The new examined life: ‘meaning from the mundane’

Bloggers who, like me, like to dabble in analytics, charts and graphs may find this Wall Street Journal piece titled The New Examined Life intriguing — and a bit disturbing.

It’s a story (via Murleting’s delicious links) about how the broad array of online tools at our disposal can help us measure and analyze even the most mundane of activities. Such is the case with Nicholas Felton (pictured above), a New York-based graphic designer who will boil down all his activities from the year into an annual report similar to the one he did for 2007. Felton is the Journal‘s hook to the bigger picture of our growing interest (obsession?) with “personal informatics” — something the Journal calls drawing “meaning from the mundane.”

The culture of sharing information online has shifted in recent years, from a focus on blog ramblings to the ubiquitous micro-movements of posters’ daily lives. Microblogging sites like Twitter have become commonplace. … Facebook’s News Feed feature initially drew criticism from members because it offered a running log of users’ minute postings and updates, but has since became a core part of the Web site’s community. Some sites collect data automatically for their users. Last.fm keeps a record of all of the songs users have listened to, and Netflix keeps track of members’ movie-watching habits.

“It’s a natural progression from people sharing things like movies, photos and videos,” says Dennis Crowley, founder of Dodgeball, an early social-networking service for mobile phones which was sold to Google in 2005. “What’s left to share? Basic data.”

And so we have the Internet to help us. With sites like Wordle, bloggers to create “word clouds” to quickly grasp what words or subjects they most frequently post about. (As my word cloud below suggests, I might want to quit yammering so much about Twitter.)

Wordle cloud -- via www.wordle.net
Wordle cloud -- via http://www.wordle.net

But that’s probably more than I need to be sharing. According to the Journal report, “Personal data collection can get in the way of living.”

And it seems like such a harmless pursuit. Mundane, even.

Battle of the gadget blogs

The New York Times is staking a claim in the world of electrogadget blogs with Gadgetwise.

Now about to wrap up its first month in business, the site is going head-to-head with more established blogs like Engadget and Gizmodo.

How will the Times fare in the gadget-blog wars? The site has five bloggers devoted to it, but as the Blog Herald points out those five aren’t posting as prolifically as Engadget’s and Gizmodo’s bloggers. The two established blogs each put up more than 200 posts per week, while Gadgetwise is averaging 26.8 posts per week. Still, it’s interesting that a mainstream publication is willing to devote so much talent to a new blog. It could be a portent of things to come.

Hat tip to Bloggers Blog.