Three thousand faces of American military casualties. Is the world safer yet. Our prayers for the families of the dead of all nationalities.
Quaker Ranter
A Weekly Newsletter and Blog from Martin Kelley
Vacation from reality
December 5, 2006
Okay, yes it’s insane to go on a vacation when one is unemployed. But logistically, it’s the best time to go: no juggling work schedules, no finishing up projects before you go, no taking cell phone calls from harried colleagues. Julie had saved up the money and started planning a getaway this summer and reservations were all in place when I suddenly found myself out of a job. We could have canceled but October brought us more than our share of disappointments and we decided to go for it. Three guesses where we are:

h3. More photos:
| www.flickr.com
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See “all the WDW photos”:http://flickr.com/photos/martin_kelley/tags/wdw2006/
On job hunting and the blogging future in Metro Philadelphia
November 29, 2006
I’ve been quiet on the blogs lately, focusing on job searches rather than ranting. I thought I’d take a little time off to talk about my little corner of the career market. I’ve been applying for a lot of web design and editing jobs but the most interesting ones have combined these together in creative ways. My qualifications for these jobs are more the independent sites I’ve put together — notably QuakerQuaker.org—than my paid work for Friends.
For example: one interesting job gets reposted every few weeks on Craigslist. It’s geared toward adding next-generation interactive content to the website of a consortium of suburban newspapers (applicants are asked to be “comfortable with terms like blog, vlog, CSS, YourHub, MySpace, YouTube…,” etc.). The qualifications and vision are right up my alley but I’m still waiting to hear anything about the application I sent by email and snail mail a week ago. Despite this, they’re continuing to post revised descriptions to Craigslist. Yesterday’s version dropped the “convergence” lingo and also dropped the projected salary by about ten grand.
About two months ago I actually got through to an interview for a fabulous job that consisted of putting together a blogging community site to feature the lesser-known and quirky businesses of Philadelphia. I had a great interview, thought I had a good chance at the job and then heard nothing. Days turned to weeks as my follow-up communications went unanswered. 11/30 Update: a friend just guessed the group I was talking about and emailed that the site did launch, just quietly. It looks good.
Corporate blogging is said to be the wave of the future and in only a few years political campaigns have come to consider bloggers as an essential tool in getting their message out. User-generated content has become essential feedback and publicity mechanisms. My experience from the Quaker world is that bloggers are constituting a new kind of leadership, one that’s both more outgoing but also thoughtful and visionary (I should post about this sometime soon). Blogs encourage openness and transparency and will surely affect organizational politics more and more in the near future. Smart companies and nonprofits that want to grow in size and influence will have to learn to play well with blogs.
But the future is little succor to the present. In the Philadelphia metropolitan area it seems that the rare employer that’s thinking in these terms have have a lot of back and forths trying to work out the job description. Well, I only need one enlightened employer! It’s time now to put the boys to bed, then check the job boards again. Keep us in your prayers.
The new aggregators
October 13, 2006
A look at the new class of “Single Page Aggregators.”
Way back in 1997 I was one of dozens of lots of web designers trying
to figure out how to bring an editorial voice to the internet. The web
had taken off and there pages and links everywhere but few places where
they were actually organized in a useful manner. As I’ve written before,
in December of that year I started a weekly updated list of annotated
links to articles on nonviolence, a form we’d now would recognize as a
blog.
About
eighteen months ago I started a “links blog” of interesting Quaker
links, incorporated as a sidebar on my popular “QuakerRanter” personal
blog. I eventually gave the links their own URL (QuakerQuaker.org)
and invited others to join the linking. I always stumble when trying to
tell people what QuakerQuaker is all about. The best definition is that
its a “collaboratively edited blog aggregator” but that’s a horribly
tech description.
The rise of blogs is creating the necessity for these sort of theme-based aggregators. This morning I stumbled on Original Signal, a new site that organzes the best Web 2.0 blogs. A site called PopURLs does the same for “the latest web buzz.” A site called SolutionWatch has written about these in Tracking the web with Single Page Aggregators. We’re all on to something here. I suspect that sometime this fall some clever person will coin a new term for these sites.
Teaching Quakerism again
October 5, 2006
Getting right back on the horse, I’m teaching Quakerism 101 at Moorestown NJ Meeting Wednesday evenings starting in a few weeks. The original plan was for the most excellent Thomas Swain to lead it but he’s become rather busy after being tapped to be yearly meeting clerk (God bless ‘im). He’ll be there for the first session, I’ll be on my own for the rest. A rather small group has signed up so it should be nice and intimate.
For the last year I’ve been pondering the opportunities of using mid-week religious education and worship as a form of outreach. Emergent Church types love small group opportunities outside of the Sunday morning time slot and it seems that mid-week worship is one of those old on-the-verge-of-death Quaker traditions that might be worth revitalizing and recasting in an Emergent-friendly format.
Last Spring I spent a few months regularly attending one of the few surviving mid-week worships in the area and I found it intriguing and full of possibilities but never felt led to do more. It seemed that attenders came and went each week without connecting deeply to one another or getting any serious grounding in Quakerism.
Reflecting on the genesis of a strong Philadelphia young adult group in the mid-1990s, it seemed like the ideal recipe would look something like this:
- 6pm: regular religious ed time, not super-formal but real and pastoral-based. This would be an open, non-judgemental time where attenders would be free to share spiritual insights but they would also learn the orthodox Quaker take on the issue or concern (Barclay essentially).
- 7pm: mid-week worship, unprogrammed
- 8pm: unofficial but regular hang-out time, people going in groups to local diners, etc.
Unprogrammed worship just isn’t enough (just when y’all thought I was a dyed-in-the-plain-cloth Wilburite…). People do need time to be able to ask questions and explore spirituality in a more structured way. Those of us led to teaching need to be willing to say “this is the Quaker take on this issue” even if our answer wouldn’t necessarily pass consensus in a Friends meeting.
People also need time to socialize. We live in an atomized society and the brunt of this isolation is borne by young adults starting careers in unfamiliar cities and towns: Quaker meeting can act as a place to plug into a social network and provide real community. It’s different from entertainment, but rather identity-building. How do we shift thinking from “those Quakers are cool” to “I’m a Quaker and I’m cool” in such a way that these new Friends understand that there are challenges and disciplines involved in taking on this new role.
Perhaps the three parts to the mid-week worship model is head, spirit and heart; whatever labels you give it we need to think about feeding and nurturing the whole seeker and to challenge them to more than just silence. This is certainly a common model. When Peggy Senger Parsons and Alivia Biko came to the FGC Gathering and shared Freedom Friends worship with us it had some of this feel. For awhile I tagged along with Julie to what’s now called The Collegium Center which is a Sunday night Catholic mass/religious ed/diner three-some that was always packed and that produced at least one couple (good friends of ours now!).
I don’t know why I share all this now, except to put the idea in other people’s heads too. The four weeks of Wednesday night religious ed at Moorestown might have something of this feel; it will be interesting to see.
For those interested in curriculum details, I’m basing it on Michael Birkel’s Silence and Witness: the Quaker Tradition (Orbis, 2004. $16.00). Michael’s tried to pull together a good general introduction to Friends, something surely needed by Friends today (much as I respect Howard Brinton’s Friends for 300 Years it’s getting old in the tooth and speaks more to the issues of mid-century Friends than us). Can Silence and Witness anchor a Quakerism 101 course? We’ll see.
As supplementary material I’m using Thomas Hamm’s Quakers in America (Columbia University Press, 2003, $45), Ben Pink-Dandelion’s Convinced Quakerism: 2003 Walton Lecture (Southeastern Yearly Meeting Walton Lecture, 2003, $4.00), Marty Grundy’s Quaker Treasure (Beacon Hill Friends House Weed Lecture, 2002, $4.00) and the class Bill Tabor pamphlet Four Doors to Quaker Worship (Pendle Hill, 1992, $5.00). Attentive readers will see echos from my previous Quakerism 101 class at Medford Meeting.
For something completely different…
October 2, 2006
In the news front, I’m no longer working at FGC. Reasons are complicated, as is often the case. In eight years I did some good work with some great people. I’ll be missing the hard-working and faithful colleagues and committee members I got to serve with over the years. I’ll be working on building my tech career and look forward to new challenges. Transitions are always a bit scary, so hold us in your prayers in this time.
The Gorillas and Chimps of the Social Networking Scene
September 18, 2006
Over on the New York Times, an article about a new Nickolodeon-created website for parents
now in the final stages of beta testing.
In a nonpublic test of the site over the summer by about
1,000 recruited participants, executives learned that these users
wanted to blog; now, every user with a profile can, Ms. Reppen said.
Through the beta test, which is now open to new members, Nick is
learning that parents want spaces to sell their crafts, a separate
Christian home-schooling discussion and bigger type on the Web site.
Local discussion boards will also be added, as will user-generated
video.
They also quote a Nissan marketing executive, who says that
“community sites are one of the big phenomenon happening on line this
year.”
There is a big shift going on.
It’s startling to realize that my three year toddler is almost the same age as Myspace and older than Facebook.
In just a few short years they’ve come to dominate much of the online
world, especially with under-25 users. The kind of independent blogs
that dominate a sites like Livejournal and Blogspot don’t have the web
of cross-connections – what I called the “folksonomic density” – of the new
social networking sites. It seems appropriate that Myspace was founded by spammers: who knows more about sucking people in?
The question: will the net have room for independent niche sites?
Myspace is changing its architecture to disable key linking features of
third-party embedded plug-ins like the from the popular video site Youtube. The big search sites also want a piece of this market – new features on Yahoo local and the geotagged maps
on Yahoo’s Flickr are impressive). It all reminds me some of the
debates about local food co-ops versus enlightened supermarkets: is it
a good thing that organic produce and soymilk can be purchased at the
local Acme, even if that cuts into the independent co-op’s business?
Don’t we want everyone to have access to everything? In the end,
philosophy won’t settle this argument.
Tweaking the blogs for hyperlocal content
September 4, 2006
Interesting article over the Moveabletype blog. Anil Dash interviews George Johnson Jr of Hyperlocal Media, who’s using MT as a content system to build hyperlocal community sites that can compete against local newspapers (see their very-cool looking BuffaloRising site).
Here’s some of what Johnson has to say:
Distribution, content creation, and the ability to more
easily compete with established local players online… blogging is
perfect for that. I mean a blog is chronologically arranged, in
columns, divided by categories and changes (in many cases) everyday.
That’s the broad definition of a newspaper, right? A blog is so much
more than that, but the basic structure lends itself very well to
developing an online competitor for newspapers.
It was three years ago that I followed Brad Choate’s instructions for using Moveable Type as a whole-site content management system.
What started as an experiment became a way of life for me. The MT
interface lends itself so well to content management that I’m now using
it for my non-techie clients: Quakersong.org and Quakeryouth.org
are both put together by MT and I’ve been surprised that there’s been
almost no learning curve for the client’s adoption of this software.
Given this, it seems odd that the kids at Moveable Type haven’t
taken MT in this direction (even more surprising since they hired Brad
himself a few years ago!). I see a big market in my niche sites for
this sort of functionality and three years later I’m still having to
tweak templates to get this to work. Anil, what’s up? If Drupal had better documentation and smoother installation it would have been the brawn behind MartinKelley.com.
It would be fun to follow Until Monday’s example and create a
hyperlocal site (hint hint to VW if she’s reading this). Of course,
locality is not just geographically-based anymore. Quakerquaker.org is a local portal of a different kind. I’m a big believer that the hyperlocality of niche and geographic sites are the cutting edge in the next-wave of the social web.
There’s a lot of pioneering to be done in this regards. The net has
a lot of power to take down culture monopolies by confronting old boy
networks and business-as-usual thinking with innovative social networks
that harness the talents of the outsiders. The smart newspapers,
magazines, churches and cultural organizations will come on board and
leap-frog themselves to twenty-first century relevance. Too many of the
Philadelphia (and/or) Quaker institutions I know respond to change by
shuffling job titles and putting blinders up against recognizing the
ever-narrower demographic they serve.