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Wait a minute, now I'm being an idiot! In Dostoevsky's time, "idiot" referred to someone with epilepsy, not someone ranting senselessly like me now :)
No fear of being occassionly wrong is a wonderful thing, which means I agree!
Truth is, Robert, I don't expect you to be "smart" anywhere any more. You're all over the map in an attempt not to miss any "new wave" trend or event. PR departments fawn over you because they know this, and can usually get a good word from you or a video interview at the drop of a hat. You've become a PR whore. How can anyone take your latest views on what's new and happening seriously? You like them ALL.
Being an idiot at blogging doesn't mean not being wrong. It means not posting idiotic stuff. From your latest post it would seem you don't understand the distinction.
As soon as you will start caring about what you look like the times you are wrong or be controversial just to increase traffic, you will start to kill some of the dynamics of this blog.
I think that the only way to increase your audience is to keep the content+conversation balance and let word of mouth do its magic.
I have heard that you only learn from your mistakes. In that case, I am one of the smartest people I know ! :)
Or the old adage: No pain, no gain! It does not just apply to exercise - it is for any endeavor.
Yet another pertinent saying: those who can not do, teach. Would you be willing to take on some blogging interns? I have been blogging for years, and I also promote other bloggers, but I would love to learn from one of the pros.
Ric
THIS shows/links to what a true idiot can sound like.
While THIS merely is some human being showing their capability of getting _way_ too emotional about a subject that is better that is both more properly discussed and objectively described in THIS.
And the best ones also field the ball without making an error over 90% of the time. But you aren't a baseball player so I'm not sure that is even remotely relevant to your defense. And that's a physical skill--which you are not exhibiting. You get paid to comment and report on the tech industry. So I would think your audience, and employer would want you to be right more than %33 of the time. Afterall, aren't the smartest students generally right over 90% of the time?
http://thesmallwave.com/TSW/Home/Home.html
Boring and crap. Nice one, Tom. Carry on trolling.
[Disclosure: Robert's a good friend of mine, so I generally don't have a lot of time for the Tom's of the world.]
Sure I won't always agree with your point of view and sure you will sometimes get things wrong, but does this make you an idiot? Not in my book. I reckon Edwin @6 has it spot on - just write the truth. It's all you can do.
But frankly, I think a lot of bloggers would do well to think through their posts a bit before writing them. I'm not saying they need to be mini white papers, but when a writer bothers to organize his thoughts and write something slightly more structured, it means better communication. Maybe that's stilted; I think of it as respectful to the people who are investing time in reading.
Did you have a point to make? If so, please make it.
Meanwhile, Robert's recent Apple rants are far, FAR, closer to trolling (though I didn't clam them to be such) than anything I have on my blog or elsewhere.
With friends like you, Robert apparently doesn't need any arguments.
David Kelley - CEO, IDEO
... That puts the effort of blogging into perspective. Idiots don't have perspective. So you've got nothing to worry about... The rest of us should be so lucky!
Blake @13: The best students are right more than 90% of the time on ESTABLISHED topics. E.g. if you're studying chemistry, many of the basic parts of the Periodic Table are well-worked-out, well-understood, and you can be expected to learn it and get it "right". E.g. we know for sure the dates of the battles in the Revolutionary War. Et cetera.
But with his early-adopter, wide-gauge enthusiasm for everything NEW, Robert isn't dealing in established topics. For better or worse (or indifferent, or just weird), he chooses to inhabit part of the EDGE of our knowledge. So expecting 90% success or accuracy or "correct"-ness doesn't even make sense in terms of what he does. We can expect 99% correctness in his English grammar, but otherwise -- it's all one long, ongoing experiment.