Sunday, November 20, 2005

A Blogger's Pop Quiz

Here's a short math quiz for you.

1. You have ten friends in J-Land, each of whom has an AOL Journal. Then AOL places banner ads on those journals without prior notice, and releases a buggy "upgrade" that makes it nearly impossible to post without taking heroic measures. Within the week,

  • Three of your friends continue to blog on AOL exclusively.

  • Three more set up Blogger accounts, but also keep their AOL Journals going with occasional posts, mostly griping about AOL.

  • Three switch to Blogspot entirely, either letting their AOL Journals lie fallow or taking them private with no readers.

  • One is so upset with the diaspora and ongoing technical difficulties that he stops posting entirely.
How many of these people have betrayed you?
  a) Six
  b) Four
  c) Three
  d) One
  e) Zero

2. You learn that someone has been harrassing the three people who stuck with AOL exclusively, and that someone else is harrassing the three who switched to Blogspot exclusively. Meanwhile, of the three people who had blogs on both services, one decides to go back to AOL for most of her blogging, one decides to keep both blogs going indefinitely, and one decides it's time to make the switch to Blogspot for everything. How many of these people are doing something wrong?
  a) Five
  b) Four
  c) Three
  d) Two
  e) One

Answers:
1. e) Zero. None of these people are doing anything to you. They are merely trying to make the best of a difficult situation. All anyone has really cost you is the convenience of AOL Alerts. (And those have been pretty buggy, anyway!)

2. d) Two. Nobody should be harrassing anyone. The rest are just trying to get on with their lives and blogs.

I've been reading all weekend of people giving each other grief for leaving AOL or not leaving AOL. I've also read a few reports that some people are feeling betrayed by journalers who left AOL, and refuse to read their new blogs on other services. Come on, people! it's only a web address! There is no need for an Us and Them mentality here. If we continue to read and comment (without rancor) on each other's blogs, write the best entries we can, and post our best pictures, then we still have a community. And that's what we all want, isn't it?

Karen



All right, why is my darn sidebar at the bottom of the screen again in IE? None of my pics are over 400 pixels wide, I swear!

Apparently I've won an award.

My email these days is pretty interesting. I get emailed comments from this blog, and AOL Alerts for people who are still posting on the AOL-J client. I also get individual notes from people: asking questions, highlighting something they've written, responding to something I've written, and/or sending out notices about where they're blogging now, today (which may not be the same place as yesterday). It all comes down to one thing: trying to stay in touch, and to reconnect amid the chaos. Hooray for that - it helps a lot, all this communication, this ongoing conversation about who and where we all are, and what makes the most sense to us at this particular moment.

But one email I got today attempted to make a slightly different kind of connection:

hi karen,

I want to award you with the great content award. Please visit your own award page at http://www.chicagoanimation.com/flash-awards.html

Sincerely,
Cuong Truong
Chicago Animation - Flash Web Design

--
Posted by Chicago FLASH web site design to Outpost Mâvarin at 11/20/2005 10:46:06 AM

As you can see, this was done as a comment to my posting from late last night. I went to the flash-awards page, and I really am featured there, at least for the moment.

Now, I can't say I take all this too seriously. I'm sure that the main purpose is to make a connection, to hand out awards so that people will visit the Chicago Animation web site and purchase its flash animation services. But it makes me smile anyway, and I'm not opposed to Truong's service, or the means of promoting it. At least it's not a a banner ad, posted directly to my blog!

Of course, if it turns out that every blogger I know got this award today, then I'll delete it as comment spam. ;)

Karen

More Fiction, More Links

Well, I don't feel up to writing that independent video store entry tonight, but I do want to point out the stuff I have been working on.

The real deal!

1. Heirs of Mâvarin, Chapter One, Part Two has been posted, over on my fiction blog, mavarin.blogspot.com. Please read it - this is an excerpt from my life's work, my Mâvarin novels. Nothing else I've ever written means more to me than this book and its sequel.

2. It occured to me tonight at work that I've been lazy about the links on the sidebar here. Oh, I've been fairly consciencious about adding links for AOL-J refugees as they turned up at the Outpost, but what about bloggers and journalers on LiveJournal and elsewhere, including AOL US? For myself, I've been relying on alerts, and following links from the Musings sidebar. But that doesn't help anyone else, does it? So I've just added most of the links from Musings and from Messages. It's quite a long list now! Please note that I did not check every link to make sure it's still active. If you find one that doesn't work, or leads to an abandoned blog, please let me know, okay? Thanks!

While I was at it, I updated my links over in Messages. In the process I discovered two errors and one serious omission . I hadn't linked to Outpost yet! Oops!

Yawn. I'm either going to work on uploading some sermons now to the St. Michael's web site, or check a blog or two and go the heck to bed. Good night!

Karen

Saturday, November 19, 2005

As the Tide Turns

Oh, this is going to be fun.

No, wait. It really isn't.

I read a long, well-written posting today on an AOL-J UK that existed before the banner mess. Tilly (for it was she) likens AOL to a landlord, and AOL-J refugees to people who had a row with the landlord and left. She makes the point that the ex-roommate is still your friend, even if she no longer lives under your roof. She goes on to say that different people have had different histories with AOL, and different amounts of difficulty, not just over the ads but with technical glitches, TOS and so on. She thinks that those who stay should not condemn those who left, although she is a tad less enthusiastic about people who just jumped ship because their friends did.

Like me.

Back on Black Tuesday, I posted a comment to By the Way, saying that I didn't mind the ads all that much, and was more or less resigned to them. Yet it quickly became clear that many of my closest online friends were much more upset than I was, to the point of feeling they had to leave AOL. Well, I could see their point, and as the day went on, I got sadder and angrier - sadder because friends were closing down journals by taking them private, sadder over the fracturing of a community, and angrier because it was clear that AOL was being totally unresponsive to the situation, preferring to leave John and Joe to take the brunt of the outrage. And the next time I tried to post on Musings, I had problems - the save button problem, the getting-to-my-subject-line problem, and most of all, the inability of the "upgraded" software to display the word Mâvarin in all its fictional language glory.

So here I am on Blogspot. Here are a lot of us.

Meanwhile, people continue to be angry and unhappy. Walking away from 18 months or more of your personal writing is a terrible thing, but moving it elsewhere is a huge undertaking - just ask Becky. And stuff that was easy on AOL just isn't here. How many of you still haven't set up your links, despite my little tutorial? And how do you keep up with where everyone is, and what they've posted? AOL Alerts were buggy, but they were easy. Bloglines requires a bit more effort. And how are you going to regain that readership you have before, when most of the links go to your AOL-J,and some of them were on journals that have been shut down?

Oh, you can do all that, really. You know you can. We all can. But it's a pain in the butt, isn't it?

And at the same time, people who have left are trying to pressure others to do the same, presumably to justify their own actions as much as to increase the pressure on AOL. On the other side of the fence, people are saying mean things about people who chose to leave, calling us crybabies, losers, and worse. It's the old Us and Them mentality all over again, the same mindset I'm always railing against, that seeks to dehumanize, to justify intolerance and hatred. Or maybe it's just people who enjoy being mean. No matter what decision we've made, there's someone who is eager to label us as Them, and tell us why we're wrong and foolish and silly.

So it was predictable that as this terrible week ends, people are having second thoughts. Did we act rashly in leaving our beloved journals, with the easy interface, established readership, and backlog of cherished words and photos? Is it worth of effort of learning HTML and CSS, of trying to get our blogs looking nice, of trying to build our readership all over again? Is it worth all this pain just to protest the ugly ads, and the buggy upgrade, and AOL's blatant disrespect? Is it perhaps better to go "home" to AOL, put up or leave up some kind of protest words or graphic, block our own view iof the animated banners, and boycott Bank of America and other advertisers?

A lot of people are asking these questions, and there is no one answer to them. If we stay away, we have a long road ahead, learning our way around, rebuilding and recovering. If we go back, it feels like defeat, like hypocricy, like AOL being justified in thinking they could get away with this. And in truth, AOL can get away with it. Because if they really don't care about us, then they don't care if thousands of people leave. In their business projections, the lost subscription revenue is more than made up for in ad revenue, and a lot of people won't leave anyway. I personally have no immediate plans to cancel my AOL membership, with all its long-established screen names and web pages. Nor have I any immediate plans, in case you were wondering, to leave the Outpost and resume my Musings.

But it sure would be easier to go back, to the comfort of our beloved, easy-to-use journals.

That is, if we could clear away the bugs.

I'll be back here tonight with another entry. At the very least, I'll let you know when I've posted my Heirs of Mâvarin excerpt over at Messages from Mâvarin. And maybe I'll get to my promised posting about Casa Video (as seen below).

Karen

Heh, heh, heh.

Right now on another tab, I've got The Great Exodus, with a Love@AOL by Match.com banner ad. Our favorite, right? Did you know that in Friday's news there were reports that Match.com has been accused of fraud? According to the lawsuit, they allegedly sent out fake romantic emails.

Karma, baby.

Karen

Pumpkin Anything?



Sometimes my beloved husband of a quarter century likes to prove that he's paying attention. Last night I mentioned that I often claim "pumpkin anything" as a favorite food. Tonight John put me to the test. He stopped at Trader Joe's, and brought me back a couple of edible gifts: three tangelos, and a "spiced pumpkin pie"-flavored Clif Bar. Thanks, John! *Gulp!* That really wasn't quite what I had in mind, but it certainly qualifies as "pumpkin anything" - healthy division.




Sorry this isn't a better picture. I was too close to it with the flash. Doesn't look promising as a foodstuff either, does it?

But it was good. Really, it was. Not pumpkin pie good, but almost pumpkin bread good.


********

A few notes before I go the heck to bed:

1. Jimmy, the Stupidsheet Guy, is now at stupidsheet.com, using the familiar Blogger interface. He explains what happened in a little more detail. Go give him a smile, will you? We owe him at least one or two of those.

2. I'm double-scheduled for 12:15 PM tomorrow. I'm supposed to simultaneously see Harry Potter at the mall and give blood at the Red Cross. Oops! I'd better go to bed, so I can get up early and reschedule the blood-giving part.

3. I've been distracted this week, for obvious reasons, which hasn't helped in the getting-stuff-done-at-work part of my life. I figure I have at least eight hours of work to do at the office between now and Monday morning. Between that and Harry Potter, you may not see too much of me this weekend. Nevertheless...

4. Tomorrow I'll have at least one entry here, and Chapter One, Part Two of Heirs of Mâvarin over on Messages from Mâvarin tomorrow night. Do go check it out, won't you? And over here, I'll be writing about this place, I think:



Good night!

Karen

Friday, November 18, 2005

The (Business) World Takes Notice

The Business Week column Blogspotting has a column this week about the plight of the AOL Journaler. It covers the banner ads situation and the problems inherent in moving, including a link to our own Steven on that subject.

In other news, Jimmy, the "Stupid Sheet Guy," spent part of this week trying to defuse the tension with humor. One night it was a fun, tongue-in-cheek movie equating AOL with the Evil Empire, and the next it was a few pages of parody ads. Apparently a couple of journalers with an axe to grind reported him to TOS for this, and AOL came down on Jimmy, hard. It's a damn shame. You could say that there might be copright infringement involved, but ever since the MAD Magazine vs. Irving Berlin lawsuit decades ago, parody has been considered mostly exempt from such claims. If Jay Leno held Jimmy's creations up to the camera, there would not have been a problem, but Jimmy lacks that kind of clout.

Interesting that AOL (save for sacrificial lambs Joe and John) can't be bothered to say anything to its broken-hearted journaling community, except to make things even worse for someone who tried *not* to leave AOL, and to highlight the situation with satire.

Oh, one more thing. Journals Editor Joe did his own blog picks this week, for obvious reasons. One of them is The History of Theodore Barnes by Nelson Pierce. I've been reading Hannah's journal for a week or two, and it's absolutely the best writing I've seen from someone her age. (She's a high school senior, but only 16, I think.) She won't be leaving AOL because of "parental unit" considerations, and is well worth reading. So read!

I'll probably be back late tonight with another entry. I've got videos to watch and return, and my dinner's long-since grown cold!

Karen