January 2010
-
The computer, the Internet and Social Media are not the downfall of man
posted by in
Tue 12th
Over the last 10 years, we’ve seen social media galvanize thousands over politics, create as many industries as it has destroyed, and offer an abundance of visual and audio entertainment. But has all this incredible change actually changed us, or just the world we live in?
December 2009
-
A Place for Enemies?
posted by in
Tue 29th
Welcome to social media 2010, where your lifestream testifies to who and what you are, and your audience is not always a friendly one. With Twitter largely public by design and Facebook on a forced march towards openness, people will increasingly have to stop to consider whether their contributions might be seen, tracked, or flagged by audiences that could use their words, opinions, and pictures against them.
-
On Facebook’s waning value to local business owners
posted by in
Tue 22nd
If I were a local business owner, I’d be excited about Google’s shiny new toys, and I’d wonder if Facebook has the chops to keep up from an innovation standpoint, at least on this front. Cutesy business pages with pictures and wall comments were fine for 2008, showed their age in 2009, but they’ll cease to relevant if there’s no innovation coming in 2010.
-
3 reasons why I’m ambivalent about social media in 2010
posted by in
Fri 18th
2009 started off with marketing consultants speaking about social media in almost messianic language. But as the year advanced, evidence emerged of a darker side to social media, and I’ve outlined 3 reasons why I am ambivalent about its future as we move in 2010.
The computer, the Internet and Social Media are not the downfall of man
posted by in
Over the last 10 years, we’ve seen social media galvanize thousands over politics, create as many industries as it has destroyed, and offer an abundance of visual and audio entertainment. But has all this incredible change actually changed us, or just the world we live in?
-
A Place for Enemies?
posted by in
Tue 29thWelcome to social media 2010, where your lifestream testifies to who and what you are, and your audience is not always a friendly one. With Twitter largely public by design and Facebook on a forced march towards openness, people will increasingly have to stop to consider whether their contributions might be seen, tracked, or flagged by audiences that could use their words, opinions, and pictures against them.
-
On Facebook’s waning value to local business owners
posted by in
Tue 22ndIf I were a local business owner, I’d be excited about Google’s shiny new toys, and I’d wonder if Facebook has the chops to keep up from an innovation standpoint, at least on this front. Cutesy business pages with pictures and wall comments were fine for 2008, showed their age in 2009, but they’ll cease to relevant if there’s no innovation coming in 2010.
-
3 reasons why I’m ambivalent about social media in 2010
posted by in
Fri 18th2009 started off with marketing consultants speaking about social media in almost messianic language. But as the year advanced, evidence emerged of a darker side to social media, and I’ve outlined 3 reasons why I am ambivalent about its future as we move in 2010.


