Willie Randolph to Speak at Fordham Graduation
Sah-weet. I'll be there to see what Willie has to say. Hey Willie, I'm faculty... get me some tix.
Dear Sprint, I would like to buy a PPC-6800. Please sell me one.
Now that I'm back on my Treo 650, I long for the days of Windows Mobile, wide, slide-out keyboards, and ActiveSync. I miss my PPC-6700. :(
But alas, there is hope. A slimmer new model is on the way... and I want it.
The problem is, no one at Sprint seems to know when it is coming out. All the bloggers seem to know that it's in May, and someone even went as far as to say May 14th. So why can't the telesales people pre-order it for me right now? Heck, they could even charge my card now? I just want it.
With a couple thousand blog readers and an upcoming trip across the country, I think I'm a prime candidate to be at the top of the list of people Sprint wants this phone in the hands of, no?
So why is getting this thing so hard and why are the people trying to sell it so poorly informed.
Last year, the PPC-6700 was released to business users before the general public. Perhaps the same thing will happen this year?
I want my 6800!!
Hell, I'll even sign a two year contract to get it.
nextMadisonAve: A Free nextNY Community Conversation on the Future of Digital Advertising
With Microsoft now rumored to be buying 24/7 Real Media, the arms race is at full throttle. For nextNYer's, the question of "Where will I be working in five years if I want to work in online advertising?" becomes more interesting everyday.
I'm sure these topics will be covered at the Future of Online Advertising conference, but if you don't have a $995 to drop and you're looking for something a little more conversational, check out nextMadisonAve, next Wednesday, May 9th, at 6:30PM (22 West 27th Street Bet. Broadway/6th - 6th Floor).
nextNY's "Community Conversations" are done in the round (or rectangle, if we're in a conference room) and are an open forum for discussion for the up and coming members of NYC's digital media and technology market. We invite prominent thought leaders to help lead the conversation, but they're very participatory.
So, if you want to meet with other digital media entreprenuers and professionals to talk about where the advertising and technology market is converging (other than in investment banker wallets) please join us! RSVP Required on our wiki (just click edit and add your name).
Also, if you know of anyone you think would make a great conversation leader for this event, we have some outstanding invites, but I think we'll have an additional slot or two open. Please let me know at charlie.odonnell@gmail.com.
More Subway Thumbing
I'm listening to Silversun Pickups on the N train home my blogging class. I would have biked home, its a beautiful night, but I seemed to strain an abdominal muscle last week and nicely aggrevated it at the gym on Sunday, so I won't push it...at least not until my two softball games at the end of the week.
The train is a bit empty now...it's 10PM. Ther girl down at the other end of my bench seat has a tattoo on the back of her neck. I don't mess with neck tats. Neck tats always trump arm tats. I think the order, from most to least hardcore is face, neck, arm, back, leg. The guy across from her has no distraction devices... No iPod, no book, no nothing. He's just sitting there, looking around, reading subway ads. Nineteen people in this car... Six have iPods. Apparently, market penetration is like 30 percent, so we're a pretty average bunch.
I hate typing on this Treo. My thumbs keep bumping into each
other. Pacific Street. One iPod on, one iPod off. Equillibrium is
maintained. I wonder where everyone gets their music. The girl across
from me has abandoned her SAT Test Prep book for a paperback of
"Starter Wife". For some reason, it's got Deborah Messing on the
cover. Is this a movie coming out? This N train is a fancy new
one...with easy to read electronic displays of the wrong station coming
up next. 36 Street. Dragula by Rob Zombie. I thought of naming my
car Dragula, but what's really the point of a car name other than to...
Ok, speaking of idiocy, the guy over in the next car just walked off
the train with his bike and just biked down to the end of the platform.
A subway platform is like the last place I'd bike around. That's got
all sorts of dangerous written all over it. It is freezing in this
car. I seem to be sitting right under a vent. Getting up... Train
traffic ahead of us...at this
time?? Liars...unless it's the money train or the garbage
train. Switching at 59th Street....Depeche Mode...World in My Eyes.
If I had a hernia, it would be a big painful protrusion, right? I
wouldn't be able to stand up straight, right? On the R train. I don't
envy suit wearers.
Power Dynamics and Perception: Perhaps it's not the choir that you are preaching to
When you're talking passionately about a product or service, it's interesting to consider the power dynamic of you and your audience. Where you respectively sit in terms of the "haves" and "have nots" can go a long way to how your audience perceives you.
Think about the following scenarios:
You're talking to someone about your business who isn't in your field and has no experience with it.
They either don't understand your product or don't try to understand it, and the exchange is dismissed. When they don't understand your market, you dismiss their confused reaction. "You wouldn't understand the problem because you're not our target audience." You forget that the laws of logic apply universally and so, even to someone who isn't familiar with your field, you should always attempt to speak with sound logic even to outsiders. Not everyone needs to find your service useful, but they should at least understand why someone else would.
You're talking with peers
This is the blogosphere. You're talking to others who totally get your space and see the world from the same perspective. Your passion is admired and even contagious. The feedback you get from peers encourages you to keep walking the walk and talking the talk... and you quickly forget that not everyone drinks the same Kool Aid that you do. Getting unbiased perspective here is incredibly difficult.
You're talking with someone who needs something from you
This is what happens when you're a VC.
Mets up, Yanks down... See how everything evens out for me?
The Mets are in first and the Yanks are in last.
Really, would you have it any other way?
The Yanks have already had nine different pitchers start games, including Darrel Rasner, Jeff Karstans, and Chase Wright.
haha
(Sorry.)
You know what the best part of this is? The Yankee MVP and frankly, the MVP of the whole baseball universe was A-Rod. He's batting .355 with 14HR and 35 RBI after 23 games. In 1968, I think that might have qualified for the Triple Crown.
Everyone makes such a big deal about Captain Derek Jeter, but for my money, A-Rod is the best shortstop on the team. Captain Derek wouldn't come to A-Rod's side last year when Rodriguez was struggling and he added to preseason controversy by saying a chilly "We get along on the field" or some garbage like that. Derek, I think it's time for you to embrace the guy who is carrying your patchwork overpaid team on his shoulders.
Jeez... How's that Kris Benson trade looking now? John Maine is 4-0 with a 1.35ERA. In fact, the Mets have a team ERA of 2.74.
No Bradford? No problem. Submariner Joe Smith hasn't given up a run yet.
Ya gotta believe... in April.
links for 2007-04-28
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Hey... I love three blocks down from here and pass this house everytime I walk to the train!
Cool NYC Apartment for Sale
No, not mine... this place belongs to a friend. Tell him I sent you...
Twitter Strikes Again
So last night, I had a late meeting and I wound up in Union Square at 10PM having not quite eaten yet. I really don't like eating alone and so I figured I'd just give Twitter a shot.
Me: Anyone hungry near union sq?
Avi Karnani, two minutes later: I'm walking back from the office, through union sq right now actually, looking for food.
The most bizzare thing is that its the second time that Avi and I have met up this way... and it's the only two times we've met. We meant to try to connect at SXSW and it didn't happen... but not too long after, I twittered that I was going to a nextNY bar outing and he just happened to be in the area. I bumped into him in the bar, only to find out later that it was my Twitter that brought him there.
I think the key to Twitter's geolocation capability is the broadcast model and its simplicity. I didn't need to have GPS going or post cross streets or anything... and Avi didn't need to identify his location either. Twitter doesn't know the difference between "union sq" and "peanut butter" but an actual human in NYC clearly knew where I was.
Twitter still needs to figure out group features and ways to market this to localized groups of people, which this works best for, but b/c I'm lucky enough to have lots of techy friends using it in the same area, I'm finding it very useful.
Web 2.0 LolCat
Andrew made this based on #5 of the Web 2.0 Sucks List... Hilarious! I love LolCats.
nextNY Social this Friday at Coppersmith's
If you're looking to meet up with other up and comers in the NYC digital media and tech scene, drop by Coppersmith's after work this Friday.
April 27th… Coppersmith’s 6PM-9PM
793 9th Avenue (bet 52nd/53rd).
Top Ten Reasons Why Web 2.0 Sucks
- The finger pointing culture of fear will always dominate a culture of openness. Media
thrives on taking people down and creating a general fear of the worst
possible outcome. Whether it's trying enact anti-MySpace laws or
firing everyone who says a dirty word or two, until we hold our noses
and fully embrace freedom of expression in this country, we're going to
hold back the real potential of the internet as a medium of
conversation and open exchange. Everyone will be too scared to publish
anything thought provoking for fear of being stoned by glass house
dwellers.
- The thinking, not just the building, has gotten small and lightweight... Too many people building features, not applications, or, gasp, companies. People are confusing design with innovation. Just because you add AJAX and rounded boxes to something does mean you have innovated.
- Web 2.0 hasn't even come close to breaking open the carrier choked mobile world. E-mail and WAP? That's what I'm paying unlimited data for? Come on. We can do better than this.
- Web 2.0 is a conversational vacuum. I'll prove it. Unless you live in the Valley, walk outside your door and try to find a Twitter user... You've got six hours. Go. Trust me, we're talking to ourselves. (Don't get me wrong... I really like Twitter... We just need to remind ourselves about how close to the edge we all are out here.)
- Spelling and grammr (beta) have gone to hell in a handbasket. I'm in ur domainz, droppin' ur vowelz.
- M&A Wack-a-mole stopping innovation in its tracks... Dodgeball, del.icio.us, MyBlogLog... Some of the most innovative startups have been swallowed into the black holes of big companies, abruptly halting their innovation paths. Unless we get some more robust business models, some more risk seeking entrepreneurs, maybe a real IPO market, most of Web 2.0 is going to wind up becoming the corporate walking dead of long forgotten or poorly understood acquisitions. Consumers suffer when entrepreneurs won't make a go of it on their own and make a bigger impact on their online experience. (Pleasant exceptions being the Office-like apps at Google...)
- Content licensing is still a bottleneck. Web 2.0 is all about people and sharing, two things that music and video content owners don't seem to be big fans of. For now, much of what we share is illegal or user generated. Freely shareable stuff probably makes up about 2% of the millions of hours of content ever created professionally. I'd like to blog a clip from the A-Team... Not only can I not access it easily, I can't clip it easily, and I sure as hell can't publish it legally. Yet, no one current monetizes it on the web, so it just sits and collects digital dust.
- The really juicy data will always remain locked up... I'd very much like to be able to share my purchases, particularly restaurants, at my own discretion. Of course, that data is at Mastercard, and I think I'll start wearing "I love the RIAA" shirts before Mastercard starts creating personal RSS feeds or APIs for users to take their own financial data to various applications. The same with my credit history. I need to sign up for lots of junk mail to get a credit report... and don't even get me started on my own medical history.
- A lot of powerful people don't participate. How many VC's out there fund widget companies without having a blog or a MySpace profile? Any Sony bloggers out there? What about brand managers that want to do Second Life campaigns without ever having been inside. How about my elected representatives? They get out there and kiss babies during election time, but how many blogging elected officials are there? (And not watered down campaign blogs... actual blogs written by the actual people.) We could do great things if we weren't so segregated into a small group of people punch drunk on Kool Aid and a great deal of people who've never even heard of Kool Aid.
- MySpace is the most popular social network. Seriously, is this the best we can do? Spam, hacking, viruses, one song at a time, and no developer network or API? Facebook is such a better product, but it's really pretty limited as a self expression tool. Plus, neither really comes close to being able to be my digital home on the web as much as my blog is.
This fucking blog will now be blocked by ScanSafe
Think of ScanSafe as a kind of enterprise NetNanny for Web 2.0. They just came out with a report that paints the blog world as a seedy hangout for foul-mouthed pornmongers.
"ScanSafe's Monthly "Global Threat Report" for March 2007 says that up to 80 percent of blogs host offensive content, ranging from "adult language" to pornographic images. The company suggests that businesses should be aggressive about preventing users from accessing some or all of this material. And of course, they'd hope that you'd use their products to do so. ScanSafe says that it discovered the "offensive" nature of blogs by analyzing more than 7 billion web requests coming from their corporate customers."
I don't think professional people need a piece of technology to prevent them from seeing a dirty word here and there. If your employees are accessing truly inappropriate content at work, perhaps you should beef up your screening not in the web browser, but in your HR department. Just a thought...
