Me In The New York Times
Monday, May 16, 2011
The New York Times Is Bullish On Twitter
Me In The New York Times
The UN, The US, The Internet
I have made that statement a few times at this blog.What do I mean?
I do not imagine a future where the UN as an organization has been dissolved, and the US federal government no longer exists. But I do imagine a future where the Internet has fundamentally altered the very fabric of what the UN is, how it functions, how far it reaches, how well it functions. I imagine a US federal government transformed by the forces unleashed by the Internet.
The Internet is transformative technology. But it does not operate in a vacuum. You take away people and you end up with computers. It is adding people to the equation that gave us the Internet. And so human institutions are very relevant to what the Internet is all about.
Slow Down The Blogging
But one post a day is the goal, and anything more is bonus. Or at least that is what I thought. I have been blogging several times a day for months now.
Blogging several times a day feels like this.
2000 Squats
Freehand Exercise: 1000 Push-Ups, 1000 Squats, 1000 Crunches
Some people have asked me, how do you make time for blogging? Implicit in that question is the suggestion that blogging is something you do on top of work. I don't see it that way. Blogging is part of my work. And, no, I don't mean AdSense peanuts. I mean blogging is like my online resume. My blog allows me to do a lot of work related socializing online. I have entered into credible conversations because I have an active blog.
Because I am an active blogger, I believe I am a more active reader of tech news.
Sunday, May 15, 2011
Livestream + Twitter Hashtag = Great Way To Experience An Event
Social Media Weekend: One Tweet At A Time: Sunday
Social Media Weekend: Columbia Journalism School: Sree Sreenivasan
Twitter Blocks Me: Sree's Loss
Social Media: Listening Tools Are The Next Frontier
Social Media Weekend needed to livestream all its panels. It streamed the opening event Friday evening, and the panel on Arab democracy Saturday afternoon that I was able to watch.
This was a paid event. So why livestream? Why give it away for free?
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