So, apparently it rained 25 days out of 31 in March. And now it’s rained every day in April, thus far. So, one of my office neighbors looked at a 10-day forecast, hoping to cheer himself up with the prospect of sun in the future. But nope. The best that’s predicted is partly cloudy.
Podcast Diet
Ok, so I was skeptical about podcasting. But the last two days I’ve done many hours of driving, back and forth to San Jose for the Kelsey Group “Drilling Down on Local” conference. Here’s what’s been on my podcast list (besides the Ricky Gervais podcast which remains a classic):
- Joseph Jaffe’s Across the Sound. This served as a great way to use former “down time” to think about issues related to interactive marketing. Also interesting for anyone considering getting into podcasting.
- Jason Chervokas’ Down in the Flood. Despite my great fondness for Chervokas, the general lack of podcasts in my diet meant I’d never listened to DITF in its entirety. Remedied this over the last couple of days with the “Best of 2005” episode. Excellent stuff on the origins of American music.
- Fred Wilson’s Positively 10th Street. A bit hokey at times, I’ll admit, but Fred and his family have good taste in music and I’ve gotten turned on to some stuff I’ve enjoyed. Both current and classic music is represented.
- Lostcasts (which turns out to be by some of the folks at interactive agency Click Here). For LOST addicts.
Next up… all the podcasts Pete Lerma mentioned in his recent ClickZ column including Search Engine Watch’s podcast.
Any other suggestions?
Pet Peeve of the Day
Ok, it’s finally reached the point where I am going to burst if I don’t post about this. I keep hearing people saying (the most recent being the person I’m overhearing behind me at this conference) that they are writing “a blog” about something, when what they really mean is that they are writing “a blog post” or “a blog entry.” The site itself, or the sum total of blog posts/entries, is called a blog, while each discrete content element is called an “entry” or a “post.” *Whew* Glad I got that off my chest. A sign of the mainstreaming of blogging?
My New Office
It’s times like this I love living in California. I’ve just moved to a new office building this week, finally separating myself from the Jupitermedia SF offices after Incisive Media‘s acquisition of ClickZ and SEW in August. The new building’s called the Strawberry Creek Design Center, and it houses a variety of design-oriented businesses, along with a yoga studio and a sports-medicine chiropractic office. (Very Berkeley). Yes, I’m now in Berkeley. My shared office area has a lot of natural light, easy exposure to open space (the green in the picture is Strawberry Creek Park), and a nice conference room. Come visit.
UPDATE: Just checked JUPM’s page on the new Google Finance and this blog entry is included in “blog posts,” I guess because of my mention of the company. Wild. Henry Blodget says the “blog posts” feature is a “traffic firehose” so it’s interesting to see what turns up there. (Will we soon see Google Finance-specific spam?)
Like the Old Days
It feels just like the “good old days” in “Silicon Alley,” when Jason & Tom and Jason are scrapping, Fred‘s weighing in, and commenters are jumping in with plenty of thoughts. All sparked by a NYT “Style” section story about the resurgence of the Alley. (Has it really been 10 years?)
I worked at @NY back in the day (beginning in 1998) and watched the @NY/SAR battle up close. At @NY, there was always the aim to burst the hype bubble, but we were also caught up in a generalized excitement about the revolution that was underway — the ideas, the energy, and, yes, the wealth creation. Tom and Jason were especially interested in pioneering a new digital publishing medium — not in chronicling the rise of a digital medium via a print magazine. Both Tom and Jason are very talented writers, journalists and thinkers — if you have any doubt, read their blogs — and I feel privileged to have worked with them at such an interesting time. Still, they certainly didn’t grow @NY at anything nearing SAR’s pace. (As others have said, they did cash out at the right time, though.)
It probably would have been smarter, business-wise, in those days, to go with print, as Calacanis did. Calacanis was and is a great promoter and he did some pioneering events. He did some things with the magazine, like the SAR 100, that really captured the zeitgeist. Some of his SAR reporters, notably Rafat Ali and Staci Kramer, now of paidcontent.org, have gone on to do some amazing work, which proves Calacanis has an eye for journalistic talent. He embodied Silicon Alley, for many, as a young enterpreneur with hustle. (The best moment I think was the New Yorker profile, featuring some beautiful black-and-white photos.) Even now, as CEO of Weblogs Inc under AOL, he’s an incredibly entertaining guy. But he’s not infallible either.
One of my friends, in the depths of the dot-com meltdown, asked me acidly if I still believed the Internet was going to “change the world.” “Hell, yes,” I said. Or something to that effect. Over the course of the past few years, we’ve seen media consumption habits shift dramatically. We’ve seen new businesses spring up to become successful with models that were “too early” back in the day.
As for the NYT piece, it doesn’t annoy me, as it does Jason Chervokas, that it appears in the “Style” section. Silicon Alley was about both style and substance, and perhaps the piece was more about the cultural aspects, rather than the business aspects, of the phenomenon. I think the Times does a decent job — though obviously a mainstream media job, and not a cutting-edge job — of covering Internet media business these days. (The “slivercasting” piece by Saul Hansell is a good example.)
Ok, enough rambling from me (I gotta get back to work covering this Internet media thing). Here are a few other posts on the subject:
- Jason Chervokas – Style over Substance in Silicon Alley
- Tom Watson: Bulletin: Silicon Alley is still Dead
- Jason Calacanis: 10 years later… lessons from the SAR/@NY Battle
- Fred Wilson: Alley Wag and Revisionist History, Calacanis Style
- Brouhaha: Back Alley Fighting
- Steve Gilliard: Warning, bullshit alert
- i-boy: Fight club, Silicon Alley Style
- The Daily Om: Silicon Alley vs Silicon Alley
UPDATE: My memory of Staci Kramer working at SAR was faulty (thanks, Staci!). Turns out she was a contributing editor at Inside.com, and not even based in NYC, during those days.
UPDATE2: Got “The Complete New Yorker” and updated with the black and white photo of Calacanis (with his bulldog) that I recalled and mentioned in this post. It was the October 18, 1999 issue. Another classic photo from the same issue: Courtney Pulitzer.
Got My Wish
Y’know how I said I was hoping the INS (USCIS) would do something to change my perception of its brand? Well it did… somewhat. My husband finally got approval of his application to become a permanent resident of the U.S. That means he’s getting his green card! Yippee! And it only took 3.5 years, give or take a month.