The Patchwork Years

July 7th, 2008 | brainjuice

The years 2001-2007, approximately, on the web were the crazy years. The patchwork years. The years the web was massively and chaotically pumped full of Stuff. 1995-2001 were pretty crazy, of course, but they were checked by connection speed and the limitations of personal publishing. By 2002, broadband was happening over a broader swathe of the world, and blogging had bitten in. Followed by the takeup of bit torrent, YouTube, podcasting, and every other damn thing.

One of the few sane responses to this explosion of production was to assume the role of curator. (Other sane responses include moving to the woods and considering a completion of the work Ted Kaczynski started.) The two most famous examples of same are Jorn Barger’s Robot Wisdom (est. 1997) — Barger is said to have coined the term "weblog" — and Mark Frauenfelder’s Boing Boing (est. 2000 as a weblog, previously a print magazine est. 1988), co-produced for much of its life by Cory Doctorow, David Pescovitz, and Xeni Jardin. The latter, in particular, has spawned countless imitators, all deeply involved in doing the web-work of 2001-2007 — sorting out all the weird crap that’s out there and re-presenting it in some kind of ordered and aesthetically or politically filtered manner for our consideration.

My own filter, on the site diepunyhumans.com from 2002-2004 before I moved that side of things to warrenellis.com, was simply gathering research material. It had occurred to me that if I gathered my internet-based research on to a searchable database — something as simple as a blog — I’d have access to it anywhere I could get an internet connection. Which, for someone who usually travels with mobile devices, was kind of a big deal. And so I’ve found myself calling up reference through a Web TV five thousand miles from home while writing on a Treo handheld device and foldout keyboard in order to meet a deadline, before now.

In the shift from there to warrenellis.com, I’ve taken great pleasure in reporting the doings of my network of mad and beautiful acquaintances, further personalising the curation process. But it is, regardless, a curation process.

Anyway. That’s been the job of half the web, for the last several years — collating links from the other half of the web. Last year, I started getting a little itchy about this.

Wouldn’t it be nice if we could stand up now and say, okay, these are the post-curation years? The world does not need another linkblog. What is required, frankly, is what we’re supposed to call “content” these days. When I were a lad, back in the age of steam, we called this “original material.” Put another way: we like it when Cory and Xeni are the copy/paste editors for the internet, but we like it better when Cory writes a book and Xeni makes an episode of BoingBoingTV.

(In fact, if you read any of the abhorrent comments threads on BoingBoing, you could be forgiven for coming away with the notion that its readership would be happy if it shut down tomorrow.)

(It’s also notable, I think, that my favourite “new” groupblogs — Ectomo, Coilhouse, Inferior4+1 — don’t just link and go. But anyway.)

And, frankly, no-one’s going to do a better job of being the internet’s copy/paste editors than the BB crew anyway. They have the time, they have the money, they have the setup, they have the audience and they have the momentum of nearly a decade in the job. Nobody needs another linkblog like that. There are already thousands of them. The job of curation is being taken care of. Look ahead.

The weblog has evolved to the point where, today, it’s possibly the most effective way of transmitting material that any of us could have imagined. Look at Tumblr. It’s the easiest thing in the world for writers to use — and also artists, photographers, videographers, spoken-word artists, musicians and a dozen other things. Imagine a jewellery maker, a laptop musician, a performance artist, a cartoonist and a short-story writer getting together on a single Tumblr to make themselves an internet channel. The tools are all there, baked right into the site for free. Not groupblogging so much as groupcasting.

And with a million people all madly curating the web — in many cases, trying to put your link in their curational record before someone else does — getting linked up isn’t exactly hard any more. These aren’t the days of begging for space on someone’s jumpstation anymore.

The above is, as Simon Reynolds puts it, “not fully baked.” I want to come back to this once I’ve cleared this flu out of my system — which is why I have this bottle of whisky — and cleared out some of the work backlog.

24 Responses to “The Patchwork Years”

  1. After Patchwork…

    The spores of discontent have infected the nervous system of Warren Ellis, driving him to higher ground so that they may burst open his skull and spread their meme sequences upon the wind:
    That’s been the job of half the web, for the last several…

  2. […] can read the rest of this blog post by going to the original source, here […]

  3. Warren Ellis, Reddit and Digg Will Destroy The Internet…

    So, there’s a nicely over-stated title to get me rolling……

  4. […] Three: Warren Ellis on the shape of the internet circa: now. […]

  5. […] Warren Ellis reminded us today that content is what makes the internet a place of mad and wonderful …, not link blogs. […]

  6. […] Warren Ellis » The Patchwork Years This is an idea I want to revisit. I know a number of very creative people, and see no reason why a bunch of us should not get together and make something clever. (tags: blogging content) […]

  7. […] The Patchwork Years: […]

  8. […] Warren Ellis » The Patchwork Years “The world does not need another linkblog.” [via JimRay] […]

  9. […] lot of people have been linking to Warren’s post “The Patchwork Years“. I thought you might be interested in something I emailed him back in January, which is my […]

  10. […] Warren Ellis » The Patchwork Years (tags: blogging internet curation content) […]

  11. […] • Warren Ellis: “The world does not need another linkblog.” […]

  12. […] The Patchwork Years - “Wouldn’t it be nice if we could stand up now and say, okay, these are the post-curation years? The world does not need another linkblog. What is required, frankly, is what we’re supposed to call “content” these days.” a rather good rant this. […]

  13. […] The Patchwork Years - “Wouldn’t it be nice if we could stand up now and say, okay, these are the post-curation years? The world does not need another linkblog. What is required, frankly, is what we’re supposed to call “content” these days.” a rather good rant this. […]

  14. […] Posted by jaycruz on July 13, 2008 The Patchwork Years […]

  15. […] Ellis has called for an end to linkblogs. Maybe the whole Boing Boing vs Violet Blue thing soured him — I know it soured me. […]

  16. […] sense that they do their thing for the love of it. The original impetus for this site can be found here. Submissions are welcome and encouraged. Send us what floats your boat. To the observers: hopefully […]

  17. […] stuff - and they obviously still fill a gap or two. Warren even went as far as saying we should leave them to do all the curating for us, like they’re WALL-E and we don’t get enough exercise and er… ok I see his point: […]

  18. […] that they found more amenable to their sensibilities.  Anyways, I think Warren Ellis’ post, The Patchwork Years, is a good read and perspective antidote to comment wars and the general philocentric ennui on the […]

  19. […] LINK […]

  20. […] a new feature, “Must Reads,” which is a linkblog of unannotated news stories. Unlike Warren Ellis, I like linkblogs because it provides pointers to a lot of information that I don’t feel bad […]

  21. […] Warren Ellis argues that we have come through to the end of the age of blogging he calls “The … Does this mean original content will make a comeback? […]

  22. […] in my editorial stance, propelled by two excellent reads from the month - Warren Ellis’s post The Patchwork Years, and the Big Contrarian’s […]

  23. […] future of science fiction; the future of the internet and its content. In answer to a piece called The Patchwork Years, which looked at the shift from curation sites to sites which produce original content, five of us […]

  24. […] Ellis on the new cultural crisis: The years 2001-2007, approximately, on the web were the crazy years. The patchwork years. The […]

Travis Louie Curates ?Monster?? in LA

Coilhouse - 10 Jul 09


Mommy-Four-Legs by Zoetica, part of the Monster show in LA

Calling all Angel City residents! This Saturday, Corpo Nason gallery in Santa Monica is hosting Monster?, a group art exhibit curated by artist and Issue 01 contributor Travis Louie. The show includes several Coilhouse featured artists and friends. The lineup includes the following:

Jessica Joslin, Molly Crabapple, Audrey Kawasaki, Kris Kuksi, Ron English, Zoetica Ebb, Jordu Schell, Femke Hiemstra, Tessar Lo, Martin Wittfooth, Chet Zar, Amanda Visell, Ana Bagayan, Annie Owens, Attaboy, Bill Basso, Bob Eggleton, Brandt Peters, Brian Despain, Brom, Chris Ryniak, Dan Quintana, Ekundayo, Dave Chung, Dave DeVries, Davey Wong, Deseo, Dice Tsutsumi, Donato Giancola, Francesco LoCastro, Fred Harper, Heidi Taillefer, Isabel Samaras, James Zar, Jason D’Aquino, Kirk Reinert, Kris Lewis, David Stoupakis, Lola, Mari Inukai, Mark Texiera, Mark Garro, Mike Lee, Mike Knapp, Miles Teves, Nash Dunnigan, Nouar, Peter Nguyen, Robert Mackenzie, Stephen Hickman, Steve Ellis, Steve Price, Vince Natale, Tim O’Brien, Tristan Elwell, Vincent DiFate, Willie Real, Vincent Nguyen and Xiaoqing Ding.

Travis Louie told Erratic Phenomena that many of the artists he chose for the show come from a background of production design- creators whose work is often not recognized the same way that most people can readily identify fine artists. Louie told EP, “we usually see their names in the closing credits of a motion picture, but don’t really know what they actually did for the film we were watching ? or as illustrators, we see their work as book cover illustrations, or in magazines like Rolling Stone, Time, Playboy, etc., but the beauty of what they’ve done is taken for granted.”

As an added bonus, the elusive and legendary Kogi taco truck will be there to represent! You may even receive a sneak glimpse of Issue 03 if you find us at the event (and it will be unveiled on this site sometime in the next 10 days). See you there!


Post tags: Art, Events, Self-Aggrandizement

Buy Me Now

The Reverse Cowgirl - 10 Jul 09

Is this a significant object? I wrote a story about this pin as part of a project. Now, you can win the story and the pin on eBay. A talented, creative writer invents a story about an object. Invested with new significance by this fiction, the object should -- according to our hypothesis -- acquire not merely subjective but objective value. How to test our theory? Via eBay! Read all about it here

TONIGHT: Nuclear Religion Art Opening at Strychnin in Berlin

Ectoplasmosis - 10 Jul 09

poster_web.jpg

flyer_web_back.jpg

I’ll be attending this, eating all their snacks, and then heading to this finissage at Foto-Shop.

Baman and Piderman Make da Band

Ectoplasmosis - 10 Jul 09

A Brutal Sunday Morning

Ectoplasmosis - 10 Jul 09

deathmetalcomics.jpg

A page of newspaper comic titles by an unknown graphic designer. Completely metal.

More Like Cuddlefish, Am I Right?

Ectoplasmosis - 10 Jul 09

cuttlefish.jpg

This delicious little vicious has been advertised on Ectomo for quite a while, and I’ve only now gotten around to perusing the rest of the squid, octopi, cuttlefish and jellyfish jewelry at Noadi’s shop. It’s quite adept, very affordable, and extremely cute.

So on the off chance that ad-blindness has obscured these wee guys from your clicking fingers, do give them a look. Their ads have supported Ectomo for ages now, so I figured they deserved at least a mention.

steamsquid.jpg
Behold, the fearsome steamsquid, driven only by clockwork and the urge to strangle, sucker, and beak!

Noadi’s Shop [Etsy]

[Additional: if you are interested in advertising on Ectomo (and we’ve been getting far more requests, lately) the best and easiest way to do it is through Project Wonderful. We’ve been using PW for years, on the advice of a reader, and it’s been an excellent little system for we somewhat-non-internet-business-oriented persons. You can also email us directly.]

This Week at MoCo Loco

Jean Snow - 09 Jul 09

Hope Forever Blossoming

This week’s Tokyo post for MoCo Loco is up, this time covering D-BROS‘ Hope Forever Blossoming flower vases, Harac’s Casta, I’mD’s Bew kitchen tray and mat, and a Sori Yanagi retrospective at the Yokohama Museum of Art.

SoundExchange

jwz - 09 Jul 09

I can't make any sense of what this new SoundExchange settlement actually means for DNA Lounge. Is someone going to come knocking on my door asking for an additional $25,000 per year because of our webcasts? Given that A) we are already paying ASCAP/SESAC/BMI for them, and B) the webcasts produce zero revenue. If you think you understand this crap, please explain it to me...

The Robotic Head of Albert Einstein Teaches Itself to Smile.

jwz - 09 Jul 09

And Soon It Will Destroy You.

To begin teaching the robot, the researchers stuck Einstein in front of a mirror and instructed the robot to "body babble" by contorting its face into random positions. A video camera connected to facial recognition software gave the robot feedback: When it made a movement that resembled a "real" expression, it received a reward signal.



THE DAY IN TWEETS:

Matt Fraction - 09 Jul 09

  • the department of law is, literally, my oyster #
  • little man you are the best #
  • welcome to earth, Harper Jinsoo Moorhead. i am so glad you were ready today to get berfed. #