Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Twitter and the Nature of Time

I have always thought one very intriguing aspect of Twitter was the fact that it's a completely different "product" depending on where you live and what time it is.

On a shelf, Tide is always Tide, Heinz Ketchup is always Heinz Ketchup, and anywhere in the world a Coke is a Coke is a Coke. Brands you can count on to deliver a solid, unchanging brand experience, but not so with Twitter.

You know the time zone math. As I just tweeted at 6:00am in Boston, "It's primetime for Europe, late for Middle East, dawn for NewYork/DC/Boston and ZZZZZZ for CA." If I go on at the end of my day, Europe is mostly gone, California is in full swing and we're getting the Pacific Rim in PJ's added to the show.

It's something I love about Twitter. It's a product which is both public and generic, but private and intimate. It is quiet and tame in my mornings, sometimes wild and brawling in my late day, but whatever time you go on, it's filled with the daily energy of people across that very wide "world WIDE web" you've heard so much about.

Picture Credit: Not sure who took this picture of (from left to right, Jack Dorsey, Evan Williams, Biz Stone) but it lives at this link.

Monday, February 14, 2011


Twitter at the Grammys

I am giving my biggest Grammy award to Twitter as APP OF THE YEAR. Of course, Twitter's role in the Egyptian uprising is historic, but Twitter's role at the Grammys was HYSTERIC-AL!

It's so much fun to see what everyone else is thinking as they are watching any wacky awards show. It's the last lone frontier of LIVE TV trying to be cool and holding it together, and despite all prep, offers up all the gaffes only live TV can offer.

It's so much fun to sit in front of the big global screen with thousands of Twitter buddies making cracks at the beautiful people. I mean I love Rhianna, but why do most of her clothes look like they finished off with a document shredder?! Clue me in please. And what brilliant producer decided to let the other 15 guys SING behind Dylan, essentially drowning him out. Let them play and let him sing, duh! And bravo stage manager, giving Dylan a doghouse bass larger than a mountain lying flat on stage, right in his path, forcing him to vault over the thing as he came on stage.

And of course there was the moment when I finally had enough with my cable provider, trying to figure why they kept dropping the audio and I tweeted my frustration -- and my Twitter buddies clued me in -- they were silently "bleeping" all the effing f words in the lyrics. Can you spell "censorship" -- a ship that needs to go Titantic please. Oy vey!

Micah Sifry wins my BEST TWEET AT THE GRAMMIES award this year,
@Mlsif From hip, to hip replacement. Acid to antacid. Mick Jagger at the Grammys

Sunday, February 13, 2011

A book: The cover is a door to an amazing world

I'm a voracious, you might say carnivorous, or certainly an omnivorous reader. And I've been thinking about books, and in particular, hardcover books. I don't cotton to ebooks frankly.

I've been thinking about why you like to own them, hold them, shelve them, loan them, wrap them up with a bow to give as a gift, cuddle up with them, stay up all night reading them and how there are some things you can do with a book which you can't do with an ebook.

Look at the shape of a book. Look at the front cover. It opens like a box, or if you think of it, like a door to a house where there's a party going on. The cover of a book is like a little door into an amazing world. Readers who love reading know this. The common wisdom suggests "don't judge a book by its cover" and they are right, you can't imagine from the door of a house what weird, wild, wonderful things might be going on inside.

No e-book lets me open a door as a real book does. And once inside, there is ink and paper. Not important you say? Well, I think it is. As a writer, I feel the connection with other writers when I see ink pressed on paper. You may say all books are now written on computers and few people write with pen, ink and paper. That's true, but ink and paper are suggestive of a person pouring their blood, sweat and tears into a manuscript. Ink is the connection to the blood and heartbeat and FEELINGS of an actual living (or once living) author. Ink may be black but it is liquid like blood and the ink in a book is the brother of the ink in the inkwell on the desk of a writer. It flows. It lets words flow. It spills. It spills the emotions. It is not digital.

Take the word "manuscript" -- notice the origin of the two parts of the word too -- "manu" hand and "script" written. A manuscript is written by a person's hand. It's "hand-made." The hands of a writer touched paper, that paper was sent to a printer, who in the old days made type with their hands -- hot lead type -- and pressed the words into the bed of soft paper. Think ink and paper, think about a signature, something totally unique, written by the hand of a person, identifying that person, a manuscript, too is made by hands, holds an author's unique perspective.

The door of a book, the cover, opens and there are people inside who say, "Come in, we'll tell you our story." It's an amazing invitation. Open that door. Go in, listen. And if you leave that enchanted place, remember you can always go back. You'll recognize the door.

Picture Credit: Amazing book I'm reading now: Enchantment, by Guy Kawasaki, Penguin. Go here to learn more.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Great Interview with Jack Dorsey at Stanford University Enterpreneurs' Corner



Check this out. Really interesting talk with the founder of Twitter and Square.

"Apple is run like a theatre company ... stage-driven, a very cohesive story."

"It's not what we can build, it's what we can take away."

"We want to make payments feel amazing."

Wednesday, February 09, 2011


Hats In Boston

I'm sure I can come up with a better title than that, but give me a few minutes. My head is still half-frozen from the blasted freezing cold, despite wearing my excellent new hat.

So I wanted to write about one thing. Hats in Boston. It's one of the best things about the cold weather here -- and hell, we have had so much cold weather here. The hats in Boston in winter bloom in reds, blues, yellows, pretty oranges like a wooly garden of happy, cozy comfort. Spring will bring pretty tulips one of these days, but in the meantime, enjoy this hothouse of hats!

So, all I wanna say is, you see some amazing and insane and cool and funny hats in Boston. Wonderful crazy hats ... which people actually wear in order to keep warm.

I don't want to be a cold climate snob, but honestly when I see skateboarder types in wool hats in 75 degree L.A. and S.F. weather, it's slightly ridiculous. Just like seeing people in California wearing "winter boots" which sadly they sometimes try to sell here on the East Coast. You know what I mean -- suede boots with tall heels and no tread -- people here take one look at them and LAUGH! These are not boots. These boots would last about 5 seconds in Harvard Square. Give it up. You want boots -- start in Maine -- at L.L. Bean.

Speaking of boots and hats and cold weather -- may I please mention my too favorite sexy guilty pleasure brands -- which I've been forced to admit are wonderful thanks to this weather pushing us to the brink of snow madness. Here they are ... wait for them: Sorel Boots and Smartwool.

Like check out Sorel's wonderful "Joan of Artic" boots which also have that wonderful funky name. And Smartwool ... I can't say enough good about them. I crave them. [And no, dear readers, they don't pay me to say nice things. Full disclosure = I just happen to LOVE them!]

Like many people, you probably looked at Sorel and Smartwool and thought, "Jeez, they're kinda on the pricey side." But not anymore. I'm a believer. They are wonderful and warm and ESSENTIAL to living on this side of the U.S. without freezing to death or falling on your butt repeatedly when negotiating these icey tobogan run streets.

Picture Credit: Steve Garfield in a wonderful fur hat. So Boston!

Monday, February 07, 2011

Big Announcement: Omnicom's DAS buys Communispace

So exciting to see the news is public now -- we've been bought by Omnicom's DAS and DAS IST GUT! It's great news and everyone who knows our CEO, Diane Hessan, can't be surprised one little bit. Bravo, DH!

Did you watch her interview here with Eric Paley who does the cool series Founder Dialogues? The most touching part is Diane talking about being a little kid and while most parents can't help showing off their kids' singing or dancing talent, Diane liked to do Ivory Soap commercials for the neighbors! That girl had advertising in her blood from early on.

How Enchanting Are You?

I'll help you answer that question soon. Thanks kk+ on Flicker for taking my pic here from Gnomedex.