Working with Wormbase today, designing the system for their micropubs. Awesome fun! Latest workflow documented here:
Category: blog post
New Lappy
Got a new lappy as my other one was dying… I’m very hard on my laptops, dragging them around the world in all sorts of conditions. They usually fall apart after 1-2 years… anyways, with this one I’m looking to go full-vege with open source… Firefox and no Chrome/Chromium is the main new approach, and also I’m trying desperately not to log into google products (I have a google account as people send gdocs etc to me)… let’s see how far we get… Also, for the first time I installed Ubuntu with an encrypted hard disk and home partition… combined with PGP, VPN, and long passwords I’m following my own advice at long last….
Great Post by Arthur Attwell
Arthur Attwell is a friend and I’ve also been a fan of his work for a very long time (ever since his amazing work with Paperright https://story.paperight.com/author/arthurattwell/ ). He just posted an awesome post on Paged Media about his new project – Fire and Lion – and their paged media workflow…
Traveling Tips #2
Last year I wrote a short post on travel bags. Now, since I’m up in the air somewhere above California, I thought I’d write down a few more…this time about clothes….
First of all, by far the most important part of travel clothing is the hoodie…I never travel without one…it has some many purposes as to be essential for any trips, but particularly for long ones (12+ hours).
There are some choice qualities that make a good quality hoodie:
- not too heavy
- a good hood that you can easily pull down over your eyes
- zip pockets
- a little baggy
I like these features for the following reasons…first…one of the worst aspects of any journey happens at the beginning – security. It is such a pain. All that standing around, carrying your bags, waiting, waiting…then the inevitable unpacking of this and that into bins, squishing things into your bag etc etc… I found all this is made very much easier in large part by having a hoodie with zip pockets. When you are waiting in line and then you realise your pocket has change from the coffee you got on the way, and of course there is your passport, and your phone, plus maybe a boarding pass, and keys… whatever…. the flotsam and jetsam of travel detritus. While you are standing in line you can very easily just dump all this stuff into your hoodie zip pockets and zip them shut. Done and done… it sounds really stupid, I know, but it really takes a load of this part of the journey. You then just need to take off your hoodie and dump it in a tray.
Also, the good news is that you can easily find and retrieve your passport and ticket if you are asked again at the conveyer belt or scanner because you just unzip the pockets… awesome…
I also prefer a hoodie that is not too thick or hot. I can wear it in hot or cold, although mostly I want it for the plane which is often too cold. And if it is a little baggy it can feel almost like a blanket when I sleep. It is cosier to have a slightly baggier one in this situation.
Lastly, I can pull the hoodie over my eyes and block out the light which helps me sleep. It also helps me block out the world if I have been traveling a lot and just want some space.
Next, as far as clothes go… I always try and take a very lightweight pair of shoes I can slip on and off easily… mainly also for the security part. You can rocket through security of you can easily tug on your shoes as you go. On that note – try to avoid trousers that need a belt. That also is just a hassle when you have to take on and off for the scanner.
As for other clothes, I take as minimal as possible. I usually take the same stuff, doesn’t matter if it’s for 4 days or 3 months. My general principle is that you can use clothing stores as washing machines if you have to. Run out of clothes? Drop into the nearest store and buy some more…of course, that won’t appeal to everyone…but I’m a t-shirt and jeans kinda guy, so it works pretty well for me. It also makes a lot of sense to do this if you are traversing seasons… sometimes I can change seasons several times in one trip. So, rather than pack everything in at the beginning for each season, I sometimes just buy it when I get there. Sounds risky perhaps, but it has never caused me issues and helps me travel light.
Also, I always carry clothes washing liquid in case I have to hand wash things in hotel or airbnb wash basins…which is, by the way, a good argument for choosing airbnb-like accommodation over hotels – you generally have a washing machine handy.
As for what I actually take, I just fit in about a week’s worth of stuff. Roll it and cram it into my bag. It will usually come up to about 2/3 full which is just what I want. I can then fit stuff in as I buy it on the road…
Off to Toronto
Off to Toronto to meet with my buddy Tarek (https://shuttleworthfoundation.org/fellows/tarek-loubani/) to hatch some plans!
San Francisco tomorrow night to meet with Dan Morgan and sketch out more of the Collabra workflow (Cabbage Tree Meet), then a 2 day Coko strategy meet with Carly and Kristen, and then a one-day Wormbase workflow meet (also using the Cabbage Tree Method), then NZ on Friday.
Update: ah…unexpectedly, traveling back to San Francisco tonight as weather delayed my flights and I can’t make the tight window to Toronto 🙁 heading back to SF…will come back to see Tarek in March…darn…
Coko is looking for Node.js/ React devs
Let me know if you are interested or may know someone that is…
Report on the 1st Paged Media Community Meeting
INKE
Just presented at INKE in Victoria, BC (Canada). Awesome conference. Also here are some friends – Cameron Neylon, John Maxwell, and Juan Alperin. Great to see them. Also met Heather Joseph for the first time after hearing so many great things about her. Good times!
Presentation here:
Paged Media Photos
From yesterday. Will post also to pagedmedia.org
















Paged Media Initiative
Yesterday I presented at MIT Press.

Today, we had a truly amazing day today at MIT Press with the PagedMedia meeting. I’ll post some photos later on today, but in general, it went like this… First we had presentations from some very talented folks that use HTML and CSS to make books – showing how they did it and the results. You might think ‘wow… exciting times’… ha…but for me it was just fantastic. So many good folks and so much to learn from each. Then Julie Blanc and Fred Chasen did two awesome presentations on possible approaches to the problem. Finally we discussed these and agreed on the best path for now, and many people committed to various roles to get this all going…. Amazing…
Anyways…now in the Toronto airport, on my way to BC to do a presentation at INKE, introduced by my buddy John Maxwell…awesome!