Fresh Cream

I am really excited about this.

I have seen a lot of concerts.  Cream is one band I’ve never seen live, and if they play anywhere near Texas, I’ll fix that.  We saw Eric Clapton not long ago, and he was great.

Here’s a link to the embedded video for feeds.

Now, if the remaining members of Led Zeppelin would tour again, I could plug the other huge whole in my concert portfolio.

On the other hand, I’m not all that stoked about this.

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Educating Kent: Facebook

blogssocialnetworksI have a genuine question.

What is so much better about Facebook (and MySpace and other similar platforms) than an ordinary blog on a popular platform- say WordPress?

I would love it if someone could explain this to me.

To this point, I’ve always felt like the blogosphere is the only social network that matters, and that Facebook, etc. are the dilutive sandboxes of the new Geocities generation.  But I am obviously missing something.  Just look at tonight’s Techmeme.

I understand how it’s better for the owners of Facebook, because they can sell ads and leverage off of the content and traffic created by users.

But I don’t get it at all from the user’s perspective.

Can somebody help me with this?

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Evening Reading: 5/24/07

Blogtrepreneur (that’s really hard to spell) has a list of 101 Essential Blogging Resources.

eMoms at Home tells work at home parents how to keep kids busy during the summer.

Ethan Johnson smartly end-runs around Classmates.com.  This is a good idea, and I may do something similar for all the other geezers from Cheraw High School, Class of 1978.  Any of my classmates who read this blog, let me know what you think.

I’m going to try some of these on Luke.  Up until now, I’ve been satisfied with saying “look at the giraffe” every time we see a horse.  Just kidding, eMoms.

An exclusive interview with Jackson Miller.

One of these days I’m going to start a 5 questions series where I ask regular bloggers 5 questions.  Like what’s the airspeed velocity of an unladen swallow?  You’re young and you got your health, what you want with a job?  That sort of thing.

Reason number 187 not to play golf.

Rogers Cadenhead on the RSS Advisory Board.  This is the 7th time I’ve linked to Rogers, not that I’m keeping score or anything.

On that note, Scoble says his link blog isn’t getting enough return links.  Sometimes I think he writes stuff just to irritate me.  It’s a real shame you have to be sycophantic or bombastic just to get included.  I like Randy’s plan better- and it obviously worked.

TVSquad on the future of Lost.  I really liked the season finale.

Thanks to Mike, Penelope (author of the book I was discussing) and Ayelet for commenting on my recent posts.

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News in an Accelerated World

Doc Searls likes his news the old fashioned way.  He says:

So here’s a challenge to the daily papers: stop giving away the franchise. Make daily editorial available online only for subscribers. Charge for the fresh stuff, online as well as off.

In a perfect old media world, that’s exactly how it would work.  But this ain’t a perfect old media world, and if the papers start walling their fresh content off, a hundred online-only publications will happily take their place.  Everyone- bloggers, new media, advertisers- would benefit from the trickle down news effect, except the papers.

I haven’t subscribed to a newspaper in almost 10 years.  By the time I see it in the paper, I already know it.  I don’t watch the local news on TV anymore for the same reason.

We live in an accelerated world and news via old media is in slow motion.

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The Politics of Working

workplace myths

Guy Kawasaki asked Penelope Trunk, the author of a book on career advancement, for her 9 biggest myths of the workplace.  I’ve spent a lot of time in the workplace, a lot of it hiring and managing people.  Here’s the list, with my thoughts (and these are only my personal thoughts).

1. You’ll be happier if you have a job you like.

There’s logic (and condescension) to the garbage man in love story, but this is not a myth.  Being a pessimist can ruin any job, but the fact is that those who do what they do only for the paycheck are generally going to be less effective and less happy.  I’m not saying you have to love it so much, you’d do it for free.  But, within the context of a job, it really helps to like what you do.

2. Job-hopping will hurt you.

I think most folks have 2 maybe 3 hops.  After that, it becomes a red flag on a resume- as does missing years in the timeline (which often hide more jumping).  So it’s a matter of degree.

3. The glass ceiling still exists.

I don’t know if the glass ceiling in the traditional sense still exists or not.  But I completely agree that lots of people are stepping off the ladder and looking for life balance.  But there will always be a segment of the population who is scrambling up as fast as they can.  The important thing is to figure out where your personal sweet spot is and work towards that.  It may be to make the most money possible, or it may not.  I hope it’s not.

4. Office politics is about backstabbing.

Interestingly (at least to me), I agree that this is largely a myth.  What backstabbing remains is much more subtle, but the ones who do it are generally found out and controlled.  If you have good and attentive managers, it’s not much of a problem.

5. Do good work, and you’ll do fine.

I agree with this, but not the toot your own horn every chance you get part.  You have to do good work, period.  Then, you have to try to get others to toot your horn for you.  If I tell you I’m good, it means nothing.  If others tell you that, it means a lot.  People don’t like self promoters because people don’t like to be sold.  They like to make their own decisions.

6. You need a good resume.

This is not a myth- at least as far as content goes.  Sure, blind resumes don’t get you the job.  But once you’ve left the interview, a good resume helps you beat out the competition.  By good, I mean content.  I agree that the form and font and whatnot don’t matter.  I wouldn’t pay some so-called expert a quarter to write my resume.

7 People with good networks are good at networking.

I totally agree that this is a myth.  People who are sincere and likeable are the best at networking.  Because to them, it’s not networking- it’s living.  Nothing turns me off faster than someone who wants to get to know me mostly to leverage off that relationship for personal gain.

8. Work hard and good things will come.

I agree that this is a myth.  Hard work is a requirement, but there’s a lot more to it.  Having said that, it’s not this: “Make sure you’re not the hardest worker. Take a long lunch. Get all your work done early. Grand thinking requires space, flexibility and time. So let people see you staring at the wall. They’ll know you’re a person with big ideas and taking time to think makes you more valuable.”  Because if you do that, people won’t think you’re a person with big ideas, they’ll think you’re a slacker.  Period.

9 Create the shiny brand of you!

This sounds like a clip from some Powerpoint presentation, but I agree with this passage: “Offer your true, good-natured self to other people and you’ll have a great network. Those who stand out as leaders have a notable authenticity that enables them to make genuinely meaningful connections with a wide range of people.”

I think people tend to over analyze job advancement.  It’s really simple.  Be smart.  Be honest.  Be kind.  Work hard.  Live good.  Manage priorities.  Find your balance.

And as Webb Wilder says, wear glasses if you need ’em.

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Evening Reading: 5/23/07

Looks like Google is, in fact, going to buy FeedBurner.  That makes me sad.  Google is trying to corner the market on information.  Like when someone shoots the moon in Hearts, it may be too late to do anything about it when people realize it and start to care.

Now cola has gone open source.

Kodak is getting out of the “low end” digital camera business.  Hmmm.

My home state gets serious about beer.  When I lived there we were happy to get our hands on PBRs and Falstaff.  I even had a taste of moonshine a time or two.  Anyone drinking those high falutin’ beers would have been beat up summarily.

The Civil War in 4 minutes.  This is a great video- watch it before they take it down. (via Kevin Briody)

Tris Hussey asked the $64,000 question, and then deleted it.  Here’s a clip from my reader.

Scott Karp is a blogging buddy, but when I see both “disruptive” and “disintermediated” in the first 13 words of a post, it’s time to mark it read and move on. 

My funny line of the day, from a TechCrunch story on some scheduled Second Life downtime: “Second Life entrepreneurs are particularly unhappy with the downtime, after all, if you’re trying to make a living from Second Life this downtime affects the bottom line.”  That’s what I tell my wife when she makes me and the kids stop playing whiffle ball and come inside for dinner.  “Honey, I’m going to get rich playing whiffle ball one day….”

Blonde 2.0 on brand building via social media. 

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Alms for the Poor or Bring Out Your Grateful Dead

willblogforfoodC|Net reports that the music industry is offering “small” webcasters the option of paying “below market” royalty rates on the songs they play, keeping the required royalty rates essentially the same as they are under a 2002 law called the Small Webcaster Settlement Act.

It’s not known what the cutoff for “small” would be, but the SaveNetRadio coalition argues logically that almost all webcasters should be considered small by broadcast standards.  Once they get more popular, however, they might very well grow themselves out of business under the proposed plan.

While I’d love the ability to stream some MP3’s from Newsome.Org, the bigger issue is not helping bloggers put a few streaming MP3’s online, it’s ensuring the viability of the places most of us go to get new music- the Pandoras and Rhapsodys of the world.

As Techdirt points out, this is likely an attempt to distract the growing number of politicians who have been looking at this very important issue.

While I’m happy to see the music industry negotiate a little, there’s a lot more work to do before we’re done.

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Evening Reading: 5/22/07

Randy Morin is 100% correct.  Those on the outside looking in could easily change the game by linking to each other.  For me, it’s a matter of recreating the blogosphere or leaving it altogether.  Once we get a collective voice, the blogging elite will let us in the club, and we can all blog together.  It’s not about pulling the A-Listers down, it’s about pulling ourselves up.  Scott Kingery agrees.

Google declares Google Office victory.  Maybe, if victory means being used by non-corporate cheapskates.  I don’t know a single person who uses Google Apps in lieu of Office or Works.  Not one.

Karl Martino makes some good points about online news, and expects to be ignored.  See item 1 above.

Darren Rowse, who I consider an un-A-Lister even though he never answered my question, has a good post on growing a blog.

Random blogs I like: Ben Metcalfe, Brad Kellett, Craig Newmark, Greg Hughes, Jeremy Zawodny, Kevin Briody, Ric Hayman, Richard Querin, Steven Streight and Zoli Erdos.

Amazing rumble in the jungle between lions, crocodiles and buffalo.  (via Rob Gale)

Robert Scoble says he’s in a blogging malaise.  That’s sort of like those celebrities who complain about all the fans asking them for autographs and whatnot.  Robert should be thankful for his blogging fame (which he deserves and earned through hard work).  So I’m not going to shed too many tears for him.

Seth makes a good point in the comments to my unblogosphere post.

On that note, I have lately forgotten to implement my new policy, so thanks to Seth, Barbidoll31, Mike, TDavid, Richard, Louis, OmegaMom, EthanSusan, Holly, DeeJay and Kelly for commenting on my recent posts.  Please keep ’em coming!

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Neither is the Blogosphere

Dave Winer points out that some conferences he recently attended were not unconferences.  He says “people don’t seem ready yet to accept that knowledge is distributed through the room.”

I agree that the structure of an unconference is a better way to learn about a lot of stuff.  But I sort of feel the way Dave felt at those conferences every time I fire up my feed reader.

If we want to promote unconferences, first we need to promote an unblogosphere.

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Partial Feeds + Banner Ads in Each Post = Bye Bye

I’ve noticed that some people are starting to combine partial feeds with a big ad banner at the end of each partial post in said feed.  I will unsubscribe to any feeds that do that.  Bye bye to two long time reads, Blog Herald and PC Doctor.

If this becomes the norm, it will spell the end of my blog reading.

UPDATE: Adrian (the PC Doctor) emailed me and said the banner ads at the end of every feed post was a technical glitch.  I have resubscribed.  Thanks to Adrian for emailing to clear that up.

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