My review of Spaces.msn.com is now cross-posted to Spaces itself.
The big advantage is that comments are open. The bad thing is
that comments are not quite as open as you might think, because you
have to have a Passport account to post.. but then, that is one
of the points made in the review…Where better to have a story within
a story, than on the service itself..
By the way, why does Microsoft use such ugly URLs for Spaces permalinks! The permalink for the review is
Tags: Economics and cybenetics
Oh, you have to love this guy–from Turkey, ideas on how to expand the Microsoft Spaces.msn.com ecosystem
December 3rd, 2004 · Comments Off
Here are more ideas.
I found him, or rather he found me, by posting on my new Spaces blog last night and this morning…Ah, small world, of course.,,
Tags: Economics and cybenetics
Some things to Do Before the Inauguration (from Lanya Shapiro, former Dean campaign, by email).
December 3rd, 2004 · Comments Off
Some things to Do Before the Inauguration:
1. Get that abortion you’ve always wanted.
2. Drink a nice clean glass of water.
3. Cash your social security check.
4. See a doctor of your own choosing.
5. Spend quality time with your draft age child/grandchild.
6. Visit Syria, or any foreign country for that matter.
7. Get that gas mask you’ve been putting off buying.
8. Hoard gasoline.
10. Borrow books from library before they’re banned – Constitutional
law books, Catcher in the Rye, Harry Potter, Tropic of Cancer, etc.
11. If you have an idea for an art piece involving a crucifix – do it now.
12. Come out – then go back in – HURRY!
13. Jam in all the Alzheimer’s stem cell research you can.
14. Stay out late before the curfews start.
15. Go see Bruce Springsteen before he has his “accident.”
Tags: Presidential politics
The forbidden United Church of Christ ad.
December 3rd, 2004 · Comments Off
Here is the television ad the networks refuse to play.
It is more than worth 30 seconds of your time. It’s message: No
matter who you are, you are welcome here, at the UNITED Church of
Christ.
And oh, uh, what you will see at the web site is a very powerful
demonstration of how the Internet can be an alternative way to get a
message out..
After all, this ad is near the top on Daypop..and I’m hoping it rises..
Tags: Economics and cybenetics
Blogging and market research in WSJ
December 3rd, 2004 · Comments Off
Several people have sent me links to this
article today on blogging and market research, in the WSJ, so you have
probably seen it, but if not, here is my favorite exerpt:
Mike Masnick, 29 years old, founded the Techdirt market-research service
in 2000, to help bring in revenue to support his blog, also called
Techdirt. “We needed something to do to make money, so we started
discussing how we were going to turn it into a serious business,” he says.
Techdirt compiles regular reports for Volkswagen and other companies based
on items that appear on blogs and message boards, as well as in mainstream
news outlets. The service starts at $2,500 a month, and can cost more than
$10,000 a month, Mr. Masnick says.
Much better name than that of its competitor, Intelliseek..
Tags: Economics and cybenetics
RSS 2.0 momentum, and Microsoft adding
December 3rd, 2004 · Comments Off
From Dave Winer this evening:
remarkable support from Microsoft. First, Halo 2 shipped with RSS 2.0
support. Who thought of RSS for games? It wasn’t even on our radar.
Then yesterday MSN Spaces, a blogging system, shipped with RSS 2.0
support. And the third bit was pinging weblogs.com. Now I’m sure
we’ll be able to turn the corner for two reasons. First, we got a huge
response from serious developers, and several credible projects started
today, in a variety of environments. Since eventually this will have to
be a distributed system, like DNS, it’s important to have a variety of
compatible implementations. Second, Andre and I did a back and forth on
this over a few hours. Andre used to be responsible for the kernel at
UserLand years ago, and now is back in the loop after the Frontier open
source release. He asked me some questions, I sent him the source, we
put in some diagnostics, tested a theory and boom, all of a sudden the
server is performing beautifully. We still have the scaling issue but
we got some breathing room today. Anyway, thanks to Microsoft for
trusting us and using our formats and protocols.
If anything this understates the case: as I said in my previous post,
support for RSS 2.0 is support for a simple, open platform for
creativity.
And support for RSS is consistent with what most of the major media companies are using.
Support for 2.0 is a most effective way for Microsoft to support the RSS
movement–the RSS ecosystem–because there is no entangling issue of a proprietary or new standard.
Of course, at the user level, at the experience level, and among the
user base, Microsoft will work to create stickiness and network
effects–but this is all at a higher layer than the RSS standard,
and enables others to play.
But the big news is that the Spaces service is easy to use, free, available around
the world in 17 languages, and has the stamp of approval of a big,
worldwide company. I think it’s introduction will greatly stimulate the expansion of the RSS ecosystem.
Do you remember when IBM opened hundreds of PC stores, and ran ads with
featuring Charlie Chaplin–and legitimized the PC? Do you
remember when AT&T offered free Internet service, and had millions
of takers almost overnight? Is Microsoft doing that for RSS and
blogging? I think so.
Large,
global companies have their limitations, but they are uniquely capable
of setting a large market on fire, if they really go for it.
Microsoft seems to be going for it. Burn baby burn!
And just to show you how huge this is, my brother in Wyoming just
started blogging yesterday, on the Microsoft Spaces platform. I didn’t
even know about it until he sent me an email telling me so..
My brother is a guy who loves fast horses and strong cars. For years he
trained race horses, and his girlfriend was a jockey. Speaking of thrills, here
is what he says about blogging in his first post…
He goes on to associate the experience with skiing, and to the thrill of slipping out to
the slopes for a few minutes during the work day..don’t tell…
Whooooeeeeeee! The sinful pleasure of Voice!
Tags: Economics and cybenetics