(picture: Norbert and Frank)
Save Ferris! Save Frank! More Save Frank!
Having heard Jimmy Wales talk about Biographies on Wikipedia, especially of living people, I am now seeing it in action.
(picture: Norbert and Frank)
Save Ferris! Save Frank! More Save Frank!
Having heard Jimmy Wales talk about Biographies on Wikipedia, especially of living people, I am now seeing it in action.
Laurel Papworth has some interesting comments on generation-Y (digi-kids) and the disconnected nature of our current governments. Laurel’s post references this article in the Sydney Morning Herald (Laurel: the reason why Fairfax doesn’t believe in the long tail is that it hasn’t worked out its business model yet)
Having spent two days with a selection of passionate Victorian School Principals, I am more concerned about our Governmental policies and the silent digital majority than those on the ground in the classroom.
The YouTube presentation at the beginning of her post puts stark numbers on the story from The World Is Flat.
Thomas Friedman was in Australia a few weeks ago, and spent time with both sides of Australian Federal Politics. I hope he was able to talk and explain that Education and Bandwidth are critical to the future of this nation. If being a Nation is that important anymore.
I am going to extend Thomas’ equation:
CQ + PQ + EQ > IQ
EQ is emotional quotient, emotional intelligence or emotional maturity. You cannot teach EQ from books. Passionate Teachers provide a role model for our kids for the future.
Let’s hope the generation after us repairs the mistakes we’ve made.
Today was Bernard Oh’s last day at Microsoft. Berno has a special place in my first 4 months at Microsoft as he guided me through lots of the “stuff”.
Stopped off at Starbucks on the way to our internal meeting with Steve Ballmer. Frank Arrigo turned up and we had a good chat about life, universe and everything. The towel helped.
Then with my special green party bracelet, we all waited for Steve to come on stage. Just in case I was abducted by aliens, and to stop the wifi-blocking beams from damaging my brain more – I put the towel on my head. Thanks Frank for the photo.
No aliens were hurt during the production of this blog entry.
Technorati Tags: towelday
Frank Arrigo has a Wikipedia entry. He’s famous!
May25th is Towel Day. A tribute to the great Douglas Adams. Or maybe just the joy that towels bring us.
Pictures from 2005 are here, and in 2006 someone panic’d and forgot to promote the 25th of May. Or the 25th of May didn’t exist last year. Ah, no. Just moved the images to Flickr: towelday
I’ll be taking a towel to work tomorrow.
At the Hill and Knowlton “Surviving and thriving in the next decade – Technology Publishing” Breakfast Bytes this morning, a group of eminent panelists in picture above, from the left:
The theme from the morning’s panel and Q&A is that “there will be a mixture of online and print” and that “online and print” readers are treated as different readers by the big-names. My perspective as a corporate online/citizen journalist is slightly different.
Like the quintessential investigative journalists: Woodward and Bernstein learnt: follow the money. In the above listing of panelists, notice where their stated investment is going. It’s online.
From a traditional publisher’s perspective, the business is about employing journalists to gather hidden facts, connect, analyse and write stories. People buy the paper (atoms) to read the stories and maybe their eyeballs will stray onto an advertisement. The marketing groups of companies buy these positions on the paper in the hope that the right eyeballs are enthralled by the product and/or service – and buy the product. The core of a publisher’s job is managing the compelling content such that a specific audience is created that advertisers value.
The web is no different, except that anyone can be a publisher, and outsource the revenue side (advertising) to Microsoft or Google. Large publishers, such as Fairfax, are unhappy that their expensive infrastructure is subverted online: Peter Roberts mentioned twice that Google made $200 million in Australia without investing in the content-side.
Peter Roberts also commented on one of his competitors, Alan Kohler’s Eureka Report, having only an online mechanism but successful business model. My perspective is that Alan’s business is successful as he is seen as a respected and independent entity within Australia’s financial community. Alan Kohler is a trusted brand.
The Gadget Guy, Peter Blasina’s question near the end summarised the morning for me: What does the future really look like? Each of the represented panelist’s organisations (maybe with the exception of cnet) have their business strategies weighted toward print, and the brand-value that print brings.
Peter Blasina comes at this with credibility as a true multi-channel brand and personality: print, online and TV – and surmised that the coming generation will change the face of the print publisher’s world. And they know it.
The future for publishers is where the eyeballs are. And eyeballs are not going to be in print, it is going to be online. Eyeballs stay longer where this is trusted value, and most importantly where there is a community. Reading a magazine is an almost high-latency feedback medium; where two-way interaction is slow if attempted at all.
Demographics of the eyeballs are changing to more online: younger readers being digitally native and older generations having more time to explore online; with more females than males desiring a community and interaction rather than passive acceptance; high bandwidth connection to permit TV, Radio and Print being equal online mediums.
Whilst I have no research to back this up, I am going to state it here. A common refrain from print publishers is that “Radio did not replace newspapers, and TV did not replace radio” as their backwards looking perspective on why online will not replace these old media. My argument is that the internet can replace the media styles: with web pages, podcasts and vidcasts. As Rupert Murdoch is quoted as saying: “Big media no longer controls the conversation”
James Tuckerman knows his readers, and I think has a plan to create value in Anthill’s community. He understands the emotional connection that he has with his readership. James also stated there are “population lumps” at birth-years of 1949, 1974 and 1985. According to the ABS, there is another population lump in the 2005-7 range too. My suggestion is to watch Anthill as a publisher. They are starting a conversation with their community.
A Question about SecondLife, the current “craze” in Australia potentially due to a visit in meatspace by a Linden Labs persona, resulted in Tony Sarno saying that “many PBL management have visited SecondLife”. I fear it is because of the gambling dens rather than the community aspect. About 20% of the audience of largely PR and technology industry attendees had logged into SecondLife, of which most had logged in once.
So, in industry parlance, what is the tip-on for online? It’s the community. Community is the new Brand.
Wikipedia.org. Ensure your school is in Wikipedia. Understand the social aspects of Wikis, and the rules related to Wikipedia entries.
Microsoft Breathe Life. Microsoft Australia’s starting point for Education.
linkedin.com. Professional Social Networking. Start here.
Live.com search (Advanced search features) Use the Advanced features of search to ego-surf.
flickr.com. Social sharing of photos with folksonomy tagging
del.icio.us Search blogs, user-created tags for the folksonomy tags.
sixtyminutes.ninemsn.com.au. Recent story
Difference of Opinion. Excellent discussion of Digital Generation Gap
danah boyd. Exploring the Digital Generation gap; formal research papers.
I Can Has Cheeseburger. Fun and interesting use of language
edublogs.org. Create your own blog, or blog for a classroom.
Finally, the presentation from 17th May 2007 and 22nd May 2007.
Microsoft PopFly is going to seriously impede my ability to do real work at Microsoft. Oh, that’s right, I get paid to demo this stuff!
PopFly is social programming, without the programming. Publish your ‘flys and have them rated; have other’s outputs for your inputs. Web sites could create their own Blocks to publish in this different form.
It’s just fun to build stuff that mashes data together. Below is what I could produce within 5 minutes (2 minutes getting a Flickr API key) and typing less than 15 characters: it is a simple Flickr photoviewer, showing the last 100 public images uploaded to my Flickr.com account.
PopFly was announced officially overnight – but I had heard about the project in my first week at Microsoft. Hearing about it vs. trying PopFly out are two separate things.