Filed under: Uncategorized
The back cover of the last Whole Earth Catalog that Steve Jobs mentioned in his Stanford commencement speech. Here is the YouTube video of the speech. I’ve just recently come across the text of his speech and it has really hit a chord within me. I’ve been way too quiet for too long on this blog. Time to open up my mind again. Dust off the cobwebs. Stir the passions that have been smoldering for a while now.
Filed under: RSS
I’ve been on vacation at the beach recently and did a lot of walking and noodling along the water. I’ve been back over a week now and still have that slow and easy wish I was still there feeling. I could easily live at the beach year round and particularly enjoy the Delaware coast even when it’s cool in the fall.
I’ve decided to use this blog in a different way than I have done other blogging attempts in the past. I want to concentrate on what I’m passionate about: RSS, blogging (although you couldn’t tell by the lack of entries), emerging technologies as they relate to personal content and most importantly how they all change the way we communicate. I’m fascinated with these social networks although for the most part they are full of junk. But I also remember how bad desktop publishing was at it’s birth. Butt ugly!!
So… hopefully each day something new will appear on this site that maybe shows a little bit of what I’m working on or thinking about. Even if no one ever reads this blog I will have some record of what was interesting me that day.
P.S. I also intend to use Ning’s playground for developing my concepts. I think they have the right idea around social networks. As I once remember hearing “let a million blogs bloom” or something like that, Ning enables the same idea for “social networks”.
Filed under: Web 2.0
I picked up the current issue of Rollingstone magazine yesterday mainly so my wife and daughter could get their fix of Johnny Depp who graces the cover this week. In the early days of the magazine I would religiously read it cover-to-cover as soon as it arrived in the mail. But as I grew away from my childhood in the 60s and early 70s I lost interest in the music they were covering during the 80s and had little time for much of anything else when I started having children of my own. Bur reading this issue has peaked my interest again as they report on the convergence of the music industry with the digital age which is one of my passions.
However….
I am surprised that Rollingstone’s site has very little of what is actually in the printed rag. I was hoping to blog about an article I read about YouTube and the music biz but I can’t find the information anywhere on their site. I want to give Jann Wenner the benefit of the doubt in that somewhere this content must exist on their site. I thought that maybe they have it locked up as a subscriber only access but I don’t see any login screen.
You would think that a magazine like Rollingstone would be leading the way in the didgital world with enhanced versions of their articles on the web along with allowing comments from their readers. And podcasts. And vidcasts. They do have a Rock & Roll Daily weblog but nothing from the current issue. I know that advertising is a big reason for the magazine to continue to thrive but come on!
Now maybe I’m just blind and the information is indeed up there. If that is the case then they have a very bad user experience going on.
Geez.
UPDATE: I was blind. There is a login but in somewhat small type under the Welcome banner. And they do have an RS Updates section that includes newsletters, podcasts, RSS feeds, and Desktop Alerts but it was way at the bottom of the Home page which I never scrolled down to see. I still don’t know how to search for current articles or if they are even available let alone finding old articles. The search field that is most obvious only seems to search music by artist, album, or song. How do you search the other content?
Filed under: Web 2.0
I purchased two books yesterday in anticipation of my annual summer trek to the beach. I came across Naked Conversations by Robert Scoble and Shel Israel at Half-Price books which surprised me since it was only released in January. My good fortune! I have been reading Scoble since his days with Userland. The book is about how blogs are changing the way businesses talk with customers (re: the cover jacket). This subject expands on what the Cluetrain Manifesto first broached: markets are conversations with blogs becoming an important way to encourage them.
The other book The Long Tail by Chris Anderson is an expansion on an essay he wrote in Wired magazine in October 2004. It’s a very interesting and much debated topic that is basically: what happens when everything in the world becomes available to everyone? When the combined value of all the millions of items that may sell only a few copies equals or exceeds the value of the few items that sell millions each? It certainly changes the playing field.
Now the tough part: which do I read first?
Filed under: RSS
I am a huge believer in RSS (Really Simple Syndication) and have been since it’s inception by Dave Winer. I use NetNewsWire on my Mac and synchronize to NewsGator Online since they purchased Brett’s fine software. With the advent of aggregators like NetNewsWire it’s become so simple to monitor all sorts of information from disparate sources all around the web. I don’t have to visit my favorite sites just to see what’s new with the information being delivered to my reader every half an hour or so.
But what i have found is happening (at least to me) is I keep subscribing to more and more feeds trying to fulfill my insatiable need to know. God it’s addicting! At the same time I’m reaching a stage where I am quickly scanning headlines and never finding the time to read the entire article. Slowly it becomes old news.
My dilemma: start cutting back my feeds and actually reading the articles or learning how to let go of the story if it doesn’t catch my interest in the first paragraph. Which is how I used to read the newspaper. My problem seems to be fear of missing the next big thing. Geez! Lighten up Francis! Or as John Lennon said “Life is what happens while you are busy making other plans.”
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This is so funny and so bad for Comcast
Add a video comment to this video
Filed under: Uncategorized
TechCrunch: Stealth start-up PostApp announced at Thursday’s SuperNova Connected Innovators session the launch tomorrow of WidgetBox, its new beta marketplace for managed web based widgets, and $1.5 million in funding from Hummer Winblad.
If you like widgets, there’s about to be a whole lot more of them available for use in your blog or profile page. If you’d like to develop widgets and have some one else deal with the details, this could be for you.
Now this is something I thought would really make sense. Widgets are coming out in all sort of products and platforms. Yahoo, Apple, Tagworld and just recently Opera have widget platforms and it makes perfect sense for a clearinghouse to emerge. I wish I had thought it up!
Maybe I can turn my hobby of widget building into a my own little cottage industry! Hmmmm…..
I’ve often thought it would be much smarter to create one’s web space with building blocks of information from sources of your own choosing and not being locked into a particular environment. Now I am a geek at heart so it’s easy for me to roll up my sleeves and make programming changes to my site but my wife wouldn’t have a clue where to start. She mainly lives and breathes in email and IM because everything else takes to much time to her to figure out. However when I installed Tiger on her Mac and she played with her first widget I saw her eyes light up a bit. Maybe with the coming explosion (hopefully) of new and more functional widgets someone like her might just get the itch to experiment.
When I first discovered Ning I had high hopes that maybe their “playground” would be the platform that would allow someone like my wife to participate but I think their interface is a little confusing for a novice. And to take true advantage of Ning you really do need to understand programming. Maybe combining some next generation widgets with the Ning platform will prove to be an interesting idea. Hmmm….
