Friday, October 30, 2009

Trojan Zbot Serang Facebook Melalui Updatetool.exe

Facebook user sebaiknya berhati hati, kali ini serangan ditujukan untuk penyebaran penipuan dan tersusupnya trojan bank. Link yang muncul dari email seperti tampilan login situs Facebook. Lalu user diminta mendownload sebuah file dengan nama updatetool.exe. File tersebut bukan file dari Facebook, melainkan varian trojan Zbot

Informasi dari Red Condor Security, teknik penipuan kali ini mampu memberikan tampilan layaknya situs Facebook. Tetapi bentuknya seperti pop Windows atau layar kecil dari Browser dan bukan halaman asli yang besar pada layar browser. Trojan yang akan menginfeksi akan mencatat kegiatan user atau bentuk program kecil keylogger. Fungsinya untuk mencatat kegiatan user dan mencari data perbankan.

(ObW)

Gerakan 1.000.000 Facebookers Dukung Chandra Hamzah & Bibit Samad Riyanto

Markas Besar Polri resmi menahan dua pimpinan Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi (KPK) nonaktif, Bibit Samad Riyanto dan Chandra M Hamzah, hari ini, Kamis 29 Oktober 2009.

Terlepas dari apakah Bersalah atau Tidak kita yang berada diluar Sistem mungkin merasa terganggu dengan kejadian demi kejadian yang menimpa Chandra dan Bibit, Bukan tidak mungkin kasus semacam ini seperti gunung ES, sesungguhnya mungkin banyak Chandra dan Bibit yang lain yang juga mengalami nasib yang sama.

Kita belum berani mengatakan yang itu salah dan yang ini salah, tapi sebagai anak bangsa yang Mencitai Negeri ini, fakta membuktikan Bahwa Institusi Polri dan Kejaksaan Agung telah gagal mewujudkan cita-cita negara kita yang bebas dari Korupsi dan Kolusi. Makanya atas inisiatif Kepala Negara Beberapa waktu yang lalu maka telah lahir harapan pada KPK. Tapi kini Sinar itu berlahan redup karena kasus yang menimpa lembaga KPK.

Sebagai anak bangsa kami mencitai KPK, untuk itu mari kita dukung Chandara dan Bibit dalam Grup ini. Kita namakan Gerakan Satu Juta Facebookers Dukung Chandra dan Bibit.

Ayo kirim semua teman-teman kita, kejar target 1.000.000 Facebooker.

Join Group : Facebook.com

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Random Quick Hits

  • I would venture to say that Colbie Caillat’s music is the music of fall…it just fits so perfectly.
  • School is getting harder to stay focused on…only 32 days left before I’m done forever!
  • I watched Twilight for the first time the other night. Not bad, but not worth all the hype in my opinion. But then again, I’m not a teenage girl…
  • I’m actually enjoying Heroes this season. Maybe I’m crazy or everyone else who doesn’t like it is…
  • People that are pulling out their Christmas music and decorations already are crazy! It’s not even Thanksgiving yet! It’s just so wrong!
  • I’m thoroughly enjoying the cool weather (as long as it’s fall and not winter weather) and the beautiful leaves outside right now in Atlanta. It rocks my world every year.
  • God has really opened my eyes lately to how blessed I am. He’s given me some great opportunities that I really don’t deserve. Some of them haven’t even opened yet, but I’m thankful for a chance and praying for His will and guidance.
  • Facebook/Twitter is cool. I told only a handful of people about our engagement and then posted it. Within a day or so, almost everyone we know knew. And on top of that, all the kind words and love meant a lot.
  • Facebook is also cool because people know its your birthday and make you feel great, without you even saying a word. Again…totally feeling the love and so thankful for it!
  • Hannah’s Blackberry broke and we’re trying to work out a deal so that I can get a new iPhone and she can get my old one without us having to really pay any money. I just wish the new iPhone 3GS was actually a better upgrade than it is…but still would be awesome!
  • I haven’t been getting enough sleep lately apparently. I keep passing out as soon as I get in bed and on the couch at school during the day. I need to start changing my bad habits…like blogging this late…starting now.

Osteo Arthritis( joint pain/knee pain)-Cure through Food.

I was suffering from joint and knee pain for about three months to such an extent, when I got up from toilet seat I used to hear my knee joints creaking as if I was opening a door which was old and not oiled.I could not sit,walk or lie down with out excruciating pain.
I consulted Osteo specialist;he had my knees xrayed and informed me that my joints have worn out and that I could undergo surgey, when they would fix a steelplate and even then my movement will not be smooth as before.
I referred to natural medicines being used for ages in our homes.
-Eliminated all root vegetables,like potatoes,sweet potatoes,beet root .
-among green vegetables,brinjal,plantain,beans,string beans,
-completey avoided oil butter, ghee,cheese of any kind in cooking
-ate greens,lettuces and leaves of vegetables every day(cooked with salt added to taste).
-stopped drinking
-drank 5 litres of water a day including one litre early morning in empty stomach
-walked a kilo meter a day in the morning
-went to bed after light food,not later than 10 pm.
The suggested period of treatment was three months.
I was allright in one month.
I am perfectly fit now and in fact I have climbed hills of 1500 -1750 feet with out any discomfort or pain unaided.(I am 60)
Those who have similar problem ,please try.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Getting Lucky at Harvard -- Ben Mezrich's Tale of the Founding of Facebook, 'The Accidental Billionaires'

That red lace bra on the cover is the first red flag

The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook: A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius, and Betrayal. By Ben Mezrich. Doubleday, 260 pp., $25.

By Janice Harayda

A new art form may have emerged in this heavy-breathing, sensationalized account of the founding of Facebook: pulp nonfiction. Ben Mezrich warns you up front that he wrote The Accidental Billionaires without interviewing Mark Zuckerberg, who created the first version of the social networking site by hacking into Harvard University computers, downloading students’ photos, and posting them online.

With no access to the prime mover of Facebook, Mezrich tells his tale through techniques such as “re-created dialogue,” scenes set in “likely” settings, and “imagined” descriptions. He also draws heavily on talks with Eduardo Saverin, who helped to bankroll the start-up as Harvard undergraduate and later sued Zuckerberg successfully for the right to be listed as co-founder of the site. You know all those “disgruntled former employees” you used to read about before a lot of newspapers banned both that clichéd phrase and stories driven their views? Mezrich doesn’t use those words — and Saverin wasn’t an employee but a partner — but The Accidental Billionaires suggests why the technique has fallen so far out of favor.

You get a fine sense of the book from a bathroom sex scene that has Saverin undressing a “tall, slender Asian girl” at Harvard who wears a red lace bra under a white shirt. Men, how often have you fantasized about finding yourself in such a situation only to discover to your regret that wearing a red bra under a white shirt is something that women never, ever do? Have you been forced to conclude that for far too many members of the other sex, this particular sartorial blunder makes visible panty line look like chump change? Are you wondering if that “Asian girl” was simply displaying an admirable loyalty to her school by wearing its colors for sex in a bathroom stall and that you haven’t seen it because you haven’t dated enough Harvard undergraduates lately? Or do you think the woman didn’t wear that combination but that someone decided that a red bra would work best on a book cover? Perhaps Mezrich believes people won’t mind his failure to answer questions like these. Or perhaps he thinks, as he writes in another context, “they’d hopefully see the humor in the situation.”

Best line: Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s business card has a line running across the center that says, “I’m the CEO – Bitch.”

Worst lines: No. 1: “the end was really a foregone conclusion.” No. 2: “the moment itself became historical only in retrospect.” No. 3: “Thankfully, the Phoenix leadership hadn’t traced the fiasco back to Eduardo yet — though even if they did, they’d hopefully see the humor in the situation.” No. 4: “Eduardo had spent many evenings in the stacks of Widener – poring through the works of economic theorists such as Adam Smith, John Mills [sic], even Galbraith.” No. 5 “[Lawrence] Summers shook his head. His jowls reverberated with the motion, like fleshy waves swirling in an epidermal storm.” No. 6: “Slowly, Summers leaned forward, and his chubby hand crawled across his desk.” No. 7: “Both had bright red lipstick and too much eyeshadow, but they were damn cute — and they were smiling and pointing right at him.” No. 8: “His hands roamed under her open white shirt, tracing the soft material of her red bra, his fingers lingering over her perky, round breasts, touching the silky texture of her perfect caramel skin. She gasped, her lips closing against the side of his neck, her tongue leaping out, tasting him. His entire body started to quiver, and he rocked forward, pushing her harder against the stall, feeling her writhe into him. His lips found her ear and she gasped again –”  No. 9: “At nine a.m. in the morning, in the Eliot dining hall, he had walked right up to the hottest girl he knew – Marsha, blond, buxom, in reality an econ major but she looked like a psychology major.” No. 10: “Maybe feeding the chicken chicken was a mistake; how was he supposed to know what chickens ate? The thing hadn’t come with a manual. Eduardo had gone to a Jewish prep school in Miami. What the hell did Jews know about chickens, other than the fact that they made good soup?”

Editor: Bill Thomas

Published: July 2009

About the author: Mezrich wrote Bringing Down the House, made into the movie 21. He lives in Boston. Kevin Spacey is producing a movie version of The Accidental Billionaires called The Social Network.

Janice Harayda is a novelist and award-winning journalist who has been the book critic for the Plain Dealer in Cleveland and a vice-president of the National Book Critics Circle.

© 2009 Janice Harayda. All rights reserved.
www.janiceharayda.com

Review: Tough Love - Web in Travel 2009

WIT – 5 years on – Web In Travel celebrated its 5th birthday and even though it was my first WIT, I came away with the understanding that the conference has depth and sincerity that can only be achieved through trust.

Stage for WIT 2009

On arrival, I was handed a program guide and tucked inside was a list of what must be the who’s who of the online travel industry that were attending.

One of the Many Panels of Experts

I am now going to proceed and summarise my WIT 2009 journey in the best way I know – the social media way = keywords.

Enlightening, profound, humorous, creative, conflicting, old ways, new ways, homemade cookies, social media, engagement, search, entrepreneurship, mentors, students, Twitter, status, community, art, opinions, fear, deals, Facebook, style, value, graffiti, empathy, monitor, react, pre-emptive, classic, roses, luxury, budget, holistic, experience, destinations, in your face, google, to serve, passion, tough love, did I say Facebook?

NEW: Twitter Roost @ WIT

Special mention needs to be made relating to the events discussion I witnessed, even with prompting by distinguished moderator – there seemed to be no obvious understanding or relevance or decisive recognition of how social media might have an enormous impact on the events business. I can only direct those in the events business to a review of an event I was involved in that clearly shows how events can deliver superior results if you engage a community online in somewhere like Facebook.

David Meerman Scott speaks Tattoos – http://www.webinknow.com/2009/01/how-an-active-facebook-group-drove-15000-people-to-the-singapore-tattoo-show.html

[Yeoh Siew Hoon our Host]

My congrats to Yeoh Siew Hoon (SHY) and her team on Web In Travel 2009. Happy 5th Birthday. – APLINK.

Willy Foo - facebook guy... leads the crew

All images courtesy of Willy Foo – to see the entire set visit:

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?page=1&aid=166745&id=719891275

Friday, October 23, 2009

Is the internet making us stupid?

Unless one concentrates one will not be in a position to surf the inernet.
Definitely one reads and by reading, learning.
What is sacrosanct about books?
We were using cuneiform and Tablets before Gutenberg.
CONTENT is impotant than the medium.
Access to information is great and internet is economical.
Whether the information thus accessed transforms into Knowledge ,depends on the individual.

FBI Profiling of Muslims on the Rise- Can't help it.

It is a fact that members of a particular race/community have been involving in Terrorist activities.
It is inescapable that authorities tend to profile;otherwise how do they go about their job?.
No doubt, particular community may be peeved at the authorities,but it is better their ire is directed at the members of the community who preach and practice violence.
At the same time the authorities must ensure that there is no arbitrary victimisation and harassment of the innocents.
Story:
SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – Muslim Americans are being increasingly targeted for unwarranted house searches and questioning, said Veena Dubal, staff attorney of the Asian Law Caucus, during a brown-bag seminar at the organization’s headquarters here Aug. 5.

Last October — in the waning days of the Bush administration — FBI director Robert Mueller signed new guidelines allowing broader FBI authority in pursuing potential threats to national security. The new guidelines allow agents to consider race or ethnicity in determining whether someone is a suspect.

These guidelines – which became effective Dec. 1, 2008 — allow the FBI to launch a criminal investigation against someone without any factual predicate and without approval from FBI headquarters, said Dubal. “Under the current guidelines, FBI agents are allowed to racially profile an individual if it is determined to be in the nation’s national interests,” she said, adding that the guidelines may also be used ambiguously to “prevent conduct.”

“A really negative shift has occurred,” said Dubal, who received the Northern California South Asian Bar Association’s Public Interest Attorney of the Year award in 2009
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=11a699af1441226d96c0b7d4f9d59330

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Pets In The Building

Another prank from David Thorne, kind of long and kind of funny

Read Below the letter as well:

From: David Thorne
Date: Thursday 21 May 2009 10.16am
To: Helen Bailey
Subject: Pets in the building

Dear Helen,
Thankyou for your letter concerning pets in my apartment. I understand that having dogs in the apartment is a violation of the agreement due to the comfort and wellbeing of my neighbours and I am currently soundproofing my apartment with egg cartons as I realise my dogs can cause quite a bit of noise. Especially during feeding time when I release live rabbits.
Regards, David.

From: Helen Bailey
Date: Thursday 21 May 2009 11.18am
To: David Thorne
Subject: Re: Pets in the building

Hello David
I have received your email and wish to remind you that the strata agreement states that no animals are allowed in the building regardless of if your apartment is soundproof. How many dogs do you have at the premises?
Helen

From: David Thorne
Date: Thursday 21 May 2009 1.52pm
To: Helen Bailey
Subject: Re: Re: Pets in the building

Dear Helen,
Currently I only have eight dogs but one is expecting puppies and I am very excited by this. I am hoping for a litter of at least ten as this is the number required to participate in dog sled racing. I have read every Jack London novel in preparation and have constructed my own sled from timber I borrowed from the construction site across the road during the night. I have devised a plan which I feel will ensure me taking first place in the next national dog sled championships. For the first year of the puppies life I intend to say the word mush then chase them violently around the apartment while yelling and hitting saucepan lids together. I have estimated that the soundproofing of my apartment should block out at least sixty percent of the noise and the dogs will learn to associate the word mush with great fear so when I yell it on race day, the panic and released adrenaline will spur them on to being winners. I am so confident of this being a foolproof plan that I intend to sell all my furniture the day before the race and bet the proceeds on coming first place.
Regards, David.

From: Helen Bailey
Date: Friday 22 May 2009 9.43am
To: David Thorne
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

David, I am unsure what to make of your email. Do you have pets in the apartment or not?
Helen

From: David Thorne
Date: Friday 22 May 2009 11.27am
To: Helen Bailey
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

Dear Helen,
No. I have a goldfish but due to the air conditioner in my apartment being stuck on a constant two degrees celcius, the water in its bowl is iced over and he has not moved for a while so I do not think he is capable of disturbing the neighbours. The ducks in the bathroom are not mine. The noise which my neighbours possibly mistook for a dog in the apartment is just the looping tape I have of dogs barking which I play at high volume while I am at work to deter potential burglars from breaking in and stealing my tupperware. I need it to keep food fresh. Once I ate leftover chinese that had been kept in an unsealed container and I experienced complete awareness. The next night I tried eating it again but only experienced chest pains and diarrhoea.
Regards, David.

From: Helen Bailey
Date: Friday 22 May 2009 1.46pm
To: David Thorne
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

Hello David
You cannot play sounds of dogs or any noise at a volume that disturbs others. I am sure you can appreciate that these rules are for the benefit of all residents of the building. Fish are fine. You cannot have ducks in the apartment though. If it was small birds that would be ok.
Helen

From: David Thorne
Date: Friday 22 May 2009 2.18pm
To: Helen Bailey
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

Dear Helen,
They are very small ducks.
Regards, David.

From: Helen Bailey
Date: Friday 22 May 2009 4.06pm
To: David Thorne
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

David, under section 4 of the strata residency agreement it states that you cannot have pets. You agreed to these rules when you signed the forms. These rules are set out to benefit everyone in the building including yourself. Do you have a telephone number I can call you on to discuss?
Helen

From: David Thorne
Date: Friday 22 May 2009 5.02pm
To: Helen Bailey
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

Dear Helen,
The ducks will no doubt be flying south for the winter soon so it will not be an issue. It is probably for the best as they are not getting along very well with my seventeen cats anyway. .
Regards, David.

From: Helen Bailey
Date: Monday 25 May 2009 9.22am
To: David Thorne
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

David, I am just going to write on the forms that we have investigated and you do not have any pets.
Helen

3 Ways to Leverage the Internet in Your Personal Marketing

Today there are more options for marketing your business than ever before.  This age of connectivity has also brought with it the age of confusion for some who are overwhelmed with all the choices.  But don’t let it get the best of you.  If you will choose three things to CHANGE in your marketing, or three things to START in your marketing, you can come out a winner.

Now, there are more than three ways to leverage the Internet in your personal marketing, but for simplicity sake, I am going to cover the three things that I feel are important enough to put at the top of your marketing list.  Are you ready?  And remember, that any marketing initiative must follow a well thought out plan and assessment of your time, imagination and budget…

  • Be realistic about your time constraints and the amount of time you can commit to for carrying out the marketing plan
  • Your marketing carries YOUR message, you are only limited by your imagination and the ideas and information you are able to produce
  • Money is a key factor, how much can you spend?  How often do you need to spend it? How much are you willing to invest in your future NOW is the first step in planning your marketing

You know I always say “the Internet is a brew-pot of potential” and those willing to work it will no doubt see an increase in business activity, exposure, and loyalty.  By developing relationships and providing informational content to your growing sphere of influence, you are able to reach into the lives of your potential clients and make a difference!  There are three ways I see this happening, and they all fit together like the internal workings of a heirloom timepiece:

  • A custom eNewsletter
  • A personal Blog
  • A Facebook account

A custom eNewsletter provides regular updates and information about you, your business and your industry to a targeted list.

A personal blog pushes out the articles from your eNewsletter to a wider audience, creating an online presence and setting you up as an “information guru”.

A carefully worked Facebook page engages the people you know and creates “fans” of your business by providing them with great content that will further engrave you and your business into their minds.

See how it all works together?  This is the beauty of connectivity on the Internet!  If your goal is to grow your business, increase your leads, and convert them into paying clients, leveraging the Internet will help you get there.  It does take a time commitment, and there will be a learning curve for many, but the benefits will outweigh the cost and you will be setting yourself and your business up for future success.

Love and peace!

Sandy

Monday, October 19, 2009

El Futuro de la computación Movil y las redes sociales

Pensamiento Visual.

Algunos servicios de telefonía proporciona al instante su teléfono con la información pertinente relativa a su ubicación inmediata, la suma total de fuentes como Flickr, Twitter, blogs y wikipedia. Snaptel procesos de fotos tomadas por el teléfono de objetos del mundo real, tales como libros, CDs, DVDs (etc) – y devuelve la información obtenida de la red, en ese mismo momento, lo que le permite comprar o hacer comparaciones de precios basadas en las tiendas en su alrededores. Son aplicaciones de crudo en este momento, pero un comienzo importante para los dispositivos de cómo usamos dispositivos digitales conectados en el futuro.

Las fotos a continuación no son nuevas, pero me recuerdan lo que los dispositivos del futuro puede parecer (desde el blog PetitInvention), y cómo una ubicación concreta, la búsqueda móvil de contexto puede funcionar. Esto podría aplicarse a la ubicación específica de tiempo real de redes sociales también: Imagine que es capaz de mantener su teléfono o dispositivo digital transparente contra una persona que acabas de conocer o de paso. Inmediatamente hubiera devuelto la información sobre esa persona en cuestión de segundos, obtenida de una red automática, perfil público y la búsqueda de la red social – y luego tener la capacidad de agregar él / ella para su red. Sería instantánea visión del hombre de pie delante de usted.

Fuente: Matthewbuckland. THE FUTURE OF MOBILE COMPUTING

Pakistan!-Explain.

How many armymen have been killed by the militants,a.k.a jihadis?
How many army men were along side the jihadis?
Story.
MIR ALI, Pakistan – ‘Pakistan’s army claimed Sunday to have killed 60 militants on the first day of an operation against an Al Qaeda and Taliban sanctuary close to the Afghan border that residents said was meeting stiff resistance from insurgents.’

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/2009/10/18/2009-10-18_operation_against_al_qaeda_taliban_kills_more_than_60__pakistan_army.html#ixzz0ULqGFuJk

Friday, October 16, 2009

Happy Diwali Facebook Style

Someone back in Silicon valley California, is doing a smart job. Given that Facebook does not have a dedicated team in India, it is amazing to see how they are using cultural and social events to build their user base in India.  Not surprising given that the brand has grown over 150 per-cent in India in the last one year.

So what is the latest innovation? A Facebook app which lets you create a private group just for the occasion of Diwali, where you can post your diwali pictures, diwali stories and tag your friends whom you met for Diwali.

Pretty neat huh!

The viral potential of such an app is enormous given the enormous popularity of this Indian festival across diaspora. And it’s heartening to see that sitting in California, Zuckerberg’s men  investing the time to study cultures and creating little innovations to connect with them. This is classic example of how to localize a global brand in a seamless manner.

So while today we get ready to light the diyas and burst those crackers and click those frozen moments for posterity, here’s wishing you all a happy diwali “facebook style”

Facebook's user-tagging’ feature in the status updates for wishing friends and family members on Diwali

The Facebook app on Diwali

blogs are just long status updates

I’ve been updating my Facebook status too much lately.

I know I should be using Twitter to record my half-hourly quips, but it doesn’t fulfil the imperative to communicate that Facebook does. Perhaps this is because Twitter, for me at least, doesn’t have the sense of community that Facebook does. I also cannot abolish my need for privacy online, and my protected tweets rather contravene the whole concept of Twitter. As a result, no one reads my tweets except Kevin Rudd, and I am suspicious of his level of dedication to my disjointed observations. Still, of my five followers he is by far the most active user.

Tweeting, or creating status updates, is a difficult art. The addition of a status bar to MySpace was particularly problematic if, like me, you had an account, deleted it, then created another when it became clear that the MySpace music scene wasn’t moving to Facebook. The point is, you now have a status bar you feel compelled to utilize, but no friends to read your status as they’ve all fled to Facebook. The mood option is also to be regretted. I was astounded by the variety of moods MySpace felt it’s users required, and changed mine to ‘ninja’ in an attempt to highlight the ridiculousness of such options to the online ether. It took some weeks for me to realise that ‘ninja’ mood, with accompanying pictogram, did not display my amused disdain for the mood option and MySpace in general, but rather broadcast to my (limited) online community that I was a complete twat.

Not even Facebook is free from status anxiety. On one hand, one knows those most likely to comment are one’s housemate/boyfriend/siblings and can thus write to that audience. On the other, there is the consideration that most of one’s acquaintance, from kindergarten friends to colleagues and distant relatives, will be able to see and make note of whatever drivel was occupying your thoughts at the time. I know most will neither see nor take note; my grandfather who joined Facebook at the age of 81 and whose most recent update was 13 months ago is an example. But, especially for old school friends and those who’s last real world contact with you was before you ditched the all-pink wardrobe, your Facebook page is all that you are as a person, and your status updates must work to present that person in it’s wonderful, witty and fulfilled entirety.

 And don’t get me started on the photos…

Of course such whinging is not at all reflective of a diminished use of or appreciation for social networking sites. Indeed, I have been on Facebook this whole time, and although nothing very interesting has happened so far I will probably be on Facebook and Twitter for the rest of the afternoon. See you there.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

How Should We Connect With You?

I remember when I started in television 21 years ago.  Back then – as in many newsrooms – you dreaded answering the phone in case a ‘viewer’ had a question or wanted to tell you what they thought of the newscast.  Who wanted to hear that?

How wrong we were.

Today, I rarely say we have viewers; we have customers.  And we definitely want to know what stories are on their minds, what they think of our newscasts and more!

I know we have a lot of work left to do – when I respond to someone’s e-mail or join the comments on our website, customers are amazed someone at the station actually cares about what they have to say.

Do we have a lot of work to do!

So, we have set up a lot of ways for people to give us the feedback I argue we don’t just want, we need in order to thrive in the world.  One example is the live chat my station, News10, does on big story days.

One Way of Connecting

We’re building a culture where everyone realizes how important this is.  And hopefully, in a year or two, people aren’t so surprised when we talk back.

Take the poll, comment – give me some feedback.

View This Poll
surveys

Agar Tulisan Blog Anda Tampil sebagai Notes di Facebook

Berbagai cara publikasi tulisan kita agar lebih dibaca oleh yang lain, mulai dari promosi atau mengirim langsung melalui email, mengirim link saat chat atau berkirim komentar dengan teman.

Namun ada cara mudah lainya yaitu disharing sebagai catatan/Notes pada Facebook. Notes ini dapat juga berasal dari blog milik sendiri atau blog langganan kita, bahkan dari situs yang lain.

Setiap situs rujukan Anda terdapat posting baru maka pada Notes Anda pun akan bertambah tulisan yang sama. Dan otomatis ringkasannya akan ditampilan pada wall.

Adapun caranya adalah sebagia berikut:

  1. Buka halaman Facebook Anda
  2. Klik aplikasi Notes dibawah kiri halaman, atau Notes pada barisan navigasi di Profil.
  3. Setelah masuk Notes, di sebelah kanan halaman terdapat Notes Setting klik Import Setting
  4. Lalu masukkan alamat blog Anda atau web site langganan Anda. Misalnya http://agr38ipb.wordpress.com
  5. Kemudian simpan hasil setingan tersebut.

Anda dapat melihat hasilnya langsung dengan cara masuk ke My Notes pada tampilan Notes.

Selamat mencoba. Semoga bermanfaat.

blog mohyiyi

Monday, October 12, 2009

Utilising Social Media in a South African business context

Social Media

I wrote a post in August entitled ‘The Growing Influence of Social Media in South Africa’ and I wanted to expand a bit more on these thoughts about the adoption of social media in South Africa.

The first thought is of large corporations that are starting to heavily adopt social media as an augmentation of their current marketing strategies.  Augmentation is critical as it is still too early in the life cycle of social media to fully commit to using this medium alone.  Research from the Nielsen institute in the US shows that although social is growing, it is necessary to still utilise the channels of mass media such as billboard, televisions and print media to holistically develop the message you are wishing to promote.

Large corporations have an advantage of being able to analyse what is currently being done in early adoption markets overseas such as Europe and the US.  Whether it is airlines, mobile or motor vehicle companies – the majority of forward thinking organisations can pick and choose from tried and tested strategies overseas before molding them to a South African context.

Two current examples of South African companies who are pioneering the way forward for social media in South Africa are First National Bank (FNB) and Vodacom.  FNB is using social media in the 5 following ways:

  • Community building
  • Product research
  • Customer service
  • Marketing and promotion
  • Transparency

Vodacom has taken it one step further and developed an entirely new application for cellphones and smart phones alike.  ‘The Grid’ is a location based social network which allows Vodacom users to connect with each other as well as brands involved through their mobile devices.  It is fairly similar to the hugely popular Foursquare in the US and if it is properly applied to the challenges of a South African market it has remarkable potential in the future.

The second thought is that of smaller organisations and brands.  Niche markets are coming through strongly as specific communities continue to have the freedom to develop.  Small businesses have a greater ease of entry to the game in terms of establishing awareness of their brand.  Not only can social media marketing be done cost effectively but it has caught on enough for customers to be consistently found online.  Social media allows these smaller niche brands a platform to communicate personally and individually to their customer base.  Furthermore, by encouraging a community centered conversation, they can stimulate open, honest dialogue to develop their products, get customer feedback and converse directly in the sale of new products.

I think that a great starting point for businesses looking to embrace social media as part of their marketing mix first need to realise that social media is all about community and conversation.  For those businesses, small and large alike, wanting to build meaningful relationships with customers/consumers I would recommend taking the following steps:

Utilise the channels that are simple and that you are already familiar with:

  • Facebook is an easy start as well as being a fantastic tool.  Not only has it cemented its place in the market as more than just a passing fad, but with over 300 million registered users, it offers a wealth of people to connect to.  Facebook has also made itself extremely simple to use and understand.  For anybody trying to build their brand and a community, creating a fan page allows for a free and instant platform with which to jump into the social world.
  • A company blog can also work effectively.  The danger is in thinking that your message is the most important.  Blogs work well when the content is good and adds value to consumer’s lives.  If you fail to do this then you will fast become just another one of the 120 000 blogs starting daily whose message gets lost in mass of information already on the internet.  Decide on the point and purpose of the blog and on the social media strategy before diving in.

Social media is evolving overseas as much as it is in South Africa.  It is not a quick fix solution to current marketing, nor is it easy to build an audience through which you can direct and dictate.  It takes time, consistency, transparency and adding value to the conversation.  For those wondering how to start, the answer is to try, test and be willing to evolve and develop.

L'avventura 2.0 del Mart: intervista con Luca Melchionna

Mart - Museo di Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto

Intervista esclusiva con Luca Melchionna, collaboratore settore Comunicazione del Mart, che ci spiega la strategia 2.0 (Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, Social Tagging, Blog, ecc.) del Museo: un’avventura non priva di problematiche ma che si contraddistingue per una visione attenta dei nuovi strumenti web e delle opportunità che offrono all’attività museale.

Per chi non volesse leggere qui tutta l’intervista (molto dettagliata ed interessante), ho preparato un mini e-book dal titolo “L’avventura 2.0 del Mart” che si può sfogliare e scaricare da ISSUU.

Non perdetevelo perché rappresenta una bella testimonianza di utilizzo del web da parte di un’istituzione culturale italiana, di certo non una consuetudine.

Un ringraziamento a Luca per la disponibilità.

Il Mart è uno dei pochissimi musei italiani ad avere una così ampia presenza online, in particolare negli ambienti 2.0 (Facebook, Youtube, Flickr, Twitter). Quando e come è venuta  l’idea che il museo poteva “vivere” anche in questi presidi?

E’ nata a fine 2006, come naturale evoluzione di un duplice processo. Innanzitutto un potenziamento globale di tutte le attività di comunicazione, incentrato su un grosso lavoro di ufficio stampa; il Mart è stato molto lungimirante, e ha creato un ufficio comunicazione di prim’ordine. Dall’altro, il rinnovamento completo di un sito web che era invecchiato troppo in fretta. La spinta finale è arrivata dall’arrivo al Mart di un “presidente tecnologico”, Franco Bernabè, e da un Consiglio di Amministrazione che ha posto degli obiettivi chiari per la comunicazione online.
La traduzione concreta di questi stimoli ha significato prendere consapevolezza che:

  • nel giro di pochi anni la presenza sul web delle istituzioni diventerà un indicatore come altri di autorevolezza istituzionale. Piano piano tutti stanno capendo che l’idea che il web minacci l’autorevolezza dei musei è sbagliata.
  • essere assenti dal web partecipativo è per definizione impossibile; non partecipare non significa affatto non esserci, ma piuttosto cedere ad altri il controllo sulla propria reputazione. Questo è un punto decisivo che risulta utile nella contrattazione delle strategie con i livelli alti della direzione museale
  • I soldi seguono le innovazioni, anche in un mercato opaco come quello italiano. Stare fuori da questi processi incide sui bilanci traballanti dei musei. Non sono discorsi campati in aria: le aziende prima di dare soldi a un’istituzione vogliono capire se sa parlare ai suoi utenti. Perché le aziende vogliono utenti che non raggiungono, mica l’istituzione in quanto tale!
  • è vero che i problemi di diritti e copyright sono notevoli. Ma è altrettanto vero che stanno cambiando le regole del copyright a livello internazionale, quindi stare fermi per paura di fare casino è una scelta comoda ma suicida. E’ meglio partecipare a una riscrittura delle regole che stare in disparte.

E’ stata costruita una strategia di intervento in questi presidi?(magari analizzando qualche best practice?)

Il tempo è poco, e ogni intervento va mantenuto, quindi le strategie sono essenziali. La soluzione più intelligente mi è sembrata quella di prendere spunto dai migliori (Brooklyn Museum), di controllare le discussioni di Museums & the Web, dei gruppi di lavoro dei professionisti del settore su LinkedIn, e di seguire alcuni blogger autorevoli, in testa a tutti Nina Simon. In base ai risultati di questa analisi abbiamo scelto alcuni interventi invece di altri, lasciando naturalmente anche un po’ di spazio per esperimenti episodici, senza i quali si perde entusiasmo. Mi pare che le regole chiave nel decidere su quale social network posizionarsi siano

  • imparare a usarlo bene, a capire chi lo legge, che autorevolezza ha, quali sono gli interessi commerciali in gioco, in che fase di hype si trova. E’ un tipo di lavoro a cui gli addetti stampa sono abituati, anche se magari finora sono stati abituati a farlo solo per i giornali. I giornali bisogna non solo leggerli, ma anche “decostruirli” capendo chi li controlla, chi li legge, che peso hanno gli editorialisti ecc. Per i social network va fatto un lavoro simile, imparando a usarli. Non si può capire il web 2.0 standone fuori.
  • Darsi un obiettivo. Quelli possibili sono tanti. Branding istituzionale, innovazione, comunicazione interna, comunicazione territoriale, gestione dei rapporti con professionisti e opinion-makers, comunicazione virale, allargamento dei gruppi demografici, redenzione dell’immagine istituzionale.

Avendo fatto la fatica del punto 1, sarà possibile capire quali sono gli obiettivi e quali gli strumenti adatti ai per raggiungerli.

E quali sono gli obiettivi che vi siete posti?

  1. Diventare il miglior museo italiano come qualità della presenza online
  2. Aumentare la conoscenza del patrimonio artistico del museo
  3. Sedurre persone autorevoli che orientano le opinioni di piccoli gruppi, e portarli al museo
  4. Allargare le modalità attraverso cui diffondere informazioni di servizio
  5. Raggiungere fasce demografiche escluse dalla nostra comunicazione perché troppo difficili da raggiungere con strumenti tradizionali da un museo
  6. Avvicinare l’istituzione alle comunità locali del Trentino Alto Adige
  7. Dare evidenza all’enorme lavoro fatto dal Mart per costruire rapporti con enti e aziende vicine, nazionali e internazionali
  8. Offrire più facilmente comunicazione in lingue diverse dall’italiano quando serve
  9. Dare visibilità a un patrimonio di documenti multimediali già presente al museo
  10. Dare visibilità e sfruttare la notevole rete di collaborazioni internazionali creata dal Mart in questi anni

L’attività 2.0 è compito esclusivo dell’ufficio comunicazione o c’è una partecipazione trasversale dello staff museale?

Come per ogni cambiamento, questo lavoro inizia da chi ha una visione, che poi (se è valida) viene fatta propria e condivisa da gruppi più ampi.  I musei sono più lenti di altre istituzioni a cambiare, ma non è questo il punto. Per arrivare a una partecipazione trasversale bisogna lavorare con chi ci sta, indipendentemente dal fatto che si occupi di informatica, storia dell’arte o comunicazione. E bisogna avere fiducia nel fatto che le attività 2.0. per loro natura, incuriosiscono e affascinano. Al Mart questo processo graduale è iniziato: i nostri curatori, operatori della didattica e alcuni degli artisti coinvolti dal museo partecipano se stimolati, e qualcuno comincia a farlo anche spontaneamente.

Allargando la visione, la cosa curiosa mi pare quella che nei musei italiani non sono affatto gli informatici a spingere per usare strumenti 2.0 Molto spesso gli informatici che lavorano nelle istituzioni non hanno una vita digitale. Non che sia un obbligo, per carità. Queste cose non fanno parte del loro orizzonte umano e professionale. Fanno altre cose, gestiscono i sistemi, le macchine. Lamentarsi non ha senso. Anzi, io la vedo in positivo. Il campo è libero per i professionisti della comunicazione, che una volta formatisi adeguatamente, possono facilmente accreditarsi con competenze in questo campo.

Infine, faccio notare due fatti nuovi

  • in Italia nel 2008-9 abbiamo assistito a un fenomeno nuovo, l’alfabetizzazione web di massa su facebook per milioni di persone che avevano saltato internet negli anni ‘90.
  • l’esplosione dei contenuti web sui cellulari, in una nazione che ha il quasi primato mondiale della diffusione dei telefonini

Tutto questo per dire che i professionisti della cultura che si auto-escludono dal web, probabilmente non lo faranno ancora a lungo.

Gli strumenti 2.0 consentono un’interazione costante con il pubblico: molti musei internazionali hanno dato vita a progetti online in cui era l’utente l’attore principale (contest online fotografici o video, realizzazione di nuovi contenuti, votazioni, tagging, ecc.) Avete realizzato (o realizzerete) progetti User Generated Content?

L’idea di creare UGC c’è dal 2007. Stiamo lavorando lentamente su molte cose, tra cui sì, c’è anche il social tagging della collezione permanente. Com’è evidente a tutti, in questo caso abbiamo un problema che non è solo tecnico, ma anche di politica museale: accogliere i contenuti degli utenti, magari sul patrimonio, comporta una ricerca di nuovi equilibri molto delicati con curatori interni ed esterni, con gli archivisti (per chi ha una biblioteca), e naturalmente con la direzione. Il mio compito non è quello di elaborare e nemmeno di discutere le politiche museali, ma quello di attuarle. Avendo un direttore e un presidente lungimiranti, ho praticamente campo libero, ma i tempi di sviluppo non sono quelli rapidissimi del web. E in un certo senso, per fortuna che è così. La dittatura del presente fa male quando si programmano progetti ambiziosi.

Finora abbiamo quindi fatto esperimenti in contesti meno sensibili, come concorsi fotografici (con Claudio Abate), una promozione su Second Life, o iniziative per portare al museo qualche utente Facebook. Abbiamo poi una pagina per commentare le opere esposte. Anche la scelta di ospitare tre link a rotazione in homepage è un UGC, perché coinvolgiamo artisti, curatori, giornalisti.

Ci tengo a specificare che queste cose non ci costano un centesimo (o comunque un’inezia se paragonate ai manifesti per strada o agli spot delle mostre blockbuster di grandi fondazioni private), e richiedono ore-lavoro molto contenute da parte di dipendenti e collaboratori del museo. In compenso, hanno un alto valore aggiunto in termini di comunicazione.

La cosa più temeraria che abbiamo osato finora è il box Twitter in homepage, attivo da pochi giorni. Questo di fatto è portare UGC in un luogo sensibile, perché basta fare un retweet e un commento di un utente (o di un curatore esterno?) si trova in contesto istituzionale. Naturalmente per ora manteniamo un controllo editoriale totale sui tweets, ma in futuro delegheremo gli update a una cerchia più ampia.

Stiamo lavorando a tutte le novità. Non siamo impauriti, vogliamo gestire il cambiamento. Sceglieremo le migliori e le porteremo avanti.

C’è spesso, da parte dei responsabili museali, un po’ di paura nel condividere online dei materiali, soprattutto per questioni legate al copyright (penso alle collezioni su Flickr, o a certe video interviste su Youtube). Qual è la vostra esperienza in merito?

Mi sono reso conto che ci sono diversi tipi di paure, alcune giustificate, altre meno. In tutti i casi, sottovalutarle è suicida. Bisogna capire e valutare. La paura di infrangere il copyright e trovarsi a processo è molto seria. E’ folle fare i techno-optimist e non prenderla in considerazione. Invece, va portato all’attenzione di curatori e direzione il fatto di cui sopra, e cioè che le regole del gioco stanno cambiando. Ad esempio, può essere utile fare leva sull’esperienza altrui. Nel momento in cui il Brooklyn Museum mette online immagini su Flickr con la licenza Creative Commons, si possono coinvolgere i colleghi per ragionare con loro su come fare una cosa del genere nel contesto italiano.

Una seconda paura riguarda il timore di perdere autorevolezza e autorità. In questo caso, penso che molti dei timori siano ingiustificati. Proprio per questo, bisogna impegnarsi e spiegare che il web fa parte del mondo reale, e proprio grazie al 2.0 sta diventando *più* reale: ognuno ci mette la faccia, comprese le istituzioni. Quindi il web non è un contesto frivolo dove si perde autorevolezza: è uno strumento di comunicazione che si può usare per molte cose, compresa la tutela della propria autorevolezza. Un modo intelligente per spiegare queste cose a chi resta fuori può essere quello di porsi degli obiettivi intermedi. Ad esempio, se portare la propria collezione su Flickr è uno shock, si può pensare a portarne una parte in un contesto più “protetto” e “istituzionale”, come può essere Europeana.

Per quanto riguarda l’autorità, il concetto è completamente diverso. La mia opinione strettamente personale (quindi in questo caso non parlo come collaboratore del Mart), è che i musei in effetti debbano perdere un po’ di autorità, per il loro bene. Le cose stanno andando così, non c’è niente che possano fare al riguardo: la perderanno e questo farà un sacco di bene ai musei, ai visitatori, alle famiglie, agli artisti, ai dirigenti e ai critici. E’ evidente che la mia è un’opinione di minoranza, in qualsiasi museo italiano. Ma per fortuna nelle istituzioni culturali si può discutere e argomentare.

State progettando anche la creazione di un blog del museo?

Certo, da almeno tre anni! La scelta difficile è quella relativa al livello di controllo editoriale. Per molto tempo, abbiamo guardato, come modello ideale da imitare, ad Eye Level , che ha un livello piuttosto alto di controllo editoriale da parte della direzione. Poi ci sono venuti dei dubbi, e abbiamo valutato la possibilità di usare i blog per coinvolgere voci libere e partner a vario titolo del Mart. Ora stiamo lavorando in questa seconda direzione.

Concludendo, che riscontro avete dall’attività digitale?

Intendiamoci sul riscontro. Facciamo un discorso per analogia. In Italia si valutano i musei in base al numero di visitatori. Chi lavora nei musei e coi musei spesso rigetta questa visione, anche se non lo dice apertamente, perché l’obiettivo principale dei musei non è quello di attirare folle oceaniche, ma quello di promuovere la cultura. Le due cose si sovrappongono, ma solo fino a un certo punto. Chi abbassa il livello culturale e scientifico per attirare più gente, alla lunga la paga, e tradisce il proprio mandato.

Similmente, lo scopo dell’attività digitale di un’istituzione non è “portare gente al museo”. Certo, è anche questo, ma non è questo il punto. Il web è la realtà, non è una versione minore della realtà. Questa consapevolezza è difficile da assumere. Perfino sui siti web online dei grandi giornali nazionali italiani, le notizie che riguardano il web, ad esempio, vengono riportati non nella colonna delle notizie vere, ma nella colonna delle frivolezze (quella a destra su repubblica.it, per intenderci). A meno che non si parli di soldi, ma questo è un altro discorso. Quindi, per concludere, secondo me va fatto uno sforzo per capire che la qualità di un’attività digitale si misura prima di tutto sul web.

E in questo senso tutti gli indicatori che abbiamo, da Google Analytics ai social network, danno ottimi risultati. Non mi metto a fare numeri, ma le metriche sono ottime ,sia per numero che per qualità della partecipazione, e in alcuni casi (frequenza di rimbalzo, tempo medio trascorso sul sito) sono addirittura esaltanti.

In un secondo momento, è altrettanto evidente che il nostro lavoro consiste nel portare questi risultati all’interno della comunicazione a tutto tondo del Mart, e allora sì che bisogna lavorare per portare gente al museo. In ogni caso, anche se accettassimo la dittatura dell’auditel museale, siamo molto soddisfatti perché le analisi statistiche commissionate dal museo mostrano che i visitatori raggiunti e convinti attraverso il web sono in notevole aumento, sia in valore assoluto che in percentuale sul totale dei visitatori.

Friday, October 9, 2009

Kembali Bermain Mafia Wars

Mafia Wars merupakan salah satu game yang paling sering aku mainkan saat pertama kali mengenal facebook. Selain game ini, aku juga sering main game manajer sepakbola, tapi aku lupa apa nama gamenya. Saat lagi gandrung main mafia wars, saya dalam sehari bisa berjam-jam online facebook sampai nggak bisa tidur hanya untuk main game tersebut. Namun, setelah satu minggu, aku bosen juga.

Nah, beberapa hari yang lalu, aku kaget karena saat iseng membuka akun mafia wars, ternyata mafia ku udah mencapai 100an. Tiba-tiba aku jadi pingin main mafia wars lagi deh. Yawdah deh seminggu ini waktuku banyak aku pakai buat main mafia. Untung aja pas lagi liburan, jadi tanggungan belajar nggak banyak.

Gara-gara kembali bermain mafia wars, aku juga jadi jarang update blog, jarang mampir ke blog-blog pakar buat belajar SEO. Liburan ini benar-benar kuhabiskan buat main mafia wars. Donlot film juga udah lumayan berkurang gara-gara koneksi yang nggak kunjung jadi pembalap.

A glimpse of my life...via Facebook

Since I haven’t updated in so long, I think the best way to update you on my life is to just copy all my recent posts from facebook, with a little more elaboration. Here goes.

Anita Pere My phone erased all my contacts. Please send me a message with your number!

That’s right, folks, I am victim to what one techno-geek blogger calls “The great T-Mobile Sidekick Data Outage of 2009.” You can probably understand how a journalist loosing all her contacts and calender appointments presents a problem. The message boards seem to indicate that most people are back online now, but I’m not. The whole experience has been so frustrating. I will never own another Sidekick again, so help me God, and my mom isn’t going to upgrade to a new Sidekick (she has the first model, and of course she had no problems whatsoever. Go figure.)

Anita Pere need suggestions for a nice parting gift for the people I’ve been living with rent-free for the past year and a half. I know a little about video and photo editing, maybe I could make them some sort of multimedia project? Halp.

It’s true, I’ll be leaving Waco soon and I’d like to do something nice for my adoptive “Waco family.” Any suggestions? I have some pictures of them playing at the lake with their dogs, and I was going to make an iMovie show out of that, but that’s all I got in the works. Suggestions are welcome (no, make that needed).

Anita Pere Maybe the lights will go out and I’ll get to leave work early!

The lights flickered a lot that rainy night, but apparently the office gods thought it best I stick it out.

Anita Pere back to the grind after a good, long weekend. Boo.

I posted this my first day back after having a great time at Dan and Amberla’s wedding in Tulsa! And Amberla’s bachelorette party—that was my first time in a limo! Woo! And of course Johnny made a very handsome best man.

(Oh, and thanks to Chuck Foxen for the picture.

Anita Pere ice cream man robbed just now. While waiting to talk to a cop, I was approached by a man speaking Spanish and, after years of Spanish classes, I asked him to speak English. I suck.

Low point? Possibly. But you try to say a sentence like “I would have gone to the store, but Lupe told me he’d go if I wanted him to.” Yeah, then Spanish would make you cringe, too.

Anita Pere Newspapers to go non-profit? Texas is already a step ahead http://www.texastribune.org/

It just might be the salvation of my people.

Anita Pere Journalism friends–is there a generic term for a Jupiter Jump? Maybe something along the lines of inflatable toys?

Turns out sometimes you have to go with wordy, such as “inflatable structures.”

Anita Pere “No one should die because they cannot afford health care, and no one should go broke because they get sick. If you agree, please post this as your status for the rest of the day.” – Barack Obama

Yes, I support a public option, in case you didn’t know that.

Anita Pere Taking suggestions for nicknames. Johnny supports “Ani.” My name’s just so old fashioned.

Truth be told, I like the idea of a nickname, but I just don’t see myself being bold enough to tell people to call me something other than Anita. I probably wouldn’t answer to anything else.

That’s all, folks. Good night.

(Wow, there’s a lot of religious undertones in this post, right? “Office gods?” “Salvation of my people?”)

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Join Us On Facebook!

As of right now, John Paul Mitchell has 450 active supporters on his Facebook fan page. We’re encouraging all John’s campaign website visitors to join his page and show him support.

We’ve chosen Facebook as the official social network for John Paul Mitchell’s campaign, simply because it integrates smoothly into the campaign site and allows optimal exposure to multiple target audiences. Another great feature that you’ll notice is the sidebar displays 10 top Facebook supporters at random, so be on the look out for your face once you’ve joined.

You should show John Paul Mitchell your support and join now!

(Source: www.aznextgov.org)

New FTC Regulations Inhibit Freedom of Speech

The FTC regulations now include social networking and blog posts. According to the revised Guides, which were last updated in 1980, anyone endorsing a product must disclose any “material connections” to the advertiser. This can include payments, free products or discounts on products or services. These regulations include any testimonials or endorsements made on the Internet, including blog posts and posts made to social networking sites such as Facebook or Twitter. I am in favor of transparency in advertising, but as a writer and supporter of free speech, I have some concerns.

Many companies and individuals use the Internet for business advertising, much like they use the mail for advertising. The FTC should hold them accountable to the regulations regardless of where that advertising takes place. However, many people use social networking sites and blogs on the Internet to connect with each other and share opinions, much like sending a letter or chatting in a coffee shop with friends. Although the FTC has regulatory authority over companies which send advertisements through the mail, the FTC has no authority over personal correspondence. Likewise, the FTC should have no regulatory authority over individuals sharing opinions on social networking sites or blogs.

The largest concern I have with the new regulations is that they target social networking and blogging sites. Traditional media are not subject to these new regulations. If that’s the case, then what is the purpose of targeting the Internet? What’s next? The corner coffee shop?

Monday, October 5, 2009

Facebook Tambah Aplikasi Penanda Bahagia

Dengan jumlah 300 juta pengguna dan 40 juta update status per harinya, Facebook memiliki dataset yang dapat digunakan untuk membuat berita terhangat dan juga mungkin diskusi politik. Awal minggu ini, beberapa engineer Facebook memutuskan untuk menggunakan dataset tersebut untuk mengukur kebahagiaan penggunanya. Aplikasi tersebut dinamakan Gross National Happiness. Prototype aplikasi terbaru itu akan menunjukkan situasi pengguna Facebook di United States apakah sedang bahagia atau sedih.

Setelah disatukan, jutaan update status dari pengguna Facebook dari setiap demografi di U.S dapat digunakan untuk mengetahui apa yang sedang terjadi. Termasuk situasi sedang bahagia, puas, atau sedih dari masyarakat penguna Facebook yang tergabung dalam aplikasi National Happiness ini. Aplikasi tersebut akan menunjukkan seberapa bahagianya dari hari ke hari, dengan melihat kata positif dan negative yang dipakai pengguna ketika mereka meng-update status mereka. Ketika user menggunakan lebih banyak kata positif dari biasanya di update status, maka hari itu ia sedang bahagia dibanding biasanya.

Data sendiri dikumpulkan dari forum public dan semi public di Facebook, yang sebelumnya belum diketahui sebelum dianalisis. Untuk mempertimbangkan status pesan bahagia atau tidak, maka engineer sudah menyiapkan aplikasi pencarian frase populer dan kata.

Internship: Broadway San Jose

Broadway San Jose is hiring a part-time intern to assist us in our two person office. Work for a fun and dynamic business helping us promote The Arts as Broadway San Jose brings the best Broadway has to offer to the South Bay.  You would work directly with the General Manager and the Social Media/PR Manager while gaining real-world experience creating and implementing marketing programs.

QUALIFICATIONS: We’re looking for a friendly and motivated individual who likes talking to strangers, has a passion for the Arts and isn’t afraid of a small office setting.

DUTIES: (including, but not limited to)

  • Building press list
  • Researching grass-roots marketing opportunities at local events
  • Creating a target list of local companies who may be interested in partnerships
  • Updating our Twitter, Facebook, Yelp, etc…
  • Assisting in setting up and managing our Street team
  • Assisting our VIP program
  • Maintaining BSJ’s Press Clippings
  • Coordinating the Advertising Calendar
  • Attendance at Special Events, such as Music in the park, etc…

COMPENSATION: This is an un-paid internship with perks like tickets to shows and discounts with our partners.

Broadway San Jose – A Nederlander Presentation is the new local company that will be bringing touring Broadway Musicals and events to the San Jose Center for the Performing Arts, (CPA), starting September, 2009, in association with Team San Jose. For more information on Team San Jose, visit www.sanjose.org. Broadway San Jose is a part of the national Nederlander Organization, a family-owned business since 1912. For further information on Nederlander, visit www.nederlander.com.

Friday, October 2, 2009

CHALLENGE: Attract a Crowd to Your Small Business Using Twitter & Facebook. Here's How . . .

I used to run The Sportsman’s Gallery. We sold art and unique gifts for the sportsman. In 1 year my team and I grew sales from $230k  per year to over $500K annually. One of the ways we grew the business that year was with “one day only” events. Here’s how we put together one of those events. 

Back then people were just starting to collect golf art.  So I arranged for a famous artist, Larry Dyke, to meet customers face-to-face one night at our store. We showcased his first limited edition golf print and his paintings. 

After working with the artist’s agent, I called a local charity and told them we would donate a percentage of the evening’s sales to them. Then the charity’s PR person sent faxes and made phone calls to their contacts with the local press.

The Houston Chronicle announced our event on the sports pages. We had a great turnout. We also made a lot of sales.

Today it’s much easier. Once you have an idea for an event, you’re able to share it with the world in a matter of minutes. You’re able to tweet influential members of the press your announcements. You’re able to tell all your Facebook “fans” about your event. Read on to find out just how easy it is.

Case Study: Twitter & Facebook Promotion, Talk Like a Pirate Event at Cosmo Cafe

On September 14th Cosmo Cafe ”tweeted” this to it’s followers, “Drag yer pirate booty on down to Cosmo this Saturday fer $3.50 Red Stripe Lager an’ Rum Punch!”

 

They also created an event announcement on their Facebook page:

 

Talk Like a Pirate Day Facebook Invitation

 

They had a great turnout. Everyone had a great time. But the smart folks at Cosmo Cafe and Bar didn’t stop there. They followed up by posting photos of the event on Facebook and in their newsletter:

 

Want to Know How Much More Social Media Can Impact Your Bottom Line? Here are the numbers from three companies.

TWITTER & PIZZA SALES GROWTH. “With his first concerted effort at a Twitter-only promotion, Leach was able to drive 15% of daily revenues with Twitter.  And of those 15%, 90% were new customers!  Not bad for a guy who didn’t even have an account until 5 weeks ago.” –   Naked Pizza in New Orleans

Quote from, http://www.localsearchnews.net/how-to-twitter-naked/

TWITTER & COMPUTER SALES GROWTH. “Dell said on Thursday it has raked in more than $3 million from Twitter followers who clicked through its posts to its Web sites to make purchases. The company, which has posted to Twitter about two years and tracks the sales with proprietary software, made more than $1 million in the past 6 months.”

Quote from, http://bit.ly/gYUyU

TWITTER, FACEBOOK & COFFEE SALES GROWTH. “Mr. Zadok says last fall Coffee Groundz’s general manager, J.R. Cohen, set up profiles for the café on Twitter and Facebook. Customers started tweeting orders and special requests such as booth reservations, and in-store events promoted on the sites drew crowds three times as large as those previously advertised through signs and other traditional means.” 

Quote from, http://bit.ly/zyhgJ

Plan Your “One Day Only” Event Now

What are you waiting for? Start attracting crowds to your business now. Create your “one day only” event. “Tweet” it up. Then invite your ”fans” on Facebook. You’ll be glad you did.

Sincerely,

Doug Stewart

Giving You the Power to Fight the Big Boys!

Using the Latest Technologies in College Classrooms

According to Mary Ann Young, a senior lecturer at the School or Arts and Humanities in UTD, there are several technologies that can used by college students and professors to facilitate learning, but the choice of which depends upon the cost, usability and the length of training required to adopt them.

Below is an interview with Mary Ann Young regarding the use of latest technologies by students and professors in college classrooms.

Your thoughts on the use of latest technologies in college classrooms?
I recall the “Twitter Experiment” by Monica Rankin, a professor of history here in UTD. There is a fantastic YouTube video about it.

She implemented the use of twitter in a large classroom where students could use twitter to comment on class room discussion, which would come up on a big screen and she could direct the discussion based upon students’ comments both verbally and via Twitter.

Other than that internet based communication like use of Google groups and Facebook groups is very popular among students mostly because of conflicting schedules. This allows them to communicate easily outside the class.

In terms of teaching courses using these technologies, I have used Facebook in few of my classes. It is very useful and convenient in terms of how it facilitates communication outside of the classroom. But I found that large number of students are not familiar with Facebook. So, I had to teach students how to use Facebook as part of the class.

Similarly I have seen the use of audio and video supplement outside of the classroom and there are various types of trainings available for that. This includes making video and audio lectures available online so students can view them conveniently and use them as reference outside the classroom. However, there are lot of controversies regarding use of video lectures.

I am doing a research on visual ethnography and the use of hypermedia. Hypermedia meaning the juxtaposition of visual image including still images, moving images, audio and standard text – all incorporated into a large presentation that would allow audience to interact with that presentation in different ways than the standard listen-to-me kind of lectures or read this text or even communicate back and fort. This type of technology is fairly new and involves large amount of training and technological capability to implement.

It is usually seen that students who are in IT related majors or have use of computers in class tend to adopt to new technologies but others stick to traditional medium of classroom learning. How can students from all majors make use of the latest technologies?
It is true that there are lot of students who do not take advantage of new technologies.

Primarily we see, at least in Arts and Humanities, there are two groups of students. One group of students, who do not know much about new technologies like use of Twitter, Google groups and so on, like to stick to traditional forms of communication and there is another group of students who use these technologies on day to day basis.

It is always beneficial to make best use of the latest technologies available. One example of this – in my Music class I try to show how students can make use of computer software to help them learn the music. These software allow them to see how loud a particular pitch is or how to distinguish between rhythms. Basically they allow students to see music visually. But very less students take advantage of it.

Most students like to go for much familiar means of communication like tradition hard-text copies of handout and syllabus and so on instead of learning new technology.

However, I have had some students contact me via Facebook to ask certain question or find out where I am so that they can come see me.

When should students be introduced to new technologies so they can take advantage of them?
Each year many freshmen come who are from different technological backgrounds. The trend in use of technologies in classroom this year can be very different from what it was three years ago.

I am not sure as to how to universalize the use of technologies. For example the use of Google calendar can be very interesting to a certain group of students but next year who knows.

There is also lot difference in technologies available. For instance, Wikipedia seems so 2005 and Youtube seems so 2009 in terms of new contents being added to it all the time.

There was a Youtube video that even professor Johnson circulated around was on “How to lengthen your paper” – that talked about how one can go to Word find a period and change the text size to around 16 point which would drastically lengthen the paper. This is not noticeable to somebody unless they completely reformat the paper.

Large number of lecturers are using YouTube for instructional purpose. In my music class I always try to show students how to find videos on YouTube that are relevant to the course and how to use it for educational purpose versus just purely entertainment.

To conclude, would you say that college students should look for a change in the way they use the latest technology or stick to traditional means of communication?
I have suspicion that students will tend to stick to whatever is familiar to them – whether it is traditional technology or whether it is something that is new. I am not sure how likely are students to learn new things unless it is something easier. So it depends on how easy it is and how much training is required.

Mary Ann Young is a senior lecturer at the School of Arts and Humanities, University of Texas at Dallas.
She can be reached at maryann@utdallas.edu.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

All for the best...

So, this isn’t a video I made, but I am really enjoying it. Both the song and the video. Beautiful stuff.

As with most of Thom’s stuff, it inspires a lot of my own thoughts. I guess that’s how you know he is a really good artist in that their work transcends the meaning they were trying to get across initially, and you take away something personal from it.

I posted this on Facebook after listening to this song a good 5-10 times-
___________________________________________________________________

All for the best…

The parallels between this semester and my senior year of high school are undeniably huge. Once more, I’ll be applying for schools. Again, I’ll be preparing to leave people behind. Once more, life will be uncertain, since I won’t know where I’m going until like spring of next year.

I’ve narrowed the choices down to four; I’ll be applying to four schools: UC Berkeley, UC Davis, UCSB, and SF State. Of these, the only one I really want to go to is UC Berkeley. Unfortunately, this is where more uncertainty comes in. You see, I haven’t been the best student in my 5 semesters at City College. My GPA is a lowly 3.157. For transfers, that’s pretty low. Ugh…

I am applying to Davis because, well, it feels like maybe we’re mean to be. I mean, look, it’s really the only place I know. Also, I know I could easily get in there from Sac City. It will also save me a lot of money, since I would most definitely live at home. I don’t care what some people may think. It’s all for the best. Nothing better than a home-cooked meal. Not paying for rent is pretty cool too. Yet, for some reason, I can’t get myself to really want to go there. I know it’s a good school. It’s just… there seems to be something holding me back from loving it.

UCSB is another place I’ll be applying to because I just want to see what happens. I don’t want to go to UC Santa Cruz, and UC San Diego is too far away, so this is my next most likely choice. As you see, I want to be close to the ocean. I guess it’s kind of a back-up school. It’s also kind of a way to give me an option if I don’t want to go to UCD. If I don’t get into Berkeley (which is a huge possibility) but the other schools, this will hopefully make things a bit more interesting, in that I’ll have to choose whether or not I want to stay home, move to the bay, or move south. I guess I just really want some drama.

SF State is up here too because it’s the ultimate back up school. I know I will get in here, if all else fails. Senior year, I got in there 2 weeks or so after I applied. It’s also a good school, and I’ve always wanted to live in the bay area. But you probably wont see me buying a SF State hoodie for awhile, or until it gets really cold.

All of this pondering makes me ponder, some more, whether I am putting too much weight on all of this selection of the right campus. Am I choosing these schools for the right reason? Will I choose the school I go to for the right reason? You see, I sure as hell didn’t want to go to Sac City at first. Of course, I was forced to go there because there wasn’t really another choice. Yet, I came around, and now I have fallen in love with this place. Seriously. It’s not just because the first person I met on the first day of school is the girl who eventually became my first girlfriend, no. It’s because of all of the people I met throughout the travels of my classes, mass transit commute, and just through other people. I didn’t think I would meet as many people as I did, especially going to a community college. Not to mention, I didn’t think I would meet as many people who would affect my life in the way they did.

Which brings me back to another one of my uncertainties. I don’t know if I am ready to leave just yet. I know it’s barely halfway through my 5th of 6 semesters at City College, and my opinion may change by that 6th semester. Yet, right now, I am so happy where I am at. I don’t care that I’ve stayed one year longer than people are “supposed” to stay at a community college. It’s called a “2 year school” but in reality, it seems like most people stay over the 2 year mark.

Yet, technically, after this semester as long as I pass all my classes, I’ll only have one more class to complete in order to transfer. It’s not even a math or science class. Just some sort of humanities class. For some reason that tells me I might be overstaying my welcome.

But I know it’s pretty much time for me to buck up and move on. It’s time to try new things, see new places, or in the case of going to UCD, finish school as fast as possible in order to move on again. The applications for SF State come out tomorrow, so once more, whether or not I want it to, it will begin. Once more, my life will be a series of blank boxes for me to check or fill out. I just hope it’s all for the best…

Die Bioenergetik des Smsens

Mitte der 1930er Jahre schrieb Reich:

Eine tonlose, schlaffe oder hohe Stimme (…), eine sich überhastende, stoßartige, gepreßte Sprechweise, falscher Atemansatz (…), enthalten meist die wichtigsten Geheimnisse der krankhaften Verschiebungen und Bindungen vegetativer Energie. (…) die genitale Kontaktangst (kommt) nicht zum Vorschein, solange diese Symptome der Kopf- und Halspartien nicht aufgedeckt und zerstört sind. Im besonderen ist die genitale Angst in den meisten Fällen nach oben verschoben und in tonisierter Halsmuskulatur gebunden. ( Charakteranalyse , S. 454f)

Einer Studie der University at Albany zufolge haben Menschen mit attraktiven Stimmen ein aktiveres Sexualleben. 149 Frauen und Männer wurden gebeten, die Attraktivität einer Reihe aufgezeichneter Stimmen zu bewerten. Jene Stimmen, die ihnen am meisten zusagten, gehörten zu Leuten, die in einem früheren Lebensalter als andere sexuelle Erfahrungen gemacht hatten, mehr Sexualpartner hatten und mehr zur Untreue neigten. Es bestand auch ein direkter Zusammenhang zwischen der Attraktivität der Stimme und der des Körpers.

Mich persönlich hat immer fasziniert, wie sich die Persönlichkeit eines Menschen in seinem Schreibstil niederschlägt. Auch ohne die Handschrift zu kennen, auch unabhängig vom Gegenstand des Geschriebenen, kann man an wenigen Sätzen sehen, um wen es sich handelt – und das trotz des Korsetts der Grammatik.

Will sagen: welches Medium wir auch immer benutzen, wenn wir uns ausdrücken, entblößen wir uns dem geübten Blick bzw. dem geübten Ohr.

Reich, Hans Hass und andere haben sich aber auch gefragt, was das Medium wiederum mit uns macht. Sie fragten sich, inwiefern uns die „Maschinenzivilisation“ selbst zu Maschinen macht. Ich diskutiere das in Hans Hass und der energetische Funktionalismus. Heute ist die Frage, was unser Umgang mit Handy, SMS, Facebook, Twitter, Emails, etc. mit uns und unserem Verhältnis zu den Mitmenschen macht. Wir sind praktisch ständig erreichbar, ständig in Kommunikation, doch bezahlen wir das mit einer zunehmenden Distanz und „Entkörperlichung“.

Was hat es beispielsweise für Auswirkungen auf die Sexualökonomie, wenn sich Menschen zunehmend über das Internet „kennenlernen“? Wie kann man mit den neuen Medien auf eine kontaktvolle und bioenergetisch gewinnbringende Art und Weise umgehen?

Mit derartigen Themen wird sich der Präsident des American College of Orgonomy, der Internist, Psychiater und Unternehmensberater Dr. Peter Crist in einem Vortrag beschäftigen:

On-line Interview with Dr. Peter Crist

Visit the American College of Orgonomy website to listen to a brief interview with Dr. Crist about his upcoming presentation, “Text, Phone, or Talk? Communication Confusion in our Electronic Age.” www.orgonomy.org

In einer vorangegangenen Email des American College of Orgonomy hatte es gehießen:

Text, Phone or Talk: What Really Works?

For the past year, the public has been bombarded with stories about Internet use, cell phones, Twitter, Facebook, Wii, and the like. But no one has thoroughly explored how the modern electronic age has impacted our personal and business lives – until now.

Board-certified psychiatrist, Dr. Peter Crist, who is also a business consultant as well as president of the American College of Orgonomy will address this critical topic as part of the ACO’s ongoing series of Social Orgonomy talks on Saturday, October 3rd. His compelling presentation, “Text, Phone, or Talk? Communication Confusion in Our Electronic Age,” will explore the functional and optimal use of written, phone and face-to-face communication, and how each relates to basic human communication and genuine interpersonal contact.

Dr. Crist will illustrate how from the dawn of Man to the 21st century, communication has evolved in remarkable leaps. Using examples from print and broadcast media as well as his clinical and business consulting practices, he will address the question: Is modern man trading intimacy and genuine contact for the immediacy of instant communication? These and other topics will be explored in his presentation.