The Inkwell
Bearing grease for the modern writing dynamo — thoughts on writing and publishing, particularly in the age of podcasting, print-on-demand, and electronic ink.
Before We Start the Episode
When I was podcasting, one of the design choices I pondered was the time in an episode devoted to what I called front-matter and back-matter — the times before and after the episode main subject, where what’s being conveyed is no longer the show but is rather about the show: thanking the contributors, sponsor reads, giving out website address and social media handles, etc.
Patching Text
Sources and thoughts on errors and corrections in text, and how layers of revision and correction actually make any writing more interesting.
Machines For Making Books
I’ve long been interested in automating the creation of books in multiple formats. I like to dream about a kind of black box, where you put your plain text book in one end, and out the other end comes a web version, a PDF, a Kindle or ePub version, or even a physical paperback edition — all from a single source text or data store.
Oxford Comma, Oxford Don
The Oxford comma, is not a rule; it is merely a thing — and I have a most ingenious and undeniable proof of this.
The Next Web Will Have Coins
We're going to need a new protocol -- a replacement for HTTP, actually. HTTP has words for "Give me the thing" and "Yes here's your thing" and "No your thing isn't here, it's been moved" but it doesn't have words for "Sure you can have it, that'll be ≥ $0.05 USD please". If subcompact publishing, which was all the rage at the end of 2012, is ever going to really get anywhere, then the common language of the web needs a way to send and receive pocket-change.
Long-Term Notes
I take another stab at describing my pet alternative model for online writing and commenting.
Be Strange
I tend to be more like Mr. Norrell; some nagging instinct tells me I ought to be more like Jonathan Strange.
Kindle & ePub Publishing Methods for Periodicals
Collected thoughts on methods for publishing serial content from blogs to Kindles and other ebook readers.
Harnessed to a Star
My thoughts on a letter Jack London sent to a young writer, and what it says about how, exactly, to make a beginning.
How to Write a Good Site
Have you ever wanted your site to be the one with the polka dots on the graph-paper diagram?