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Guy
Good luck! You'll always be on my reading list!
Scoble, I am sure you are inspired.
Now, I bet that you planned to post this later this week but the net gossip speed had you sitting down all day explaining things to your fans.
:)
Cheers,
Gary
http://www.garyshort.org/
Congrats on the move. I am excited for you - and for the bloggerhood!
Thanks mightily for the candid clarity with which you're doing this.
You turned Microsoft around for me. In my past, MS WAS 'the evil empire'. Now it's a company that great people work for, and great people sometimes leave.
I'll continue following your blog. It was never the MS content of the blog that got me reading. It was the humanity of Scoble. And the example you set for others.
Thanks, dude.
May your new position (and deeper partnership with Maryam) bring you abundance, joy, and loving.
Blue skies
love
Roy
Did you know that advertisers are now paying her $85,000 per week? That's almost as much money as I made in an entire year of working at Microsoft.
Everybody should push for the maximum compensation possible, but there is obviously something wrong with the economy and the valuation of skill and knowledge if somebody who edits a few home movies and posts a couple of diary-like entries a day on the internet makes more than entry-level coders at a technology company like Microsoft.
Now that you are finally leaving the convicted monopolist, would you consider writing a book that "spills the beans" on the real issue of morale inside Microsoft and who is really pulling the strings over there?
If Scoble is dumb, so am I - probably the last time you will hear a former Gartner analyst say that in public!
I was just all over rocket boom looking for advertising...donde esta? I want advertisers that pay me to not promote them :)
Good luck on the move.
I know for one, you'll always get me as a reader.
I know for one, you'll always get me as a reader when it comes to the IT industry. )
And how can I be mad at the ole Scoble? It was the Micosoft-induced personality change when this all blew up. But water over a bridge now. Also you owe me a pizza. Back when you first heard news, I said you'd leave before "Longhorn" even came out, which in the pre-PDC 2003 frenzy was quite the 'burn at stake' heresy talk. But I win. :)
And my rant was on the BUBBLEISH nature of some of this podcasting and shaky-cam stuff. It's never going to replace Hollywood or Burbank, it's just narrow-casting, and broadcasting is always the big player. Rocketbloom and YouTubeims for all the "hits" is still niche and just as bloggers downplay experts and think in terms of egalitarian idealism, podcasters downplay TALENT. What podcaster slaves months and months over scripts? What podcaster can even write? How many podcasters can morph to broadcaster? (Hint: if mega-lucky, less than 1%).
Still something to be said for a customized narrow-casting market, and culled end-user content, just don't wrap it in venture-capital hyped-up world changing revolutionary utopianistic clothes. Podcasting? It's just branding, really. But man if 'bubble' wasn't your middle name, falling for every bubble around, Longhorn to Tablets/UMPC to Web 2.0 to Second Life and now to Podcasting.
Thank you for a great look at MS and also thank you for taking time out of your busy schedule for a brief tour of MS for my wife and I.
Last year, I just emailed Robert and asked him where great places were to stay and great things to do when my wife and I came out to Seattle. Out of the blue he said to let him know what day we would be able to come and stop by MS. I didn't even know he would respond let alone allow a brief tour of MS. Thanks a lot for that.
Don't forget to add a tour of MSNBC to Channel9 :)
Robert you are aware of this after your trip to Montana however you need to get further outside of Seattle/Valley areas and find out what people are really using technology for.
Oh, and good luck in the new job. See you at Gnomedex, I hope.
The story "Famed Microsoft Blogger Scoble leaves for start-up" is currently the seventh "most popular" news story on Yahoo! News, and the third "most viewed" news story.
Of course, the fourth most-viewed news story is, [Paris] "Hilton backs SUV into car after shopping." Soooo.
To get to the top of the news story heap, I'm guessing you need a headline like, "Famed Blogger Robert Scoble backs into Paris Hilton after leaving Microsoft."
Good night, and good luck.
You are, of course, three great things: a terrific brand (that stands for integrity and curiosity and more), a media "property" (but you knew that), and a human being. Your experience at your son's graduation is terrific - a great push-you-over-the-edge-of-the-next-great-adventure experience. My son, Nick, is eleven. He is already programming. He actually thinks I am cool and, brother, we know that won't last too much longer. So, as I embark on my own new adventure at Ogilvy, I will think about Nick and the story you shared. As Lou Reed said about his child being born, "it's the beginning of a new adventure."
LOL. That's rich! Coming from an evangelist for a convicted monopolist that has never known the meaning of fair competition.
And ironic that this comment comes at a time when you are leaving Microsoft. Anyway, I wish you the best on your new endeavor. Just don't get too successful or your ex employer may decide to "cut off your air supply" or "knife the baby" or some such other phrase. In other words the best wishes I can send you is that you are never on the receiving end of Microsoft's competition.
Good Luck. Keep up the good work.
I admire MS for taking a risk in letting you go as much as I admire you for making this move. You are really worth than 85k/year. So money was the only reason? If not I would be interested in hearing what was lacking in your MS job.
Good luck with getting everything that you wish for :)
I don't subscribe to vcasts, but if I do.. you will be the first person I come to.
Was that the right link? Doesn't go to Engadget.
u were one of the few people who replied back to me
so i am grateful to u.
i am glad u are leaving microsoft.
does podtech plan to open a indian office?
if so i am ready to join for 40$ per month salary
i just want a real life one thats not restricted to computers.
i am ready to join even today
my prayers will be with u and ur family.
if u know any company which is intrested in motivational, public speaking, stress management and principles of luck classes with a free seminar then we-me and my dad will be glad to help them
send me a email anytime
bye
@runb@laj!
Well, I hope they are building a good pension and you too because this bubble will burst, too. Don't think it's a bubble? ha! It's one of the smallest one you'll see.
"Translation, that product will create new "Amanda's" and new "Cali's.""
Yup, and the more the merrier. Also less money.
Vlogs and postcasts bore me to tears.
Again with the naive comments, Scoble. It's not the fact that MS was having to compete..it was HOW they competed. Do they really keep you guys that much in the dark about how MS was found guilty? Are the MS PR releases the only thing you read when it comes to Microsoft?
This podcasting bubble concerns personal control of personal media. It might be small and nerdish but it's in the personal entertainment space and that's the place where people hang out without knowing they're surrounded by technology.
I think Scoble's feet-first landing in that space will only boost its profile. That makes my lecturing job easier because wobbly-cam podcasts and personal podcasts will continue growing. While there's no denying the small sector that personal entertainment represents, it's a big chunk of change when you look at the money needed to ramp up into it and to sustain the habit. Advertisers sense that's a sector with discretionary income to burn and they're booking media campaigns into it. Those paid placements, sponsorship packages and personal subscriptions sound more like the development of a new media industry instead of the yammering of thousands who drank the Kool-Aid.
--Angsuman
Interesting argument. I notice that wasn't the one Microsoft itself used during the anti-trust trial. Particularly in relation to the MS-IE and MS Windows relation. What was wrong with giving MS Windows users the chance to try out alternative web browsers? You've just made BillG and SteveB guilty of perjury.
And in relation to sports, I know it very, very well - the more competitors you have, the more vibrant your sports code. Microsoft's statements during the anti-trust trial would get it laughed out of any sports league. It's perfectly alright to compete fiercely on the football oval or the hockey arena - heck, it's the only way to have any fun! You can't get out what you never put in, in the first place, and from first bounce to final whistle, you have to play the ball, but mark your opponent and contest the ball every time. "cutting off their airsupply" - playing the man - takes away the fun, unless you prefer fighting to winning.
Correct. And the Novell's at the time DID NOT use their dominance to illegally muscle out/crush Microsoft. I believe the phrase is called barrier to entry. You may want to re-read the Findings of Fact in the DOJ trial. Unless you are saying that case was BS too.
http://www.usdoj.gov/atr/cases/f3800/msjudgex.htm
p.s Do us a favor and in one of your future high profile MS Exec interviews ask Gates or Ballmer this simple question:
Who contacted Baystar to invest in SCO, and Why? And under who's direction were they acting?
p.p.s Leopards don't change their spots.
Podcasting Reality
1. Commodity Market Already - Existing content (Radio, TV, Video) can be flipped over without much more than an re-encode. It's a pre-made commodity market, no need to pay Silicon Valley charlatan-hustlers thousands of dollars to "show you how".
2. Start Line on the Faddish Cycle - Like anything "new new" on the net, it runs through the usual cycle: massive experimental euphoria with tons of venture-speculation money thrown around, and then the serious bubble-popping cool-off phase, with a full-circle return to rational value-added markets. World changing? No. Some limited niche value? Yes. Hucksters trying to quick cash in on the boom before the bust? Tons.
3. Not Discoverable - No channel surfing, no radio-scanning check-out concepts; you can skim thousands of news sites and blogs (or other online reading materials) in no time, not so with podcasting.
4. No ROI - It takes a heck of a lot longer to listen to podcasts, over reading the same material online. Most of the market, outside of certain niches, isn't going to invest that time.
5. Lack of Talent and Quality - People want to hear existing Radio/TV shows and Audio Books, not geeks and goofball Rocketbloomish amateurs playing with gadgets and whatnot. And the podcasting hypesters are populated with the eternally wrongheaded "Medium is more Important than the Message" types. As lesser barriers to entry, is only that, it doesn't confer any sort of talent or quality along with it.
6. Passivity - The market wants media without work, pre-packaged in easy forms, not eternal geeky tricks of twiddling and syncing.
7. Land Grabbing - Audio Books, Audio/Video Training Material, loooong been around. If a certain codec now works on a portable device, it's now somehow podcasting?
8. Over-hyped - It's all venture-fueled, a new new techie hot branding -- firehose money at it. It's JUST a distribution mechanism; and just because you can do it and download it, still doesn't mean anyone is listening.
I'm not one of your regular readers, but this shift made me subscribe to your feed. You've just won one :)
Great decision, Great Book. Your are certainly a visionary in this open-source marketing movement.
Now Cuban's Mavericks just need to win the title and help bring blogging further into mainstream culture.
"The place where people hang out?" What people? Not normal people, or people with all the money.
Oh... And congrats on the move... *8-)
So there are undoubtedly several readers like me who'd wandered off elsewhere over the years, who may be more consistent now.
Good on you for the move!
I also liked your recent posts about what's important in life, they reminded me some great posts from the first blogger, Michel de Montaigne, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michel_de_Montaigne, in "Les Essais", circa 1580.
Good luck with your new company: looking forward to read (hear and watch) more of you.
P@
Got stuck at the lines :
"My ethical system says that you should reinvest your talents and your luck to make the world a better place."
Good luck. You'll find me on your blogs more than often now. Good for me.
Kidding aside, best of luck, Robert. I am sure that you will continue to do great things.
I've read your weblog for quite some time. I work at Microsoft as well (although considerably lower profile than you). I'm a divorced father of two boys.
You'll never regret living closer to your son.
This Microsoft stuff and podtech as well, while nice, will never compare the work you do as a father.
Enjoy the extra time with your son.
One other thing... The rich man isn't the only one with the audio plug in his new BMW. Our nephew Cory, just got a new SCION XB, with the audio plug installed. Not bad for about $15,000. Sure beats the hell out of the price of the new X5 BMW we looked at 3 weeks ago at over $50K!
Podcasts are a way of hearing something different and interesting to listen to without 25 mattress store commercials per cuommute. Certainly I use my iPod to filter out crap I don't want to listen to...
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