
A recent twitter exchange between Tim Carmody, Alexis Madrigal, Alison Arieff, and Brendan Koerner drew my attention to this nice Snarkmarket post from Carmody on digging up material from offline, which Carmody calls paleoblogging:
I wish we saw more of this: the recognition that at this point much of the freshest material is stuff that was created before everything was created online,. or somehow remains outside of it. To digitize the undigital. It's fresher because it's a little hard to get at. You can't just keystroke it. You have to dig it out and contextualize it.
The old is the new new.
Places that do it well include Carmody and Robin Sloan's Snarkmarket; Atlantic Tech, curated by Madrigal & Nicholas Jackson, Ta-Nehisi Coates' blog; BoingBoing, Kottke, the The Paris Review, whose archived interviews alone are worth the subscription price; and Caleb Crain's Steamboats are Ruining Everything, where Crain currently fronts a wonderful analysis ("Blowup")of the facial expressions in the now-iconic photo of Obama and his close advisers watching the bin Laden mission.
Carmody also recommends Kevin Kelly, which now I see it does look juicy, as well as The Little Professor and the luscious Wynken de Worde.
By all means go read Carmody's post on the beauty of paleoblogging, see for yourself what he's talking about. The comments there recommend a mess of other sites.
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Image: Mining some Latin at Wynken de Worde. I love the rope used as paperweights: soft, flexible, weight-scalable.