Welcome

Welcome to Orient Lodge, a literary outpost on the internet.

This site contains a collection of thoughts and other writings. Recent posts will show up on the front page, and other posts can be found through links on the right.

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Speechless Wednesday



pitbull1, originally uploaded by Aldon.

If you want my Wordless Wednesday post, see below. This picture cannot be wordless, but it leaves me speechless.

This puppy, along with another one you can see on my Flickr page is in danger of being put down tomorrow if a home is not found for them.

The shelter is located at
239 MAPLE HILL AVE. NEWINGTON CT

Please email Sherry at PIZON67 at YAHOO.COM or call 860 305 6764

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Wordless Wednesday



Alpacas, originally uploaded by Aldon.

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power.com

Techcrunch has an article about Power.com, a new “social inter-networking” site that links Facebook, Myspace, Orkut, Hi5 and other sites into one site.

They are a Brazilian based company with about five million users already, I suspect mostly gathered from Brazilian Orkut users.

I've gone in and played with it a little bit. Other than random places where Portuguese slips through, I haven't found any obvious glitches or anything especially noteworthy.

They are trying to grow the site virally and anyone that gets 100 people to join in the first 100 days gets $100.

I could send out email blasts through them to my friends on these various networks but that seems a bit spammy.

Instead, I'll post the banner they provide:

If a bunch of people sign up this way and we find good reasons to use other than simply as innovators and early adopters, I might send emails to some people as well, but probably not.

So, take a look at power.com and let me know what you think.

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Two Views of Twitter for Journalists

The Columbia Journalism Review, in light of the New York Times article, Citizen Journalists Provided Glimpses of Mumbai Attacks is asking, How Should Journalists Use Twitter?

What does Twitter add to the coverage of such stories? What does it subtract? ... Is Twitter anything more than just a stupid human trick? Where does it—where should it—fit into the larger universe of Web-based journalism?

Well, I’m no expert on journalism. I’m a blogger and a microblogger and people always get stuck on the relationship between blogging and journalism. As to Twitter, I have a pretty good ranking according to sites like Twitter grader and I have been on Twitter for over two years now, as well as just about any other microblogging system I can find, so I do have a few opinions.

Recently, I wrote a blog post entitled I Get My News on Twitter.... I talked about tools that I use to organize the information I get from Twitter and emerging tools in the space. This points to two ways that I believe journalists should be using Twitter.

It is a great place to get raw information. It is standing in a virtual crowd, listening for voices that have something to say. When you hear someone saying something interesting, you sidle over to them, listen to what they have to say, and if possible and appropriate, join in the conversation. This is useful for finding people on the ground who are smart and have something to say at a disaster far away, like the terrorism attacks in Mumbai.

It is also useful on a local beat. An editor of a local paper mentioned to me at dinner one evening that his reporters use Twitter to get reports from local emergency services, sort of like a twenty-first century police scanner.

I’m currently trying to get as many of my sources to use Twitter as possible. If something important happens at the capital, I might not get the first call or text message, unless it is a text message sent to Twitter, and then I get it as soon as everyone else, or maybe a little sooner if I’m better at using Twitter than others.

Beyond that, Twitter is a great way of getting your message out. When I create a blog post, Twitterfeed reads my RSS feed and creates a Tweet for me with a link back to my blog post. If I want to be the first person to get a message out, I’ll send a quick headline tweet out letting people know what is going on, and follow up with a blog post later.

I currently subscribe to the Twitter streams of quite a few news organizations. Twitter becomes my news scroll. News organizations that want me as a reader need to try and get in my news scroll.

To me, Twitter isn’t just another stupid trick and while it is using a new medium and a new format, it doesn’t seem all that new either. It sort of reminds me of the teletype at the college radio station that I would gather around with my friends decades ago. It will be interesting to see what other people have to say.

Oh, and by the way, I heard about the CJR article on Twitter.

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Recent ma.noglia bookmarks

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Reflections on The National Public Vote.

Over on MyLeftNutmeg there is a spirited discussion about the pros and cons of a National Public Vote for the election of the President. BlastFromGlast makes the point that ‘the franchise is not uniform from state to state’ and that ‘we cannot trust reported results’.

His concern about the difference in the franchise from state to state is an important one. Here in Connecticut, we have certain disadvantages when it comes to voting. We do not have election-day registration or early voting. On the other hand, we do have good voter turnout, a paper trail of votes, and we have provisions where felons who have served their time can become re-enfranchised.

Are these differences greater than the differences that the electoral college creates? The estimated population of Texas in 2007 is about 24 million. They have 34 electoral votes, or one elector vote for every 700,000 in the state. Wyoming, with 3 electoral votes, and a population of around half a million has one electoral vote for every 175,000 people in the state. In other words, each vote in Wyoming, if everyone in the state were voting, would have four times the impact as each person voting in Texas. I believe this far outweighs the differences in the franchise from state to state. This gets compounded when you narrow it down to swing voters in swing states. With that one or two states can make all the difference.

This has two negative effects. First, campaigns are going to focus more of their energy on these voters. Perhaps more importantly, it makes these states much more attractive targets for voter fraud. BlastFromGlast has argued that the electoral college is like compartmentalizing sections of a ship so that if one compartment becomes flooded, the ship doesn’t sink. The problem with this is that unless all the compartments are equal, a person looking to sink a ship only needs to find those compartments whose breeching would have the greatest effect on sinking the ship.

So, do we wait until the franchise is more uniform between the states? I believe it is wise to move towards a National Public Vote now, and fix up the problems along the way. Yet what system would work best? One idea that has been popular is for states to assign all of their votes to whomever wins the popular vote. There is a potential danger with this, however. If only a few states do this, then the incentive to campaign in those states is gone. A candidate would be wiser to campaign in states that have not made such a change, since the votes won there would be beneficial in the unchanged state, as well as in any states that have made the change.

One way to get around this, is to make the change effective only when a majority of the electoral votes will be cast that way. However, that might end up being the same as doing nothing.

Another approach to making states more competitive is to follow the example of Maine, where some of the electoral votes are assigned on a congressional district by congressional district basis. For states that have congressional districts that are highly competitive, it would at least make these congressional districts more attractive to national candidates. These two ideas could be combined in a collection of different ways, such as making assigning one electoral vote per congressional district with the remaining votes assigned based on either the popular vote in the state or nationwide, and with assigning all electoral votes based on the national popular vote when a majority of the states have agreed to such a provision.

When you get right down to it, there are a lot of complicated issues about how best to count the votes, and the more we think and talk about them, the more likely we are to find a better solution.

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Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit. World AIDS day, the end of NaNoWriMo 2008.

Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit, another month begins. It is off to a slow start for me. I’ve been exhausted, and have been plagued by an assortment of minor physical irritations, a planters wart on the bottom of my heal, a ganglion cyst on my wrist, and some sleep depriving unexplained itching.

It feels as if I got a vast amount of nothing done during the month. I started NaNoWriMo with one idea. It fell apart and I started over with another idea. This idea was much better, but I ran into a period of no time to write, and it withered. I haven’t gotten much for billable hours during the month, which is a concern, and my unread emails have climbed rapidly. I have kept up, at least somewhat, on my blog and my social networking.

Kim is back on an IV for her Lyme disease, and so more of the housework falls to me and I’m behind in that area as well. Yet we’ve done some good things around the house. We’ve bottled our first batch of hard cider, and have a second batch brewing. We are also making some homemade sauerkraut from a giant head of cabbage we got from our community supported agriculture box. They say to allow five to six weeks if it is left at 55 to 60 degrees, which is probably the average house temperature here.

In the bigger picture, today is World AIDS day. Later today, I hope to write a reflection on when a friend’s partner died of AIDS.

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The Advertising Conversation on Twitter

The other day, I started unfollowing people who use Magpie. I typically send them a message to let them know I’m planning to unfollow them. If they drop me a note back and have a good discussion, I don’t unfollow them.

Today, @annezieger talked a bit about Magpie, and asked some good questions, which I responded to in tweets, but thought I should go into in much more detail in a blog post.

One question she asked was if that I unfollowed people using Twittad or adjix. I responded saying that I haven’t seen or been annoyed by Twittad or adjix ads, but I have been annoyed by Magpie ads. I went on to comment that Twitter and new advertising is about conversation. Magpie isn’t.

Now that I’m back home and have a little more time to explore, I thought I’d offer my thoughts. I went and checked out Twittad. The way Twittad works is that it changes the background of your twitter page to include one of their advertisements. The reason I’ve never seen it is that I almost never look at people’s twitter pages. I’ve searched out a few twitter pages with Twittad and I don’t find it offensive in the least. I might even consider trying it. However, I like the branding that I have for my twitter page. Very simple. Just the Orient Lodge Red that I use on as many social networks sites as will allow changing backgrounds. Twittad pays you to put up an ad in a non-offensive location. Not bad.

Adjix has another interesting approach. They are a URL shortener, like tinyurl, is.gd and tons of others. Yet when you shorten a URL with them, you have the option of adjix adding a small header bar with their advertisement in it. Again, very unobtrusive. They offer a valuable service, easy URL shortening, with an advertising scheme built in. Very smart. I may try adjix.

Then, there is Magpie. What Magpie does is insert advertisements into the stream of tweats you create, as if the message were coming from you. Good idea, to get people to read the messages. Very dumb idea for anyone to use. Let me come up with an analogy. My twitter stream is like the stream of things that I say at a party. I try to make what I say interesting, well timed, and on topic. Magpie is like if someone said, we’ll pay you if you allow us to hook up a device that at times we think will be effective from a marketing perspective, will take over your mind and have you say what we want you to say.

I’m sorry. I just don’t think that is a good idea. Especially if you have any people that follow you from a cellphone and pay the phone company to get your tweets.

Anne also asked if when e-mail advertising first began, did I drop anyone who did ad blasts. Unfortunately, this doesn’t make a lot of sense. With Twitter, you chose who you follow. On email, you generally don’t chose who can send email to you.

Yeah, in a sense, spam filters give you that ability. You can set up spam filters to discard any email messages from a spammer, and I’ve done that. So, in a sense, I suspect many of us have dropped emailers that send spammy ad blasts.

Another interesting and more general difference between Anne and I on twitter is the question of who the ‘leading lights’ are. She wrote, “Can’t a group of the leading lights get together for a position statement on this stuff?” I responded that there are over half a million leading lights. She responded, “I know there are many, but let’s be honest, a few stand out...”

I suspect this is where we have a fundamental difference. I’m all about the long tail and stuff like that. I think each of the half a million non A list tweeters are just as important as any of the A list tweeters. Let’s take @vinu for instance. @vinu is currently followed by just over a thousand people. Twitter Grader ranks him at the 99.5 percentile, with an overall rank of 2,416. Yet for a brief period, I would suggest that he was one of the most important members of the Twitter community. Why? He was on the ground in Mumbai and providing some of the best coverage there was of the terrorism there.

This also gets back to ads as part of a conversation. If someone were to come up with a pay per post type model for twitter advertising where they would post tweets about a product or brand they liked, and then engage in a conversation, that would be much better than Magpie sending stuff the person hasn’t written.

As an example, I follow @ripple6. It is the twitter stream of a company of social media marketers. I follow them because I get useful information from them. They were taken over by Gannet, and I wrote about this in a blog post about the future of the newspaper industry. They linked back to that article. They get the aspect of twitter and other social media as a conversation.

Anne asks if I think there is room for “Hi, here I am!” type ads in a twitter stream if they are done well. I actually think there is, providing it is the person saying, “Hi, here I am, and I represent brand X”, or something like that. We can tweet them back. We can see how they follow up.

Perhaps this gets to some of why Anne and I disagree about Motrin Moms. My wife and I both found the ad offensive. We could get into a long discussion about why we felt the ad was offensive, but that misses the point. Some people will find ads offensive, others won’t. Yet returning to the virtual living room, if you offend a bunch of people, you apologize. You get into a discussion about what was offensive, how you’re trying to understand, and how you’ll try not to be offensive again.

I tried to bring the folks into a conversation. I sent emails to various VPs of marketing at McNeil Consumer Healthcare dealing with Motrin. I explained my background as a blogger that writes about marketing, and my coverage of shows like ad:tech and OMMA. I provided a bunch of questions about their perspective on what had happened. I explained that I wasn’t under deadline and they should feel free to take their time, but I would appreciate some feedback. I received acknowledgement receipts that they had read the emails and nothing more. Sure, I could have followed up with older media like the telephone, but that just illustrates the point. They’re broadcasting, but not interacting in new media.

(For those of you who missed it, here is my parody of the Motrin Ad. I whipped it together in around half an hour on my laptop, so the production quality is poor, but that perhaps underlines the message.)

So, those are my thoughts on this cold damp Sunday evening. Anyone want to join the conversation?

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XRI, OpenID, FOAF, XFN and Open Social Networks

Today, I stumbled upon QDOS’ FOAF Search Tool and spent a bit of time exploring FOAF and related technologies. I’ve been interested in these technologies for quite a while and always enjoy checking back to see what has been going on.

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