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The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
I've got a great idea that I'm implementing, but I can't work alone.
You too Mr. Seattle. This is a Billion Linden Idea.
I'm known as Ad Stork in SL. or check my clog contact page.
The company is true to its core vision and holds a mantra and code of ethics. This is especially enlightening given that the engineers and sales are aware of quicker, yet darker strategies, but they maintain the course of what they know is authentic.
The company is in dire need of good marketing, both in terms of public communication and getting higher exposure to its target industry (old media). This is of crucial importance for growth, but hoping that an addition to the team can be found ... QUICKLY!
Hivearchive.com
If copycatting on10.net smuggy insider-baseball geekiness and the MTV AAD Zoom-jump-cut style of brain-dead TechTV rejects, all half pitching to Second Lifer's -- is only your goal, it's all but doomed.
You need to take more of a Foglight Entertainment approach and kick to web, and somehow make the economics work (impossible at that). But if you don't, it's navel gazing geekville forever out, well until the VC money runs out.
http://http://media-slaves.blogspot.com/2006/06...
Part II of the episode is all about SL and Hipcast.
Just wondered if any student readers of yours or recent graduate would be interested in working with me on helping me 'connect', 'integrate' better my blogs and websites.
As you suggest in your comment to IAN they need not be based in New Jersey but if they do it could be a plus.
It could be a form of 'internship' to add a project to their portfolio.
Serge
Biz:
http://www.njconcierges.com
Blog:
http://www.sergetheconcierge
Portland Oregon
sharongreenfield dot gmail dot com
http://rudd-o.com/about-me/
http://rudd-o.com/projects/
http://rudd-o.com/projects/supercharged/
http://rudd-o.com/services/wp-consulting/
Don't fall into the Valley trap of treating the newest shiny thing as gospel. Trust me, I'm a native here, and I've seen it for years. Nerds. VCs. Marketing types. We are oh-so smart and important... it's the air.
All of the whizbang shiny stuff that pops up-- you have to learn, learn fast, and treat it like mundane reflex--make Second Life, podcasting, blogging, and vlogging as routine as merging on the freeway. Even then, some people don't go with the flow well. And others do it fine.
To borrow a quote from a book, all you gotta do is just condense fact from the vapor of nuance.
Now, about that show idea? ;-)
I'll avoid critiquing Eric Rice's blog in verbose detail (which seems to be what you invited), except to say that from a technical standpoint it's not an example to hold up. (Fixed width, fails validation, very bad CSS, table-layout, no H1, bad cell experience until >220K of data loads, unnecessary Javascript, un-accessible, and more.)
It turns out that it's good enough, though, isn't it...? :) Technical failings can be made up for by interesting content. (Perhaps not interesting to me, but I'm not the target audience.)
Wordpress templates are an excellent example of Sturgeons Revelation. It is VERY hard to find ones that are technically well designed, pretty, and useful. I've searched repeatedly, and despair of finding more than a very few. I've worked on the 'technically well designed' side, and somewhat the 'useful' side, but I can't make it 'pretty' worth a darn, and the same level of failing applies to writing engaging content. ;)
Anyhow, to the original question (which was actually what startups exist, not what they're looking for), Chris Pirillo put together a list of Seattle area startups a while ago, didn't he? Or were those just Web 2.0ish startups...?
Exactly. Oh I guess he's alright. Mea Culpa. Quite rare in the Valley. So on second thought, do get someone just like him.
And that's what they give us. Heh.
Working in a global multinational,as I do, and as you once did Robert, we get used to be virtually and sometimes physically all over the world. I dont think my personal brand is quite up there with yours yet but the principle of us all getting to know who is who with all this stuff is really exciting. ;-)
Its a bit of a shift of power.
I remember the great dot.com shiny thing, but it still feels that there is a real buzz in the ether at the moment and lots of opportunities to follow up.