On Moleskine

June 22, 2005





The blog has moved

 

The present version of this blog will not be updated in the future.

 

Please visit Fred On Something at his new address at http://fgiasson.com/blog/

 

I hope that you will enjoy the new format and the future things I will write on it,

 

Salutations,

 

 

Frédérick


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June 8, 2005





Journal writing saw by Dilbert

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I was waked up by this beautiful Dilbert comic strip this morning. This is a beautiful piece of sarcasm from Scott Adams.

 

Do I need to add anything? I do not think so.


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May 30, 2005





The best waterproof pouch for your Moleskine notebook

 

 

I am considering to start a travel blog for my next trip to India. However, given the Internet infrastructure there (I am not talking about the major cities), the challenge could be interesting. It is a back to the future with their 33,6k and 56,6k phone modems.

 

It is why I bought 2 large Moleskine notebooks some months ago. I do not think that I will have the luxury to have a computer for 4 or 5 hours in a row to draft, correct, publish and talk with my readers. It is why I will draft all my posts in the notebooks before publishing them. However, what if I get caught by the rain? No worry, I found the best waterproof travel pouch for these Moleskines notebooks! My Moleskine perfectly fit into the pouch; it seems that it was specifically created for this purpose.

 

What is interesting is that when I will get them out of my backpack, people will think that I am pulling out some type sailor gears. No, it is not, it is a heavy duty Moleskine waterproof pouch.

 

 

 

 

 

 

I found this pouch in a local CAA service center for only 3.5$CAN. This product is manufactured by Coghlans, a Canadian company. I do not know where you can find such pouches in your Country, and unfortunately you cannot buy them on the Internet from them their website. However, there are some Internet retailers that sell them. Do not search anymore for a waterproof pouch for your Moleskine notebook, you just found it.



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April 21, 2005





How I use my Moleskine pocket diary

A lightweight version of my Analog Blog concept as classification system for my personal pocket journal

 

 

 

What I like with the Moleskine pocket daily diary is his size and his number of pages (much more than the Moleskine pocket ruled notebook). He is just perfect to slip it into your coat's pockets; and have enough pages to be useful as a personal journal. When I bought it some months ago I first thought that I would use it as a pocket diary. I quickly realized that it would not be a good idea and that it will be much more useful as a pocket personal journal. Then I started to use it as an idea repository organized as a lightweight version of my analog blog concept that I developed some months ago.

 

 

 

Why do I opt for a lightweight version of my system to use with my Moleskine pocket diary?

 

  • Because the pocket diary is too small to efficiently implement the whole concept. I don't want to write my life in it; only ideas that come up in my mind and quotes that I found during my journeys. Given this, a lightweight version of the concept is all designated to fulfill my needs.

 

 

Why to use this classification system to organize my pocket personal journal? Because I want to rapidly and effectively organize my ideas. I could put my thoughts without any classification system. I could put my quotes here and there. I could put book excerpts at random. The problem with this is that if I search for something, I don't want to check every of the 300 pages before finding it. But I don't want to put as many time to organize my journal that it take to write it. It's why I adopted a lightweight version of the analog blog system.

 

 

 

 

 

The lightweight version has only 3 sections:

 

1.      The content pages.

2.      The categories pages (build as the index of the journal).

3.      The external references pages.

 

 

 

 

This is what looks like a typical page of my pocket personal journal. It's literally a repository of my ideas, my thoughts, quotes and book excerpts. There are only 5 features that I implemented in these content pages:

           

1.      The page number.

2.      A possible reference to an internal ( ->[x;y] ) resource.

3.      A possible reference to an external ( [x;y]-> ) resource (see the section bellow for more information about this feature).

4.      A date (in this case I used the date of the original Moleskine pocket diary; but you can explicitly write it near your entries).

5.      Possibly Meta Data words at the top corner of your pages.

 

 

 

  

The categories page(s) is essential. The idea and his functioning is the same as in the analog blog system. You can see it as a dynamic index. You can create your categories when you start your personal journal; you can also create them when you need it. When you'll put a new entry in you journal that have the same semantic meaning as a category, then you'll only have to add his page number at the end of the category's line.

 

These categories pages will be in the first pages of your journal. Remember, this is a sort of index or table of content. When you'll need to find something, or check what you already thought about something, chec'k this section to quickly find what you want. It has the same utility as the Synopsis of Categories of the Roget's International Thesaurus. You can easily use it as a source of inspiration; a place where ideas emerge.

 

[Category's name]

·        This is the name of a category. Use words with clear and rich semantic meaning to name your categories.

                       

[x - y - z]

·        This is the pages of your journal where you can find entries with the same semantic meaning.

 

 

I put the external references pages at the beginning of my journal (some pages after my categories pages). You can also put it at the end pages without any problems. This is the place where you'll put the external resources references referred by your journal's entries. In my case, it's usually a reference to a book where I wrote an excerpt of it in my journal. It could also be an internet URL, an address, a phone number, etc. The purpose of this section is to put references to resources that you don't want to rewrite every time you refer to them in your journal.

 

[x : y]

·        This is the reference's identifier. X is the number, the ID, of the external resource's reference. Y is the page where the external reference is viewable. Then if you check the page content excerpt above you’ll see: [3;6]-> . When I read this in one of my content pages, I know that if I'm checking at the page 6 of my journal, I'll find the external reference #3 that refer to a resource (in this case it's a book called "Page after Page" that refers this journal's entry).

 

 

 

 

 

I used this lightweight version of the analog blog system since some months and I'm really satisfied by it. It's simple (much more than the original version) and effective (I use it often to find ideas to write about on this blog).

 

The whole aim of this is system to save time while using my journal as a personal source of knowledge. The axiom is that if I can't find the information I want; it's that I don't have the information. The personal journal concept is a way to backup and/or create the knowledge, the information; and this classification system is the way to find this knowledge, this information. The union of the two concepts is the foundation of my axiom.

 

 



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January 28, 2005





Collective work on Moleskine's notebook

What fascinate Moleskine's community bloggers?

 

 

 

 

Some days ago I had written a post on Analog blogs. What's an analog blog? This is a method used to utilize your Moleskine notebook as a blog. This is a way to organize it, to link your thoughts together to be able to follow the flow of your thinking through time. It's sure that this method is usable with other notebooks but I demonstrated the concept with Moleskines. Why? Because I lately discovered a passionate community of bloggers that write with enthusiasm about them. They write hacks to enhance their usability; they write about what they write in them, how they use them, where they use them and why they use them. They are passionate, they write on Moleskines with their guts and inspiration. Then, as a neophyte in the Moleskines world and in his immerging community, I wanted to know why they are attracted by them, and overall, why they are fascinated by Moleskines.

 

After I published my post, I got an unanticipated exposure. I read posts and comments from other visitors and bloggers about it. I found that people seem to love the idea; they seem fascinated by the concept. It was not a great idea; it was just an aggregation of already know hacks with some enhancement based on an emerging communication technology called Blog. The more I read on reactions the more I find that people love the idea of wedding between new and old technologies. They love the paradox created by the situation. They seem to be seduced by the idea; as I am.

 

Finally I asked to some of these bloggers their fascination, in the present world of technologies, for Moleskines: a technology used by humans for ages. This article is the result of their work; their passion for Moleskines' notebooks. I got their answer and texts one after the other. I I'm astonished by the result, the work they done. They are all great pieces of work. They are more than inspiring.

 

I need to thank you all for your great work. This post is not my work, it is yours! I'm really happy to have done this project with you. Thank.

 

To all of you readers: continue your reading and you'll be rewarded!

 

 

 

-- PS: I didn't know how to present them; in which order to place texts; so I sorted them in family names alphabetical order

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By Merlin Mann

 

We all make decisions about the extravagances that we'll permit ourselves, and one of mine is picking up a fresh Moleskine every month or two. Moleskines don't record your thoughts any more efficiently than a $.99 notebook would, but they have a satisfying weight to them, and writing on a Moleskine's silky pages just feels a little bit fancy to me.

 

You could probably make a case that food served on paper plates tastes the same as it would on fine bone china, but that's an awfully cynical point, and it certainly won't win you many second dates. A sexy little notebook makes you feel good and--who knows?--you might find yourself taking an extra few seconds to think about what you're committing to those lovely pages, to pause a moment and reflect.

 

With so many disposable, marginally useful items crowding our lives, it's comforting to have a well-made book in which to set down your thoughts.

 

 

 

 

 

 

By L.S. Russell

 

English, the language not the country, was invented over sixty-five million years ago by a man, living in the Neander Valley, named Manfried Piltdown. He named his new invention after his best friend, Brian English, who had a bad habit of ending his sentences in prepositions. The two were inseparable best friends and spent many years together hanging out in Brian's garage (which was really his parents garage but they let him use it as long as he promised not to set fire to the glass where his grandmother kept her teeth), inventing languages and watching porn. Brian would do all the talking and Manfried would scribble the words that came out of Brian's mouth in a notebook.

All was well until Satan invented junior high school, and other institutes of higher learning like the adult book store. Satan decided that he needed to teach three things so he hired some smokin' hot teachers then he invented math, and driver's education. But he was fucked if he could think of a third thing-so he went to see Manfied and Brian.

The following is an actual transcript:

 

SATAN: Dudes! I just invented junior high school.

BRIAN: Wicked Satan! Do you have a class president yet?

SATAN: No dude. I need to teach three things; I've got math and driver's ed covered but I'm fucked if I can think of a third thing.

MANFRIED: Dude! I've got just the thing. It's called English. Me and Brian invented it-it's sweet.

SATAN: Psycotic dude! I have a couple of smokin' hot babes who can teach it. How much do you want for it? I got like five bucks on me.

 

Transcript ends.

So Brian and Manfried went into another room to talk about selling English to Satan so he could teach it in junior high school. Brian was totally against it, but Manfried was psyched. They argued until they smelled smoke coming from the other room. When they went in, Satan was nowhere to be found, but Brian's gran's teeth were in flames in the middle of the room. Brian's mom and dad kicked him out of their house, and Brian and Manfried were never friends again. Brian went to live in Finland, and Manfried sold English to Satan.

Brian tried to re-invent his own version of English, called English Leather, but since Manfried had the notebook (and the name English Leather sounded gay) it was no use.

So you see, I use Moleskine notebooks because of the storied history of the English language-a great language deserves to be written in a great notebook.

 

 

 

 

By Mike Shea

 

 

First draft of the story… In a Moleskine!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Citizen Fred's Book

 

Citizen Fredrick Joseph Abergale stared at the object sticking out of the dirt hill.  He had worked on this trail for six hours now and it was the first man made object he had seen.  When he awoke to the soothing voice of Citizen G giving him the job of inspecting and clearing the trails of Great Falls for that day, his heart sank.  The trails were twenty kilometers away from the huge towers of the city and offered little distraction from the sharp cool air, the

frighteningly wide sky, and the sickly green foliage creeping all around him.

 

Static filled his earbud.  He only caught bursts of the microshows and had no idea if he was supposed to laugh or mourn.  Rarely did he hear the fanfare at the beginning or end of the forty five second microdrama or microcomedy so all queues for feeling were gone.

 

The silence covered Fred like a cloak.  It squeezed him and dropped moments of quiet in the normal bustle of his mind.  In twenty minutes he would return to the road where a gyrocoptor would take him to the supershuttle and back to his home on the two thousand forty sixth floor of dwelling tower 23.

 

Then he saw the object half buried in the hill.  Only the corner of the rectangular object shined from under the dirt.  A shining plastic covered the corner of the black rectangle.  It frightened Fred to look at it.  It was alien to him.  He kicked at it with one dirt-covered work boot.  More dirt fell and the object slid down the hill.  With one gloved hand he reached out and pulled it free.  The black rectangle was sealed in some sort of plastic bag with a complex

fastener at the top far different from the atomic fasteners Fred was used to.

 

Fred pulled at the seal and it popped open with a puff of stale dust. He pulled farther and the plastic cover burst open and fell of the black rectangle inside.  He recognized it at once, though he had never seen one in his life.

 

It was a book.

 

Fred's heart lept and fell all at once.  He had never been so scared or excited.  He had never seen a book before, though he had once seen a picture in one of the historical data archives.  He didn't know what it was and Citizen G would not tell him, but an ancient man Fredonce cared for in a Medicare center spoke of these books.  Fred thought the man was senile. Now however, he held one himself.

 

Don't Be Evil.

 

The words, the only law of the planet now, hammered in Fred's head. What would not be evil?  Should he destroy the book?  Should he bury it?  Should he take it with him and tell Citizen G of it on the gyrocoptor?  That feeling of excitement filled Fred again.  His fingers ran over the black oilcloth cover.  An elastic band held the book closed.  When he touched it, the elastic snapped like brittle rubber.  It fell away in three small black pieces and all thoughts of turning the book in fell away along with them.

 

Fred opened the book.

 

Most of the characters of the first page were difficult to make out. Fred's eyes, used to only reading the ideal font decided upon by Citizen G, had to trace over each character before recognizing it.  One word and one four-digit number, once recognized, sent waves of electricity through Fred's cold body.

 

"January 2005"

 

Truth dawned on Fred like hot sunlight.  The small book he held was nearly five hundred years old.  His hands trembled.  What words filled these ivory pages?  No one knew what life was like so long ago.  Few cared.  Now Fred would read the words of another person like himself from centuries ago. He would hear the voice and read the mind of someone dead for at least four hundred years. His last hesitation broke and he turned to the next page.

 

Fred struggled with the first few pages before subconsciously recognizing the strange handwritten letters and words.  Soon, with script and language problems falling away with each word, Fred fell into the stories themselves.

 

When he looked up two hours later, Fred saw the last rays of sunlight reflecting off of the two-mile high datacenters to the south.  He looked up at the criss-crossing white trails of the supertransports in the sky above him. For his forty years, Fred looked at these trails but only now did he really see them. They looked like a web.

 

He felt the words of the book seeping into his thoughts.  He felt his previous ideas and beliefs crumble and fall. Like a rogue program tearing through a central processing unit, the stories of that book burnt all new paths and circuits in Fred's brain.

 

Fred didn't know what to do. He didn't know that in eight months he would plant a home-made bomb that would send one of the Citizen G datatowers crashing into twelve others. He didn't know that he would stand on this hill a decade later, lean and starving but never so alive. He didn't know that his grandchildren, naked and brown and wielding flint-headed spears, would hunt down wild deer for food.

 

Fred walked silently to the waiting gyrocoptor, tucking the small black book into the deep pocket of his blue overalls. His mind was empty and his thoughts were clear. And he was not afraid.

 

 

 

 

 

 

By Todd Storch

 

 

Moleskine...why do I love you so? 

 

You aren't "high tech".

You aren't powered by a lithium battery.

You don't have Bluetooth or WiFi built in.

You don't automatically sync with my PC.

I can't get email updates from you when items are completed or added.

I can't access you via the web when you aren't around.

You don't sound any alarms when something becomes due.

I can't beam any info to you via infrared.

I can't attach you to a portable keyboard.

You don't have fingerprint security options.

 

What is is about you Moleskine? I think I have some ideas why I love you...

 

You have a cool, elastic band to keep you closed.

You demand a good pen to write on you.

You challenge me to determine what sections should be in you.

You love it when I give each page its own page number.

You love that I talk about you on other's blogs.

Other people ask me about you all the time.

I don't have to worry about charging you each night.

I feel productive writing on your pages.

I put down more thoughts and ideas on your pages than I did in my PDA.

You love it when I cross reference my To Do list items to other pages with additional details

You love the 2 different colored tabs I use for "Work" and "Personal" sections.

Your back pocket is perfect for pictures of my kids.

You secretly remind me of my favorite Mead "Trapper Keeper" when I was

11 years old.

You are "Old School" hip.

 

 

 


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January 23, 2005





Analog Blog

Organize your Moleskine notebook as a blog

 

 

            This January I was introduced to Moleskine notebooks. It seems that there is a little frenzy, on the blogsphere, on the subject, these days. I was recently searching for a good, beautiful and classic looking notebook for my next trip. I found it in the Moleskines.

 

            When I found a discussion on it on the blogsphere I followed references and discussions. There is literally a small and beautiful community of bloggers that are passionate by them. They transmitted me this passion for Moleskines. You can find many posts on Moleskine hacks to optimize it's usage [1][2][3][4][5].

 

            Personally I was interesting to try to use some of these ideas, enhancing them, and use my Moleskines as an analog blog. Okay, it can seem crazy, it can seem really, really geek (and it is) but I'm curious to found if it can be effective and practical.

 

            We first need to remember the main blog's characteristics:

 

·        A blog is a sort of electronic personal journal that you use to put thoughts in and get comments by the community. (Have in mind that this post is about analog blogs. Then this is a paper personal journal and you'll not get comments from the community).

·        A comment system is implemented for each post. (In our case, it will be your own comments on past posts. The concept will be strengthened if you suffer of multiple-personality).

·        The posts on the blog are usually classified in categories.

·        Blogs sometimes refer to external resources.

·        Blogs usually reference internal thoughts.

 

 

Is that not beautiful? Okay, there is how you can see it on paper:



 

                          Figure 1

 

[Date : Location]

·        This is where you enter the date of your post's entry. This is probably one of the most important feature. You'll be happy to have it in 20 years. With it, you'll be able to track the evolution of your thoughts. After you can optionally add the location where you write the post. It's a way to help you remember the circumstances of your writing. The mind work this way; with a simple smell, image or word you can remember a whole situation.

 

[Title]

·        I personally think that the title is really important. It can help you to know, in a single phrase, what the post is about. It helps a lot while skimming the pages of your analog blog.

 

[Meta Data]

·        This is a good idea of Merlin Mann. You can put some words that act like the title, help you rapidly remember the object of your post.

 

[Comments Pages References]

 

·        This is the place where you put the page numbers of the comments you done on the post. I'll come back to this feature later.

 

[Category]

·        This is the category name to which your posts belong to.

 

[x : y] 

·        This is the permalink of your post. You'll use these numbers to refer to this post. X is the number of the book where the post is present. Y is the current page of this book.

 

*Note: In the whole post I take in count that you are a Moleskine freak. So every reference has 2 numbers, one for the book and the other for the page. So if you have only one and don't think about buying another one then you can erase the book number reference.

 

[v : w]

·        This is an optional reference. It refers to where the post continues if he is made on more than one page.

 

[a : b]->

·        This is a link on an external reference. Basically an external reference is a reference that is not in your analog blog. I'll come back later on external references. A is the number of the book where the external references link page is and B is the page of the book where the external reference is viewable.

 

->[c : d]

·        This is a link on an internal reference. An internal reference is another blog entry in your analog blog. It can be in the current book or another one. C is the number of the book where the internal references page is and D is the page of the book where the post is viewable.

 

 

 

 

                          Figure 2

 

The categories page is essential and is the second main feature after the posts' pages. You can see it as a dynamic index. You can create your categories when you start your analog blog; but you also can create them when you need it. When you'll create a new post that enters in one of these categories, you'll dynamically add it on this page. This page will be the first or one of the first of your book. Remember, this is a sort of index or table of content.

 

[CategoryX]

·        This is the name of a category. This is the same name that will be writing in the [category] section of the Figure 1.

                       

[1 ; 2-4 ; 8 ; 12]

·        This is the pages of the current book where you have posts that belong to this category.




                          Figure 3

 

This is the page where you'll enter your comments on your posts. For this special page, I suggest you to begin at the next to last page. When the next to last page is full, continue to enter you comments on the previous one. Why working in reverse order? You think that all will be upside-down? You are right, it will be. But you will always be sure that you'll not lack space for comments as long as your Moleskine is not full. There are two problems that will rise if you say, when you'll start your analog blog, that you'll take the last 20 pages for you comments. First, it's possible that your posts entries reach the start of your comments and that you have only use 10 pages of your 20 dedicated ones to comment. You can also use the 20 comment pages and you don't have any place left to continue adding comments. It's why I suggest proceeding like this.

 

[e : f]

·        This is the back reference to the post you comment. E is the number of the book where the commented post is situated and F is the page of this book where the comment is viewable.




                          Figure 4

The external reference page will be you last one (or last few ones). This is the place where you'll put the external references referred by posts in the book. These external references can be an internet URL, an address, a phone number, etc. The purpose of this section is to put references that you don't want to rewrite every time you refer to them in the analog blog's current book.

 

[g : h]

·        This is the reference number. G is the number of the current book. H is the page where the external reference is viewable. As you can see, you can use this reference in another book.

 

 

 

 

 

Finally you have your own analog blog ready. Now I just hope that this whole thing is effective and usable. Only the time will tell me it. I'll probably not see the benefit of it in the first days, but month after month after month I hope that I'll see them.

 

Okay, okay, I'll do the security review of the analog blog system. It's 100% safe over the internet as long as your Moleskine is not open and in the view of a broadcasting web camera. And it's physically secure as long as he is on me and that I'm not assaulted with a .45.

 

So, this is a little post that I wanted to write. Share your thoughts, comments and additions by commenting it. I'm sure that the "system" is not perfect and it's why I hope you’ll comment it.

 

-----

[Update: 21 April 2005] I published a lightweight version of the system for Moleskine Pocket Daily Diary (or notebook)

[Update: 29 January 2005] I published a reaction and clarification post on the subject of analog blogs.


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