June 20, 2008

A very sad day for Berkeley: Cody's Bookstore closes

I have been a longtime fan of Cody's Books in Berkeley. It was a great independent bookstore with a big selection and very knowledgeable salespeople that supported local authors. It also brought a lot of great speakers to Berkeley, many of whom I had the privilege of hearing talk in a small, intimate space, and many of whose visits resulted in posts on this weblog. It was one of the institutions that enriched the city, kept it intellectually stimulating, and made it a great place to live.

I subscribe to Cody's weekly events email, and today, I received this very sad email

After 52 years, Cody's Books will shut its doors effective June 20, 2008. The Berkeley bookstore has been a beacon to readers and writers throughout the nation and across the world. Founded by Fred and Pat Cody in 1956, Cody's has been a Berkeley institution and a pioneer in the book business, helping to establish such innovations as quality paperbacks and in-store author readings. Throughout the 1960s and 70s, Cody's was a landmark of the Free Speech movement and was a home away from home for innumerable authors, poets and readers.

The Board of Directors of Cody's Books made this difficult decision after years of financial distress and declining sales.

According to Cody's president, Hiroshi Kagawa, "[It] is a heartbreaking moment…in the spring of 2005 when I learned about the financial crisis facing Cody's, I was excited to save the store from bankruptcy. Unfortunately, my current business is not strong enough or rich enough to support Cody's. Of course, the store has been suffering from low sales and the deficit exceeds our ability to service it."

"When I met Cody's 25 years ago, I was a freelance journalist, enraptured by its books and atmosphere. It means so much to me and I apologize to the people who have supported Cody's for not being able to keep this landmark independent bookstore open. Cody's is my treasure and more than that, Cody's is a real friend of Berkeley community and will be missed."

Cody's would like to thank all of our loyal customers for their years of patronage.

This is a sad day for book lovers and for Berkeley.

Posted by tbishop61 at 09:31 PM | TrackBack (0)

February 20, 2008

Etech in our own backyard

I'm an long time devotee of ETech, the OReilly conference devoted to Emerging Technologies, but unfortunately, I won't be able to make it to San Diego this year. However, I was delighted to find that Berkeley is holding the academic equivalent of ETech here in Berkeley. Called the Berkeley EECS Annual Research Symposium, or BEARS for short, it is a day when the Berkeley Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department shows off its stuff. The event is not well publicized, and appears to be targeted largely at the companies who sponsor research at Berkeley, but it is open to the public, and free. I've gone to the event in the past, and if the past is anything to judge by, it should be fascinating. The full program is available online, but highlights from the morning include Boing Boing editor David Pescovitz quizzing the faculty members on how new technologies will disrupt traditional industries and Wired Magazine editor Adam Rogers quizzing them on what technological innovations will create new industries. The afternoon is devoted to open houses at the various research labs -- you can go to labs you never knew existed in downtown Berkeley and see the wonderful and wacky things that very bright grad students are working on.

Check it out. Highly recommended.

Posted by tbishop61 at 02:49 PM | TrackBack (0)

March 25, 2006

More Berkeley Bumper Stickers





Like my fellow Berkeley resident Tracey Taylor, I have a facination with the bumper stickers of Berkeley. It is hard to imagine another town with as varied and pointed a display as I see around me in Berkeley. I can almost always count on a chuckle at seeing a new one as I walk to work. I ran across two this month which seemed worth sharing. The first was seen on the front windshield of a van in Andronico's Park and Rob parking lot, "Buck Fush." The second, "Time to Impeach: For a Blown Job" was spotted on on a car (not a Volvo) parked in a driveway near my work.




Enjoy.

Posted by tbishop61 at 11:04 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

March 20, 2006

Berkeley Cybersalon: Journalism vs. blogging = Yawn


Berkeley Cybersalon


Sylvia Paull has a gift for getting smart people together, and tonight's Berkeley Cybersalon was evidence of that. The panel she put together on journalism and blogging included John Markoff from the NYT, bloggers
Jory des Jardins and Lisa Stone from Blogher, journoblogger Steve Gillmor, and analyst Joshua Greenbaum. She made a very curious choice for moderator, neoconservative Andrew Keen, who recently made a stir in the blogosphere with his defense of elitism, and who, judging from his blog, seems to be attempting a Camille Paglia-like rise in the neoconservative movement by finding them a new whipping boy, in this case Web 2.0 utopians. It is not often someone that partisan can be a good moderator -- but in his case we didn't get the chance to find out if he could or not. As interesting and talented as the panel were the bloggers and journalists in the crowd -- during the course of the evening journobloggers Dan Farber of ZDNET and Scott Rosenberg of Salon, Tom Foremsky of SiliconValleyWatcher, newly minted blogger Alan Saracevic of the SF Chronicle, blogger Mary Hodder, soon to be former blogger Dave Winer and not yet blogging local editor Becky O'Malley of my beloved Berkeley Daily Planet, were heard from. Unfortunately, the result of all this brainpower assembled under one roof for a couple of hours was, in the end, a yawn. Sylvia's gift for getting people together isn't matched with skills at moderating group discussions, and she hijacked the moderator's position midway through the discussion, and the conversation scattered into a series of random non-sequiturs. Tonight's Berkeley Cybersalon ended up being reminiscent of a badly led graduate seminar with a bunch of really bright people mostly talking to themselves, trying to score points off each other, or trying to impress the professor, instead of having the focused discussion I had hoped for.

The evening started of with Sylvia Paull pointing out all the important people in the audience, a practice which I find elitist, implying as it does that the other people in the audience aren't worth introducing, and ironic, given the topic of tonight's conversation. To be fair to her, it may just be her way of trying to introduce people to each other, but I find it distasteful.


Berkeley Cybersalon


The first (prepared) question went to the panel, about the role of elitism in the media, and it generated some thoughtful and thought-provoking responses. Joshua Greenbaum and Lisa Stone talked about the dual meaning of the word elite, closed club vs. expert. Greenbaum said that in the sense of expert, everyone in the room is an elitist, and big media is elitist, of course. It has to be, and we want to have sources of information that are expert, and we want expert processes for gathering and disseminating information. Stone talked about the difference between the two as being like Daddy (mainstream media) and Mommy (blogs) fighting -- big media requires limited number of people to work together to get news out daily -- the blogoshpere has great tools for distributing work, but the two are more alike than different. She has more details on her blog. Steve Gillmor pointed out that he has written for both, and he doesn't see a significant difference between them at the end of the day. "Some say blogs don't have editors -- wrong, we have thousands of editors who fact check our ass every day". John Markoff talked about his training as social scientist in power structure research. He spent his time as a scientist connecting the dots of power, and believed that power resided in institutions. But now the institutions of big media are under lots of pressure. As a funny aside, he noted that he thinks he knows who his audience is -- 45 or older people who read newspapers, including a significant fraction that thinks they run the country (as opposed to the folks who read the WSJ who really do run the country). Markoff also posed an interesting question, coming from a self-described former internet utopian. He pointed out that internet technology has flourished at a time of the greatest concentration of wealth in our history, and people say the net is democratizing influence, but he can see little evidence of that. Has participation in the political process increased? Not that he can see. "Everybody has a voice, yes, but does that mean that more people participate?" Harking back to the works of Herbert Marcuse, he wondered if the internet is a substitute for sex in the original Marcusian paradigm of institutionalized desublimation of libidinal energies supporting the status quo. I found that a really interesting question, but unfortunately no one followed up on it. Jory des Jardins talked about the joy of blogging after being in the magazine business "blogging allows me to write about what I want to write about."

The next prepared question went to the crisis of big media today, and wether it was a result of online media? There was a wide consensus that big media is in an economic crisis, brought on by pressure to improve profits by Wall Street, and by eroding profits from Craigslist and other online advertising. Someone had an interesting point about mentality of "everything always free". What happens to the economics of information when for $19.99 a month, people feel they have the right to all the information on the planet, no matter what it costs producers to produce it, or what intellectual property rights have been embodied in it? Later, Steve Gillmor opinioned that while the business model what currently screwed up, finding the right information has never been more valuable. He argued that what is coming is the inversion of the search engine model -- instead we will be signalling the people who have products information about our interests. There was less consensus about what other crisis media was in. Markoff asserted that while profits are down, there are fewer columns, stories are shorter, the writing is a little bland, but circulation hadn't changed that much. By contrast Lisa Stone spoke about her work with American Lawyer in bringing in better content from legal bloggers. She thought there was a crisis of quality, and that users were looking around for better quality.


Berkeley Cybersalon

Then the discussion got interrupted by Paull, who popped up in the back of the room with a microphone and called upon to the moderator to cut off one of the panelists, and when he failed to do so, did so herself, and took over the moderator role. She called upon Dave Winer to speak, and he started haranguing Markoff about having promised to write some story about Winer 6 years ago, and not doing so. After letting Winer go on and on, she walked around the room Sally Jesse Raphael style, calling on random people to make comments. Some people had some interesting things to say, but most of them didn't talk to each other's points, so that was the end of organized, focused discussion. There were some interesting tidbits:

  • Dan Farber talked about blogging having brought the means of production of information to the hands of the people, but that we still need to develop mechanisms for reputation and filtering.
  • Jory des Jardins and Lisa Stone talked about the popular success (and hinted at the financial success) of Blogher. They have launched a community effort with 60 editors, they are covering issues like single motherhood in depth, issues which are not being covered anywhere else. Women's voices being heard -- telling stories about themselves (they might be interested in Madeleine Kahn's new book). Blogs are creating experts of everybody. They also pointed out advertising-wise that women do most of the consumer buying in our society.
  • Adina Levin, visting from Texas, talked about the practical power of citizen reporting and connecting citizen to citizen during Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath.
  • Markoff had a couple more funny asides. He revealed that Becky O'Malley had been his first editor, and talked about growing up reading IF Stone, whom he called the first blogger.
  • Alan Saracevic plaintatively noting that the economic model is falling apart for journalists and bloggers. We need some way for journalists, however defined, to have enough financial support to write.

Towards the end of the evening, there was an extraordinary exchange between Andrew Keen and Scott Rosenberg. Keen reprised the argument from his weekly standard article, defending traditional elite media from the Web 2.0 barbarians at the gate. From his article:

the danger of the Web 2.0 cult of creative self-realization calling for the most poorly educated and inarticulate amongst us--can and should use digital media to express and realize themselves. Web 2.0 "empowers" our creativity, it "democratizes" media, it "levels the playing field" between experts and amateurs. ... Without an elite mainstream media, we will lose our memory for things learnt, read, experienced, or heard. ... The consequences of Web 2.0 are inherently dangerous for the vitality of culture and the arts. ... Traditional "elitist" media is being destroyed by digital technologies. Newspapers are in freefall. Network television, the modern equivalent of the dinosaur, is being shaken by TiVo's overnight annihilation of the 30-second commercial. ... The purpose of our media and culture industries--beyond the obvious need to make money and entertain people--is to discover, nurture, and reward elite talent. Our traditional mainstream media has done this with great success over the last century.

I don't think that Keen's argument holds water, and it seems like a red herring at best -- complaining about digital media and the democratization of the means of production is like complaining about the effect of the advent of the steam engine on horses, or parents complaining about the music their children listen to, but Scott Rosenberg, who in my personal encounters with him has always seemed extremely level headed, stood up and gave a great and impassioned defense of the need for and value of self-expression, both as the fulfillment of human need that is valuable for itself, and as the motivation for everything from technological progress to great literature. It was a great mini-speech that I can't do justice to here, not having an article to crib from, but that moved me and brought a round of applause from the audience.

So there were lots of smart people, and lots of interesting little moments, but at the end of the night I walked out with a sense of disappointment for what could have been. With those panelists and that audience, I would much rather have discussed:

  • John Markoff's question as to whether increased ability to publish leads to increased participation in the political process (and if not, why not, and how can we fix it).
  • Dan Farber's question of how to build new mechanisms for reputation to help people select content and decide how much to trust it.
  • Alan Saracevic and everybody else's question of what kind of economic and business models exist or can be created to finance anybody, Journalists or Bloggers, working full-time to create content.
  • My related question of how to create new and interesting ways to filter and sort through content, now that the cost of gathering and distributing information isn't the primary filtering mechanism.

Instead, we ended up with the tired old fight that some never tire of rehashing: Journalists vs. bloggers. Perhaps entertaining for some, but for me, it was as Shakespeare expressed himself once "a tale, Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing."

Full size photos of the CyberSalon on Flickr. Other people's impressions: Scott's report sounds similar to mine, while panelist Steve Gillmor had a very different reaction.

Cross posted from Geodog.

Posted by Geodog at 01:46 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

February 20, 2006

Berkeley Cybersalon hosts Radio Geeks




Tonight I went to a Berkeley CyberSalon panel on the future of Radio and saw a very different crowd than your usual tech event. While the Pre-Supernova party I went to Thursday was mostly under-40 crowd, the Berkeley CyberSalon was almost all over-40, some of it well over. Tim Pozar, Roger Coryell, Carol Pierson, and Gregg McVicar, had an interesting conversation about the decline of radio, with some great details of Berkeley history from the audience (the emcee of the first Grateful Dead show in Berkeley and the person who set up the first live internet broadcast of a protest had good stories to tell). Alas, I fear radio geeks may be a dying breed, as the demographics of this audience might indicate. I was surprised at how little most of them (Roger Coryell was the exception) talked about what was happening with internet radio and podcasting. The ominous shadow cast by the RIAA seems to have mostly taken it off the table for "legitimate radio", and the monopoly ownership of broadcasting encouraged since 1996 and the political climate seem to be killing off all but lowest common denominator radio (my conclusion, not the panel's conclusion).

Once again, an interesting discussion at the Berkeley CyberSalon, and I am grateful to Sylvia Paull and Jeff Ubois for putting them on in my backyard. Someday I'll have to join the Hillside Club.

Posted by tbishop61 at 01:55 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

November 24, 2005

Local Berkeley author Madeleine Kahn's new book published

Local Berkeley author Madeleine Kahn's new book, Why Are We Reading Ovid's Handbook on Rape? Teaching and Learning at a Women's College, is finally out in paperback. You can buy it at Amazon, directly from the publisher, or from Berkeley's own Cody's Books. I've created a web site for Madeleine Kahn (the author), where you can read reviews of the book, see where her book tour will take her next, or peek at some of the essays she has been working on since she wrote Why Are We Reading Ovid's Handbook on Rape? Teaching and Learning at a Women's College.

Susan Ito, a former student of Madeleine's, put on a great book party as part of her Shepherd's Canyon Writers series to celebrate the paperback publication. I was there, and managed to get a few pictures of Madeleine Kahn giving her book talk. There are more pictures available to family members at TheBishop.Net photogallery.

Congratulations Madeleine!

Posted by tbishop61 at 12:01 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

September 12, 2005

How to help the Red Cross in the Berkeley/Oakland area

Copied from another East Bay Blog, where I am a contributing writer, the Beast Blog:

Gwen writes:

I went to a training session at the Red Cross today and wanted to share some information, in case readers are interested in volunteering:

The Red Cross needs all the volunteers they can get to help victims of Hurricane Katrina. They will continue to need help at least through the beginning of 2006. Even if you can only come in a couple hours a month, that's a couple less hours they need to fill.

** They have extended hours and are open seven days a week due to the crisis.
Most of the work requires minimal skills (if you are able to view this on your computer, you are skilled enough).

Oakland in particular needs help, as they're one of the eleven call centers in the country that field calls to the national toll-free number from people affected by the hurricane who need assistance finding water, food, shelter, medicine, etc.

General volunteer intake is from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily; times for phone training sessions for local and national response are also offered in the evening and listed below.

You DO NOT NEED TO REGISTER to attend a training session, just show up.

The Oakland Red Cross offices are at 3901 Broadway @ 40th Street in Oakland, near MacArthur BART station and on the 51 line.
1. Response center training (fielding calls to the national toll-free number from clients in the south who need immediate referrals to ground support) is daily at 10 a.m., 2 p.m., and 6 p.m.
** There is special need for volunteers who are fluent in Spanish or French.

2. Local phone bank training (answering calls from locals who want to make donations or volunteer) is daily at 8 a.m., noon, and 4 p.m.

3. They also need help around the office -- data entry and standard administrative work, copying and whatever else needs doing -- to fill in for the regular staff and volunteers who've gone down south. There is currently no training or organized intake for this; I was told that the best way to help with this is to go down there and make yourself useful.

4. If you are interested in on-site work in the affected regions, more information about conditions and a self-assessment are available at:
http://www.bayarea-redcross.org/topnav/vol/volkatrina.htm
[scroll down to 'Disaster Assignment work']

Elsewhere: there are 10 chapters within the SF Bay Area chapter alone [mostly central/east Bay Area] and from what I understand, all chapters nation-wide need help with their local phone banks and office work, contact them directly:

SF Bay Area chapter http://www.bayarea-redcross.org/topnav/about/offices.htm

Thanks, Gwen!

Posted by Geodog at 02:06 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)