So Misguided

Plain words, uncommon sense

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Amazon Acquires Shelfari

imageAccording to the Shelfari email newsletter, “Shelfari joins the Amazon.com family.”

Shelfair.com, acquired by Amazon.com on August 28, is a social networking site for book lovers. You create a virtual bookshelf and share reviews with your friends. I’m also a member of GoodReads.com, which I like for the email messages I receive of friends’ book reviews.

Both systems let users pull in your Amazon reviews, which is great and saves time. It will be interesting to see what happens now with the other virtual bookshelves using Amazon’s API (will they continue, get stronger, disappear) and what will “working hand in hand” (as claimed in the Shelfari email) actually look like.

I suppose I should go update my bookshelf in all of these places.

Is there not some way to do this in one place and have all my reviews distributed and posted to all my bookshelves? Hmmm. Must be…

Craft Mafia: Handmade Nation

Handmade Nation: Sneak Peak of a d.i.y. craft documentary being released in 2009. I like the Craft Mafia mentioned and the jewellery made from bike parts. So cool.

Director: Faythe Levine
Director of Photography: Micaela O’Herlihy
Additional Camera work: Drew Rosas
Editor: Cris Siqueira
Assistant Editor: Joe Wong
Music: Wooden Robot

Video and book: Handmade Nation: The Rise of DIY Art, Craft & Design.

Visit www.indiecraftdocumentary for more information.

EE Roadshow

Another plug because I’m getting excited … I’m organizing an event called ExpressionEngine Roadshow on September 26 in Vancouver.

Are you interested?
http://www.eeroadshow.com/

ExpressionEngine is a CMS that I use for web design. I love it. SoMisguided runs on EE, as does BoxcarMarketing.com.

The event is for designers, developers, project managers and EE users who want to learn more about the tool, how to use it and design in it, what’s coming in the next release, how it performs with modules, extension and SEO capabilities, and there will be drinking and nibbling on tasty Havana treats.

Why Havana? Because it’s at Havana restaurant in the theatre there. $50 for the afternoon (1-5 pm) and then the party (5-7pm).

Registration is filling up so here’s a link if you’re keen.
http://eeroadshow.eventbrite.com/

Hope to see you there!

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Things We Like This Week

Bit of a lazy Friday round up of things on that caught my attention this week.

Print Liberation has a new book out: Print Liberation, the Screen Printing Primer. It has future publicists for the company shaking in their boots (kidding).

Penguin UK has launched a dating site, “where book lovers meet”.

Alan at the Penguin blog makes jokes about penguins dating. Definitely worth a read.

Plus:
* Needled: A community that loves tattoos has a cool navigation style that really works with what the site is about.

* I got nice presents from Campaign Monitor.

* Social Actions has a cool widget for promoting social action.

James Glave: Trailers and Almost Green

James Glave, author of Almost Green (now in stores), has some new trailers up for his book.

I like James and his enthusiasm.

http://glave.com/trailers/

ALMOST GREEN is a quirky look at one man’s quest to build an eco shed, a sustainably designed writing studio. This “green” house was one work of wonder in terms of battling opinions, neighbours, suppliers and the land itself.

Reading Fiction Makes You Smarter

… or at least more empathetic.

According to researchers at the University of Toronto, reading fiction elevates your “social intelligence.”

Quote:
“For the first time in history there is now scientific evidence that reading fiction has psychological benefits,” writes Keith Oatley in New Scientist. Oatley is a professor of psychology and the leader of the Toronto team. He is also an award-winning novelist (The Case of Emily V.). On the phone from the University of Toronto, he explains that reading fiction appears to stimulate parts of the brain that govern empathy. “What you’re doing when you’re reading fiction is you’re allowing yourself to become another person for a short period of time … It loosens up your personality, your rigidities.” –from TheStar.com

Book Review: Petite Anglaise

imagePetite Anglaise is the pseudonym of Catherine Sanderson, English blogger living in Paris and the author of a new book Petite Anglaise (published by Random House).

Catherine/Petite has an engaging and hilarious writing style, which appears perfectly fine-tuned in her book. You can appreciate my fandom here when I say that publishers often make the mistake of publishing bloggers and thinking that what’s compelling in a couple of paragraphs can be morphed into a full-length book. Such trepidation is not required when reading Petite Anglaise (book or blog). From blog to book really works for Petite Anglaise–a blog that sits on that fine line between reality and embellishment that is often prevalent in autobiography.

Quote: Here’s a quote from a recent blog post titled “Fraud”

I fully intended for this post to be a witty open letter to the person who stole my identity and used my bank card for an extravagant online shopping spree (total cost: 3.285,17). Or perhaps a song, in the style of Brassens, who in Stances un Cambrioleur so eloquently thanked the burglar who had the good taste to pay his house a visit.

It would have described my joy at receiving a letter from the Caisse d’Epargne, heavy with menace, which informed me, in typically verbose (but not particularly comprehensible) French, that having noticed repeated dysfonctionnements consecutifs a l’utilisation de ma carte bleue, I was invited to “regularise” the resulting overdraft. If not my card would be cancelled, my bank account immobilised, the Banque de France notified, and helicopters would be dispatched to hover outside my apartment window so that men in uniforms could shout at me over their loud hailers and/or airbourne snipers could get me in their sights.

The book chronicles the birth of the blog Petite Anglaise and the subsequent consequences. Catherine, a young Englishwoman in Paris, in love with all things French, is feeling a little less than loved by Mr. Frog (her husband) and less than in love with her job. The discontent and the discovery of blogging results in an anonymous blog Petite Anglaise. Catherine shares the intimate details of her life in what she hopes will be read by Mr. Frog but instead captures the attention of many bloggers and blog readers. Apparently 100,000 visitors per month.

And like all anonymous and wildly popular bloggers, Catherine eventually reveals herself at a blogger meetup. She develops some very well-formed relationships with her readers, one of which is a little too well formed and it rattles her family substantially and tempts her to abandon the real life she’s created. But I’m not going to tell you what happens to Mr. Frog and Tadpole (her daughter).

Petite Anglaise (on Amazon.ca) by Catherine Sanderson.

Petite Anglaise (the blog)

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