Given the ongoing and at time spicy debate that surrounds the Long Tail, as presented by WIRED’s Chris Anderson, I believe its time we ask a very simple question:  Is “The Long Tail” a Theory or an Ideology?  If this question has already been asked, then consider this simply the time for me to ask this very simple question.

By Theory, I simply mean a statement of some causal relationship(s), and/or conditional process(es) that can be proven to be false.  Notice, I did not say that a theory is something that can be proven to be true.  This distinction - falsification - is fundamental to what it seems we call our scientific method.  Furthermore, as highlighted by the Oxford dictionary, a theory involves “general principles independent of the thing to be explained.”  The outcome and conditions are not the theory - the theory is in the spaces in between the cause and the consequent.

By Ideology, I simply mean “a system of ideas and ideals” that can be shown to be true.  Importantly, these principles may not be independent of the thing to be explained.  Instead, ideologies are alternatively explanations or interpretations.  The cause and the consequent are fused together, no longer independent.

For example, the various disciplines of the social sciences - economics, sociology, political science - are supported by various ideologies.  These disciplines are cornerstoned, and at times distinguished, by certain ideas and assumptions about the world such that explanations make sense. These ideologies then give birth to all sorts of theories about human behavior, at the level of individuals or the aggregation of individuals we call markets or societies.

The Long Tail may in fact be an Ideology - a system of ideas and ideals that once in place can be shown to be true.  I am coming to this conclusion given most challenges to the claims of the Long Tail are met with re-stated conditions and exceptions.  The objective of the Long Tail thesis appears to be to describe a set of conditions under which both the cause and the consequent would be shown to be true.

As such, the premise(s) of the Long Tail may not form a Theory to be tested, but an Ideology to be adopted and adapted.


So.  The Google comic made for the release of their browser is pretty nifty.  Clicking through each and every page in a browser however, is no real fun.  Therefore, I have pooled all of the images into a single PDF file.  I included the credits for this comic on the final page.  All rights involved ultimately belong to Google.  This is just a PDF of the images, easier to read.

Here is the link to the Google Chrome Browser Comic Book in PDF form.


Just a quick test of the iPhone app for WordPress.


Seems the blogoland is officially in a tizzy over the next iPhone.  Per protocol, the Apple Store is closed for “restocking,” and a flurry of fuzzy and poached screen shots have appeared in the last week.

Quite honestly, as an iPhone owner, I can say that this thing makes other phones just look like toys.  Not that toys are a bad thing.  But as more phones live and work like iPhones, social life will have to be impacted in unexpected ways.

Apple store closed for restocking


A brief paper written by WIll Page (of MCPS-PRS Alliance, in the UK) and myself has been made publicly available.  The piece was meant to stir a larger discussion around alternative licensing structures rights societies might put to use, particularly in the context of new, music-related startups.  These startups usually (1) cannot afford the rates societies have set based upon the financials of more mature businesses, and (2) are trying to use music in novel ways, for which a collective license may not already exist.

The paper can be downloaded from the MCPS-PRS Alliance site for independent research