with browser size. Let me know if you find problems.
Saturday, February 03, 2007
Updates
I've added a few things to the left panel of ItAllGoesHere.
First, if you scroll down, I've added and RSS feed button below the Favorite Posts section. Admittedly, I know almost nothing about RSS or Atom feeds. I added them because it seems like many other sites offer feeds, and if people are comfortable reading that way, why not accommodate it; it was simple to implement.
Next, I've added an updating NYC skyline graphic to the left, below the Key section. It's from NewYorkOnTap. It displays the skyline in quasi-real-time. Its appearance changes to track the weather, the color of the Empire State Building, the phase of the moon, and probably something else I'm forgetting. If you hold your mouse over the graphic, you get an instant weather read for NYC.
Finally, I've added polls to the left under the NYC Updating Skyline section. I created the html code at BlogFlux. Once you vote, click on the "see map" link to view a map showing the location of other voters. I'm still working out the appearance of the polls, but I'm almost there.
Monday, December 11, 2006
Saturday, October 28, 2006
Blogger Beta Templates
A few weeks ago I updated my page to Blogger Beta. As a result, I never got to experience any of the recent Blogger outages. Today I updated my template to a new Beta compatible template. The features are nice, but getting 3rd party code to work is proving difficult for this XML illiterate.
PostBlog: Things seem to be working now! Now I just need to get Blogger/Google to make the rain stop, it's interrupting my schedule. :)
Post2Blog: It occurred to this unthoughtful blogger that I never said how I was able to get my beta template up and running. I followed the advice of a post at SocraticGadfly. Thanks SocraticGadfly!
Sunday, July 30, 2006
Update to Haloscan
Haloscan commenting and trackback have been added to this blog.
At the suggestion of Jay :) I've converted the comments to HaloScan. It looks like the conversion deleted any pre-existing comments :( I appologize to anyone that took the time to comment, but love that you visited my site.