I have a long history with Madison Newspapers, now Capital Newspapers, the corporate home for The Wisconsin State Journal and The Capital Times and their increasingly intertwined operations, including the combined website, Madison.com. I was a State Journal carrier as a kid, back when kid on bikes delivered papers instead of adults in cars. Both papers published some of my first freelance photos. I was a Cap Times subscriber right up to the bitter end, when the daily print edition went away. But I've had it.
The internet is sweeping through print journalism like a tidal wave. I've long thought that, as local news coverage migrates to the web, daily newspapers are the least likely to emerge as major players on the local scene. They have their legacy print operations that are bleeding money to worry about. Good, user-friendly design has never been their forte and is important on the web. They just don't think in web terms and face a host of competitors who seem more nimble and comfortable with the conventions of the web -- ranging, here in Madison, from Isthmus and Dane 101 to a host of local bloggers and, increasingly, the rapidly improving news websites of the local TV stations, and who benefit from being able to promote those sites on-air.
The redesigned Madison.com is the last straw. Just when I start thinking that, as a disappointed former print edition reader, I may be too hard on them and should be more sympathetic, they prove me right all over again.
It's not mainly the redesign itself, although I find it cluttered and confusing, and it doesn't run well on my older computer -- something that for some reason is not a problem on either TheDailyPage.com locally or NYT.com nationally. It's not even their restricting access to their older archives. Sooner or later, we readers will have to start paying for content in some way, if we want to keep receiving content. (Though I do think they have an obligation to make the archives available -- and affordable -- for libraries.)
No, what really ticks me off is that they broke all the links to their existing content during their website redesign. Every link to a Capital Newspapers story in Letter from Here is dead. This violates one of the most basic tenets of good netiquette -- you don't just break a lot of links for no good reason. Sure, stuff happens and some break over time. But wholesale slaughter like this? Just one more example of how the organization doesn't like or understand the web. To them, I guess it's just a high-tech printing press, to do with as they like.
So that's why I won't be linking to them anymore. I'm just one little blogger, but I suspect I'm not alone. Why link to something that may just disappear with no warning? And that -- broken link by broken link -- is just one more way a website slides into irrelevance. It's a matter of trust.
Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Not much time (or weather) left to bike out to Pluto before they pack up the planets

Quick -- if the sun were a sphere represented by a circular flower bed 24 feet in diameter just west of Monona Terrace, how far away would Pluto be, and how big would it be? The answer might surprise you, because most representations of the Solar System are so wildly out of scale. If you actually published a diagram to scale in a book, most of the planets would be invisible.
The answer is that Pluto would be in Mt. Horeb, about 23 miles by bike path from Monona Terrace, and Pluto would be the size of a marble. If it weren't marked by this special sign, you could easily lose it in the grass. The sun, the planets and one asteroid standing in for all the others are all marked by informative signs along the UW Space Place's Dane County Planet Trek Scale Model of the Solar System that's laid out along bike paths all the way to Mt. Horeb. Check out the map at the link.Physically visiting the sites is a great way to stretch your imagination and develop an appreciation for just how incredibly vast -- and mostly empty -- this little corner of the universe we call the Solar System really is. You might not be up for a bike trip all the way to Mt. Horeb, but you can experience a lot of the impact right within the city limits. All the planets out to and including Saturn are within the Beltline.
So, if the weather picks up a little and makes biking less dreary, you might want to try the inner leg of the journey soon. The display was up all summer, but after October 17 the planets will be packed up for the season. Even the shorter route is filled with surprises and insights. If, for example, Pluto seems incredibly tiny and far away, it's also surprising just how close to the sun Mercury really is.
Tuesday, October 06, 2009
At the Laurel Tavern watching a former Packer retiree put on a football clinic

You know how it goes. Everyone dreams of retiring someday, but when someday comes, a lot of people are ambivalent. Some feel they have skills that can still be productively employed, but often their employer wants to move on without them. Sometimes they're encouraged to retire (remember the $5 million the Green Bay Packers offered Brett Favre last year not to play?), sometimes they're shoved out. Or they just get tired and retire on their own. But soon hunting, fishing, golfing or sitting on the tractor -- whatever -- gets tiresome. They decide to go back to work. The Brett Favre saga seemed to involve a little bit of all of the above. Some, like Favre, choose to go back to work if they can. Often it doesn't work out. Sometimes it does.
Tonight the Packers gambled that they'd win if they could shut down the formidable running game of their arch rivals, the Vikings. They accomplished that goal, and in effect, dared Favre to beat them. Did the former retiree still have what it took to win a big game that mattered? Well, let's see -- the Vikings won, 30-23, and Favre had a career night: 24 of 31 for 271 passing yards, 3 TDs, no sacks and no interceptions. And a QB rating of 135.3. In his last game as a thirty-something, Favre added another record to his long string, becoming the only QB ever to beat all 32 NFL teams.
I don't get ESPN because I don't get cable, so I listened to the first half on radio and then watched most of the second half at the Laurel. As a radio listener, I was able to hear sportscaster Wayne Larrivee's immortal words as Favre picked apart the Packers pass defense.
Any true Packers fan is sick to his stomach at what Brett Favre is doing to the Packers.The Vikings are 4-0 and lead the division, Favre will be 40 in his next game and says he just wants to play in another Super Bowl. I wouldn't necessarily bet against him.
Monday, October 05, 2009
Getting ready for winter at Wingra Boats

That was then. This is now -- a cold October Sunday afternoon when the temperature never gets above the low fifties and the sun is nowhere to be seen, and the annual hibernation ritual of the boathouse on Madison's Lake Wingra is under way. The piers have to be taken down. Just what wet suits were invented for.
Friday, October 02, 2009
At least nobody was killed. It was no Bay of Pigs. Maybe now we can get down to business.
I was stunned by the news from Copenhagen about Chicago's Olympic bid, not because I cared all that much about where the 2016 Olympics end up, but because I had convinced myself that President Obama wouldn't have put the prestige of his office on the line without having some inside knowledge that Chicago's acceptance was a done deal. Yeah, right.
Most presidential administrations begin with a period of almost giddy hubris in the White House. This is a bit different from the "honeymoon" they always talk about, which has to do with some vaguely defined period of goodwill extended to the new president by Congress and the public. It's arrogance, pure and simple. It's as if the enormous power of the office starts to deprive the president and his staff of more and more of their normal common sense and judgment. They don't sense the limits of their power until they're forced to confront it by some embarrassing public humiliation. It's after this that the real presidency begins.
For Kennedy, it was the Bay of Pigs. Chicago's getting so ignominiously kicked off Mt. Olympus was hardly a tragedy. Nobody was killed. But what the defeat lacked in tragic dimensions, it made up for in the farce of humbled hubris. It was all the more embarrassing for being so gratuitous. Obama had already said he wasn't going. It made his knuckling under to narrow parochial interests seem all the more inept, once the results came in.
Maybe this is the wake-up call President Obama needed. It's not as if his leadership on healthcare in the last few months hasn't suffered from a lot of the same ineptitude. We can only hope he's becoming aware that good words are not enough. Healthcare would be a good place to begin. And some real economic reform. The new unemployment figures today are horrible -- 9.8% unemployment, with the "real rate" up to 17%.
Most presidential administrations begin with a period of almost giddy hubris in the White House. This is a bit different from the "honeymoon" they always talk about, which has to do with some vaguely defined period of goodwill extended to the new president by Congress and the public. It's arrogance, pure and simple. It's as if the enormous power of the office starts to deprive the president and his staff of more and more of their normal common sense and judgment. They don't sense the limits of their power until they're forced to confront it by some embarrassing public humiliation. It's after this that the real presidency begins.
For Kennedy, it was the Bay of Pigs. Chicago's getting so ignominiously kicked off Mt. Olympus was hardly a tragedy. Nobody was killed. But what the defeat lacked in tragic dimensions, it made up for in the farce of humbled hubris. It was all the more embarrassing for being so gratuitous. Obama had already said he wasn't going. It made his knuckling under to narrow parochial interests seem all the more inept, once the results came in.
Maybe this is the wake-up call President Obama needed. It's not as if his leadership on healthcare in the last few months hasn't suffered from a lot of the same ineptitude. We can only hope he's becoming aware that good words are not enough. Healthcare would be a good place to begin. And some real economic reform. The new unemployment figures today are horrible -- 9.8% unemployment, with the "real rate" up to 17%.
Thursday, October 01, 2009
Black and White Postcard from the Deindustrializing Heartland

For some in this increasingly two-tier economy, it is forever Christmas. But for others it's definitely not, no matter how much people say the recovery is under way -- especially in the deindustrializing Rust Belt.
I took this picture on Labor Day in Kenosha. WI, the old manufacturing city on Lake Michigan with a double-digit jobless rate. It has taken many hits in recent decades, especially when the auto industry and many of its suppliers pulled out. I was reminded of Kenosha by the headlines yesterday saying that the Fed's Midwest manufacturing index had dropped again -- down now more than 20% compared with a year earlier, vs. a national decline of "only" 12%. It's possible to see the silver lining in all this -- but you probably have to be Corporate Report Wisconsin to see Kenosha and similarly afflicted Racine just to the north along the lake as "shining beacons."
And what is it about this "jobless recovery," anyhow? A recovery for Wall Street only? How can some people be basking in a stock market-fueled "recovery," when the country is filled with areas where the real unemployment rate, by the time you add in the people who have stopped looking for work, is flirting with Depression levels and people are losing their homes left and right? What kind of recovery is that?
It makes you wonder about the corporate news media. If the Great Depression had been broadcast in living color on television every night, would we have a sunnier view of it as well?
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