Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Newspapers Buy Blogs A Drink

As you can see, I've joined the masses of people who post their ultra-concise comments on Twitter. I've found it so useful, it's taken precedence on my blog page over my most-recent post. Why? Because more than likely, I'll have five new Twitter posts before anyone realizes I've updated my blog.
Has the traditional blog gone the way of the newspaper? Shunned for its lack of immediacy over a newer technology that provides greater capabilities for social interaction and networking? You bet it has.
But the same answer cannot be given for the following question: Is the blog irrelevant? Ask the same question of newspapers and the answer remains 'No.' I think we're just seeing a sea change of how the medium defines the message online.
My sentiments here would be hard to convey in a single Twitter update... most of my Twitter updates (I refuse to use the phrase 'Tweeting.' If anything, I'm a Twittering Nabob of Negativity, to modernize a phrase from William Safire for Spiro Agnew.) do not merit the kind of writing at length I sometimes do for my blog, and they certainly have little use in a newspaper without being reworked for that format.
If the medium isn't the message, at the very least it's directing traffic to get 'Tweets,' blogs, columns, articles, soundbytes and viral videos to their respective areas for maximum consumption.
So belly up to the bar, blogs. The first round is on us in the newspaper business.

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Thursday, February 19, 2009

Africa: I've got good news and bad news

Good news, Zimbabwe: You've decided to switch from paying your civil servants and military with the "pariah" Zimbabwe dollar (which most consider "worthless") to using foreign currencies, which could also help stave off inflation.

From the UK's Guardian:

"Although relatively low compared to what Zimbabwean professionals used to earn, $100 is a small fortune against the near worthless wages they had been receiving. Teachers were paid several trillion Zimbabwe dollars a month but inflation, which is above 10 sextillion (10 billion trillion) percent, wiped out the currency's value. Almost all shops in Zimbabwe now accept payment only in US dollars or South African rand."

Bad news: You picked the U.S. dollar. Seriously? While still home to the world's largest economy and the top producer of American agrandissement, the U.S. of A. is also in the grips of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. And despite recent highs against the Euro, I don't think it's too far-fetched to say the U.S. dollar is primed to burst like the once-booming housing market.
Hopefully President Obama's new stimulus plan will have a positive effect on jobs, credit, etc., because it almost assuredly will take its toll on either the dollar (by printing new money and raising inflation) and/or future generations of workers (who will pay for the plan's price tag PLUS interest).

Verdict: I love my country, and it's great to see parts of the world still seeing value in our currency, but I wouldn't mind being paid in precious metals at this point. Plus, Euro coins are so neat looking compared to the ole greenback.

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Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Aditude: Baby


I swear I'm not getting paid to put these ads up on my blog... they're just so bizarre that they must be pointed out. I caught this one while reading Salon.com. Is there a tooth whitener that's so powerful, the sight of your pearly smile will cause others' eyes to go the shade I like to refer to as "post-nuclear emerald"?

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Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Just Another Chapter In The Saga of The Panda




I saw this ad today on a popular blog, and ever since my life has been I complete wreck. Obviously people are concerned about the economy, and many of them are going back to school to get degrees in order to help the secure new jobs... But why the pandas? Are they people dressed as pandas? Most of the marketing specialists I know like to dress up as animals, but that's another story. Or could something far worse and sinister be at play? Is Degrees.Info a secret plot to transform the average Web-surfing human into happy, dancing pandas? If so, it's a brilliant ploy, because I know the truth about The Panda:



I'm drunk on panda mystery.

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The Internet - As We Thought It Would Be













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Tuesday, February 3, 2009

You might be wrong, Jon Severson

If you haven't read this piece from Colorado Biz yet, I advise you to do so, because the following is a sampling of my response to its heralding of the imminent demise of the Rocky Mountain News.

One less voice for a community is rarely a good thing.

More voices with more diversified opinions and content is a good thing, as best as we can tell from Severson's article. Technological advances in communications have served to better the human experience; there is no doubt about this. But sooner or later, the sources of content for these new media will either be forced to evolve or dry up.

As a young professional myself, I enjoy the explosion of niche products found via Internet, podcast, YouTube, etc. If you have a niche interest, you can find that specific media.

At the same time, how many young professionals like myself care as deeply about the physical, geographical and HUMAN community around them as they do their social networking groups? I imagine the ratio is staggering. But eventually people grow up, realize that being part of the immediate world around you is vital to making sure you live in an area with good schools for your children, high quality of living, etc. Who has stepped up to fill the niche of local community news?

It would be nice to think that citizen journalists could take a full-time, active role in direct democracy to serve that local need... but invariably people have other interests, other demands on their time and energy. Maybe each teacher, plumber, accountant, doctor, police officer, IT specialist and other working American should find the time to play an active part in civic life — but that is a utopian ideal not yet achieved. Until then, your local newspaper is there, working to be a part of the community, and delivering relevant content, providing an attractive medium for local businesses to advertise.

Newspapers — and newsgathering/content-producing organizations of all kinds — need to evolve with the times. But the core goals of the local news organization, be it paper, news radio, magazine, blog or TV news, are as vital to modern society as most others. If the workable business model of the future is out there, surely these organizations will be supplanted or adapted... but if anyone can show me that business model, I'm happy to hear it, learn it, sell it, teach it and champion it in all ways.

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About This Blog

The once and future savage outpost for my semi-meaningful thoughts and monologues that are too long for Twitter and not good enough to be sprawled across the front page of every major metropolitan newspaper in America with 120-pt. headlines. Also, the occasional diversion via YouTube.

Meditate On This

Most of the great artists never live to see their work truly appreciated on a global scale... Vincent van Gogh. Johann Sebastian Bach. Keyboard Cat.

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