turing complete user - notes for a guide

Thanks to Olia Lialina for giving a name to what we're always preaching around here: General Purpose User or Turing Complete User. Let's call this person a TCU. (Not Texas Christian University.)
This is a person somewhere between the programmer/designer/hacker sneering at naive users and the inept clod most "apps" are designed for.
To give some examples from my own blogging experience:

Being a TCU means you can find my email address on the site, even though I don't have a large button that hooks into your email program.
A TCU who wants to link to a post here figures out that clicking on each post title puts a permalink in your address bar (assuming your browser hasn't disabled that), which can be copied and used as a hyperlink in a post, email, or sharing site.
A TCU who wants to "follow me" finds a feed link and adds that to an RSS reader.
A TCU has an RSS reader.
A TCU finds a way to get me a message -- a non-TCU goes on Twitter and demands I turn on blog comments.

In the scenario where Firefox takes away the checkbox to disable Javascript, the programmer sneers at the ordinary user who will get into trouble turning off Javascript, the inept clod is the person who checks and unchecks boxes without knowing what they do, and the TCU either employs the box (if it's there) or goes into about:config (if the box has been removed) but ultimately has a reason to turn off Javascript - say to visit a suspicious page or troubleshoot a web app.

If a TCU is having problems searching old tweets, he makes a Twitter archive using an open-source web-page-making program (and takes the time to save the tweets, a few dozen at a time, as he goes). Obviously this isn't worth doing if most of your tweets are just "hey dude."

Lialina mentions regularly visiting Twitter pages without following people as a TCU example -- what a concept.

The TCU complains about login attacks on his self-managed site and miraculously gets a suggestion from a generous TCU of a plugin to use (it's working).
The TCU turns off Google's "display results as you type" feature. Have a little patience, jeez.
The TCU is wary of "dark patterns" in web design -- the down side of being treated like a clod by programmers is that they can manipulate you.

The old-new academic word for TCU is bricoleur, one who cobbles together experience from available bits and pieces. Lialina is correct to put the focus back on the USER, where the drift of current design is to rub out all traces of human agency while at the same time encouraging people to express their individuality by sharing.
Will try to think of other attributes of this marvelous being without being too egotistical.

More

please to be giving us your data

One of the post-Google Reader feed-reader companies emailed with an offer for a year free on its "pro" account. My emailed reply:

You may or may not have seen that I listed _________ along with other readers: http://www.tommoody.us/archives/2013/06/26/rss-reader-list/
Thanks for your offer - I will think it over and/or try the "free" version.
I was not a big user of Google Reader and am less concerned than others with sharing info from feeds (that's what my blog is for).
Bloglines was adequate for me until they made you sign in every time you visit the site. Feedly is OK but I don't like having to depend on Google for sign-in.
I'm glad to see _________ offers the option to sign in via email. That may be an incentive for me.

If your spider sense was tingling about social bookmarking as early as del.icio.us you were correct since the sale of that company messed up all your "networks."
These companies want your data and data for people you're sharing with but you are a victim on so many levels. Statistical fodder for a startup's incredible journey, for openers, and this was before that brash young man fled to Hong Kong and revealed the worst case scenario about where all the information was going.

opinion page profiling

The Daily Howler's Bob Somerby notes how the New York Times trivialized the De Blasio mayoral primary win. A postmortem by reporters Jodi Kantor and Kate Taylor "focus[ed] on the possible role played by 'gender and sexuality' -- and on nothing else." And then there was columnist Gail Collins. Somerby quotes from the TV ad narrated by De Blasio's 15 year old son, which she responds to:

I want to tell you a little bit about Bill de Blasio. He’s the only Democrat with the guts to really break from the Bloomberg years. The only one who will raise taxes on the rich to fund early childhood and after-school programs. He's got the boldest plan to build affordable housing and he's the only one who will lend a stop-and-frisk era that unfairly targets people of color...

To Gail Collins, says Somerby, "it wasn't about any of that. The ad worked because the family seemed so happy at the end of the ad!"

Collins dwells on the family's ethnic makeup while managing to ignore the substance of the above quote. Possibly voters were paying more attention to the content than she was.

let's help kickstart a "country of evil"

An Italian journalist recently freed as a hostage of Syrian opposition groups certainly minces no words about them. From the BBC:

"Our captors were from a group that professed itself to be Islamist but that in reality is made up of mixed-up young men who have joined the revolution because the revolution now belongs to these groups that are midway between banditry and fanaticism," he said.

"They follow whoever promises them a future, gives them weapons, gives them money to buy cell phones, computers, clothes."

Such groups, he said, were trusted by the West but were in truth profiting from the revolution to "take over territory, hold the population to ransom, kidnap people and fill their pockets".

Mr Quirico said he and his fellow captive were kept "like animals, locked in small rooms with windows closed despite the great heat, thrown on straw mattresses, [given] the scraps from their meals to eat".

He said his guards seemed to take no interest in anything other [than] money and weapons - spending entire days lounging on mattresses, smoking and watching old black-and-white Egyptian movies or American wrestling shows on television.

He said he felt these men took satisfaction from seeing what they would regard as two rich Westerners reduced to the status of beggars.

Once, Mr Quirico said he had borrowed a mobile phone from a wounded rebel fighter to call home. "It was the only gesture of pity I received in 152 days of captivity," he said.

"Even children and old people tried to hurt us. Maybe I am putting this in overly ethical terms but in Syria I really found a country of evil," he said.

These are the folks Saint John McCain, Mother Teresa Samantha Power, Florence Nightingale Kerry, and Father Obama want to help by bombing Syria -- just a few light punitive pinpricks, you understand, it wouldn't really be war.

presenting music on a web page - notes

A commenter/screenshotter yesterday inadvertently pointed out the inherent pathos of a music blog with mp3 links removed. Sorry, it does look kind of silly. Have been gradually pruning sound files, oldest first, for reasons of storage/bandwidth/spam, and 2002-2005 posts are pretty much empty of active sound links. I reposted the blog in question mostly as a slice of obscure history. It's also a collection of ideas for how music can be represented through peripherals: text description, photos, diagrams, notation, artwork -- without direct access to the thing itself.
A later, very successful model for how to generate a scene/life/activity around contingent, waiting-to-be-clicked sound files has been Soundcloud.
I just kind of hate the simple-minded reduction of watching a cursor scroll through a wave file, as the inscription alternates between loud (exciting!) and soft (dull!) moments. Apparently we need this visual trick to make the dead data of 1s and 0s come alive and stay alive for 3 plus minutes. And then the highly artificial, intrusive, hypnosis-breaking device of having people post their faces and "Yo! Really tight groove, mate" smack in the middle of the timeline.
There's got to be a better way but apparently there isn't. Another alternative is YouTube style streams with everything from full-blown music videos to static LP covers positioned above the moving cursor.
All this assumes you need to do something with your eyes while your ears are working. And underscores that the web and blogging are visual media, despite the amount of music content online.

Ongoing edits.