Tag John Tolva

Around The Blogosphere

Lately I am bored with everything I see on the Internet. As more and more people flock to Facebook, MySpace and Twitter, they have less and less to say that is the slightest bit worth paying attention to. Like everything else about our culture, it’s “dumbification” pure and simple.

So, I’m even more glad than usual to discover a couple of blogs I hadn’t seen before and gladder still that some of the ones I’ve been reading for a long time can still come up with great posts.

My two favorite “discoveries” are very different beasts. The first one is a blog by long-time comedy writer Ken Levine. Levine was a regular writer for “M*A*S*H*” and “Cheers” and has been involved in many other fine sitcoms over the years. His blog is like getting a table at lunch with the cool kids and finding out all the stuff you always wanted to know about a world you’ll never be a part of. Levine’s blog came recommended via Mark Evanier’s blog, and Evanier himself needs to be nominated as a National Treasure for his devotion to the history of television. Those of you who share my interest in television and show-business history (and you know who you are) would be similarly captivated by Ken Levine.

The second one came to my attention through Adam Gaffin’s Universal Hub. It’s called “Other People’s Emergencies: Random Thoughts of an Urban Paramedic”. As the title implies, it’s written by a guy who is a paramedic, working in Boston. He’s done that job for more than twenty years, and the posts I’ve read so far really show that depth of experience in the sense of having a very unvarnished view about the situations he encounters, without coming across as jaded or burned out on the real tragedies. This post about a shoplifter playing injured to get away from the cops is a typical example of the realities of the jobs of cops, firemen and paramedics in a large city, while this post with a somewhat apocryphal story about an ER resident too quick to cut open a chest is dark humor at its finest.

My blog-buddy John Tolva isn’t exactly burning up the bandwidth with posts to his blog, but the other day he posted this photograph:

tolva-chicago

It’s a picture of the corner of North Sheridan Road and W. Dakin Street in Chicago as it looks now, with an enlargement of an old photo of John’s father, grandfather, and uncle standing in the exact same spot about fifty years ago. These sort of “past-present” photos are always interesting, and I thought this was a good example, but it also reminded me of a fantastic post John wrote a couple of months ago that told the story of his great-grandparents immigrating to Chicago at the turn of the 20th century and then interwove the tale with a present-day account of him (John) finding himself at the EXACT spot where his great-grandparents lived.

Lastly, a huge shout out to Alan Taylor, one of the small group of online friends I actually know in “real” life via our mutual friend, Andre Torrez. He is the person behind the amazing photo blog that appears daily at Boston.com, The Big Picture. The Big Picture celebrated its first anniversary last week, and in one short year has managed to garner all sorts of awards, praise and imitators. His idea was really simple: every day the Boston Globe, as well as dozens of other newspapers across the country, receive dozens and dozens of news photographs from the wire services, but very few of them are ever actually used in the newspaper or online. His idea was to take the pictures that aren’t used and feature them in large-format, high-definition size, organized topically. After all, the paper pays to get the images, and some of the most spectacular news photos just end up ignored. Alan isn’t a photographer, a journalist, or an editor, he’s a web developer, and he does “The Big Picture” in between all of his regular daily duties for Boston.com. With the fate of the Boston Globe in question, I certainly hope that the New York Times or some other news organization is able to keep this blog available for a long time to come.

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Pimpin’

I’ve mentioned my blog-buddy John Tolva and his blog here a number of times. He’s one of those people who is always doing something amazing. Well, last Friday his most amazing thing to date became a “reality” — IBM’s virtual re-creation of the Forbidden City of China went online after three years in the making. John was the project manager for the whole thing, and posted about his travels to China and the ongoing work throughout the project all along the way.

In order to experience the virtual Forbidden City, you’ll have to download the software necessary to render and run the simulation, but it’s free and available for Win/Mac/Linux platforms. Borrowing from the engine and conceptualization of the “Second Life” virtual world website, you create an avatar for yourself and then explore the vast confines of the palace grounds, encountering other real people similarly involved in the site, as well as some computer-generated NPCs. All the characters are historically appropriate to medieval China at the height of power of the dynastic emperors. I haven’t had a chance to dive in yet, but am looking forward to it a lot.

One of my clients, a very wonderful lady named Jean K. Mason, has just published her memoir about her father, a Midwestern industrialist named Raymond Kaltwasser (pictured above in 1925). A hard-headed, imperious and eventually mentally ill man, he domineered his family, disowned his daughter, and continued to wreak havoc even after his death. Jean eventually was drawn back in and had to fight against other family members and controlling interests in the company to restore order. This is the book that Jean was working on when I first started to help her with her computer, and I had a very small part in its creation through cleaning up her 20-year-old word processing files, so I’ve been able to read snippets of the book, but not yet the completed manuscript. She gave me an autographed copy last week and I look forward to reading it a lot. If it sounds interesting to you, you can order a copy directly from her at that website.

This article in yesterday’s New York Times features the company where my wife works — SiOnyx. As the article explains, they are developing a process for manufacturing a revolutionary black silicon light receptor for use in applications such as digital imaging; their process results in a material that is 100-500 times more photosensitive than current technologies. Harvard University is announcing a licensing deal with them today, and they’ve just completed a round of venture financing to the tune of $11 million. The article focuses on the “A-ha!” moment when Professor Ed Mazur, the Harvard professor who is SiOnyx’s chief scientific advisor, realized the potential of an accidental discovery made by his graduate students and how that has been turned into an enterprise with tons of potential. They’re still a tiny little startup, but all signs point to them being a big deal in the not-so-distant future.

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Fly The Ocean In A Silver Plane, See The Jungle When It’s Wet With Rain

I don’t travel much. Some minor business travel now and again, a couple of international trips, and a few zig-zags between New England and the Midwest in my college/grad school years. It’s not that I don’t like to go places, it’s more a case of not being afforded the opportunity to do so on any consistent basis…not to mention not having the sense enough when I was a young person to take the time to do it then.

Part of the fun of living online, thus, is getting to learn about other parts of the world from people who live there and getting to enjoy travel somewhat vicariously through the travels of others. Lately, it seems like a lot of people I know online have been gallavanting here and there. Blog-buddy John Tolva is just back from an extended trip to Ghana as part of a project he is doing through his employer (a well-known International Business Machines company) to assist local craftspeople in selling their goods internationally online. I’ve been following his blog posts about the trip, as well as his Twitter feed. He offered up some great posts about what he saw and did in Ghana, along with great photos:

The Twitter posts were, of necessity, more terse but in their own way much more telling. He came down with a malaria-like sickness that he’s still taking meds for, and I gather his trip home was…eventful. But he also DJ’d in a disco, met wonderful people, and obviously learned to love a place that most Westerners do not have the faintest idea about.

Maya Waldman is a mutual friend of Andre Torrez who has spent most of the last three or four years travelling around Asia, including a year-long stint in the Marshall Islands as a teacher. She’s presently making an extended return visit to India, and I would not be the least bit surprised if she stayed there for a long time. It’s easy to understand her fascination and feeling for the place. Check out this amazing photograph of spices at a local market:

On a slightly different note, Brittney Gilbert, another MFOT, relocated from her birthplace of Nashville, Tennessee last year to the San Francisco area to take a job with the CBS television station there, KPIX, as their resident blogger. Even though Nashville is urban, Brittney has been going through that fish-out-of-water experience one inevitably has when moving to a huge metropolis. Especially one as unique as San Francisco (and even moreso, since she lives in Berkeley). She seems mostly happy in the Bay Area, but in this recent post on her personal blog, she talks about the sometimes astonishing differences. I can relate to her experience much more than I can either of the other two, having moved betwee small-town Maine and Chicago a couple of times in the 1980s, and still sometimes shaking my head when I walk through places like Harvard Square.

I doubt I will ever see Ghana or India in person. I have spent a little time in San Francisco, but not nearly enough to feel like I know the least bit about it. It’s just great to be able to benefit from the sharing of these three individuals’ experiences and have a small taste of the rest of the world.

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Linkapalooza – Miscellania

Links too good not to post, but which don’t have much in common:

  • Not really all that thrilled about taking a “staycation”? (Oh, and if you EVER use that word in my presence, I WILL kick you in the gonads) Maybe you’d like to visit some of the most famous man-made ecological disasters in the U.S. GOOD Magazine lists a whole bunch of them just ripe for tourists. For example, the subterranean coal fire in Centralia, PA which has been burning since 1962, or what’s left of the Salton Sea. It’s got to be better than sitting on the front porch at night listening to Grandpa fart while you watch “I Survived A Japanese Game Show” on the old portable TV.
  • Remember Max Headroom? Well, if you’re older than 30, you probably do. He was a big deal for a while back in the late 1980s. He had a TV show, did commercials for New Coke (which you also have to be older than 30 to remember), and was a genuine pop icon of that decade. Well, it’s been 20 years, but he’s back. Britain’s Channel Four has brought out some new channel promos featuring Max, looking a big older (like the rest of us). Even though today’s advanced CGI animation could probably whiz up a fully-animated version of Max, Channel 4 actually brought back Matt Frewer to play the talking head once again. Here’s Max today:

  • graph via Dave Sifry

  • Nobody can say with 100% certainty, but the best estimate of the total number of blogs online today is in the range of 115-120 million based on an estimate of 175,000 new blogs launching every single day. Realistically, though, the vast majority of blogs go ghost after a pretty short period of time. It takes a lot of time, effort, and imagination to hang in there for the long haul. The eighth anniversary of this blog is only a few weeks away, and with the notable exception of the six-month hiatus I took in the second half of 2005, I have never taken more than a few days off here and there over the years. Some blogs, though, never get beyond Post #1. Maybe the author got writer’s block, maybe they realized they just didn’t have it in them, maybe they were abducted by Martians and were anally probed, who can say. This website “collects” blogs that never made it beyond the first post, calling them “one-post-wonders” (via). They all seem to be Blogspot.com blogs, but I’ll bet you could find just as many at any other hosted blog service.
  • Blogging buddy John Tolva has been working on an interactive website of the Forbidden City in Beijing for a long while now. He’s one of them super-smart computer guys that do cool stuff at IBM, don’tcha know. Yesterday he had this interesting tidbit: he superimposed a map of the Forbidden City on a Google Map of Downtown Chicago (a.k.a. The Loop) to demonstrate that the Forbidden City is almost exactly the size of the traditional boundaries of the Loop. Frankly, I had absolutely no idea that the Forbidden City was so vast, and relating it to a place I could visualize was very effective. Looks like the site won’t be done until sometime in the fall — probably not in time for the Olympics, eh, John? I can hardly wait to see it.

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