Today is my birthday

Wikipedia reveals other reasons to celebrate (and/or mourn) November 5. Today is Guy Fawkes Day. This is the 401st anniversary of Fawkes' involvement in the Gunpowder Plot to assassinate King James I. A couple generations later, this date also marked the beginning of the Glorious Revolution that eventually toppled James II. Another little bit of rebellion came in 1872, when Susan B. Anthony did a little bit of civil disobedience by daring to cast a vote. (A woman! Gasp!)

Monopoly first hit the shelves during the heart of the Depression, and I Love Lucy debuted on November 5, 1951. In 1979, the United States was declared to be the Great Satan. And Saddam Hussein was just sentenced to death.

The New York Times and the BBC both have "On This Day" features.





Making Comics (review: 4.5/5)

Scott McCloud's latest is all about story-telling secrets and how to shape your own vision for comics. It mimics the style of his earlier book, Understanding Comics, using the form to explain itself, and expands a bit more on the theories he presented there. I think it's wonderful to see how much more mature McCloud's own work is in this book. The art is better; the layouts are cleaner and more interesting. The visuals are all just more inventive and lively. I was glad that McCloud seemed to stretch himself and take the opportunity to demonstrate his competence by illustrating in a lot of different styles--you can tell that he really put a lot of work into these panels. All that effort pays off, especially in the chapters devoted to backgrounds and to facial expressions.

One of my complaints about UC was that he didn't give enough examples--but Making Comics absolutely makes up for that. To boot, there's an excellent bibliography, and every chapter has some supplementary wrap-up content. Each chapter ends with a couple pages of footnotes, commentary, and also exercises to help you flex your comics skillz. Very impressive, and a lot of fun to read.




November 2, 2006

Some interesting thoughts on blog readability. Paul Bausch crunched the readability of the most popular blogs using the Gunning and Flesch-Kincaid measures: "My prediction that the most popular blogs would have very good readability scores didn't quite hold up. I can't pinpoint a "sweet spot", but maybe blog readers enjoy more densely layered text. (Think Time instead of Newsweek, but not quite Harvard Law Review.)" A text file of the results is available for your perusal.




November 2, 2006

Apple is sponsoring the Insomnia Film Festival for students. The goal is a 3-minute film in 24 hours. I always had a good time with the very similar Campus MovieFest, which operates on the 5-minute, 7-day rule. Factor in some healthy procrastination, and the two festivals are about even. Most CMF movies didn't really get serious until the last 40 hours or so anyway. Might as well be realistic about it.


November 2, 2006

National security employees have been using a wiki to share and update information. I think it's notable that that they describe it as not just a pure issue of organizational communication, it also involves generational work trends. There's a need to pass along old wisdom and adjust to the competencies of a younger workforce:

Not all U.S. intelligence analysts have embraced the new tool, but many younger analysts have, said Michael Wertheimer, DNI's deputy director of analysis and chief technology officer. Half of all U.S. intelligence analysts have one to five years of experience, he noted. "This is how they do their work," he said. "This is how they like to work."