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I asked Jason Kottke to talk about the creative process for how he goes about collecting information for kottke.org. Perhaps my first encounter with Jason’s name was in a magazine article about full-time bloggers. Jason is a soft spoken person and I appreciated his calm style of presentation. He began with the assertion, “There’s a lot of misinformation out there. It makes our world unnecessarily complex.” By Jason’s estimate, there is about 7.1 quadrillion bytes generated each day by newspapers all around the world. I was surprised to learn about Jason’s strong need to maintain editorial integrity by being sure to verify his posts by checking multiple sources. I gravitate to Jason’s blog for its simplicity, and I was happy to learn of his care to instill trust in his readership.

He scans about 100 online pages and 100 real pages with a requisite “one poem per day.” This latter comment was truly poetic–pun intended. But he said that his best posts are usually found randomly through serendipity. It seems that there are a variety of random URL generator sites out there which after a few casts of the die I understood Jason’s point quite clearly.

Finally, I was excited to hear that he generally blogs with “a couple longer posts with eight shorter posts.” Jason’s site feels fairly unstructured but seems to work extremely well. I didn’t realize that it was because he has a clear sense of how each post is organize-d. It is this simple combination of trust and organization that underlies his journey to “find out what the Web is saying about the world.”

This entry was posted on Sunday, September 10th, 2006 at 7:47 pm and is filed under 2/ organize, 8/trust, event. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One Response to “Simplicity Symposium: Part 4”


  1. […] Hier ein paar bilder von der ars electronica. Filme zu den einzelnen projekten sind bei Tobias zusammengestellt, und ein paar abschließende gedanken bei Tim und Tobias zu finden. Schade, dass wir so manchen vortrag verpasst haben. […]

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