by cameron | Sep 14, 2006 | Uncategorized
If you’re in Australia, pick up a copy of the Sept 7th edition of BRW in your local newsagent and read the cover story on Web2.0 on page 30. TPN gets a *very* small mention on page 33, along with fellow Aussie Web2.0 startups Atlassian, Omnidrive, Zapr, Remember The Milk, Touchstone, Gnoos, Bluepulse, Tangler and Tinfinger. Congrats to Ben Barren who actually got some copy! I smell the work of Mike Zimmerman from Technology Venture Partners in this story. He gets a bit of copy as well. Mike, if you are responsible for getting our brief mention, my thanks!
by cameron | Sep 13, 2006 | Podcast
Check out our new sponsor Wardy IT!
Yeah it’s been a while folks! How y’all doing out there?? Did ya miss me?
Today my guest is Robert Cauthorn, CEO of Citytools and longtime digital media practitioner. Robert headed and launched StarNet, the first profitable online daily newspaper, which became the Arizona Daily Star. He was also the third recipient of the Newspaper Association of America’s Digital Pioneer Award. I caught a presentation Bob did at PANPA a few weeks ago and had to get him on the show. We talk about what’s wrong with the newspaper business, what they need to do to survive, and the fallacy of “trusted brands”.
Stuff about this podcast you should know:
Opening Theme Song: “Save Me†by The Napoleon Blown Aparts, America’s baddest rock n’ roll band!
by cameron | Sep 12, 2006 | Uncategorized
This is according to a recent Washington Post article. (link)
A recent Scripps Howard/Ohio University poll of 1,010 Americans found that 36 percent suspect the U.S. government promoted the attacks or intentionally sat on its hands. Sixteen percent believe explosives brought down the towers. Twelve percent believe a cruise missile hit the Pentagon.
I also love this quote from the article:
"It’s a much greater stretch to accept the official conspiracy story than to consider the alternatives."
Thanks to NickHaC for the link to the story. He’s just watched the Loose Change film and agrees with me that they make a pretty compelling argument that, 5 years later, there are still way too many questions unanswered.
by cameron | Sep 12, 2006 | Uncategorized
Over the last couple of years I’ve been extremely rude to friends like Jeremy Wagstaff and Marc Orchant (to name only two) who have told me how they had partially abandoned technology in their search for productivity and had regressed back to using a pen and paper. Not just ANY paper mind you. The infamous Moleskine. In certain geek circles, using a Moleskine is almost as de rigeur as having a Mac notebook. Secretly I’ve always wanted to join their ranks (on both counts, but for now we’ll discuss the moleskine) but I bravely fought the urge because I wanted to force myself to develop a strategy for using technology that worked.
Well, as listeners of The Productivity Show already know, I finally broke last week and have abandoned technology as my primary productivity tool/s in favour of a Moleskine. The one I’m using is a large lined notebook. And okay, there is something strangely primitive-yet-seductive about writing, with a real pen, on real paper. You got me. It’s just like a Tablet PC but strangely different. It doesn’t take ten minutes to boot. I don’t need to calibrate the book each time I use it. The battery life is pretty good, the fan is quiet, and it doesn’t get too hot on my lap. It doesn’t make any loud booting up noise when I open it in a café. The screen resolution is pretty good in sunlight. And I don’t need to synch it between multiple PCs and PDAs. I won’t get separate out of date versions of my task list appearing in multiple folders scattered across my PC.
Of course if I lose it, I’m screwed. Which is why I moved away from my Franklin planner eight years ago. It got stolen out of my car and I lost ten years of important shit. After eight years of using PDAs, I’ve decided – ENOUGH!
Now I’m becoming addicted to reading blogs with Moleskine hacks. And all of those annoying pens which people have given me as gifts over the last ten years when I speak at conferences, I can now finally put to good use. I apologize to all of you for being rude as well.
Now, I need a Moleskine system. That’s part of the seductiveness of the book I think. You can create your own mods without learning AJAX. I need a system that will allow me to capture and process. Is there a Moleskine hack which stops you from reading blogs about Moleskine hacks and makes you get back to work?
by cameron | Sep 10, 2006 | Video
Okay Okay Okay! I’ve moved the videos to the “video” category, so you can all stop yelling at me. 🙂 Yes Cait, I’m talking to you. Sorry for the trouble folks. The RSS feed for the video shows is now http://http://noillusionspodcast.com/category/video/feed/. I think.