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@holden @dkernohan Ads are dying. Alphabet is a restructure to downplay ads. See also YouTube Red. Market is being prepped for subscriptions

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@holden @dkernihan Ads are dying. Alphabet is a restructure to downplay ads. See also YouTube Red. Market is being prepped for subscriptions

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@dkernohan @holden Ads do solve access problems; the problem with direct purchasing is it squeezes out lower income people. Complicated.

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@dkernohan It sounds like it would be very useful research in the instructional technology / digital humanities fields, for sure.

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@dkernohan Facebook inherited a web landscape from Google & Yahoo that was already hooked on free services funded by invasive ads.

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These audio reactions to questions about AIDS in Reagan-era White House press briefings should make you furious. http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2015/11/reagan-administration-response-to-aids-crisis

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Congratulations to friends and fellow @mattervc Three alumni Stringr on their $1.5m raise! http://techcrunch.com/2015/12/01/stringr-funding/

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Native content everywhere, with display ads on the brink; native content everywhere, with no indie thought to think http://www.niemanlab.org/2015/11/how-did-the-ge-branded-podcast-the-message-hit-no-1-on-itunes-in-pa...

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Teachers need much stronger digital skills. Hint: don't post sensitive school district information on Weebly. http://wjla.com/news/local/7-on-your-side-shocked-to-find-pgcps-confidential-student-records-exposed...

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@jf Mostly marketing but it sends a good signal. A public benefit corporation is probably a little better.

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I've spent a really lovely week with my parents. I'm so lucky to have them - and grateful. So glad I'm not thousands of miles away anymore.

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@Workshopshed @happystartups I meant owning frivolous goods. Ownership of, eg, companies does encourage responsibility.

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Hey, UK! One of the engineers (and people) I trust most in the world is looking for a new position. He's based in Oxford. Any leads?

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I'm deeply thankful for all the wonderful people in my life. A very happy Thanksgiving to all my US friends & family - and thank you to all.

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This list of words that prove you're older than a millennial is also a list of my most-used words. :/ http://www.inc.com/john-brandon/8-words-that-totally-reveal-you-are-not-a-millennial.html

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@patlockley Also: if Automattic succeeds, other companies will also build open software. Better for everyone. @dkernohan @philbarker

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A startup builds a business, not a product. The product is in service of the business. If you just want to build product, join a company.

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@HongPong I think they've done everything they need to - up to the ecosystem to fill those kinds of gaps.

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Why WordPress's new Calypso interface is genius

Matt Mullenweg just introduced a new management interface for WordPress:

Today we’re announcing something brand new, a new approach to WordPress, and open sourcing the code behind it. The project, codenamed Calypso, is the culmination of more than 20 months of work by dozens of the most talented engineers and designers I’ve had the pleasure of working with (127 contributors with over 26,000 commits!).

How does WordPress, a twelve-year old server-side product, compete with new, beautiful publishing services like Medium? And how does Automattic grow its $1.16bn valuation?

One of the biggest problems with self-hosted software has been the technical barrier. By now, many users are comfortable with installing an application from CPanel or, maybe, FTPing files to some shared web space. But it's hard - and these approaches only really work with relatively old-school PHP-based software.

New, evented server-side platforms like Node allow you to build completely new kinds of experiences, but installing them is beyond the reach of most self-hosted users.

So, first, WordPress introduced a core API, using best practices from the modern web, making it far easier to publish third-party client applications.

And then they introduced Calypso: a completely new administration interface, based on Node and React. It's open source and works with any WordPress site, but it requires a WordPress.com account. It also uses the WordPress.com servers to power a new reader interface. Effectively, if you want to have a superior reading, writing and administration experience on WordPress, you need to use their service.

In his post, Matt adds:

With core WordPress on the server and Calypso as a client I think we have a good chance to bring another 25% of the web onto open source, making the web a more open place, and people’s lives more free.

I think that has the potential to be true. The new interface is incredibly fast, beautiful, and functional - and you can continue to own your data on your own server, if you want to. But this is also a rebuttal to anyone who thinks that everything should sit on your own server. With this change, WordPress is now, at least in part, a centralized service - albeit one where you get to choose where your data is stored.

Or to put it another way: WordPress powers 25% of the web, and Calypso is a strong step in the direction of putting all of that under the control of services run by Automattic. I don't think that's bad at all: I want both WordPress and Automattic to be wildly successful, and I see this as a smart way to maintain and grow their position.

My expectation: we'll start to see more examples of this data-interface separation, where the logic and data will sit wherever you want, and the beautiful apps and interfaces will be powered by centralized services. Architectually, it makes sense. And it's about time open source moved away from its limitations and built the best possible user interfaces it can.

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It's a bit rich for the Republicans to call one of their candidates a fascist. He is, but they've been sewing those seeds for a decade.

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Let in the refugees. How we respond to them is a reflection of who we are.

George Packer in the New Yorker this week:

A lot of people in this country are disgracing themselves this week. They include politicians of both parties—though many more Republicans than Democrats—and all regions. Their motives vary: deep-seated bigotry, unreasoning fear, spinelessness, opportunism, or some unholy mix of them all.

They say you only really know the true nature of someone's character in a crisis. Similarly, you only know the character of your country when people are in need. For citizens of the US and the UK - the two major countries I've called "home" - there has been a lot to be ashamed of.

We have the threat of terrorism, now from Isis, and atrocities being committed all over the world. We also have a stream of people who are fleeing those same atrocities, in a manner that is reminiscent of Jewish people fleeing the Nazis before and during the second world war.

Back then, both the US and the UK turned down Jewish refugees, sending them back to their deaths in mainland Europe. There were numerous reasons, which you can now hear by watching the news, as they are parrotted by today's politicians as reasons we shouldn't accept refugees from Syria and Iraq.

Of course, they maintain that this is a different debate. It's not. As Josh Zeitz writes in Politico:

In short, most of the elements that conservatives like David Frum cite as differentiating factors between now and then—fear of refugee violence, fear of their inability or desire to assimilate, concern over their economic dependence, suspicion of their ideological alienation and radicalism —were in fact central to the debate over admitting Jewish refugees in the 1930s.

Considering today's refugees in the same way does not diminish the plight of the Jews in the second world war, or in any way lessen the horrors of the Holocaust. This week, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum felt the need to release a statement:

Acutely aware of the consequences to Jews who were unable to flee Nazism, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum looks with concern upon the current refugee crisis. While recognizing that security concerns must be fully addressed, we should not turn our backs on the thousands of legitimate refugees. 

The Museum calls on public figures and citizens to avoid condemning today’s refugees as a group. It is important to remember that many are fleeing because they have been targeted by the Assad regime and ISIS for persecution and in some cases elimination on the basis of their identity.

The humanitarian case is clear, but immigration is also a net economic benefit in both the US and the UK. This leaves racism and xenophobia as the largest reasons to reject these refugees.

If you want to find racist and xenophobic arguments, you often have to look no further than Facebook. Here are two:

I've seen arguments that the immigrants are all fighting-age men, and a secret army is somehow being sent to destroy the US from within, like the plot of a bad 1980s cold war action movie. When I responded with the actual UN demographics of registered refugees, I was told one can't trust the UN because of their treatment of Israel. So far, the logic on display is so loose that I haven't found an adequate way to respond.

I've also seen many arguments which agree with Ted Cruz that we should be screening for Christians. Ironically, Cruz's suggestion itself proves that Christians aren't necessarily more moral than anyone else. "There is no meaningful risk of Christians committing acts of terror," Cruz said, forgetting that the majority of domestic terrorist attacks since 9/11 have been committed by white Christians.

I believe it's important to stand up to these kinds of arguments. For many people, discussing politics online - or around the Thanksgiving table - is taboo. But words matter, and deeds matter. The plight of an entire group of people fleeing terror and death in part depends on us changing the minds of the population, and sending a signal to our representatives that racism and xenophobia will not be tolerated.

Shouting at each other isn't necessarily effective, although we've developed a culture of it (and sometimes voices need to shout to be heard). We need to sit down, particularly with our loved ones, and have reasoned, fact-based conversations that lead to mutual understanding.

Love has to win. Peoples' lives are at stake.

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@kylewmahan Turns out there are hundreds of them! Weird subgenre. Here's one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=muLfJWOfqGQ&list=RDmuLfJWOfqGQ

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Jessica Jones is so good. Reminds me of Buffy: superhero tale as metaphor. But way, way darker.

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Unsurprisingly, the NSA looked to foreign powers when its own email surveillance was curtailed. GCHQ? http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/20/us/politics/records-show-email-analysis-continued-after-nsa-progra...

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