- CNN Seeks Blog Guru to Work with Blitzer (Micro Persuasion) – Everything about this potential gig sounds interesting, and I was seriously considering it until I read the part that says the blog guru will be working out of the DC bureau. I just escaped D.C. and there’s no way I’m going back, even if it was working with a short guy named Wolf.
- Grassroots Journalism: Actual Content vs. Shining Ideal (Online Journalism Review) – A review of "10 citizen journalism sites" including Greensboro101.com.
- Why Google Wants AOL (Business 2.0) – It’s all about IM, installed user-base, protecting search territory, and…oh hell, just go read it.
- Getting Flat, Part 1 (Linux Journal) – Doc Searls looks at Tom Friedman’s "The World is Flat" from the open-source software point of view.
- Getting Flat, Part 2 (Linux Journal) – A must read. Doc continues what he started in Part 1, and here’s just one of many good excerpts I could pull: "I can save Microsoft a pile of time and money by reporting a fact no school wants to admit, one that will
flatten the world far more than any other factor: pretty much everybody is smart. What’s more, they’re all
smart in their own ways." - For Future Journalists, It’s Cash, Not Causes (Cleveland Plains Dealer) – An opinion piece on the shocking news that today’s journalism want to make real money.
- "Journalists Have to Get Smarter About Business" (Manship School of Mass Communication) – In a speech Peter Copeland, Editor and GM of Scripps Howard News Service, says that journalists have to get better at business in order to survive and thrive.
- The Open Source Business Model (Moore’s Lore) – Dana posits that it isn’t enough to provide relevant space to advertisers, you also have to show them how to communicate with your audience. He says a lot more than that, but you get the gist.
It Gets Worser and Worser
I’m on record as thinking that the vast majority of the members of the US Congress and the current administration are a bunch of sniveling, self-absorbed bastards and bastardettes. The Vice President isn’t doing anything to change my mind. Some highlights:
- Vice President Cheney continues to hold 433,333 Halliburton stock options
-
100,000 shares at $54.5000 (vested), expire 12-03-07
33,333 shares at $28.1250 (vested), expire 12-02-08
300,000 shares at $39.5000 (vested), expire 12-02-09 - Halliburton shares are currently trading at $61.27
- Halliburton shares were trading at $17.93 in January ’03
- Deferred salary paid by Halliburton to Vice President Cheney in 2001: $205,298
- Deferred salary paid by Halliburton to Vice President Cheney in 2002: $162,392
- Deferred salary paid by Halliburton to Vice President Cheney in 2003: $178,437
- Deferred salary paid by Halliburton to Vice President Cheney in 2004: $194,852
- The Vice President has attempted to fend off criticism by signing an
agreement to donate the after-tax profits from these stock options to
charities of his choice, and his lawyer has said he will not take any
tax deduction for the donations. Valued at over $9 million, the Vice
President could exercise his stock options for a substantial windfall,
benefiting not only his designated charities, but also providing
Halliburton with a tax deduction. - In September 2003, the Congressional Research Service (CRS) issued a
memorandum to Senator Lautenberg concluding that holding stock options
while in elective office does constitute a "financial interest"
regardless of whether the holder of the options will donate proceeds to
charities. CRS also found that receiving deferred compensation is a
financial interest.
Of course the source of alot of this is Senator Lautenburg who is a member of the same dishonorable fraternity as the Vice President (that would be the Senate), so you have to make sure that the information is correct. All of the numbers are all public record, as is the Congressional Research Service memo, so I’d say the data is right. The context might be a different story…nah.
I’m not saying the Vice President talked the President into going to war for the purpose of Halliburton’s profits. I am saying that it’s unseemly for the Vice President to retain any ties to his old company when the US government is one of its key customers, and was when the Vice President was elected. I am also saying that all the money he’s received from Halliburton since the start of the war is blood money. Like I said, unseemly.
More Marital Bliss
A man in England asked his wife for a divorce by hanging a banner on a highway overpass. A week later she replied with her own banner. Go here to see pics.
And You Thought You Had it Rough
According to this article a man in Italy has been sent to jail for 9 months for violating immigration regulations. Here’s the kicker: he originally had been sentenced to house arrest, but after a week he went back to court to beg the judge to put him jail because he couldn’t take his wife’s nagging anymore.
I’m not saying a thing.
My Dream Machine
In the last year my Grandmother has lost a significant amount of her vision. Basically she can see shadows and that’s about it, and since she’s 85 she has that many years of ingrained habits that rely on her being able to see. I know how hard it is for me to adjust to major change at 39, I can only imagine how hard it is for her at 85.
My aunts have been very busy helping Grandmother, taking her to appointments, taking her grocery shopping and all the other daily chores we take for granted. They’ve also enlisted the help of an agency (sorry, I’m not sure which one) that has provided some guidance in dealing with services for the blind.
One of the things the agency did was provide a special tape recorder (looks like it was made in the 60s) that has symbols on the keys so that a blind person can tell the "Play" button from the "Stop’" button. To be honest the machine is a real clunker, and I honestly don’t think many of the tapes interest Grandmother. I also think she misses reading the newspaper and I know she feels more isolated than she ever has, despite my aunts’ best efforts.
So I decided to do a little research and find out what kind of technology is out there that might help Grandmother, and while I’ve found some interesting stuff I don’t think any of it is quite right. For instance I found a machine that will scan any printed matter and convert it to speech in a couple of different voices and languages that the user can select. Very cool (and about $2,600), but after watching Grandmother struggle with the buttons on the tape recorder I wouldn’t want to subject her to having to figure out this machine.
The scanner is just one example of some of the technology that’s available, but I don’t really think any of them will work. Another example is all the computer stuff I found. There’s a lot of software out there that lets blind people use a computer for work and play in traditional ways (software that converts screen text to audio) but that still requires someone to know how to use a computer in the first place. What I’m looking for is a machine, probably a computer that can be manipulated via voice by anyone.
That’s led me to imagining what kind of machine I would build for Grandmother if I were a sufficiently talented engineer. Unfortunately I’m not an engineer by any description, but particularly not "sufficiently talented". I’m going to outline my dream machine below, and if anyone has a suggestion for how I might find or build a product like this please let me know.
My dream machine would:
- Work off of voice prompts. No button pushing or reading necessary.
- Could be managed remotely for tech support.
- Would provide audio output of information (news stories, directory listings, audio sent by family and friends, etc.).
- Would be navigable by voice prompt, and if it doesn’t "understand" commands would provide audio feedback.
- Would also act as her phone.
- Would be "always on."
I guess what I’m imagining is HAL from 2001: A Space Odyssey, of course without the thing going evil on my Grandmother.
You’ll notice that I didn’t mention any features like email, web surfing, etc. That’s because I seriously doubt Grandmother would ever do those things, but I’d imagine any machine equipped to do what I ask would also have the standard computer stuff available as well.
Actually I think the biggest deal here is the user interface. It needs to feel familiar to Grandmother, to be analagous to devices she’s accustomed to like a phone or a radio. I know if we called it a computer she’d never use it, so it could be her fancy radio that she can talk to and it talks back. Or the phone that has a radio attached. Whatever, as long as it works and she doesn’t have to push anything.
So maybe she would email, but really it would be her saying "Do I have any messages?" and the machine replying, "You have three new messages." She’d then say "Play the first one" the machine plays it and asks "Would you like to reply?" and then Grandmother says "Yes" and so on. To her she’s talking, but to you and me she’s sending an audio email.
Well, I think you get my drift, and now you know why it’s my dream machine, not my reality machine. What with the aging of our population I hope these voice applications come along sooner rather than later, because I think we’ll need them. Here’s to hope.
One More Reason the World Hates Advertisers
According to this piece on Business 2.0 there’s a company in Seattle called Brain Fingerprinting Laboratories that claims "By hooking humans up to machines that measure cerebral activity,
the company believes it can determine whether specific information is
stored in a person’s memory. Now, Brain Fingerprinting believes it’s
found the ideal first business application: advertising. (Source Puget Sound Business Journal, full article here).
So the company plans on spinning off an ad agency based on it’s technology. Now let me get this straight; after serving us misleading information, horrid jingles and banal copy that has sucked our brains dry now the advertisers want to read our withered and overwhelmed cerebra? Good luck
New Wiki by/for Entrepreneurs
There’s a new Wiki for entrepreneurs that you can find here. Most sources for entrepreneurs are crap: get-rich schemes, dumb-ass advice from some guy with an envelope-stuffing business, etc. This one is notable for the people who are involved in the early stages, most of whom seem to have some deeper, richer information to share.
For a definition of wikis go here, or read this:
"online collaboration model and tool that allows any user to edit some content of webpages through a simple browser. mobileman.projects.supsi.ch/glossary.html
Chinese Propoganda
I’ve always been fascinated by propoganda materials like old World War I recruiting posters. Via Boing Boing I found this site that has propoganda posters for the Chinese space program. I definitely recommend reading the site for background on the evolution of the Chinese space program and how it has been promoted to the Chinese people.
Here’s a poster from the 80’s:
And here is a poster intended to appeal to the Falun Gong adherents:
Reading List October 13, 2005
- Our Web Site is a Blog (A VC) – Fred Wilson’s firm has converted its website into a blog, which might be an interesting read if you’re interested in venture finance. The site is http://www.unionsquareventures.com/
- It’s Official – It’s Rude (and other survey lessons) (The Post Money Value) – An ex-Microsoftee surveyed 25 other ex-Microsoftees on various issues related to the company.
Reading List October 12, 2005
- Corante is Not Second Class Journalism (Moore’s Lore) – Should First Amendment protections be restricted to media companies?
- Cramer Gest Prechterized (Moore’s Lore) – A loud Wall Street bull is starting to growl like a bear. which can’t be a good thing.
- Online Search Company Taps Bloggers, Celebrities to Endorse Products (PR News) – The Rollyo story.
- Who’s Connected? Companies that have their own website (bookofjoe) – Joe found some data in Financial Times that compares European countries by the percentage of companies with 10+ employees that have their own website. France is at the back of the pack with just 26.3% of companies with their own website. Joe then provides some background on why the French lag behind and compares them, unfavorably, with Argentina. Of course I could have told Joe that the reason that France is lagging is because the French are so, well, French.
- Banned Books Week – ‘Of Mice and Men’ Ranked #10 – (bookofjoe) – Here’s the money quote from this post: "She remarked that when she was a girl her mother was extremely unhappy with Winterson’s love of books and reading. Her main complaint? ‘You just can’t tell by looking at them what’s in them.’"
- Sourcing, verification, bloggers and the Times (The Editor’s Blog – John Robinson) – John, the Editor of the Greensboro News & Record is asking some good questions of himself and other media folk. If a major story came across his screen via a trusted blogger, but without sourcing would he go with the story? Probably not. But his paper did go with a major story based on a New York Times report that was also unsourced, even thought the Times has had credibility problems of late. More credit to John that he’s willing to think about this.