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1 month ago

in Thymer: Online Project Management Made Simple [50 FREE Invites] on Mashable - The Social Media Guide
Either they're gone or the damn "beta key" field is coded poorly. Can't register
1 reply
Diederik The keys were gone within minutes. We fixed the sign up page, now it will let you know if the keys are gone. We've added a few hundred new keys, so you should be able to register now. Enjoy Thymer!

1 month ago

in Twitter or write a book? Hm… on Broadcasting Brain
Seriously, you can't compare 130K words of tweet text to the equivalent of a book. As someone who has written a book and also write over 2 million words in the past 10 years, I know that the latter collection has a lot of garbage that even I don't want to read ever again. So those 2 million words are hardly something bigger than the individual pieces of quality. (Though I might able to extract quality nuggest and add all new text.)

On the other hand, if you have common themes running through your tweets, maybe you can write a book around those themes, explaining why/ how/ when/ etc those tweets came about -- in the context of how to be an effective "microblogger".
1 reply
Mark Dykeman's picture
Mark Dykeman As I've explained above, Raj, "there is probably a lot of crap in my Twitter stream that isn't worth preserving. It is an interesting idea, to pull it out into book format like you describe, but it's of limited long term value. I was more interested in the sheer quantity of words." So I don't disagree with you on that point. It's merely an expression of magnitude. Also, it's an alternate way of looking at things, as in "Hm, what would have happened if I put the same time and effort into writing a book instead?" I'm not implying that the content in my Tweets warrants a book, not by a long shot. I'm saying that a similar amount of effort, applied differently, would have yielded a big deliverable. But I'm sure you're a smart guy, Raj, and that you probably figured that out on your own. Right?

4 months ago

in WordPress Automatic Upgrade 1.2 Release on Techie Buzz
I get the same error ("Fatal error: Call to undefined function: current_user_can()") as Nick mentioned above, on Sep 11/2008, but not the database error. I also have WP 1.5.2 and can't seem to use the plugin (downloaded from wordpress.org on Mar 6/09). Any ideas what might be wrong?

10 months ago

in Nominate Your Favorite Writing Blog for 3rd Annual Top 10 Blogs for Writers Contest on Writing White Papers
My nomination/ vote is for Deb Ng's Freelance Writing Jobs:

http://freelancewritinggigs.com

Not only a source of writing advice but of jobs as well.

1 year ago

in Daniele, first photos on LucaFiligheddu.com
Congrats, Luca. He's beautiful. So much hair!

1 year ago

in 2008/06/19/web-meeting-tools/ on Mashable - The Social Media Guide
There's also Teamviewer, which is free for personal use. It's a remote desktop tool, and I've actually used to work on two computers simultaneously (when an app didn't exist on one computer).

1 year ago

in Don’t Just Linkbait Top Bloggers, Write For Them on Instigator Blog
Ben - great article.

James, I see you finally got online, then. Hope you're well. Haven't seen you in a year or more.

1 year ago

in Even Simple Multi-tasking Can Make a Project 30% Late on LifeDev
I've been a multi-tasker for over 20 years and it always works for me, but only for certain types of work - if it's all physical, good luck. To succeed with it, you need to plan a bit and to be able "see" the multi-tasking in your head.

I'm proof against this growing theory that multi-tasking is bad. But the fact is, in any project, you'll have down time. That's when you work on something, preferably sufficiently different.

This is in fact how my father, a now retired math professor, taught me to study in high school and college. I took it and applied it to most of my career, most of my mindset.

Now if all of your projects/ tasks are the exact same type of work, you are better of single-tasking. This, I believe, is what multi-tasking naysayers seem not to understand.

It's also something I'd forgotten when I'd originally taken on too much blogging work earlier this year. But when I dropped some work and learned to balance writing against research against, say, commenting or communicating, I found I could multi-task again.

So to all multi-tasking naysayers, I say you're approaching it all wrong.

2 years ago

in From Geek to Freak: How I Gained 34 lbs. of Muscle in 4 Weeks on The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
"4. Eat enormous quantities of protein "

I have previously tried that, and it does work to a degree. However, I'm surprised you don't qualify your statement. For some people, "enormous" amounts of protein can cause diarrhea, if they don't spread intake over the day. And excess protein can cause acne as well.

2 years ago

in The Multifaceted Approach To Web Income on Telegraphik
Publishing addiction.... yes, a very good term for it. That's what i have too, though nowhere nearly as successful as you. Keep up the good work.

2 years ago

in The $100 New Media Project on Telegraphik
Yes, David. Me too. Glad to see you are back in action.

2 years ago

in It’s A Boy! on Instigator Blog
Congratulations on the beautiful boy :)

2 years ago

in First the iPod Now Comes iGoogle on Marketing Pilgrim
Seriously? I forgot that Apple owns the "i" and that Apple once promised Apple Records they'd never move into the music business. - iRaj

2 years ago

in 2007/04/19/petition-against-alexas-statsaholic-lawsuit/ on Mashable - The Social Media Guide
So much for openness on the Internet. Not surprisingly, very shortly after Alexa levied lawsuit against Statsoholic, they suddenly had multi-domain comparison.

Some people just don't get what it means to release an API. It's not so that you can wait until someone else develops an application using your API, then you steal the idea from them by crying trademark violation or some such. Very disappointing.

2 years ago

in Your Roadmap to Success: The Outline on Writing White Papers
Great advice. The outline is crucial. Don't approach any large project without creating an outline. In fact, I use it for small writing projects as well. Having an outline helped me write 900 pages of content for a book back in 2002 in only 3 months (plus a month for editing). Also in 2002, I used outlines to start 100 short stories and complete 60 of them.

The outline is often ignored but should be treated as the backbone of your writing, regardless of the type.

3 years ago

in Plagiarism Today Turns One on Plagiarism Today
happy happy happy, happy blog-i-versary :) I just passed my one-year recently, too.

3 years ago

in U.S. Vs. Europe: Notice and Takedown on Plagiarism Today
Jonathan, good point. The Convention is getting outdated. Yes, we need more powerful standards, as well as best practices and techniques for actually fighting copyright infringement and general plagiarism. I think that your site is aiding in that regard. Keep up the good work.

3 years ago

in U.S. Vs. Europe: Notice and Takedown on Plagiarism Today
As far as I know, and as I've been writing about for several years, The Berne Convention (http://www.law.cornell.edu/treaties/berne/overv...) on international copyright issues was adopted by all member nations of the UN (United Nations). That would include any countries in the European Union as well as the U.S. There are newer documents such as the DMCA, which also need to be taken into consideration at the same time.

3 years ago

in Blog Herald doesn’t understand why full-text feeds work on Scobleizer
When you make a bold statement like "Blog Herald doesn’t understand why full-text feeds work", you imply that all full-text feeds actually "work" and earn ad revenue, which of course is total nonsense. They may do so in the future, when someone comes up with a way to either successfully monetize full-text RSS feeds, or manages to make their site sticky despite offering full-text feeds.

And by the way, I won't subscribe to any feed that isn't partial-text :) I much prefer to browse, then get the full effect of the corresponding website. Except I keep envisioning something that might be out of some Blade Runner kind of world: an RSS reader that sequentially "plays" 3D holograms of stories.
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