The Four Horsemen of Media

Subscribe to the good words of Seth Godin

The first is when you talk about yourself. Directly to people who care to hear you out.

The second is when you pay someone to carry your message. Media for hire, we call it advertising.

The third is when you cajole the ‘editorial’ side to talk about you, with authority. Publicity is often worth more than advertising, but it’s pesky in that it doesn’t perform on demand.

The fourth, the fourth is all the rage right now. That’s when unanointed kings of tiny media, when bloggers and tweeters and others talk about you.

Why do we persist in believing that these four have much in common? They don’t. Being confused about how to classify them is expensive, or worse.

You know you’re in trouble if someone on your team says anything like, “But how do we do this quickly? And at scale? Is there a way interns can churn through names? We have money to spend, hurry!”

There are some that would be delighted if PR and social media would just own up and start playing by the rules of advertising. In other words, you ought to be able to buy this sort of buzz. It’s more efficient, more convenient and more predictable.

Of course, it doesn’t work that way. Buying your way into the fourth horseman doesn’t work. Professionalizing it doesn’t work so well either. What works is making something worth talking about.

As it should be.

If you’re hoping that this now important form of media is going to sit there and promote your average stuff for average people made in bulk but pretty cheap product merely because you’re used to paying media companies to run ads… I think you’re wasting a lot of time and money.

This goes deeper than that. You’ll need to take that money and change the product and the service instead.

The Party of 1999

[iDevice Link]

Noah Brooks + Greg Hydle + Joel McCormick’s 1999 Road Trip to Whistler
Season 1 – Part 1
Colorado to Multnomah Falls

DESCRIPTION:
In 1999 the three of us took off on “MY first ever” road trip from home. We packed a car full of goodies… including a full Apple G3 desktop computer setup with 17″ display + Joel’s portable TV. We didn’t have pocket cameras… we had a Sony VX1000 with a non endless supply of DV tape. If I could tell you what day we began this adventure – I would. Unfortunately I didn’t organize media (or capture it) in the 90s the way I do now. Lets just say this is sometime in the month of June of the year 1999.

DISCLAIMER:
I’m bringing this to you RAW and uncut (minus a couple bare ass noah shots) because I love seeing how we began documenting life… and what it has now transformed into.

Also… I miss all of Joels quirky antics, like his laugh and his random looks that just kinda make you smile.

Sorry for the raw language and anything that may offend anyone. We were kids. Wait… we still are. Miss you Joel.

Hope you enjoy the adventure.

[Part 2 – Multnomah to Bellingham]
[Part 3 – Mount Baker]
[Part 4 – Drunk in Vancouver]
[Part 5 – Border Patrol – oops]

The Franchise Episode 1

[iDevice Link] <— 56 views With 7 straight wins in a row... the Colorado Rockies are the best team in baseball right now. Last year the glory belonged to the San Francisco Giants. Kudos to Showtime for delivering a unique story in a creative way. Cheese factor on this reality show is low. Get excited for baseball. Genius. [Part 2] <— 26 views [Part 3] <— 24 views

David Fincher Tribute

[iDevice Link] <— 50,451 Super creative compilation of David Fincher's films.

The movies used in this video are:

Alien 3
Seven
The Game
Fight Club
Panic Room
The Zodiac
The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button
The Social Network

In search of a biz monkey (why bother?)

Subscribe to the good words of Seth Godin

Andrew Chen coins a great term. A biz monkey is a replaceable, Powerpoint toting, suit wearing, acronym-spewing middle manager business dude drone. They are quick to comment and sneer, slow to actually ship.

When something is scarce, it’s valuable. MBA’s with buzzwords and the ability to raise a million dollars around some web idea are not scarce. They are fungible.

People who understand technology and are willing to bend it to their will, on the other hand, are scarce. They can’t be found with a classified ad on Craigslist or in a blind project ad on eLance.

The job of the smart business person isn’t to fish in waters where coders are cheap. It’s to have enough initiative and vision that the best coders in the world will realize that they’ll do better with you than without you.

Business people add value when they make things happen, not when they seek to hire cheap.

BHTM 2011 at Red Rocks

Big Head Todd is coming back “as usual” for the first must attend summer concert at Red Rocks. This years show is on June 11th, 2011 with opening by Guster. Get your tickets.

Here is a walk down memory lane:

[iDevice Link] <— 194

Thunderbolt Technology

  • Dual-channel, each 10 Gbps
  • Bi-directional, equally fast in both directions
  • Dual protocol, PCI Express for hard disks and DisplayPort for monitors
  • Daisy-chain-able, supports up to six devices per channel
  • Woks with both copper and fiber cabling, fiber allows longer cable runs
  • Low latency, very, VERY short delays in transferring signals
  • Delivers up to 10 watts of power over copper wiring, but not fiber, to support bus-powered devices. (Though this is not enough for most hard disks)

[Apple]
[Intel – Light Peak]
[Analysis]
[VIDEO: Engadget Thunderbolt Demo]
[Thanks to Larry Jordan for the inspiration]

Happy 50th Issue MacAddict | Mac|Life

I don’t post much on Apple these days simply because everyone is on board now – it’s definitely not as unique of a hobby or fad as it used to be. However, in honor of MacLife’s 50th issue – lets take a look at some of their 50 reasons why they love Apple.

[Read Full] and follow along.

#48 – The Clamshell iBooks: This one is purely for you MattMatt.
#43 – Clarus the Dogcow: So many stories.
#41 – The Newton: Taken for granted.
#40 – The Packaging: Often overlooked.
#39 – Support for Education: My entire technical background came in Elementary School (Not Lying)
#35 – The Power Mac G4 Cube: Put on Ice = Hello Mac Mini.
#31 – Great Commercials: 1984.
#27 – System 7: Multitasking – This one if for you Brett Foncannon.
#22 – Woz: We are happy you are alive Woz – thanks for all the parties.
#20 – The 2010 MacBook Air: The one product I don’t have that I want.
#19 – iMovie: The original iMovie changed my life.
#16 – The Apple II: Specifically the Apple IIe + Lemonade Stand + Logo + Winter and Summer Olympics = framed my childhood. Thanks Mom + Dad.
#14 – Mac OS isn’t Windows: You already know.
#9 – Product-Announcment Events: Try it yourself.
#8 – The iPod: Do you still have your original 5GB with spinning wheel?
#3 – Steve Jobs: Need u say anymore?
#2 – The First Macintosh: 3rd grade was amazing.
#1 – The Apple Community: Unfortunately this community is too large to be an Apple nut like I used to be. I’ve actually found myself looking for something new? And have found these smaller + creative communities that will continue to grow on passion alone.

Walking Down the Stairs… on a Pole

[iDevice Link] <— 2,293 In support of my sister Sheila, I am reposting this. In all honesty, I would probably throw this stripper a buck or two. If she’s not an adult entertainer – I apologize… I was purely judging on behalf of her name only.

@2:20 when she walks down the stairs… on a pole = pretty amazing.

Good luck sister.