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Content Tagged Scoble

Video: Scoble Tells the Comment Trolls To Go Back to Digg

Robert Scoble caused a stir yesterday with a post on how tech bloggers are failing our readers. We all chase the same stories, get spun like a top by the PR machine, and can’t sustain a conversation about a single topic for more than a few days before we all rush to the next shiny object.

I caught him on video at the (surprisingly snoozy) Fortune Brainstorm conference. He pines for the old days of blogging, before comments were taken over by trolls. He seems to think the trolls all came from Digg and should go back there. More likely, it is just a sign that blogging is attracting a bigger audience

The problem is, as he put it in his post:

Our commenting systems really suck. . . . Only the most motivated will leave comments. That’s usually someone with an axe to grind. That’s cause we’ve failed you. We haven’t moderated jerks out of our commenting system so now no normal person would go close to anything resembling a modern commenting system.

It’s not only that. There was a time when a good idea (like a cheap Web tablet) would be chewed on for a month by the blogosphere, going back and forth between different bloggers, and getting refined along the way. We’re all slaves to the news cycle now, talking about the same thing for a day or two, and then moving on. But does it have to be this way?

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

Web2.0: TechCrunch

PodTech Sells For Less Than $500k - FriendFeed

friendfeed thread on demise of a Web 2.0 darling

podcasting: del.icio.us tag/podcasting

PodTech Sells For Less Than $500k - FriendFeed

Scoble dishes in a some of his comments. Interesting.

podcasting: del.icio.us tag/podcasting

PodTech Sells For Less Than $500k - FriendFeed

Long discussion on FriendFeed with Scoble and others on the PodTech failire

podcasting: del.icio.us tag/podcasting

Yet Another Drama About Twitter

Twitter, in a post on its blog, has acknowledged that it’s been having problems. It attributes some (not all) of them to so-called “popular” users that it says overloaded the system when they sent updates in too quick a succession. In other words, it was a tactical acknowledgment by the company of problems that have already been widely reported.

Of course Twitter’s most popular user is Robert Scoble, and as far as numerous successive posts have argued, he is the real source of the problem (prompting some not-unexpected foot-stomping on Scoble’s part).

I wrote about Twitter’s problem in a post last weekend and how they should charge for people like Scoble, Michael Arrington and myself for using their system so aggressively. Our use of Twitter benefits our businesses. Links to Scoble’s posts can drive traffic to his site or his videos, which in turn drives attention to his work and his employer. Same holds true for Michael and for me. On a more philosophical basis, it allows us to stay in touch with our readers, who in turn keep us in business.

Nevertheless, since common sense and paid services are apparently not part of this brave new Web 2.0 world, my idea didn’t play well. What was I thinking? Instead there’s this belief that Twitter, the ultimate tool of our collective narcissism, should be so lucky to have super users, that they are what make it popular with everybody else. I don’t subscribe to that point of view, but hey that’s just me.

For Twitter, the challenge of keeping the service going while at the same time fixing it to scale up is immense. Thankfully they have the money and what looks like the will to fix the problems. Will they? We shall see!

Update: The debate about Twitter rages on. Scoble met with Twitter team and talked about the various issues in a video interview. I got an email from Even Williams who is one of the founders of Twitter and this is what he had to stay:

We like the idea of charging for commercial use. That’s something we’ve been talking about for a long time (you can probably find my quoted saying that from a year ago). We’re just not there yet.

Given all different opinions, and other issues that have emerged, I have to reiterate that by charging the super users, I am suggesting that costs will bring in a sense of responsibility to the entire ecosystem. When there is no tax involved, there is no cost to having thousands of followers, or sending hundreds of messages. When asked to pay, heavier users will use the system responsibly.

Technology-News: GigaOm

FastCompany.TV Launches: More Scoble, Now On A Beach

viewNode("4b7771ec503d4", {"width": "450", "height": "267"});

Nearly missed this one. The Robert Scoble run FastCompany.TV has launched with more Scoble, more often. In the intro video above Scoble explains what he has planned for the site, complete with a beach scene that is straight out of a daytime soap opera.

The site has launched with two shows, Scobleizer TV, Scoble’s own show that was previously with Podtech, and “FastCompany Live,” live video shot from cell phones Qik style.

So far Scoble hasn’t cried in any of the videos I’ve watched; perhaps in future episodes they’ll place puppies and kittens on the beach to get the tears happening, or maybe baby seals to keep with the nautical theme.

See our previous coverage of FastCompany.tv here and here.

Update: Here’s what made Scoble cry, his video of the WorldWide Telescope project. The light show starts about a quarter of the way in:

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Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Web2.0: TechCrunch

UI Designs : online media, etc.

Scoble doing an interview with some dude about RIAs. A nice RIA desktop app for ebay.

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

The New Web War - Apollo - Silverlight - Robert Scoble

Visit Google's Finance site or Yahoo Maps and you'll see it. Check out any number of startups--such as Kyte.tv or multimedia scrapbook app Scrapblog--and it's right there. A new, more interactive, graphical, and visceral Web is bubbling up all over.

RIA: del.icio.us/tag/RIA

Brian Jones - New Office file formats announced

This is a pretty old video but it is an interesting insight into the thinking behind Office Open XML

XML: del.icio.us/tag/xml

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