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Michael Krigsman

9 months ago

in Anti-depression thinking: what do we do? on Scobleizer
Most importantly, stay calm and try to maintain some sense of personal balance. Yes, it's hard in this difficult environment, but a relaxed mind makes every problem more manageable.

9 months ago

in The Scoble Top Tech Blogger/FriendFeed/Social Media List on Scobleizer
I totally, absolutely, completely agree that "someone who only tweets is superficial."

Sure, 140 characters is a great way to concisely share bits of information. But, how can short info-bursts replace writing logically composed thoughts and arguments?

Fact: blogging is hard and twittering is easy. Although both are useful, confusing or equating their value for substantive communication is a mistake.

9 months ago

in The Scoble Top Tech Blogger/FriendFeed/Social Media List on Scobleizer
Hey, thanks for including me in your list.

This proves that enterprise software can be sexy after all!

1 year ago

in No, I didn’t take down Amazon on Scobleizer
Yes, yes, it was Twitter's fault. Where ever twitter goes to host, they immediately fail. Some of sort of voodoo hex or spell. I suggest exorcism.

1 year ago

in Maryam on Yahoo’s rejection of Microsoft on Scobleizer
At this point the blog swarm on Techmeme is almost as interesting as the story itself.

As I blogged, it's time for Microsoft to break itself into sensible, bite-sized pieces. After that's accomplished, Yahoo can buy the newly-minted Microsoft Internet division.

http://blogs.zdnet.com/projectfailures/?p=584

1 year ago

in Why we’re going to FastCompany.tv on Scobleizer
Congratulations - look forward to seeing your new work!

1 year ago

in Social Media as Personal Power on Chris Brogan
You're saying the difference between enterprise software and social media software is the latter empowers individuals. While you don't explicitly state what enterprise software does, presumably it empowers groups (ie: companies).

You go on to say that "Social media tools are built to connect individual voices to a community." Here's where I see a disconnect: from this description, it appears that enterprise software and social media tools end up doing the same thing. Since I suspect that's not your argument, could you elaborate more on what the differences actually are?

By the way, was great to meet you on Twitter, and hope we can get together here in Boston sometime.

Michael Krigsman
Blog: http://blogs.zdnet.com/projectfailures
Twitter: http://twitter.com/mkrigsman

1 year ago

in Enterprise “firestorm” continues on on Scobleizer
Hey Robert, It has been fun, hasn't it :-)

Michael Krigsman
http://blogs.zdnet.com/projectfailures

1 year ago

in Why enterprise software isn’t sexy on Scobleizer
Geez, Scoble, I like you but you missed the boat entirely on this one. I've blogged the response over at ZDNet:

http://blogs.zdnet.com/projectfailures/?p=524

Michael Krigsman
http://blogs.zdnet.com/projectfailures
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