
Karen // September 22, 2008 //
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It's been said a zillion times, but the Web has definitely transformed the way that we find, access, and experience information. Long before Google became a verb, the trend began of bypassing other modes of research in favor of instant gratification. "Looking it up" now means one thing only, and every now and then I'm still reminded of how incredibly vast the Web is, and how no matter how obscure the object of my search - someone, somewhere has already made a website about it.
Such was the case this weekend when I found the official
Barbapapa website. Andrew had mentioned my beloved book from childhood recently, but neither of us could remember the title character's name. Fruitless Google searches of "family of blobs" and "children's shape-shifting book character" yielded nothing. I finally figured out the magic combination of search terms (i believe it was "1970s children's book blob") and was handsomely rewarded. Out of print for years, the Barbapapa books still catch a pretty penny on
eBay. But thankfully, a fan with some time on her hands has gone ahead and created a detailed fan site that provides a Cliffs Notes-style summary of each book, including my favorite,
Barbapapa's New House. Now please excuse me while I scour YouTube for old episodes of
Reading Rainbow...

Andrew // September 4, 2008 //
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Because people are already trying to figure out how to opt-out while opting-in. Just when your Great Aunt was about to send you that friend request on Facebook, you're pining for a way to participate without, well, participating.
That's the thought behind
FriendFeed's new "fake follow" feature, and Merlin Mann's
proposal for a social network pause button.
This is great. It demonstrates the power (and risk) of getting what you wish for. It also exposes a potential downside of the Internet bringing us closer together, keeping us in the loop while physically miles and time zones apart. In most cases, that hand-written letter from an old friend you haven't heard from in years is a welcome surprise in your day. So do you need to know when she's running errands on the weekend? (Thanks, Facebook!)
The challenge is fighting the information overload, and it's not a unique problem to social networks. A couple years ago it was your newsfeed reader. Last year was tweets. This year they've ganged up with Facebook and a gazillion other networks to drown you in the minutiae of everyday life, and it's not even
your life! Even the sites you signed up for before you knew what an online social network even was suddenly wants you to import your email contacts to "see who else we can rope in..."
I personally take a fairly lax approach to social networks, not too worried if I don't have the most "friends" or "followers" or whatever. It's not a contest. It's a tool, an experiment, and by no means perfected. For all we know, Facebook will be a ghost town in 2 years because everyone has moved to some sort of brain implant. (Although I probably wouldn't bet on that!)
Speaking of which, are you following us on
twitter? We promise we won't bug you much.

Andrew // September 2, 2008
Michael Ruhlman gives us
a sneak peek at an early copy of
Alinea, the cookbook and so much more from Grant Achatz and Alinea. It looks absolutely fantastic, and I can't wait to see it in person.
Pre-ordering via
alinea-mosaic.com gets you access to all the cool website extras too.