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| Wednesday, February 1, 2006 |
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On making and changing minds
| | I'd challenge Doc to point to an example of how blogging has changed his mind. |
| | In this post on 9/11/2001, I declared myself a pacifist. I'm not sure I am anymore. Not a determined one. I might meet the definition suggested by the first two paragraphs of the Wikipedia entry on pacifism. But as for being a pacifist of the nonviolence school to which I used to belong... well, I have doubts now. It's not a subject I'm eager to write about, but there it is. |
| | I was gaga for awhile about Juan Cole until Mike Sanders smacked me down about that, as I recall. But that may have been in a private conversation. Does it matter? |
| | Okay, I'll move on to the rest of the list tomorrow. |
Making me into a mash potato
Constitutional reminder
More capital, less ism
| | Why, though, should we think big when the essence of new Web businesses is smallness? Add an API and charge for data, mash-up a bunch of services to create a new view of the world, or latch an ad model to a formerly fee-based product‹that's a solid foundation to start something these days. And we aren't talking about the most capital-intensive undertakings... |
| | That's one small pull-quote from a much longer piece about what Mitch calls the Friends-and-Family era of IT business, where companies are launched like small businesses in the old-fashioned economy. |
| | He opens with, Dave Winer has done a lot of smart technology development, but I'd look somewhere else for ideas about how to fix venture capital (a reference to what Dave said here). But Dave's deeper point is about making users owners. I think that's key, and also not far from Mitch's "the essence of new Web businesses is smallness". |
| | I believe there are lots of approaches that need to be discussed and tried. But I also believe we're beginning to see a fundamental shift in the marketplace itself. As more developers and users participate with each other, user-based funding of some kind becomes inevitable. |
| | What form(s) should that take? I think that's the big question we're all trying to answer here. |
A date to go with the place
| | OneWebDay is up. It's a day like, say, Earth Day to celebrate the Web as a Real Place (and not just an "information service" delivered by packet carriers), and the lives we live there. |
| | The date: September 22, every year, starting in 2006. |
| | I love the whole idea. It's critically important that we recognize, and celebrate, the Web, and the Net, as a place, and not just as a shipping system for "content". I explain why in Saving the Net. The nub: |
| | We who know and understand the territorial nature of the Net need to appeal to the same territorial sense in those we hope to win over with our arguments. |
| | Advocating and saving the Net is not a partisan issue. Lawmakers and regulators aren't screwing up the Net because they're "Friends of Bush" or "Friends of Hollywood" or liberals or conservatives. They're doing it because one way of framing the Net--as a transport system for content--is winning over another way of framing the Net--as a place where markets and business and culture and governance can all thrive. |
| | Celebrating OneWebDay is a great way to do that. |
Take the time
Pity our perfect weather
| | These mornings I've been getting my public radio over the Net from KUOW in Seattle, where the weather forecasts are a dirge of cold and rain. (Our main regional public station, KCRW out of Santa Monica, is having an annoying fundraising marathon, which I hate. I give them money, but not during fund drives. It only encourages them.) |
| | It's amazing how little Winter we've had this year. Meaning how little rain: almost none. All of it has hit North of here. The forecast is for a high of at least 70 degrees (21 Celsius) all week. With no rain. |
| | While that makes us enviable in February, it also makes us flammable by April. The woods are dry, and so are the reservoirs. |
| | Worse, there's no snow at Mt. Baldy, so: no skiing. (Or so little it doesn't count.) |
| | Meanwhile, we're out on bikes and rollerblades, dining outside at the beach, living in a SoCal brochure. |
| | I didnt even think it was real, or it was one of those maldives honeymoon hotel photos. Now Doc, if you could just photoshop Jessica Alba in? |
discuss
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