Speed bump

I just added a bespoke caching mechanism to the front page, which makes it a good deal faster, and lets us gimp along on low-end hosting a bit longer. For those who care, it uses Ruby’s marshalling capabilities to store objects in the database, so the page is rendered each time, but the mongo db queries that were gumming up the page aren’t.

One small downside is, the cache is refreshed every two minutes, so if you add a word or a comment, you might have to pause a moment before you see it show up on the front page.

Reference tools, anyone?

If you’re like me, you spend a lot of time on a handful of word-related sites. I’ve built some bookmarklets for my most frequent look-ups, and you may find them helpful too. They work in Firefox on Mac and Windows, and I haven’t tried them in any other browsers or systems (sorry). There are two ways to use each one:

  1. Loading the bookmarklet will prompt you for a word or phrase to lookup; type it in the box and click OK.
  2. Highlight a word or phrase on any web page, then load the bookmarklet to skip the prompt and look it up immediately.

Let me know if you have trouble with any of these. Right-click any of the links below and select “Bookmark this link” to add it to your bookmarks menu.

(Note that this Wordie bookmarklet is a modified version of angharad’s original, designed to function the same way as the others listed here. It also recognizes null values and doesn’t try to add them.)

And now, the pièce de résistance of this post, Visuwords.

I just discovered this site and I was flat dazzled. You can look up any word to find definitions, synonyms, antonyms, acronym meanings, and possibly more that I have yet to find. I like the snazzy interface, which effectively shows the associations between each item. The site seems to understand concepts too, and links words to other related things. Fun to play around with, and possibly a valuable time-saver when those bookmarklets just don’t do it for you. It’s also darn quick. Possible inspiration for your next case of writer’s block?

Click the picture above to hop on over, and don’t say I never gave you nothing.

(Originally posted by uselessness)

Collaborative Fiction

One of my favorite childhood games was the story-go-round. I first discovered it on a Boy Scout campout, as my troop gathered around the fire to toast marshmallows. Our scoutmaster would begin telling a story, but stop after a few sentences of exposition and prompt the next kid in line to continue from where he had left off. And so we’d elaborate, one by one, each improvising the next crazy direction for our story to go, until it was the scoutmaster’s turn again, and he would attempt to tie up all the lose ends and conclude the tale.

I realized two things: First, Boy Scouts aren’t actually very good storytellers, and eventually every plot ended up involving aliens and X-Men blowing everything up. Second, most kids don’t really even like storytelling. Once the novelty of the game wore off, nobody wanted to play anymore. Except me. I’m a wordie kind of guy. It’s in my blood.

I’ll assume it’s in your blood too, or you wouldn’t be reading Errata. If that’s the case, wouldn’t it be great if we could use the internet to play a grown-up version of the story-go-round, where contributors actually know how to write and are passionate about doing so? Sounds like a heck of a time waster, if nothing else. Good news: we can.

I’d like to say I came up with idea, but alas. It’s a new site I recently discovered, where anyone can write short stories called “ficlets.” Very very short stories, actually. There’s a 1,024 character limit for each one. What’s fun is the ability to write a sequel or prequel to any ficlet on the site, and others can do the same with yours. Even if you don’t feel like writing, it’s pretty cool to read others’ stories from beginning to end and see the unique ideas and writing styles presented by each author.

Enough blabbing, go check out Ficlets for yourself! And if you’re interested in collaborating with me, here’s a direct link to the stories I’ve written.

(This was originally posted on the old errata by uselessness)

Helvetica, math, bloggers

A few small bits:

Helvetica: The Movie. A movie about a font — font meets girl, font loses girl, etc. Great concept, and its web site is, as one might expect from such a high-design project, quite lovely as well.

I recently came across what amounts to a math dictionary. Definitely not high-design, but the content is very well done, and it includes many citations, the best part of any dictionary.

Lastly, a few Wordie regulars have graciously agreed to contribute to this blog on an occasional, informal basis. Stay tuned 🙂

You are what you read

Please forgive the self-promotion/cross-posting, but I just submitted one of the more interesting Librarything blog posts of late to Digg. Would love it if you’d take a second to go over and digg it, and pass it along to anyone else you know who might be interested:

http://digg.com/software/You_are_what_you_read

As noted in the comments of the LibraryThing blog post, there must be a bunch of similar things that could be done with one’s words, or a word cloud. Would love to hear any good ideas. I’m seriously considering wrapping my MacBook in a word cloud.

See all comments on your words and lists

If you go to any one of your lists, or to your profile page, theres a “Comments” link where you can see all the comments that you yourself have written.

On that comments page there is now also a link to a new page, where you can see everything other people have written on your profile, your lists, and your words. Another way to keep track of what people are saying.