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Filed under: digital culture

Apple keynote events: the Macguffin of mythinformation

Tonight saw the latest Apple "Special Event", and the launch of some new shiny kit and software from Cupertino. This seems a timely opportunity to plug a project I've helped out on for Sage publishing. 

CommunicationSpace is an online community space for the discussion of media and communication research. In my first posting to the site, I wrote a retrospective of Patrice Flichy's paper The Construction of New Digital Media from 1999. In the paper Flichy describes how new media technology is imbued with mythic qualities and ideologies even before it is launched. This process is facilitated by sections of the media (notable Wired) who champion certain positions about the new technologies.

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Web Standards is the new Comedy is the new Rock'n'Roll

So when exactly did coders become rock stars?
 

In the course of my morning I had cause to be looking at some stuff by Jeffrey Zeldman on A List Apart, and then shortly after to be on Amazon which threw up a suggestion that I buy the new edition of his book  'Designing with Web Standards' (I already have the first one, and I've ordered this new edition for BCU's library).

 
I'd never really thought twice about the front cover of 'Designing with Web Standards', but having just been reading some of his other content I spotted that he's got a neat little corporate identity going based around the book cover, which looks like this:
 
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His Twitter avatar, his avatar on a List Apart all call back to this iconic book cover. So far so obvious: I have the same avatar in lots of places on the Internet, and the man is selling a book, so you'd expect him to use every trick in the book to remind you of that fact. But just look at that cover for a second. That's not the way we sell technical manuals about the Internet. They look like this:
 
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They should be dark, have some sort of symbolic reference to the "world" part of "world wide web". They should look like an extension pack for Warhammer 40,000. So what's with the beardy guy on the cover? He's a geek's geek: men want him, women want to code like him. The guy's a bloody rockstar. In the words of Ron Burgundy: people know him.
 
Now look at this companion volume:
 
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(source: http://amzn.to/avuxw9)
 
OK, it's classic brand extension - you can't miss that this a companion for Zeldman's book - but at the same time it anoints another rock star coder; Zeldman's rhythm guitarist, speaking up for standards.