Categories
content strategy

Popping kernels: how long does good writing take?

 

In the age of print, lengthy articles gave readers the feeling that they got their money’s worth.  Writing was planting a seed that bore fruit, but only after investing a certain amount of time, emphasizing quality over quantity.

140 characters revolutionized the idea that content has to be lengthy.  If print is fruit from a seed, short real-time content is popcorn from kernels.  This style does not have to be at the cost of quality, but takes the philosophy that if you put that much out there, some of it is bound to be good.

Categories
content strategy

Fishing for a sunburn: the guaranteed outcomes of taking action

How satisfying is it when you set out to accomplish something, strive for it and get it, all in a nicely packaged crescendo to climax?  For most of us living in the real world, these sorts of single-play successes are not the norm.  Instead, we have to work at it with patience and persistence, and the payoff may not come with a rest, but with a call to more work.

I went on my first deep sea fishing trip yesterday and spent eight hours on the water.  That’s eight hours of casting out, reeling in.  We didn’t come back with a fish, but guess what I did come back with?   A nice red sunburn with white raccoon eyes where I had sunglasses on.  Yes, I should have put on sunblock, I even had it with me.

A fisherman will tell you that sometimes you come back with a fish, sometimes you don’t, that’s why it’s called “fishing” not “catching.”  A blogger will tell you sometimes you hit linkback gold, sometimes not.  On the other hand, take a moment to think through the guaranteed outcomes of your work.  Will you build up experience, wisdom, a work philosophy and ethic?  As a blogger, every post you write is another post you can point to for an employer or as a writing sample.  We don’t all need to reach a huge audience or instigate global change.  Those are the “nice-to-haves.”

How do you make use of the incidental, guaranteed outcomes of your work?  Or does reaching a certain goal makes it worthwhile?

Categories
Uncategorized

Cherry Equity – can it work for Content?

When I started running daily back in August 0f 2009, I was worried that I wouldn’t be able to keep up the habit.  I had tried running regularly before, but over time I would get lazy.  As a solution, I created an incentive system that kept me from petering out.

I called it Cherry Equity, and how it worked was if I ran twice in a day, once in the morning and once in the evening, I would earn two cherries the following morning.  Actual cherries,  a big bag of them.  If I did really well, I would earn an extra bonus cherry.  On the other hand, if I skipped an afternoon run, I would only get one cherry the following morning, and if I skipped a morning run, I would lose out on the whole reward.  The key to success was the fear of losing out on cumulative rewards.  If I had one cherry after every run, it wouldn’t have been as big a deal to lose the reward after one or the other.  On the other hand, losing out on a reward I had already earned was a drag.

Having come a year and a half of no longer needing cherries to keep up the habit of running, I find I would love to apply the system to writing content.  I am very sporadic when it comes to writing, but with a cumulative incentive system, it could work.  The question is what kind of incentive works well for writing, flavored pens?  I need a real content strategy, and writing twice daily could work but it will hinge on having a real reason to do it.  What’s your reason?

Categories
Uncategorized

Upgrading Android via CyanogenMod

In the midst of upgrading my G1 Android phone using CyanogenMod.  I found a helpful tutorial video that made the upgrading process much friendlier on Lifehacker at http://lifehacker.com/5339901/get-root-access-in-android-with-one-click .  It is still showing the TMobile G1 splash screen but it hasn’t died yet ..

A little over one year later, I am looking into buying a Nexus One.  Total I’ve only spent $354 in prepaid minutes since I bought this phone, so I am happy going without a contract.

Categories
Uncategorized

You have the mike

I originally attempted to write this as a comment on the New York Observer’s article on 140 Conf but my comment was repeatedly marked as spam as well as my email to the site administrator. Oh well to that.

Picture being at Jeff’s conference at one of the sessions, take Jack Dorsey’s (founder and CEO of Twitter). Jack speaks into the microphone and it expands the reach of his voice from fifteen feet to one hundred feet.

Now take Jack’s microphone and give it the power to record what he says and play it back for anyone to hear for the life of the microphone. Not good enough? Jack, say something to your friend in St. Louis, or to one in Los Angeles or London. Better yet, this microphone is two-way, so Jack’s friend in London can answer him either as a private whisper, or as an equally public broadcast, able to be heard by both friends in LA and St. Louis. How much will Jeff Pulver pay Jack to use that microphone at his conference?

Turns out this microphone is free to use and available to everyone and anyone. What a guy Jack …

When Jeff talks about the State of Now, he’s talking about the movement away from the archives such as the library or the expert and into the age of the device, that broadcasts both ways instantly and globally.

Go ahead. Speak into the mike. Anyone?

Categories
social media writing

140 Conf: or How Twitter is helping me get the most out of a Twitter Conference

I’m attending 140 Characters Conference on July 16-17 where I will learn about the State of Now with 139 other participating characters plus attendees, credentialed media, bloggers, and Jeff Pulver the lead organizer himself.

My strategy to maximize my experience is to do the research ahead of time. Namely, to make excellent use of that ever-so-useful page titled The Characters. But who wants to spend time clicking on all of those icons?

Enter Firefox add-ons. Sneak Peek and Who Is This Person are making my research much more efficient, and accordingly that much more likely to remain in my memory where it might do some good 😉

Sneak Peek creates a hover box over a link with a snippet of the linked page according to three regular expressions defined by the user, as described in this tutorial. I created a “Sneak Peek script” by using the Sneak Peek menu item under Tools after the add-on was installed. My script shows the latest twitter updates of any person on the 140 Characters Conference Page when their icon or twitter url is hovered over.

Here is the Sneak Peek script (all are required fields):
Name: 140 Characters – twitter
Author: Sara Streeter
Author URL: http://www.sarastreeter.com
Site Pattern: ^http://www\.140conf\.com.*
Link Pattern: ^http://twitter.com/\w+
Peek Pattern: < ol class="statuses" id="timeline" >[^]*?< /ol >

(Hint: don’t insert spaces into the peek pattern ol tags like I did above – WordPress was interpreting the html tags as styling for this post)

Screenshot for Sneak Peek for twitter urls
Screenshot for Sneak Peek for twitter urls

Who Is This Person I found to be a nice supplement to the Twitter previews. This add-on requires no tweaking and allows you to highlight any name and right click, which will give you an option of “Who is this person” with an arrow down to several methods of checking up on a person (Google, Wikipedia, and LinkedIn are most useful to me).

Screenshot of Who Is This Person Firefox Add-on
Screenshot of Who Is This Person Firefox Add-on

There is another Firefox extension LinkedIn Companion which seems to be more of a bookmarking tool, not as applicable to this situation but still useful.

So far, looking through the character bios and tweets, I am amazed at the influence and depth of experience reflected in the attendee list. If each person is summed as a single character, I would say that is of the same genre as the oriental calligraphic character, in which a single collection of strokes conveys a concise and poetic concept, complete unto itself.

Categories
geek

Adventures in Slipstreaming

I had the chance to get fairly geeky back in mid February with the purchase of a new copy of Adobe Creative Suite 4. The issue was that this product was not compatible with the operating system on my Dell Vostro 1500 laptop which comes with Vista Home Basic out of the box. My options were either to downgrade to Windows XP or upgrade to Windows Vista Business. I chose the former and that’s when the ‘fun’ began …

I have a student account that lets me download certain software for free, so I used it to grab a copy of Windows XP. I loaded it on my laptop and found that it just booted from Vista rather than install XP. Keep in mind I have tried to backup my computer before with Macrium Reflect but never figured it out successfully. Faced with the dilemma of apparently not being able to install XP with Vista still on there, I went for broke and started installing XP in the C drive, overwriting the current installation.

The first issue I ran into was the SATA Drivers on my laptop – XP predates this type of hard disk driver so it doesn’t install correctly when it runs into them. I found a solution through googling on my functioning XP desktop. If you press F2 quickly as the computer boots up, it puts the computer into BIOS mode, which is a level lower than the operating system and works even when there is no operating system. If you arrow down you’ll see the option for Drivers and SATA. Hit enter and it lets you change the option from ATA to AHCI. This is compatible with XP.

I went along and got the installation page that looks like Windows XP. That’s when I ran into the i386/asms Access Denied error. This was as far as I got. From here on out it was one denial after another.

I tried to slipstream my Windows Installation CD – this means inserting the drivers that XP needs into the installation itself so it can run the computer. I followed a guide I found online – http://unattended.msfn.org/unattended.xp/. No matter how I tried, either Windows wouldn’t recognize the CD as a proper XP boot CD or it would get back to the same asms Access Denied error.

In the end, I accepted defeat and started contacting my geeky friends. It just so happened that one of them has access to Vista Business DVDs for free at his work, so I got out of having to pay the $200 or so for the OS, plus I got back full use of the laptop. Unfortunately, the data on my laptop was lost and I had to reinstall absolutely everything.

Here’s what I learned

  1. Slipstreaming=customizing an installation CD, usually by inserting necessary drivers
  2. $OEM$ is a folder that needs to include the license for Windows XP. The dollar signs mean it will be copied over to the new computer automatically. You can find a more complete guide to these folders at http://unattended.msfn.org/unattended.xp/view/web/18/
  3. There is a folder structure basic to Windows installations that also contains identifiers for the installation. All these components must be included for it to work.
  4. XP folder structure

Here’s what I did wrong

  1. Overwrote my operating system AND my data
    • I should have done something, anything, to back up my data. Luckily for me I have FTP access to both of my live websites so I was able to get a working copy from there, plus I have a repository for one of them. Still.
    • All my music and pictures were erased because they were stored in the Windows My Documents folders.
    • I have since learned that Macrium Reflect allows you to create a Linux boot CD from a restore point, which would have come in really handy had I not been able to obtain a Vista Business DVD, and it might have saved my data. Restore point=good
    • I should not have wiped Vista at the start. If I had not had another computer to google with and find solutions, I wouldn’t have even had the option to troubleshoot the issue. Lesson being NEVER do this to a primary or g*d forbid a work computer. Check out comment #8 on this forum post for an idea of the process the way it should be done.

  2. Took my chances muddling about with the command line and WOULD’VE tried to figure out the registry key if I could have created a restore point for that.
    • This would have been WAY too advanced in the sense that the only thing wrong with my laptop at this point was there was no operating system. If I had messed up the registry keys that would have been bad.
    • There’s only so much you can do to solve a problem the hard way before you should give up and go with the easy way (in my case, giving up on XP and going with the Vista Business DVD). I know I am the type that wants to figure everything out and learn which is good to a point, but when nine hours go by and you still hit the brick wall, that would be time to stop learning and fix the thing.

  3. I should have read ALL the requirements of Adobe CS4.

I realized after the fact that Adobe CS4 also requires a 1.8 gHz processor at least. My laptop has a 1.4 processor. So in the end I still couldn’t install the software on my laptop and it went on my desktop. This would be the part where I go “doh!”

Categories
leadership

Leadership and Doing it Right

Is there a wrong way to be a leader?  I would argue that there is a wrong way to lead that does more damage to a cause then it helps, one that is centered on an individual who might have a charismatic personality but no ideas and instead relies on suggestions to others of how things ought to be.  What I mean by suggestions is a statement of opinion about the way reality should be, as opposed to ideas which are solution oriented and creative. 
 
What you might hear from a suggestion-based leader vs. an idea-based leader:
Suggestion-Based Leader Idea-Based Leader The Difference
“That’s your problem” “How would you work this out?” inspire the person to think for themselves
“I want results” “This is how you’re contributing” fit the work into a larger picture
“You need us, so you’ll help us” “Here’s what we have to offer each other” balance of power in relationships
“I’ll talk him into it” “I’ll see what he thinks” listen and reason with people
“We succeed because we work hard” “We succeed because we add value” purpose matters more than effort
 
Here is how you can become a great(er) leader:
  • Follow through on your idea in your own life first
  • Let your conviction speak through your actions
  • Build your network by seeking out others who inspire you
  • Help somebody
  • Be human like everybody else and let the idea itself take center stage
Great ideas make great leaders, and I am proud to say that in our community of Greater Providence in Rhode Island and nearby Boston there are many people who have taken their inspiration and turned it into action. 
Who do you consider to be a great leader?  Why? 
Categories
social media

100 ReTweets of Wisdom – One Month Later

As an experiment, 100 RTs was not the most rigorous.  I started at 900 Tweets and I am now at 977, having only actually done 21 ReTweets.  So what did that accomplish?

First of all, I learned how hard it is to give up any tweets at all, for the sake of experiment or other.  I got some follow backs, which was fine.  I found out how difficult it is to find tweets of any substance by using search.twitter.com.

Did I discover cool new people to follow?  Resoundingly, yes.

More importantly, this exercise made me reach out of my twitter comfort zone and find people with no prior connection to me.  This underscores a feature of twitter unique among social media networks – you get to know people based on what they think, not what friends they have.

BTW –

technogoddess
technogoddess Today, I came out to play when I would have hidden. And it felt liberating. It wasn’t for her, but for me and the next woman who deserves me
Brian McLeod
LoudMac Today is one of those days to just pick one off the list of “everything that cannot be completed today” and knock it out.
mikhelk
mikhelk Sometimes I need to be reminded that I always have choices. Often many more than are 1st apparent. No matter where I am or what’s before me.
Rob Knight
robknight Never underestimate the power of a simple message to the client explaining honestly where a project stands. That’s all they need.
Dave Whelan
djwhelan My uncle just joined Facebook. Worlds collide. It can’t be very long before my father and future in-laws join. Maybe the world is too small.
Sarah Dopp
sarahdopp Low tide with storm winds. The water has a huge space to dance with. The ground is covered, then big and empty.
Evan
montythestrange Tech section of the office is getting the hax0r vibe; dark skies outside, no lights on by us. PHP Ninjas coding by the light of the LCD.
Maggie Mason
Maggie I want to achieve maximum efficiency without getting all worked up about it. I’m aiming at peacefully frantic. Serene rampage.
patobryan
patobryan everybody needs someone to look up to and someone to look down on… and apparently, something to fear.
ryan
secretsquirrel Spent most of my weekend playing an evil bisexual hooker-warrior in a game. I am worried what would happen if I did not have these outputs.
Noah
heyitsnoah Just failed six CAPTCHAs in a row. Does that mean I’m a robot?
Cat
CatBailey Why do I get told it’s ironic when I suggest someone ELSE see a shrink? It’s not like I’m hogging the crazy over here. *pissed*
Pedro Valle
petevalle Stealing some WiFi over at Dunkin Donuts. This is the sort of hijinks only a nerd gets excited about.
Nicole Reising
colereising Ran in the rain tonight-decided insurance on my blackberry might actually be a good idea afterall. 🙂
Shannon Thompson
TheBathProject made some Chai Tea with local honey, watching the sun come up over the mountains out back, a beautiful pale pink with orange tinge aaaahhhh
Warlach
Warlach Oi, seriously people, the internet is not rocket science. “Notepad” is not an appropriate response to how your site publishes content.
matthewktabor
matthewktabor bittersweet blog moment: trying to research a topic and finding only your own posts addressing the subject
burstein
burstein Met the ex. While it is a bad idea to bring a stick to a gun fight, sometimes a olive branch works out ok.
Rowan Price
roprice there’s a whole new generation of web developers who’ve never had to write actual Javascript, cuz they’re using JQuery. Green with envy 🙂
Karen Cardoza
mrsb Ok.. time to just pick a task and jump right in. There will be no fairies coming in the night to do everything for me.
Annalie Killian
maverickwoman NY times cover story: Obama vs McCain approach 2 maintain US relevance thru technological innovation. Obama strategy better but execution?
Categories
social media

Listening and 100 Tweets of Wisdom

I have always been the person with something to say.  Not that I am always producing content, but when it comes to social media it is typically because I want everyone to listen to me.  It’s weird how things kind of come together but I also had my 900th tweet coming up, and wondered if there might be some way I could use those 100 tweets before 1000 to do something more interesting than the usual day to day “what are you doing?”

My last blog post was on copyright and file sharing, and Chris Bloom took it upon himself to comment on it – a great and detailed comment that reminded me of Chris Brogan’s post “Finding Treasure in the Comments” – and inspired me to start reading more of the blog posts of those people I know and follow on twitter.  For the last few months I’ve been an eager audience of Mashable and TechCrunch, but I asked myself, do I know what my friends are working on?

I’ve created a folder in my Google Reader to keep track of rss feeds of friends.  I’m committing myself to comment frequently on their blogs and stay up to date on their projects.  And now I’m dedicating one hundred tweets from 900 to 1000 to retweeting people that I find inspiring, informative, funny, and original.

Now if anyone has any more ways that they like to keep track of what their friends are posting, tweeting, or working on, I’ll be glad to listen.