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January 20, 2008

Moi moi moi

Doris Obermair interviewed me at the Picnic conference in spring 2007, and now has posted an edited version in which I talk about the effect of the miscellaneous on business. (With Spanish subtitles.) (By the way, I list videos here.) [Tags: doris_obermair everything_is_miscellaneous ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: business • digital culture • everythingIsMiscellaneous • metadata Date: January 20th, 2008 dw

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January 18, 2008

Control doesn’t scale

Control doesn’t scale. That seems to me to say it all. Or, it at least says some of it.

Now, here are some of the people who came up with that phrase, some well before I did:

David Friedman (economics)
Steve Manning (technical writing)
Jonathan Feldman (remote application controls)
Curtis Yanko (CruiseControl, a build management tool)
Steven Riley (MAC-based access control)
Uwe Doering (a packet filter for access control)

I hereby claim that phrase in the name of Her Highness, Queen Generality.

[Tags: control aphorisms ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: aphorisms • business • control • culture • leadership • politics Date: January 18th, 2008 dw

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January 8, 2008

BradSucks to rock Harvard Feb 11

Some time in the early evening of February 11, I’ll be conducting a very special (as they say in the entertainment biz) Web of Ideas session about how the new business models for music are affecting music…by interviewing BradSucks, who will also favor us with some songs.

I’m a big fan of Brad’s, so I’m quite excited about this.

[Tags: bradsucks music ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: bradsucks • business • digital culture • entertainment • music Date: January 8th, 2008 dw

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December 28, 2007

2008: The Year of Scale?

The Harvard Business Review blog ConversationStarter asked a bunch of people what they think the issues for managers will be in 2008. Sean Silverthorne has compiled a list.

I wrote about the need to deal with a world in which customers, information and relationships have all scaled.


(Note to self: In 2008, try to use the phrase “got big” rather than “scale.”) [Tags: hbr 2008 business management ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: business • cluetrain • leadership • marketing Date: December 28th, 2007 dw

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December 16, 2007

Tim O’Reilly on what a truly open cellphone network looks like (and an article on Google cloud computing)

Great op-ed by Tim O’Reilly, holding out the greed stick to the cellphone companies to induce them to open their networks.

[Tags: tim_oreilly open_networks wireless cellphones telcom net_neutrality ]


Stephen Baker has an excellent, provocative article on “cloud” computing, where “cloud” means gigaclusters like Google’s and not the great amorphous mashup of information known as the Internet.

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: business • digital rights • net neutrality • wifi Date: December 16th, 2007 dw

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December 14, 2007

Pissed off marketing

Alitalia lost my luggage. It happens. It’s been two days and they still haven’t delivered it. It happens.

But here’s what shouldn’t happen. When you’re at the airport registering the lostness of your luggage, the last step before they send you home to live in the clothes you arrived in is the Bestowing of the Toiletries. The little bag contains the cheapest possible bathroom utensils the airline can find: A toothbrush as rigorous as a cotton swab, a chunk of deodorant floating loose in its container, a razor blade fashioned from the sharp edge of a tuna can. But the last straw was the one piece of clothing included: A white undershirt on to which they’ve printed their logo. Not only does this render it useless if you happen to be wearing a shirt of any translucency, why do they think I want to advertise their business for them? What part of “I’m pissed off” don’t they understand?

Likewise, when you’re put on hold by a business, why would they think you’re in a mood to listen to their ads…especially if you’re put on hold while trying to get technical help? What are they thinking?

If you have an emotional IQ above than that of your average rattlesnake, you can figure out that marketing to customers when they’re pissed off at you requires apologies, extra care, patience, and humility, not happy jingles and cheery logos.

Grrrr…

[Tags: marketing business pissed_off ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: business • cluetrain • marketing Date: December 14th, 2007 dw

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December 3, 2007

Web of Ideas: Leadership

On Wednesday at 6:30pm, I’m leading a discussion of whether leadership on the Web is different from leadership off the Web, especially business leadership. In fact, I’m gong to run through my 20 minute presentation for Le Web 3 on this topic. I’ve gotten pretty interested in the nature of the leadership of big collaborative projects, and I’m looking forward to a chance to have my inklings bashed around.

Plus, we serve pizza.

The session is open to all. It’s at the Berkman Center [map]. [Tags: berkman leadership]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: business • digital culture Date: December 3rd, 2007 dw

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November 30, 2007

Facebook chooses sides

I’m glad Facebook decided to reverse its most egregious defaults so that not clicking “yes” will now mean “no.” Good.

But in this matter Facebok overall is showing itself not to be on its users side. There is no reason not to give users a big red opt out button — making the whole thing opt in would be even better — except that FB knows we would use it. FB is choosing its own interests over its users’.

And, no, not every company does that. Sure, there’s self-interest in all that we do and all that our organizations do. But companies choose sides. Almost all companies use their customers. A few are truly on their customers’ side. Now we know where FB stands. [Tags: facebook ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: business • cluetrain • digital culture • marketing Date: November 30th, 2007 dw

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November 27, 2007

Kindle and openness

Harvard Business Review online is running a brief post of mine on why Kindle may end up as an open device, and, more generally, why there’s often competitive pressure for openness.

[Tags: kindle amazon ebooks openness ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: business • digital culture • libraries Date: November 27th, 2007 dw

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October 17, 2007

The miscellaneous is making my eyes bleed

You know what’s not helpful? A bill from AT&T that spreads across 56 pages of tiny print the information that explains why my bill is twice as high this month as usual.

You know, if they organized their information in a useful way (which is actually what my sense of the miscellaneous is about), I might even be able to tell that I should up my plan and pay AT&T more money every month. So, how about fewer lists of data — I don’t really need to know about each and every text message our children send — and perhaps some notifications of where my usage has swerved off the norm?

Who designs these bills? Squirrels? [Tags: information_architecture, whines]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: business • everythingIsMiscellaneous Date: October 17th, 2007 dw

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