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Random, But Interesting Archive
June 15, 2007
Memphis
I got a chance to spend 24 or so hours in Memphis before Bonnaroo. I'd never been. But I was lucky enough to have guides.
My buddy Martin texts me a number as I'm leaving Orlando, Memphis bound. "Call Dallas" was the word, Dallas being the man who would be at the airport ready to take me to my destination, the vibrantly decomposed studio of Jim Dickinson and his boys Cody and Luther, who form two thirds of the North Mississippi All Stars. They were recording together, on the family farm 35 minutes or so outside Memphis in the North Mississippi woods. Dallas was going to take me there.
I rang Dallas while still on the tarmac. It's been quite some time since I've had walking around time. You know, the kind of time where you land somewhere foreign, you know one guy maybe, or bump into someone, and that person takes you to another world. It'd been years since I'd been to Tennessee. The place lived in my mind as legend, mostly through music. And I'd never been to Memphis.
"Travel. Dallas," he answers.
Dallas, I tell him, John.
"Alright. I'm five minutes from the airport. You on the tarmac?" Gentle, like bourbon on new ice.
Yes, I say.
"I'll be at the top of the escalators as you come out. I'm dressed like a tourist, got a panama hat. And a badge."
I knew I'd like Dallas.
After the obligatories (hotel, beer, ice, food), we drove across the Mississippi and headed south for a while, the highway cutting through woods and rolling farmland. Dallas regaling me with stories of the land as we tooled along in his Chevy wagon - the one with the same engine as the 1994 Corvette - same transmission, too. Thirty minutes and we took a left, we're in low folds of resting grassland, punctuated by high elms - were they elms? - draped in kudzu. Were it not for agriculture, this would be impassable land.
Fourth driveway at the left, Cody had put a red bandana on the mailbox. We hit a dirt road, then we pass one, and another single wide. Someone might live there. Then again, someone might not. But nothing felt out of place.
A quarter mile down a clearing, and a mowed field, crowned by forty-foot kudzu skirted woods. In the field, to the left as we entered, an Airstream, seen better years, but still proud. And past it, as we pan to our right, a Chevy Grand Torino, maybe 1974, rusting but again, nobly. Immediately to its right is a 1990 or so 280Z, sweetly clenched in a decades long conversation with mother nature. We had arrived at a good moment, as Mother Nature had figured out a way to claim the old car, namely by pushing a six-foot-tall blackberry shoot - tall and straight as any tree - impossibly through the hood, and dead center to boot.
Then I saw the studio.
- Posted by John Battelle at 8:40 PM
- Permalink
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Reader Jack Lail Says...
Reader Jack Lail, who my damn Typekey issues prevented from commenting, sent me this:
My paper, The Knoxville News Sentinel, has a producer blogging and Twittering at Bonnaroo. Check Lauren Spuhler's coverage out.
And check out the
She's got some great stuff up already!
Cool, thanks Jack!
- Posted by John Battelle at 6:15 PM
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June 14, 2007
Google Cancels EBay Party - Ebay Cancels Google Ads
Guess I was wrong. A reader sent me a cancellation notice, Google is now no longer trying to poach the party goers at EBay's fest. I bet some senior folks on both sides must have traded a few curtly worded emails....
Update: Holy sh8t, check this out:
EBay Inc. has pulled all of its advertising from Google Inc.'s U.S. network in what is widely seen as punishment for trying to crash eBay's user conference in Boston this week.
The move exposes the widening rift between eBay and Google, as they increasingly compete on new products, making a public showdown inevitable, according to analysts.
"We've seen that the two companies have been on a collision course for a long time," said Derek Brown, an analyst for Cantor Fitzgerald. "This seems to be the latest and most bizarre twist."
Yes they have been. As a reader of Searchblog, though, you have known that for a very long time.
- Posted by John Battelle at 9:59 AM
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- Comments (6)
June 12, 2007
eBay Opens Up
From Ars:
One of the few survivors from the dotcom bubble that we know today as "Web 1.0" has now announced that it is moving firmly into the Web 2.0 world. The online auction site eBay announced at the eBay Developer conference in Boston that it has opened up its three core businesses—eBay, PayPal, and Skype—to third-party developers. These new application programming interfaces (APIs) are being released as part of a limited beta program: attendees at the eBay developer conference will get preferred access.
- Posted by John Battelle at 9:49 AM
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- Comments (2)
YouTube Working Out the Kinks
Top online video service YouTube will soon test a new video identification technology with two of the world's largest media companies, Time Warner Inc. and Walt Disney Co..
The technology, developed by engineers at YouTube-owner Google Inc., will help content owners such as movie and TV studios identify videos uploaded to the site without the copyright owner's permission, legal, marketing and strategy executives at YouTube told Reuters in an interview on Monday.
The so-called video fingerprinting tools, which identify unique attributes in the video clips, will be available for testing in about a month, a YouTube executive said.
- Posted by John Battelle at 8:28 AM
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