The Sacred 37
Accordionizing the Eschaton
I hit the "talk" button and the conversation went like this...
Guy: Hi, I was going door-to-door -- I tried to reach your neighbours but they weren't home -- and I wanted to talk to you about The Rapture and the Great Tribulation...
Me: I'm very sorry, but I'm on my way out the door. Look could you, er, come by later?
Guy: Sure. I was wondering if you...
Me: Oh, I know about the Last Days. I read Left Behind, see, and I fully expect to be pulled away in The Rapture. I think that with everything the way it is in the world right now, it could happen really soon; the signs are there! Maybe you could come by for coffee later and we cou...
...and that's when I let go of the intercom's "talk" button.
He buzzed three more times, each buzz growing in length and sounding more desperate, but by then, I'd started scrubbing the toilet.
To the poor fella out there: Thank you for the opportunity to indulge in a little birthday prankery. Best present so far!
To those of you who were wondering if there's a Chick tract on the topic: of course there is! You get bonus points for correctly guessing that it contains a reference to the Catholic church as "The Whore of Babylon".
And to to my Evangelical friends: Real Rapture believers don't buy green bananas!
Shirky on Flaming and the Design of Social Software
Clay Shirky has a great article titled Group as User: Flaming and the Design of Social Software in which he says that one of the misconceptions of designers of social software is that they see the "user" of a piece of social software is not a collection of individuals, but a group:
When we hear the word "software," most of us think of things like Word, Powerpoint, or Photoshop, tools for individual users. These tools treat the computer as a box, a self-contained environment in which the user does things. Much of the current literature and practice of software design -- feature requirements, UI design, usability testing -- targets the individual user, functioning in isolation.
And yet, when we poll users about what they actually do with their computers, some form of social interaction always tops the list -- conversation, collaboration, playing games, and so on. The practice of software design is shot through with computer-as-box assumptions, while our actual behavior is closer to computer-as-door, treating the device as an entrance to a social space.
We have grown quite adept at designing interfaces and interactions between computers and machines, but our social tools -- the software the users actually use most often -- remain badly misfit to their task. Social interactions are far more complex and unpredictable than human/computer interaction, and that unpredictability defeats classic user-centric design. As a result, tools used daily by tens of millions are either ignored as design challenges, or treated as if the only possible site of improvement is the user-to-tool interface.
The design gap between computer-as-box and computer-as-door persists because of a diminished conception of the user. The user of a piece of social software is not just a collection of individuals, but a group. Individual users take on roles that only make sense in groups: leader, follower, peacemaker, process nazi, and so on. There are also behaviors that can only occur in groups, from consensus building to social climbing. And yet, despite these obvious differences between personal and social behaviors, we have very little design practice that treats the group as an entity to be designed for.
A related entry: Joel on Social Software.Birthday Gift Art
So Many Goofy Grins, So Little Time

Me at the OpenCola office in August 2000.
More birthday self-indulgence: I've set up a photo album that would be a catalog of where I was and what I was doing all these years. The photos contained within the album were selected from my 1998 through 2001 collections; I'll add more later.
You can see the photos in album or slideshow format.
It Was Thirty-Seven Years Ago Today...
| In 1967... |
| Jose Martin "Joey / Accordion Guy" deVilla is born in Manila, Philippines. Also born this year: Dave Matthews, Kurt Cobain, Liz Phair, Vin Diesel, Julia Roberts, and Anna Nicole Smith. Ferdinand Marcos is president of the Philippines. Lyndon B. Johnson is president of the US, the next country in which I live. Lester B. Pearson is prime minister of Canada. my current home. Love is a Many Splendored Thing debuts on US daytime television and is the first soap opera to deal with an interracial relationship. CBS censors find it too controversial and ask for it to be stopped, causing show creator Irna Phillips to quit. President Johnson and Soviet premiere Aleksei Kosygin agree not to let any crisis push them into war. The X-15 research aircraft with Chuck Yeager establishes a speed record of Mach 6.7. Thurgood Marshall is sworn in as the first black Supreme Court justice. The first home microwave is released by Amana. St. Louis Cardinals win the World Series. Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl I. The Toronto Maple Leafs win the Stanley Cup. They have not won it since. Disney's The Jungle Book and The Graduate are the top grossing films The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is founded. One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez is published. Paul McCartney announces that all four members of the Beatles have "dropped acid". For the first time, Jimi Hendrix sets his guitar on fire during a concert in London. Canada celebrates its first one hundred years of Confederation. Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band is released. The first issue of Rolling Stone magazine is published. US President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967, establishing the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Sesame Street ensues. The FCC orders that cigarette ads on television, radio and in print must include a warning about the health risks of smoking. And finally: The United States Supreme Court in Loving v. Virginia declares all U.S. state law which prohibit interracial marriage to be unconstitutional. That's gonna come in pretty handy next year, |
