By special request of TTLB’s “house liberal” commenter, my old friend Lisa…
August 8: I’m going to go on record and predict that the Swift Boat Veterans kerfuffle won’t just be a major negative for Kerry: it will be a campaign-killer…
Unless Kerry’s campaign manages to completely discredit the Swifties — which seems increasingly unlikely — the campaign is over; Kerry is done. And after Election Day has passed, I expect that anyone looking backwards will wonder why in the world the Democrats ever thought making Kerry’s Vietnam service a centerpiece was a good idea in the first place.
Mary Beth Cahill, December 15: The campaign manager for Sen. John Kerry (news – web sites)’s failed presidential bid said Wednesday she regrets underestimating the impact of an attack advertisement that questioned Kerry’s Vietnam War record.
Mary Beth Cahill, who spoke at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government with Ken Mehlman, President Bush (news – web sites)’s campaign manager, said the Massachusetts senator’s campaign initially thought there would be “no reach” to the ad from Swift Boat Veterans for Truth…
“In hindsight, maybe we should have put Senator Kerry out earlier, perhaps we could have cut it off earlier.”
Mehlman said that it was natural that the ad had the reach and impact it did, because Kerry decided to make his Vietnam record a central part of his campaign.
“Because Senator Kerry was so focused on that part of his biography, it came out as an issue,” he said.
Ms. Cahill, Mr. Kerry, and yes, even Ms. Clinton are welcome to call upon my services when next they find themselves in need of political advice…
Category: Main
SoA Challenge Wrap-Up
Well, I haven’t seen an ‘official’ announcement, but I believe the of America Friends of Iraq challenge is now complete.
As of this morning, the TTLB EcoTeam raised $1,687 for SoA, which put us in the #4 slot out of 23 teams competing — not bad for a bunch of insignificant microbes!
We have to extend congratulations to the three teams that surpassed us: Team Pajamahdeen was lagging for a long while and then blew our doors off in the last few days to end with $5,035; Castle Argghhh’s Fighting Fusileers for Freedom finished with $6,560; and those blasted Northern Alliance chaps blew the curve for everybody by bringing in a whopping $12,095. Fine work by all!
And as for the TTLB EcoTeam, let me extend my thanks and gratitude one more time to all the bloggers who joined the team and promoted the effort, and to everyone who donated. As time passes and I get to know Spirit of America’s work more and more, I only find myself growing even more enthusiastic for their cause. We’ve done good, folks!
And so for one more moment of glory, I present the TTLB EcoTeam:
Stand In the Trenches
It Is What It Is
Adrian Warnock
Cao’s Blog
Mark A. Kilmer
Rebel Rouser
Broken Masterpieces
Feste…a foolsblog
One Year Bible Blog
Pillage Idiot
The Liberal Coalition
kj4ever
Belief Seeking Understanding
Intermittent Stream
Pull on Superman’s Cape
Bloggledygook
Yankee from Mississippi
The Spoons Experience
Slublog
Vince Aut Morire
ccs178
Last Chance for SoA Challenge
Tonight the Spirit of America Friends of Iraq Blogger Challenge is coming to a close. If you haven’t done so already — and hey, even if you have — there’s one last chance to a donation during the challenge!
Spirit of America Challenge: Help!
A quick note: we’ve behind into fourth place in the team competition! Team Pajamahdeen has squeaked ahead of us by a mere $36.
Would somebody please step up to the plate and fix that?
2004 Weblog Awards…
Have you voted yet?
If not: too late! Kevin has posted results for most categories.
Congrats to all the winners…
2004 Weblog Awards
Well, if you weren’t aware of the Weblog Awards, you’ve obviously been living in a cave for the past month. But I’ve been rather remiss in promoting the awards, especially given that some of them are actually based on Ecosystem categories.
Voting closes tomorrow, so if you haven’t voted yet, by all means, go do so!
Spirit of America EcoTeam Update
With only four days left in the fundraising drive, the EcoTeam is in a strong third place in the team competition with $1,574 raised to date. There’s still time to join the team and make a donation, so let’s see what we can do for a big last push towards the finish line!
And on that note, let me welcome the latest additions to the team:
Slublog
Vince Aut Morire
ccs178
…and, blogless though he may be, let me also say thanks to Papa Bear for chipping in a donation!
Ecosystem Update
Some folks have noticed that there has been some weirdness on the Ecosytem lately.
First, a little over a week ago, everybody’s total link counts took a steep plunge. This was on purpose. The Ecosystem is meant to track ‘current’ links that each blog is receiving; not every link going back forever. But, for various technical reasons, I had to stop clearing out old links for a while — and everybody’s counts continued to drift upward.
Around 11/27, I fixed that, and cleared out all the old links. Unfortunately, that created a bit of an abrupt change in the rankings. But, from here on, things should stabilize.
Now, that wasn’t the big problem. For the past 10 days, I’ve been chasing what I thought was a nasty SQL database corruption issue. Yesterday, I finally figured it out. It wasn’t corruption at all — at least of the techincal kind.
For a while now, the Ecosystem has been the target of commerical spam-websites, which try to register themselves with bogus URLs that guarantee high rankings. There is validation code to prevent such abuse, but it is still a bit leaky and there are holes.
Well, I realized yesterday that it was in fact one of those attacks which was the cause of all the problems of the last week. In a nutshell, one of our fine spammy friends managed to get a blog with URL “http://” into the Ecosystem, which resulted in everybody’s links being assigned to that blog. I caught him on the first day, and marked the blog as suspended — but what I realized yesterday is that the method I used to suspend it prevented it from showing up in the listings — but didn’t prevent it from grabbing everyone’s links in the actual database.
Anyway: now that I know the issue I’m plugging up all the remaining vaildation holes, and starting today things should begin to return to normal. I expect that within a few hours, I’ll have the Ecosystem fully operational, and hopefully the Daily News as well.
Thanks for everyone’s patience…
EcoTeam Marches On
Please welcome the EcoTeam’s latest members:
which is one of the best blog names I’ve seen in a while
Yankee from Mississippi
and, I’m especially pleased to welcome good friend Spoons on board the team.
Still room for plenty more!
T-Mobile AirCard
Glenn seems very happy with his new wireless data card. This isn’t a WiFi card, but rather, works on the cellular network and therefore has access anywhere there is appropriate cell site coverage.
I’ve looked at the Verizon card, but at $80/month for unlimited access, it was a little pricey for me to justify given my limited needs.
So, I found a more affordable solution: for $30/month, you can use a T-Mobile AirCard for unlimited access. The drawback is that unlike Verizon’s coverage, T-Mobile is currently strictly dialup speeds — about 56kbps.
That’s not great for high powered web surfing, but I’ve found it is still extremely handy to be able to grab e-mail, be on instant messaging, and blog from anywhere.
TTLB EcoTeam Leaps Past Buzzmachine!
Thanks to the generous support of the EcoTeam blogger members and readers, we’ve now raised $1,147 for Spirit of America! This puts us in third place for blog-teams; behind Castle Argghhh’s Fighting Fusileers for Freedom and the dreaded Northern Alliance.
Please welcome the latest additions to the team:
ChrisCam’s Intermittent Stream
Pull On Superman’s Cape
TTLB EcoTeam Update
Please give a belated welcome to Douglas at Seeking Understanding, who joined several days back but I somehow managed to miss. Welcome aboard, Douglas!
Carnivorous Conservative on SiteMeter
Carnivorous Conservative has interesting analysis of SiteMeter statistics:
Who is read “more”, for example, Andrew Sullivan, Powerline, Protein Wisdom or Ace of Spades? Depending on how you want to interpret the numbers – and with the caveat that I’m no internet know it all – $20 says you probably guessed wrong. What if I told you that at least in one measure the numbers actually prove that both PW and ACE individually beat Powerline and Sullivan COMBINED!!
I think his methodology is sound, as is his logic. The only question, as always, is just how accurate SiteMeter’s data actually is…
Update: The Commissar points out one potential issue with the analysis: the large number of “zero-second” visits. I am fairly sure that zero-second visits represent visits where the user simply hit one page — since there is only one timestamp, there is no way to calculate how long they were viewing the blog overall.
Also, another interpretation for Carnivorous’ finding that Protein Wisdom receives more blog reader-time than Powerline: maybe Protein Wisdom fans just read really, really slow…
TTLB EcoTeam Marches On
Please welcome the latest addition to the TTLB EcoTeam:
In addition, I’m also especially pleased to welcome N. Todd of the Liberal Coalition on board the TTLB EcoTeam in the Friends of Iraq Blogger Challenge. N.Todd is reaching across the partisan divide to support SoA’s effort despite severe misgivings about Bush’s policies and the Iraq war — an example I sincerely hope many others on the left will follow.
Today is the first official day of fundraising in the challenge, so if you haven’t donated already, I humbly ask that you reach into your heart, and then into your wallet, and click here to support SoA’s fine efforts to help the Iraqi and Afghan people. Thanks!
For more on TTLB’s participation in the Friends of Iraq challenge, see here.
‘Blog’ is the #1 Word of the Year
Merriam-Webster Inc. has announced that “blog” is the most searched-on word from its sites:
Merriam-Webster Inc. said on Tuesday that blog, defined as “a Web site that contains an online personal journal with reflections, comments and often hyperlinks,” was one of the most looked-up words on its Internet sites this year…
Springfield, Massachusetts-based Merriam-Webster compiles the list each year by taking the most researched words on its Web sites and then excluding perennials such as affect/effect and profanity.
The full list is:
1. blog
2. incumbent
3. electoral
4. insurgent
5. hurricane
6. cicada
7. peloton
8. partisan
9. sovereignty
10. defenestration
Which, of course, absolutely demands that we rise to the challenge of using all ten words in a sentence. Here’s my entry:
In 2004, while the vast peloton of the mainstream media peddled furiously onward in an electoral campaign aimed at the defenstration of incumbent President Bush, the insurgent forces of the blog world unleashed a hurricane of criticism on the media itself, plaguing Dan Rather and other liberal talking heads like a swarm of cicadas, slowly but inexorably devouring Big Media’s sovereignty as sole arbiters of Truth and exposing them as the partisan hacks we always knew them to be.
Additional suggestions welcome; leave yours in the comments!
TCS Column: We Have Met The Enemy, and They Will Be Us
I’m pleased to report that first Tech Central Station column is now up over at TCS. I discuss the increasingly blurred border between blogs and traditional media:
These days, enjoyable sport can be had observing the ongoing battle royale between the staid defenders of traditional journalism on the one side, and the young punks known as bloggers on the other..
Look closer at the two sides, however, and you’ll find that there’s far more crossbreeding going on between these particular Capulets and Montagues than you might expect from all the hue and cry. The reality is that the line between “blogger” and “journalist” — and between “amateur” and “pro” — is already extremely fuzzy. And if you think things are blurred now: well, just wait a little while longer, because soon enough, things are going to start to really get interesting.
TTLB on Pundit Review Radio: Audio Link
If you didn’t catch my Saturday appearance on Pundit Review Radio live, you can now listen via their audio link here.
TTLB EcoTeam Growing
The EcoTeam is going strong, and has now swelled to ten members. Please welcome the latest additions:
Cao’s Blog
Mark A. Kilmer      Rebel Rouser
Broken Masterpieces      Feste…a foolsblog
One Year Bible Blog      Pillage Idiot
And important note: If you want to join the EcoTeam, please be sure to donate using this link, and join the team here. Quite a few folks have been getting one or the other of those steps wrong…
For more on TTLB’s participation in the Friends of Iraq challenge, see here.
Ecosystem Issues
As many of you may have noticed, the Ecosystem is having some issues over the past few days. I’m working to resolve them, but for now, please have patience. And if you know anything about debugging strange issues with MySQL indicies, please read thread at the MySQL forums and let me know what you think…
Brokaw’s Bad Advice
Tom Brokaw has advice for his chosen successor Brian Williams:
“Put your head down and do the work, and don’t read the many media critics who will be out there with commentary and criticism in the beginning. Your compact is not with them but with the audience.”
You know, I was just thinking that what network news needs is anchors who are less open and responsive to criticism.
But Brokaw’s advice is misguided on a more fundamental level: he draws an artificial distinction between “media critics” and “the audience”.
News flash: they are now one and the same (see also: blogosphere). Every viewer can be a media critic and contribute their feedback and ideas. And despite Mr. Brokaw’s counsel, Mr. Williams would serve himself, his network, and his audience well if he learned to listen…