Reactions to story from ongoing · When · Naughties
Look Sideways
http://www.tbray.org/ ongoing/ When/ 200x/ 2008/ 05/ 02/ Look-Sideways
There was this little flurry of excitement when one of the Silly-Valley TechWhatever news aggregators asserted that Twitter was dropping the use of Rails. It seems not to be true. This is yet more evidence that the news aggregators are becoming part of the problem, not part of the solution. If you want care about Twitter, follow @biz or @ev. If you care about Rails, follow DHH here or here or here. If you care about Sun, read what the people at Sun say. Same for IBM or Microsoft. If you care about the Big New Thing that’s going to change your life, wait till it comes and touches your life.
Reactions / posts that link to this post
-
We Consume Information, But Where From?
http://www.brooksandrus.com/blog/2008/05/05/i-consume-inform...We Consume Information, But Where From? I’m looking sideways at Tim Bray. Almost sounds dirty or sneaky, but its actually a reference to one of the most important aspects of communication on the web — the greatest value is often personal and organic. Individuals rather than professional organizations can offer the most credible insights and the message is typically delivered organically via the social networks we’ve established throughout our lives and linked together via the net. The web is chalk full of information to the point that its overwhelming; which begs the question “where to look”? Do you settle on an aggregator or two or load up on a-listers? Tim is suggesting we “look sideways” instead and seek out credible individuals within the organizations that interest us the most and then rely on our social networks to pass us other meaty bits their unique angles offer up. There’s a safety in this approach that allows us to focus (who can keep up with the Internet news cycle after all) and bypass the misinformation created by eyeball pandering journalists who sometimes deliberately slant or misrepresent and often lack the technical acumen to provide meaningful insights even when they are being their dispassionate best. As the snapshot from the New York Times above illustrates this phenomena is not confined to the geek class inside the tech industry, but is a broader trend that’s having an impact on how young people in the States are consuming political news. This leaves us with a couple of really big questions: how are people getting their information? how do you reach your audience if its got an organic cloaking device? People are getting their information from all over — a combination of passive delivery via professional broadcast media, organic network references and self-initiated research (search) with the latter two being sourced from both individuals (sideways) and professionals (top-down). How this sourcing pie is sliced up will, of course, vary given the demographic and personal tastes of the individual. However, its clear that there’s a trend towards organic delivery of individual sources — passive broadcast, spin-handling, PR and professional journalists have jumped the shark. The more interesting question is how do you reach your target audience via the organic information stream? I’m inclined to agree with Guy Kawasaki’s suggestion to target the fat cross-section of moderate influencers rather than the a-list. Its more than a numbers game though — moderate influencers aren’t in it for the eyeballs; they’re both consumers and participants who are more interested in spreading good ideas than self-promotion (see Pistach.io or The Deck for alternate models). Below are a few of my favorite sideways looks. There are a boatload of others in my aggregator representing companies big and small (more Adobe staffers and community members than I can reveal without blushing). I would love to check out some of your favorites — leave them in the comments! Tim Bray - Sun John Dowdell - Adobe (JD’s blog is down while Adobe repairs MXNA, but its worth waiting for) John Nack - Adobe Tinic Uro - Adobe Steve Yegge - Google Greg Linden - Microsoft (formerly Amazon) Sam Ruby - IBM Michael Lopp - Apple
More rising blog posts
-
Entertainment »
Australia offers Animal Crossing training -
Business »
Sprint And Affiliate Sue Each Other Over Legality Of New WiMax Effort -
Lifestyle »
West 86th Street Subway Art 1 [Living the Scientific Life (Scientist, Interrupted)] -
Politics »
Yet more Republicans in denial [The Island of Doubt] -
Sports »
Saturdays game is at 1:05 -
Technology »
CW gives 'Reaper' another shot
More rising news stories
-
Entertainment »
Books of The Times: Little Pieces of Los Angeles, Done His Way -
Business »
Greenberg Says AIG in 'Crisis' -
Lifestyle »
Jays overcome triple play, earn DH split (AP) -
Politics »
That Pundit on Fox News? An Upstart Named Rove -
Sports »
Reds end Marlins' 7-game win streak, 8-7 (AP) -
Technology »
Google to Connect Friends Across the Web
Recent posts from ongoing · When · Naughties
-
JavaOne Day One
5 days ago -
Whatever One
6 days ago -
Video Pain
7 days ago