More from Ireland

Maryam is doing some wonderful blogging about our trip to Ireland.

Colm Smyth says “I’ve been Scobleized (and it didn’t hurt).” Heheh! Says I’m 100% geek and a few other things. I should hire Colm as my PR guy. Too nice.

Paul Watson reported on the user group meeting in Dublin last night. I was tired. Traveling and speaking and experiencing new things (and the Guinness!) does wear. Today we’re having a day to ourselves, mostly. We’ll be filming a Channel 9 video at the Guinness brewery today at about 3 p.m., though, and will be visiting Microsoft’s offices at about 4:30 p.m.

In other news I see that Kent Newsome is reviewing all the feeds in my blogroll. He’s done the As. And the Bs.

John Porcaro, who works on the Xbox marketing team, takes on the question of whether or not the Xbox 360 marketing is “the best or the worst?” We were having so much fun with the user group last night that we missed the launch. I did take a picture of an Xbox sign in a local store here in Dublin. The full version is selling for 409 Euros, which is pretty close to what it’s selling for back in the US. Shawn Morton has a more skeptical view of Microsoft bloggers and asks: are Microsoft bloggers pushing propaganda about the XBOX 360?

Actually, that gets to “how does Microsoft control the message?” question that I got in one of my talks the other day. No one tells me what to write, but all employees have access to the Xbox Discussion alias. There employees from all over the world discuss what they are hearing on the street. It gets pretty violent in some of those mailing lists. People pass along accusations and rumors and news articles and reports on forums. And the Xbox team is there answering them within minutes so that all employees have the latest information. No one says “you must write this” but they share their manufacturing plans, their decision-making process, and other behind-the-scenes information. Add in that I know several people on the team and they give me other details, and yeah, it can look like a concerted effort sometimes. That’s why I point to John Porcaro’s blog and Larry Hryb’s blog rather than try to report it all myself. They are both on the Xbox team and have better access to what really is going on than I do.

Stowe Boyd puts some RSS backlash out there (he doesn’t like the feed reading experience). I keep hearing this too when I give speeches. But almost always these are people who don’t try to keep up with a large number of sites and just visit randomly. I take a more structured approach to my feed reading and hate reading sites on the Web, for the most part. Although with Digg and Memeorandum I certainly do my share of random poking around too.

One thing, though, is even if you hate the RSS experience, there are benefits for having all that stuff stored up. Desktop search works a lot better than even Google on the Web does. If I remember I read something on a feed a few months ago I can find it instantly by using desktop search, but it often is hard to find on the web-based search engines like Google, MSN, or Yahoo.

It’s interesting that some people actually like seeing a blog’s design. I don’t. It impedes readability. Imagine if the New York Times had a different font, a different color backwash, and a different font size for each author. It’d make reading a newspaper really a poor experience, wouldn’t it? Yet we put up with that on the Web. RSS frees me from that system and makes it a lot easier to read a large amount of information very quickly.

But not everything comes through my aggregator. Some gets emailed to me. Chris and Ponzi are at it again, but this time with a video blog.

Gary Price brings us “hypermaps of Boston” which use Google, MSN, and Yahoo Maps in a mashup.

RawSugar (the search engine you can tag) has released a major update, according to their blog.

It’s Jerry Time. His second video has twice as much animated angst. It’s amazing to me that people have the skills and the time to do stuff like this. I love it!

Speaking of weird video blogs, Rocketboom has some geeky Christmas lights.

On the weird video blog theme, yesterday we turned on a new feature on Channel 9: Shows. Charles Torre is driving this, he’s doing several theme-based shows that really are interesting. Going Deep, Women in Technology, and ArcTalk.

Let’s see what else is up. Oh, yeah, got too many emails? Microsoft Research just released SNARF. I’ve tried it out, I like it! It’s great to see different approaches to helping people deal with their email overload. Speaking of which, 221 emails unanswered in my inbox. Sigh…

Will BifSniff be the cartoon on my next business card? I can’t wait to see what FrankP or Bif comes up with! Their cartoons are fun.

17 thoughts on “More from Ireland

  1. Thanks Robert, it was really great to meet yourself and Maryam at the Cork Geek dinner… delighted you like the cartoons…

    Did you see Seth Godin is talking about ‘the hobby economy’?

    I guess myself and Bif aren’t the only ones not too worried about monetisation right now!

    Thanks again, the pressure is on now to come up with a killer idea for your card… πŸ˜›

    Like

  2. Thanks Robert, it was really great to meet yourself and Maryam at the Cork Geek dinner… delighted you like the cartoons…

    Did you see Seth Godin is talking about ‘the hobby economy’?

    I guess myself and Bif aren’t the only ones not too worried about monetisation right now!

    Thanks again, the pressure is on now to come up with a killer idea for your card… πŸ˜›

    Like

  3. I totally agree about the unfortunate ubiquity of form over substance on blogs. I’ve seen too many that look pretty but don’t really have any content behind it. Kinda like a vendor demo!

    Like

  4. I totally agree about the unfortunate ubiquity of form over substance on blogs. I’ve seen too many that look pretty but don’t really have any content behind it. Kinda like a vendor demo!

    Like

  5. This, of course, explains everything…

    http://technology.guardian.co.uk/online/news/0,12597,1465973,00.html

    The distractions of constant emails, text and phone messages are a greater threat to IQ and concentration than taking cannabis, according to a survey of befuddled volunteers. Doziness, lethargy and an increasing inability to focus reached “startling” levels in the trials by 1,100 people, who also demonstrated that emails in particular have an addictive, drug-like grip.

    Like

  6. This, of course, explains everything…

    http://technology.guardian.co.uk/online/news/0,12597,1465973,00.html

    The distractions of constant emails, text and phone messages are a greater threat to IQ and concentration than taking cannabis, according to a survey of befuddled volunteers. Doziness, lethargy and an increasing inability to focus reached “startling” levels in the trials by 1,100 people, who also demonstrated that emails in particular have an addictive, drug-like grip.

    Like

  7. Don’t dismiss propaganda by claiming it is not commanded. You can self-propagandize. Not being ordered to does not eliminate the nature of propaganda. If you want to dismiss that claim, you need another argument.

    Like

  8. Don’t dismiss propaganda by claiming it is not commanded. You can self-propagandize. Not being ordered to does not eliminate the nature of propaganda. If you want to dismiss that claim, you need another argument.

    Like

  9. Hey Robert, who’s the PR guy – I guess you brought more traffic my way than I did for you πŸ˜‰ It was an unexpected gift and it brought a tiny tsunami to my hit graph.

    In case I appear too nice though, let me just emphasise you’re not making it onto my Blogroll; you’ve got enough signposts already πŸ˜‰

    Good to meet you, and I stand by what I said.

    Like

  10. Hey Robert, who’s the PR guy – I guess you brought more traffic my way than I did for you πŸ˜‰ It was an unexpected gift and it brought a tiny tsunami to my hit graph.

    In case I appear too nice though, let me just emphasise you’re not making it onto my Blogroll; you’ve got enough signposts already πŸ˜‰

    Good to meet you, and I stand by what I said.

    Like

Comments are closed.