20061126 Sunday November 26, 2006

The Art Of The Unique

"A Muse-poet falls in love, absolutely, and his true love is for him the embodiment of the Muse..."

---

I have a disease.
I am afflicted with a Muse!
She makes me write these words...

The mundane defines The Unique.

How can we identify The Unique?
How can we categorize its effect and value?
How can we nuture it?
When should it be supressed?

What does The Unique look like in a world of infinite differentiation?
Does it look like anything at all?

Ruth pulled me onto the dance floor. My hips couldn't sync with her motions; her blouse was too loose and her breast popped free. She quickly tucked it back in, mildly embarrassed but also happy and excited. Then I recognized her. She'd approached two weeks ago, stood near, watchful but hadn't followed through.

Erica stood out from the crowd, alone, perceptive, waiting. She moved from my far left to my near right and giggled when our eyes met twice. Then she stepped onto the dance floor.

She was... amazing. Her variety, flexibility, interpretation and change of pace were amazing. I've seen perhaps five women like this before. Once in 1984 at the Sasch in Studio City. Once at the FenixUnderground.

Erica was unique.

Ruth pulled me back to the dance floor but moved on to a better dancer, a more attractive man... until his boyfriend joined the fray.

But by then I was lost in thought...

"The Art Of The Unique"

Oh, My God.
I have a Muse.

I know the words, the mythology but I never felt it emotionally.

She is My Muse.

"The Art Of The Unique" sprang into my mind, inspired by her fear that she wasn't special. The S-curve begat the Miner, the Miner begat the Ideosphere, the Ideosphere begat the Cultural Diffusion.

Then the Diffusion merged with my Muse and begat "The Art Of the Unique".

I have a new venue.

( Nov 26 2006, 06:44:04 PM EST ) Permalink Comments [1]

20061124 Friday November 24, 2006

Updated Ideospheric Sampling Model

Recently I've used graphs from Google Trends, Nielson's Blogpulse and Alexa.com to bolster or refute trends which I've detected with MemeMiner.

Normal meme propagation tends to look like an S-curve over time.

As memes propagate over the Internet, they seep into different domains at different rates -

We can define three types of "avenues" -

1) Communication avenue which is the true vector of meme propagation like Dejanews.com, blogs or email.

2) Measurement avenues such as Alexa or Netcraft measure network flows.

3) Reference avenues catalog existing data. Reference avenues will always lag meme propagation.

My original graphs were based on one memetic entry point - Dejanews.com. In this three-part model, I'm sampling across a range of memetic propagation - a memetic entry point (a communication avenue like Dejanews.com, email or blogs), a measurement or feedback point like Alexa.com or Netcraft.com and a reference avenue like Google Trends or Wikipedia.


These sampling points may provide insight about why a meme is propagating, a trouble-shooting model if you will.



Note: "nothing" means "less than expected". The nature of propagation is that seepage (bleedover) will occur at different rates throughout the Ideosphere.


Sub-bandwidths of the Ideosphere can be categorized into five types -


An Ideospheric bandwidth (or "channel") either represents a certain meme (and its sub-memes) or it does not. If it represents a meme, it can denote either a positive or negative connotation. Unallocated bandwidth has three potential states -

a) bandwidth which was never exposed to the current meme

b) bandwidth which actively avoids the current meme

c) bandwidth which accepted the current meme and discarded it in favor of a more desirable meme.

Positive and negative connotations are detectable by associated keywords (i.e. a semantic map).





The cause of unallocated bandwidth is trickier to determine, particularly for memes are which actively avoided. Today's case-in-point is "deficit". In spite of massive increases in consumer credit, the Federal deficit and trade deficit, the general public avoids talk and thought of "deficits" -

The absence of information is often meaningful... if it can be detected.

( Nov 24 2006, 07:52:34 PM EST ) Permalink Comments [2]

20061123 Thursday November 23, 2006

Ideosphere Latencies

A graphical description of the MySpace Meme results. In this example, each of the S-curves represents the propagation of the "MySpace" meme through a particular avenue or channel:

We can define three types of "avenues" -

1) Communication avenue which is the true vector of meme propagation. We need an existing communication avenue like Dejanews.com, blogs or email to boostrap the meme propagation of a new meme like MySpace.com.

There are simultaneous communication avenues and the "MySpace meme" will appear on each of them (to some degree) and within a certain time range.

2) Measurement avenues such as Alexa or Netcraft measure network flows.

3) Reference avenues catalog existing data. The meme must already exist, get collected and cataloged and then referenced by a user. Reference avenues will always lag meme propagation.

So, we can assume that Google will always be a lagging indicator in regards to new memes. Blogpulse.com is probably a better predictor.

I'm working on a visio diagram of this "avenues & latency" theory based on set-theory but I don't have it all worked out yet.

( Nov 23 2006, 08:28:34 PM EST ) Permalink

20061122 Wednesday November 22, 2006

Ideospheric Interim Thoughts

I ate and dinner and wondered why the three Internet datasources in MySpace Meme Update are offset by so many months. Networks always have latency but seven months?

I have two crude Ideosphere models -

My High-Level Abstract Model
My Sampling Model

My goal is to look at the Internet from an holistic, high-level view. Most people, particularly its builders, see it from the ground up, from low-level bits and bytes assembled into silo structures.

Then I realized that the three datasources have external latencies. We can categorize them as three types -

1) Dejanews.com is a communication tool
2) Alexa.com is a measurement tool
3) Google Trends is a reference tool

A pure communication tool will always be the first to propagate a meme.

A measurement tool will always be coincident indicator, parallelling the growth of the meme.

A reference tool will always lag a meme because it is dependent upon a communication tool to propagate the meme initially.

MySpace.com is also a communication tool but it needed a pre-existing communication tool to boot-strap the propagation of its meme. Ergo, Dejanews.com leads MySpace.com because it existed first.

It makes perfect sense that these three data sources are lagged by a few months, one from the other.

I'll write this up better tomorrow with a simple time-lagged diagram.

( Nov 22 2006, 09:06:16 PM EST ) Permalink Comments [1]

MySpace Meme - Successful Prediction & Update

S-curve Methodology
Three-source Sampling Theory

In April 2006, I predicted that MySpace had topped out in rate of growth based on Dejanews keyword histograms.
Alexa and Google Trends confirm that prediction.

Dejanews.com shows a peak in January, 2006.
Alexa's traffic peaks in March, 2006.
Google Trends shows a peak in July, 2006.

Dejanews predicted the Alexa traffic change three months before it occurred.
Google's Trends tool, based on search items, lagged the change by four months.
Dejanews was a leading indicator while Google Trends was a lagging indicator.

My opinion - Fox probably paid top dollar for MySpace.com in July 2005 and MySpace is close to peaking in terms of total users & traffic.

( Nov 22 2006, 04:19:24 PM EST ) Permalink Comments [3]

20061121 Tuesday November 21, 2006

My Best Decision

I'm grateful, almost every day now, that I never had children.

I wouldn't have spent enough time with them.
I would have taught them the wrong things.
My brother has done a far better job than I would have.

( Nov 21 2006, 03:31:46 AM EST ) Permalink

20061119 Sunday November 19, 2006

Vogue At Ebb

The Vogue, social center of Seattle's Goth community, is closing its doors (as I suspected several months ago). Technically, it's changing to a new location, but in reality the Vogue is going

from
(7 days per week @ 5 hours per day) = 35 hours per week
to
(3 days per week @ 3.5 hours per day) or 10.5 hours per week

That's a net reduction of 70% of club time per week.
You won't hear those numbers from the Goth community, though.

I'll run a spider analysis of livejournal.com in the next few days that might show other changes in the LJ community. If information is increasingly specialized, then by inference that information must have an audience of decreasing size. Is there a point where information becomes too specialized and granular, where the cost of specialized information is greater than its worth?

Oh, well.
That's how it goes.

( Nov 19 2006, 12:39:21 PM EST ) Permalink Comments [1]

20061118 Saturday November 18, 2006

Mr. X

Mr X-aggeration, late forties, dressed as an African explorer, outlandish in the crowded pool hall. I was the only soul that talked with him.

He was back from South America where he'd been training mercenaries. I was considering a gig in Saudi and yes, he'd just been there, too.

But he was also an inventor, robbed by Micron and Nike of his greatest invention - the lighted shoe. He owned mining properties around the State, multiple houses across the Pacific Northwest, drove exotic cars and always carried "large quantities of kuggerands" in them, dated an olympic swimming champion...

but the best came last... his combat days as a Navy Seal.

He'd lost credibility since the Micron theft but I had fun with the conversation. We talked about women, how they coveted possessions and income (that part sounded true!) and he asked me how I handled that situation.

"I tell them the truth," I said.

"Which is?"

"I drive an Echo, I'm unemployed and I live with my parents!"

"Ahhhhh", he grinned, "I bet that sends them packing."

"Yup, except for crazier young ones!

"And aren't those the ones you really want, anyway?!!!"

We had a good chuckle over that.

( Nov 18 2006, 01:43:28 PM EST ) Permalink

20061117 Friday November 17, 2006

Trish

Small and slim isn't your average stripteaser's body. Perhaps her face and personality made up for it. I won six of our eight pool games but Trish destroyed me in Game 7 and I wondered if she'd thrown shots to build my ego. But to be fair, she was constantly distracted by calls and friends snapping phone cameras. We're probably digitized together now, forever surfing the Internet.

She was playing alone; small, determined, in a drab, unflattering t-shirt and jeans.

So drab that I wasn't sure she was female.
After all, it is a weird club full of strange sexual styles.

Then I noticed her familiarity with the club staff. Suspicions rose. I played this table last night. I've chatted with the staff, maybe too much. Perhaps she was laying in wait for me? Ten minutes passed before I suggested a game and the phone cameras started snapping during our second round.

My full name was googled from Boise addresses this week. Twice. I keep fairly tight hold of my identity, I rarely use credit cards. The number of Boise residents would even know to query my name is... very small. One recruiter, perhaps two HR reps, an Indian developer with my business card, a pharmacist.

I've been carded at four clubs, but two were cursory glances.. But this club wasn't one of them and the doorkeeper went over my license, thinking it was fake or expired. It seemed curious at the time.

It's easy to be paranoid in the Information Age, especially if you're one of the instigators.

I do wonder.

But I don't care, I like the place and I'll be back tonight and Saturday, too.
If a scheme is afoot, so be it.
I'd be more flattered than worried.

( Nov 17 2006, 05:32:48 PM EST ) Permalink Comments [1]

20061116 Thursday November 16, 2006

Teresa

Some people bring out your best game.
Some people give you quagmires.

I won six of six games against a large ex-marine. But it wasn't so one-sided, each game was clean and close. Jason had me stone cold in Game 5, but I ran the table with two low-percentage shots and he flexed his big fists in frustration.

"DAMN. I just can't beat you!"

Jason brought out my six best games.

After Jason came "The Dancer".
Did I imagine her interest?
Her hair masked her face, but the skin-tight pants revealed enough.
Did we make eye contact?
Did she dance too close to my chair?
Did she face me too often?

Then Teresa. What do you say when a young, attractive chick makes an unsolicited introduction while her boyfriend waits nearby? Maybe the relationship was more casual than I'd thought. She wanted to know too much too soon and afterwards, she watched me too closely and too often.

The dancer was a mystery but Teresa was not. :)

( Nov 16 2006, 11:32:53 AM EST ) Permalink

20061114 Tuesday November 14, 2006

Zune Meme - Successful Prediction (so far)

My prediction (originally from July, 2006): "Microsoft's iPod competitor, Zune, is still not picking up mindshare or buzz traction"

From Yahoo News: "Zune music player's slow first day no surprise...the Zune investment may take years to bear fruit"

My original prediction mentioned deliberate memetic manipulation as a possible marketing tool and behold...

"What the pro-Zune cabal that runs Digg's censorship committee doesn't want you to know is that the Zune is in serious sales trouble. That's a problem that no amount of fake and anonymous blogs can cover up, no matter how much disinformation they spew."

( Nov 14 2006, 05:42:24 PM EST ) Permalink Comments [2]

Replicant Meme Analysis

Deckard: "I have had people walk out on me before, but not when I was being so charming."

( Nov 14 2006, 01:14:06 AM EST ) Permalink

20061112 Sunday November 12, 2006

TheHousingBubbleBlog Meme & Analysis

S-curve Methodology
Three-source Sampling Theory

I worked Casey Serin over so I thought I'd search the opposite case for differences; perhaps for a psychological indicator of where we are in the housing market crash cycle.

Declining traffic for TheHousingBubbleBlog.com implies that the public is getting bored with housing crash details (or entering a new state of denial). Blogpulse.com confirms the trend -



But Google Trends shows there's still strong interest in a "housing bubble".



So I dreamed up the brilliant idea of comparing "housing bubble" queries against "housing crash" queries.
In theory, they should be a matched set, right?
For every bubble, there's a crash.
But human psychology is in play here -



A period of denial seems to take place in the second half of 2005, just prior to crash. For comparison, I ran Dejanews.com graphs on "housing bubble" versus "housing crash" and these bandwidths have better synchronicity -



This entry is already too complicated.
I'll make a second entry with additional graphs but my best guess is that -

( Nov 12 2006, 07:15:42 PM EST ) Permalink Comments [2]

20061111 Saturday November 11, 2006

New Daily Hit Count High

Thanks mostly to China but Casey Serin and TheHousingBubbleBlog put me over the top!

No, wait!
I was already over the top! :)

I blew it on Thursday night. A coed approached me on the dance floor, asked my name and began complimenting me. She'd noticed me from a few days ago (not hard to do consider how out-of-place I must be in a college dance club, ho ho!). But my mind was elsewhere, it was almost closing and I didn't follow through.

But I re-iterate my prediction that I will end up with a woman that's half my age!
Maybe TWO of them!

Creepy, I know.
But it seems to be the cards.

So I'm off, maybe I'll get another chance at her, yo ho ho.

( Nov 11 2006, 10:26:39 PM EST ) Permalink

Rumsfeld Meme

Methodology
Other Examples of "Cool vs Evil"

For entertainment purposes only!
Maybe his resignation was predictable!

Comparison of blog sites which contain "Rumsfeld" and "good" against sites which contain "Rumsfeld" and "evil" -

( Nov 11 2006, 04:32:57 PM EST ) Permalink Comments [1]


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