Confused by all my networks

I admit to testing tools just for the fun of it; so I find myself hovering between a dozen different networks, without much commitment to any of them.  Some of these I treat as news sources.  Facebook is the only one I look for any kind of social connections, but I tend to be stingy about them too.  The problem with this lifestyle of tasting different services is that my networking world becomes distorted in favour of geekdom, a domain to which I don’t really belong.  Some of the services I like best, such as FriendFeed and Twine, have readerships that incline heavily towards technical people.  I am still trying to figure out which of these networks I feel most at home in, and what I want to accomplish there.

I have just read some interesting, if terse, notes that came out of the SXSWi event, Beyond Aggregation — Finding the Web’s Best Content” [Louis Gray posted an interesting blog post after this same event:  Finding the Web’s Best Content – Do You Want it New or Trusted ] A panel of experts discussed their methods.  For me, I find a mixture of RSS news feed reading, supplemented by FriendFeed to be the most useful.  If I want to learn more about a subject, or what people are saying, I try a search on socialmention.com.  I don’t have the time or the patience to wade through reams of twitter tweets.

The next question is what to do with all the information I gather.  The first step, I think, is to get it organized in something other than chronology, so for this it makes best sense to use one of the social bookmarking sites – I use Delicious.

There is a serious question about the value of link sharing.  So many people are already sharing, and have greater expertise than me in every field.  I’m a dabbler; I don’t have the time to read everything about all the subjects that interest me, and other people who specialize in each knowledge field, are better at aggregating content for it.  Lately I have been thinking that the best approach may be to gather various stories about a given subject, then contribute towards the conversation by placing the most authoritative articles together in my blog, together with my own thoughts.   Besides mentioning these articles in the text, I will gather the links together prominently, so that readers can go directly to them and not listen to my blather.  In order to preserve a unique voice, I will speak mainly from my own experience.

In the last few days I have begun to reduce my linksharing across various networks.  In order to be efficient, it isn’t sensible to cross-post to various services.  I seem to have gone back to delicious for most of my bookmarking (rather than Twine).  Delicious enables finer control over the placement of the information, and their website also works very fast.  But most people, including me, seem to treat delicious just as a great reservoir of information.  I also want my links to enter a chronological “river of information”.  I like Friendfeed best for this.  I have decided to put into Twitter (using FriendFeed as the lever) only my original material.  On Facebook I have stopped sending all the Friendfeed information to my profile and news feed.  It can be found under the FriendFeed tab of my profile.  When a link seems particularly relevant to my facebook crowd, I can send a link directly to FB.

I have yet to consider the changes that have come to Facebook today (new privacy settings that enable profiles and newsfeeds to become public – see links below) and the other modifications that may change the way that people use Facebook.  But I will leave that to think about that another day.  For now, I have opened up my privacy settings.

Links:

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Scaps from my journal during the mindfulness retreat

Chang How

Chang How

Thursday, March 5

We started a four day retreat with Chang How, a Thich Nhat Hanh disciple, at Khukuk, a kibbutz just above the Sea of Galilee.  We arrived Wednesday lunch time and it will continue till Saturday afternoon.

During the evening meditation I thought again about what Murakami wrote at the prize ceremony in Jerusalem.  I must download the speech, lest it disappears from Haaretz website.  His speech emphasized that every human being has worth and dignity.  Is this dignity based on his Buddha Nature, or is it based on the things that make him unique – the imperfections?  Are the imperfections, the egoism, the flaws of character, also Buddha Nature?  I think that for a writer these are of the essence; the thing that makes a novel interesting.  The dirt – this is the place a novelist goes, and dwells.  But he transforms it into art – he exhalts what other men shun.  He doesn’t belong to that dirt, but rests upon it like a lotus, like a saint.  Of course this is a very idealized view of a novelist.  But in reading writers of the calibre of Murakami or Mistry, there is a feeling that they are special in that way.

Thursday morning.

I was very tired yesterday when we arrived, and tired this morning in meditation. Thoughts confused. I imagined, I think it was early morning, that over Chang How, while she sat talking, giving a dharma talk, there was a high beam, and on it sat a crow.  I was gazing at the crow, which made bird movements, hopping and pecking.   And then at breakfast in the dining hall, I also sat gazing above Chang How’s head (this time in reality).  Behind her hung a photograph from the early days of the kibbutz.  There was the fortress from the 1940s, its tower, stone walls and interior courtyard.    There was a banner saying that you must have the intelligence to know what to want, and then to execute it.

The teacher gave a dharma talk this morning about her own life experiences, which included early life in Vietnam.  She became a refugee and had to move three times, the last time to Canada.  When she fled, it was without any possessions.  She had only two shirts and two pairs of pants, all of which she was wearing.

Chang How was for a long time very angry with her mother.  Her mother had to work hard to support their large family, such that she had little time for the children.  Once when she came home from work the children asked her to take them for a ride on her motor bike, but she was just too tired.  Till today, her mother is full of worry, remembering her earlier hard time and the war.

They had a handicapped brother, who lived with them at home.  Chang How said that while one normally thinks that it is the most beautiful child who gets the most attention, his disability brought all of them to love and help him.

Chang How grew up hating the Americans for what they did in Vietnam, and it took her a long time to overcome this hatred.  Later in Canada she met with war veterans and told the story of how one visited her home.  He had been traumatized by the war and was very distrustful when he came to stay with her.  Before going to bed he secretly checked the whole apartment, crawling from place to place, checking every room.  He even came into her room while she pretended to sleep.  He was afraid she would murder him.

—————–

Satyakama Jabala told his mom that he wanted to study under a vedic teacher and so he needed to ask her about his lineage.  She said, When I was young, I was a maid, and had many relationships.  Therefore I can’t say with any certainty what your lineage may be.  My name is Jabala, so you should say that you are Satyakama Jabala.

Satyakama Jabala went and sought out a vedic teacher and, when the teacher asked him about his lineage, he repeated the story is mother had told him.  The teacher said that only a true Brahmin would have responded like that, without hiding any part of the truth.  He accepted him as his student.

“Om is like a pin, which pierces through all the leaves.”

This morning in meditation I felt like Om must be the string upon which all the beads of a mala are strung.

I fell into a deep sleep after breakfast, with the Upanishads shielding my face from the sunlight. Dorit had been reading aloud the 14 mindfulness trainings, and I had said, “The dharma’s too hard, I’m going back to sleep.” I didn’t awake until 10:30, till long after the “dharma sharing” had begun.

The days, (in the Galilee) are full of birds, “sounds like they are saying words.”

Maybe they are giving their own version of a dharma sharing, if I could understand them.

Da – Datta – Dhamyatta.  I had been looking for that half-remembered passage from What the Thunder Said, in TS Eliot’s The Wasteland.  Quoted from somewhere in the Upanishads, I think.  [found it later: Brhadaaranyaka Upanisad, Chapter 5, 2.] Dorit had been asking if Dana, the donation given to the teacher in Buddhist retreats, is a Sanskrit word.  English, Italian, Pali, Sanskrit – the same.

My Flip camera‘s battery is weakening fast.  This morning I managed to film only till the end of the recitation of the first mindfulness training.  Strange, I dreamed, in my mid-morning slumber, that it had an iphone battery, and was therefore replaceable.  It would be nice if it would be so.

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On news feeds and link sharing

Lately I have tried to become more systematic in the way I use and process the vast amount of information that is available on the web.  I realized some time ago that it isn’t enough to rely on chance and occasional browsing to pick through that information, but to depend on bookmarking and storing of newsfeeds.   One obvious illustration of the necessity of newsfeeds is that most newspapers do not keep yesterday’s news on their homepages.  So if you miss a day, important articles have already been buried.  But by subscribing to the newspaper in an rss reader, the articles are still easy to find a few days later.

Recently I have read articles that advise abandoning newsfeeds and relying on Twitter.  That doesn’t work for me – Twitter is too intense.  But, on the other hand, I have found that Twitter offers a way to serve up its content also through RSS, and that’s a lot better.  By doing a Twitter search on a certain term, I can then store that search in my newsfeed aggregator.  That way, I will never miss a Tweet on that term.  A variation on this is to use the search engine Socialmention, which checks other microblogs and media sources too.

I use Flock browser, with its built in aggregator to collect my newsfeeds.  As with Google Reader and other aggregators, it’s possible to create folders, such as “technology” or “politics”, place the relevant sources in those folders, then see all the stories in a mashed up stream.

I have also been considering, once again, about how best to share links to stories I find interesting.  I want to share them across various networks without making a separate share for each network and, preferably, without duplicating stories.  That means adopting a relay system, and this never works in an optimal way.

Today I decided that old and trustworthy Delicious just might have the best way of doing this.  There are a few advantages.

1. It has a very large user base.
2. Many other services allow import to and export from Delicious.
3. The service happens to be built in to my Flock browser again, allowing synchronization between local and remote bookmarks.
4. Delicious has some neat features: its simple tag organization, the fact that it tells you how many other people have posted links for the same article, and the ability to find other readers interested in the same subjects.

When I post to Delicious, the post is picked up by Facebook, and placed in my news feed.  The same happens with Twitter. Both of these are relayed through FriendFeed.  Delicious also has a feature that collects all links from a certain day and makes a blog post of these.  I will see how this works.  The only odd-man out of my social networking constellation now is Twine – a topic-based network that I very much like.  Twine recently started to allow import of bookmarks to its service, but I haven’t tried this yet.  It would be better still if it permitted import of links via one of the other services, rather than the extra effort of re-linking every story through its browser bookmarklet.

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