Lördagsfyran

Frågor kommer härifrån.1. Vann rätt person presidentvalet i USA?
Om jag bodde i USA skulle jag ha blivit jättebesviken, men här i Europa kommer Bush inte att påverka mycket. Både Kerry och Bush och Amerikanska kongressen skulle ha haft samme utländska politik angående protektionism och miljö. Och om Kerry skulle ha vunnit, hade det varit han som hade nu Irak som problem, inte han som skapade problemet. Men Irakier, och invånarn i andra länder i Mellanöstern kommer att lider mer under Bush än Kerry i nästa 4 år, därför att jag misstänker Bush inte har en plan eller intresse om att hjälpa lösa Israel-Palestina konflikt.

2. Lägger vi oss i amerikansk politik för mycket?
Amerikansk politik är intressant därför att kulturella skillnader är så stor mellan de konservativa och liberala amerikanerna. (Däremot har Europa större politiska skillnader mellan höger och vänster.) Förresten har USA fortfarande större påverkan på Europa än tvärtom.

3. Vem borde bli president i Sverige?
Om han/hon har samma makt som kungen, borde det blir er störste levande ikon… Ingmar Bergman, självklart! Men om den Svenska presidenten var lite som den Franska presidenten, föreslår jag… Mauricio Rojas, fortfarande min favorit svensk politiker.

4. Vad skulle hända om George W Bush och Carl Gustaf Bernadotte (kungen asså) bytte jobb med varandra?
Expressen skulle skriva om Bush döttrars fester istället. Vita Huset skulle ha en blå Ferrari parkerad utifrån.

Metablogg

Uppdatering kl.17.42: Förlåt, ordet “blogg” var inte helt nytt på Nationalencyklopedin, utan reportage. Erik bloggade “blogg” (hur meta kan man blir?) här. Får jag avlämna min första rättelse av en artikel på Nationalencyklopedin? Erik på mymarkup.net länkade till en helt ny artikel om ordet “blogg”, och jag håller med att det är en bra utveckling för svenska bloggosfären. Men jag vet inte om artikel är helt korrekt, faktiskt:

… Metablogg används som begrepp för bloggar som består av andra bloggar.

Det är inte sant. På engelska, i alla fall, när man gör metablogging, skriver man om bloggar och om att blogga. Metablogs, då, är bloggar som handlar om blogg-centriska grejer. De är inte bloggar som består av andra bloggar. Vad är, egentligen, en blogg som består av andra bloggar? Något som Kinja? Det är bara en form af syndikering, eller hur?

Kanske finns felet därför att om man googlar “metablog”, den första träffen är “Metablog, the blog of blogs,” som länkar bara till andra blogginlägg, och alltså är en länkblogg. Bloggen använder termen på felaktigt sätt, då. Dessutom är ordet metablog lite konstigt; det finns fler, bättre ord om att skriva om i en paragraf om bloggar.

De här bloggarna använder termen metablogging på korrekt sätt. Tycker jag.

Cold comfort

If Bush says we hate freedom, let him tell us why we didn’t attack Sweden, for example.

Top 10 reasons why Osama Bin Laden didn’t attack Sweden:

10. Couldn’t tell Sweden from Switzerland.

9. Attackers decided to take extended sick leave at 80% pay instead.

8. Stockholm World Trade Center is only seven stories high, and they couldn’t find it.

7. Osama’s illness turns out to have been Stockholm Syndrome.

6. Has been reading a lot of Little Green Footballs, thinks Sweden is a Wahhabist theocracy.

5. WMD attack did occur, but Swedes are immune to surströmming bombs.

4. Because everybody knows Sweden has no army.

3. Will never forget the summer of 1982 in Afghanistan and those long warm nights with Lotta Hedman, that hot Swedish backpacker — especially how she would unravel her blond pigtails as they bathed naked in the Amu Darya while the full moon illuminated the Hindu Kush. He still wakes up in a sweat thinking of her. Sometimes he wonders what has become of her.

2. IKEA furniture easy to transport from cave to cave. Especially likes his Lagom™ brown tarpaulin backdrop and Slarvig™ collapsible desk.

1. Still holding out hope for a Nobel.

Political blogs are from Mars, community blogs are from Venus

Annica Tiger has written two interesting posts (with good comment streams) on women bloggers in Sweden, asking in particular why so few are represented on Bloggforum‘s panelsOm du tänker komma till Bloggforum Stockholm 2004, glöm inte att registrera dig. Och förlåt, men jag hinner inte än om att skriva om viktiga saker på svenska. Nja, jag skulle kunna göra det, men du skulle inte vilja läsa det. Ger mig ett år till.. If roughly 50% of bloggers are women, why are only two out of 15 participants women? Shouldn’t a representative sample of Swedish bloggers have a roughly equal number of men and women?

It should. But Bloggforum is not a representative sample of Swedish bloggers. To explain how this came about, maybe it’s best to ask “Why have Bloggforum at all?” The forum (I think) shouldn’t try to replicate in the flesh what blogging does best digitally — and blogging can adeptly cover a great many issues, for example the very one we’re discussing now. The whole blogging medium is geared towards conversation, so why “blog unplugged” in a forum setting?

Because blogs are somewhat of a closed system in a society that is not yet fully aware of them. Because the conversation about blogging should include those who don’t blog. Because many professions are poised to be affected by the rise of personal publishing, and professionals who are already blogging are the best positioned to help with the transition.

Bloggforum participants, then, reflect the rise of “pro-blogging” in Sweden. In the US, pro blogs include such notables as Gawker, Wonkette, Gothamist, Talking Points Memo, Andrew Sullivan, Instapundit, Daily Kos, Crooked Timber, The Volokh Conspiracy, Matthew Yglesias, Juan Cole and James Lileks. One thing they have in common is that they are read by non-bloggers much more widely than other blogs. The other thing they have in common is that they are predominantly authored by men.

Well, at least many genres of pro blog are. Political opinion bloggers are almost to a man, er, male, with the notable exceptions of Virginia Postrel and Ana Marie Cox on either extreme of the seriousness spectrum. (In contrast, the sexes are more balanced on US newspaper opinion pages). Blogger-professionals, like lawyers and journalists, also tend to be male (while again, the sexes are more balanced in the profession at large). Satire and personality-cult blogs, however, seem to be a female bastion (Wonkette again, Eurotrash, Maccers, Belle de Jour), while community blogs like Gothamist are pretty evenly split.

The Swedish blogosphere has now entered its pro-blogging phase, but not uniformly on all fronts. It is the political and media blogs which are leading the charge, and — as in the US — these are predominantly authored by men. It is this kind of blogging that the current Bloggforum focuses on, not because it is inherently more interesting than the more personal strain of blogging (and certainly not because it is dominated by men), but because it is, right now, more relevant to the debate about whether blogging can change the political and media landscape in Sweden. These are the questions most likely to perk the ears of mainstream media, and hence most likely to raise the profile of blogging, which leads to more readers for all.

In the meantime, I can’t wait for a Stockholm city events blog, or one that dredges the gossip rags and solicits celeb sightings from readers. Or how about a Stockholm restaurant review blog, by an anonymous foodie with an appetite, an expense account and a snarky palate? A Swedish culture blog? — someone should release into the wild interns with attitude to sniff out the good from the bad from the ugly among Stockholm’s gallery and concert offerings. There is already one pioneer, of course: Anna’s still unique fashion/shopping blog. Whoever authors these future blogs — men or women — should be on future Bloggfora.

For what it’s worth, I have a few theories as to why political and media blogs in particular are predominantly male, even while both sexes populate the field:

1) I am biased, and I don’t know it, so I just think there are more men than women authoring these kinds of blogs.

2) Political blogging is by nature an aggressive, competitive sport, prone to combative stances, and men tend to like this environment more than women.

3) Media blogging is by nature all about professional self-promotion, and men are shameless.

4) Women, being mature, don’t depend on ego-affirming site statistics for a sense of self-worth.

I’d love to hear why I am completely off the mark in this post. I’m not all that sure about what I’ve just written.

Blogging eye for the Swedish political guy

Politiskt.nu should be the center of political debate in the Swedish blogosphere. It is not. The site is all dolled up with fancy technical solutions, ready for political sparks to fly, but instead is proof that if you build it, they won’t come unless you do it right. Politiskt.nu is in dire need of a makeover. I’ll oblige:

1. Post! This group blog of six saw three weeks go by between its last two posts. Not surprisingly, the last comment is from Oct 7In fact, because posts published more than two weeks ago have their comments closed automatically, it was impossible to comment at all for a week on politiskt.nu, until tonight, when the first post in three weeks was published.. You have to show some enthusiasm before others will. It’s just like dating — you have to like yourself before others will like you.

2. Link generously! Every post on politiskt.nu is just a wall of text, even when it refers to other articles. Blogging is not the same as publishing newspaper articles in reverse chronological order. It takes a different mindset. Your post has to mesh with the web. You should use links instinctively as shorthand for explanations, attributions, sources, proofs, references, punchlines of jokes… They are obligatory.

3. Get personal. Is there a relationship between the bloggers on Politiskt.nu? Do they comment on each other’s posts? Do their posts acknowledge each other’s presence? Do they even read each other? I couldn’t tell. It’s as if there are six unconnected blogs here. We want a show — some butting of heads, parries, retreats, comebacks, good points, nice catches, notes of grace in victory… There has to be a logic behind having these bloggers under one roof.

4. Catch the blogging bug. Were the contributors rearing to blog when they were recruited, or did blogging have to be explained to them? Were they ardent readers of and commenters on other blogs before they themselves started? Do they have their finger on the pulse of what’s exciting Swedish bloggers right now? Do they get it? It has to be a grassroots effort — a group blog’s stable of talent should not have to be cajoled into posting.

5. Ditch registration. If you are going to have commenting, don’t turn it into a privilege. Stop forcing people to register — you’ll lose 90% of your commenters. Nobody cares enough about your blog to remember yet another password. Even Movable Type’s new system, which lets you register one identity valid for a slew of blogs, is not really catching on — and that’s because commenters are in a buyer’s market; there are plenty of blogs vying for their input, and if you put up barriers, these other blogs are but a click away. If you build dams, the critical mass will stay on the other side.

if you’re concerned about spam, there are some good technical solutions out there. Ever since I added an extra question to my blog commenting form which humans find easy to answer but machines not, I get around 2 manually submitted spam comments a month — down from around 100 automated ones a dayIt now works withMT 3.11‘s new templates too, thanks to Strang’s efforts.. It’s an easy solution to implement as well, one which any content management system worth its salt should manage. Finally, if you have a blog with comments, you have to resign yourself to regular weeding — you can’t legislate away abuse.

6. Focus on the essentials. Simpify your site so it becomes more amenable to the daily quick fix visit. Nobody uses the calendar to navigate blogs, so ditch itThe one thing a calendar does do spectacularly well is show a dearth of posts. And how useful is one of these on the first of the month?. Instead, give more space to your most recent comments. Don’t put your blogroll in a drop-down menu. Don’t put your bloggers’ names in a drop-down menu — these names are your main draw, and should be visible as soon as you visit the site, without having to mouse over pictures or click on menus. RSS is good, but just put up the link — it’s not your job to explain it. In fact, nothing in your horizontal menu bar is essential, on the grounds that it is better to do it than to talk about it. Give and accept trackbacks. And, pardon me, but I HATE not being able to see the URL of where I am in the browser’s address bar. That is so 1998.

Of all these, tips 5 and 6 are the easiest to do. Tip number 4 is the hardest, but if you get that right, numbers 3,2 and 1 will follow effortlessly.

Pardon the tone, it was for effect. Politiskt.nu is a good enough idea to attempt salvaging.

An ode to pears

I had a pear today at work.

Every Monday, a fruit basket arrives on our floor. The bananas always go first, followed by the grapes, apples and mandarins. By Thursday, only the pears and oranges are left. I can understand why oranges remain — their strength lies in their pressing — but pears?

Is it the complexion of their skin — always a bit mottled? Or is it their colors, an autumnal range, reminiscent of decay? Is it the shape, not round or pert but, well, pear-shaped — an adjective most often modified with “horribly” by the British? Apples look less like human anatomies past their sell-by date. Are pears apple’s ugly friend?

Apples often do boast bright young colors and taut puncture-me skin, but how much of this glamor comes through articifial enhancement? Pears, on the other hand, seem never to have benefited from science’s tonics. They have to rely on more subtle inducements.

When is the last time you bought pears at the supermarket? I have certainly gone a year or more without tasting one. But this morning, on an empty stomach, I trawled the bottom of that basket and bit into my first pear in a while.

Inside, the texture looks glassy, but the flesh is smooth and giving, pliant even, as if flattered by the unaccustomed attention. Pears are easy on the taste buds too, not as tart as apples, and wetter, though the juice is silky like soft water, and prone to run down the chin.

Does this make them harder to eat in polite company? Is this why they are shunned by the corporate snacking community? Do get reacquainted with a pear one of these days — they’re the mature fruit.

I also do requests

Commenting on my earlier post on Stockholm door code sequences, a reader writes (well, OK, it’s Geoff):

Can you do the same thing with the rings and the sequences and the words=numbers=objects in a list, and tell me just how long it would take for the proverbial monkey to type up a copy of Hamlet by randomly banging away at a typewriter?

Seriously.

Geoff, you’re right, that monkey is indeed proverbial. Wikipedia has a very interesting article about him and the various guises in which he and his infinite siblings have been bashing away at typewriters for nearly 100 years now, ever since he was evoked by French mathematician Émile Borel to illustrate an otherwise not-too accessible law of mathematics.

I think the reason our typing monkey has entered popular consciousness to the extent he has is that he straddles two of our fascinations: Our obsessive habit as a species to seek out patterns in nature; and infinity, around which we just never manage to wrap our minds, try as we might.

The reason for the first of these two fascinations, I think, is that we humans are really just finely honed cause-and-effect detectors, hoping to use this skill to avoid harm long enough to procreate. When our detectors misfire — when we generate false positives — we notice coincidences. How we deal with coincidences depends on our ability to intuit the odds of unlikely juxtapositions occurring randomly (and they do occur). Most of us are terrible at such estimations, so we end up turning coincidences into meaningful events, letting them fuel our superstitious beliefs.

We’re suddenly in the middle of a digression here, I know, but there is an interesting corollary example of this: People who buy lottery tickets of the PowerBall variety avoid choosing a sequence like 1,2,3,4,5 and 6; it just doesn’t look random enough to win. In fact, if that were the only option available, I suspect many habitual players would not be willing to pay for it, even though the chance of that sequence winning is exactly the same as their preferred “random” sequence, of which “type” there are far more.

Because the number of sequences in which the average lottery player can detect a pattern is far lower than the total number of possible sequences, as a group “sequences in which I see a pattern” wins less often than “sequences in which I can’t see a pattern.” This much is true. The mistake comes in thinking that membership of the larger group increases a specific sequence’s chances of being selected at random.

An exploration of this fallacy propels Inflexible Logic by Russell Maloney, a wonderful short story from The New Yorker circa 1940. In it, the protagonist decides to test empirically whether six chimpanzees eventually do end up writing all the works in the British Museum — with remarkable results.

And one of my favorite writers, Jorge Luis Borges, wrote The Library of BabelBoth these short stories are worth copying and pasting into a word processing document, printing out and reading, if you have a spare half hour., a short story which explores the futility of deriving meaning from patterns found in sequences if all possible sequences exist. Who else but Borges would think to use that as a plot device!?

This brings us back to the problem at hand. Although our typing monkey has had much coverage on the web, I have not found an actual calculation of the probability he would type out a copy of Hamlet in any given sitting. So, Geoff, I will oblige you:

The calculation is very simple. Take this copy of Hamlet. It contains 32,197 words made from 194,270 characters. The “alphabet” of possible characters includes both lowercase and uppercase letters, punctuation marks and spaces — let’s say 64 characters in total. The chance that a monkey randomly types out Hamlet in a given sitting, then, is one in 64194,270. According to Mathematica, that equals one in 3.833 x 10350,886 — a staggeringly small chance.

Another way to conduct this experiment would be to find and then line up 194,270 monkeys and put a typewriter in front of each of them. We let all of them hit a single key each at a time, and string together the result. If we manage to train them to type one character per second, we get a potential Hamlet text every second. There have been 441,504,000,000,000,000, or 4.415 x 1017 seconds since the Big Bang, approximately, so if our monkeys had started typing soon after the birth of the universe, the probability that they’d have something for us by now is 1-(1-1/(3.833 x 10350,886))4.415 x 1017Unfortunately, even Mathematica gets an overflow error trying to calculate that. Methodology: First you calculate the probability of a copy of Hamlet not being typed at a given sitting (1-1/(3.833 x 10350,886)), then you raise that to the power of the number of sittings, in our case the number of seconds since the Big Bang, 4.415 x 1017. This gives us the probability of Hamlet not having been written after all these seconds; to find the probability that it has, just subtract that number from 1..

That’s a vanishingly small chance. According to our French mathematician Borel, who actually thought a great deal about this, the class of events with probabilities of less than one in 1050 of occurring are negligible on a cosmic scale. The probability our monkeys will type Hamlet is certainly in that class. However, Borel also came up with a class of events with probabilities that are negligible on a “supercosmic” scale — probabilities of less than one in 101010, or 1010,000,000,000— something exceedingly unlikely to happen even if given an inordinate number of universes to play with. We’d definitely have a text of Hamlet before long on this scale, according to our calculations.

But Borel gave an example of an event with a negligible chance of occurring even at the supercosmic scale: the chance that a container holding a mixture of a fair number of oxygen atoms and nitrogen atoms would spontaneously have all the oxygen atoms jump to one side and the nitrogen atoms to the other side, thus organizing itself, decreasing the system’s entropy and breaking the Second Law of Thermodynamics.

We can therefore state with confidence that monkeys will type Hamlet long before the Second Law of Thermodynamics breaks.

Regeringens länkningspolicy

The website of the government of Sweden has a linking policy which states: “Specify the link to www.sweden.gov.se and www.regeringen.se in a neutral manner.” (My italics.) It’s funny, but it’s also stupid. Imagine enforcing that linking policy among bloggers. Or on company websites — It would be a PR fiasco. Why can governments get away with it?Jag tycker inte om dumma “terms of use” policy. Jag tycker inte heller om länkningspolicy (och Boing boing inte heller).

Regeringens nya webbplats har en Länkningspolicy. Det börjar så:

Länka gärna till www.regeringen.se och www.sweden.gov.se, men tänk på att:

  • Ange länken till www.regeringen.se och www.sweden.gov.se på ett neutralt sätt.

    Jag tycker att det är jättedumt. Får man verkligen inte kritisera webbplatsen när man gör en länk till den? Kan du inbilla dig om bloggar använde samma länkningspolicyn?

    Radiotjänst guy

    Well, they found me. The knock on the door came barely a month after having moved. I actually thought it was the landlord come to fix a light and so I bounded to the door, only to find an extremely sorry-looking man with droopy eyelids who began to inform me in resigned Swedish that maybe I was not paying for a TV license. I let him talk for a while, then feigned ignorance of Swedish and let him start again in English. He spoke rather excellent English, I must say. In fact, I suspect he was British. He reminded me of Hitler, but without the mustache or charisma.

    My TV was turned off and around the corner, and so I could have lied to him, but he looked so sad and dishevelled and obviously much verbally abused and routinely lied to, and probably bullied in the playground growing up, that I just couldn’t bring myself to contribute further to his evident self-loathing. In fact, I had all the body language of a liar even when I admitted that yes, I have a TV the landlord lent me, and how much would it be, oh that much a month, and if I get rid of the TV do I just call… what is your service called, Radiotjänst? Emboldened by my less than hostile reception, Radiotjänst guy even made a brave attempt at explaining his purpose in life, pointing out that they guarantee the existence of public broadcasting free of advertising and political meddling.

    What annoyed me most is that since I was pretending never to have heard about Radiotjänst, I couldn’t retort with evident knowledge that while there is nothing wrong with publicly funded broadcasting, there is everything wrong with poll tax collectors for televisionsA paradox… Here are three facts: 1) I have yet to meet a a Swede who approves of Radiotjänst. 2) Sweden is a democracy. 3) Radiotjänst continues to exist. How can these three things all exist simultaneously?.

    Now that I think about it, I bet his look was a foil. Radiotjänst jobs are probably some of the most coveted ones around for actors, who see this as the ultimate test of their method-acting skills. Become Radiotjänst guy, the teacher intones to his charges as he sends them off to collect licenses. And whoever comes back with the fewest gets booted from the course. My guy is probably already back at central casting, where they are removing the make-up along with the artificial bags under his eyes. Soon, he’ll be at home sipping a claret as he learns his lines for an upcoming starring role in Death of a Salesman. No wonder he spoke such good English. I really think I have seen him on TV — now wouldn’t that be ironic?