Wednesday, December 28, 2005
It's a small, but uplifting, world
The webpage also pointed out a forthcoming program on Animal Planet titled "A Panda is born" which follows the National Zoo's recent giant panda breeding efforts, culminating in Tai Shan's birth. I've set the Sky Plus Box (a UK version of TiVo) to record the program, it promises to be one of the highlights of the Christmas TV season.
The airing is at 7pm on New years Day in the UK, the webage says New Years Eve which I presume refers to when the program airs in the US.
Tuesday, December 27, 2005
It doesn't get much cuter than this

Panda Cub Tai Shan at the National Zoo in Washington, USA

If you have a minute, go and watch the video at the Washington Post.
Monday, December 26, 2005
Sunday, December 25, 2005
Outlook and RSS
As big as the blogosphere is today the RSS explosion yet to come requires two things:
(1) the killer application for reading feeds
(2) a simple, consistent and generally understood way of subscribing to feeds
Robert Scoble's recent post (reproduced below) links to the blog of a Program Manager on the Outlook team. Having had a look at the source post I believe that the basis of the killer feed reader is being built into Outlook. Robert points out that synchronisation across PC's would be a killer feature, as would the capability to post to your own blog from Outlook.
Michael Affronti is a program manager on Microsoft’s Outlook team and is starting to write about the future of Outlook. Here he’s writing about RSS Aggregation into Outlook 12. I haven’t yet played with this feature. One reason? I’m happily stuck in the NewsGator family of products due to its synchronization features. See, if I read a feed on NewsGator on my desktop PC (which, ironically enough, gives you similar features to Outlook 12 in today’s Outlook) it marks it as read on the Web service and also on NewsGator on my Tablet PC and also on my new SmartPhone (and soon it’ll be synchro’ed with NetNewsWire on the Macintosh and FeedDemon and RSS Bandit on Windows) and also on the Media Center PC that’ll soon run my home office (which is how I’ll display stuff on my HDTV screen at home when I get that next year).
It’s going to be very hard for me to give up NewsGator because of this synchronization. Hey, Michael, is Outlook 12’s aggregator gonna hook up to NewsGator?
That said, don’t underestimate the effect of Outlook 12’s support of RSS here. It’ll bring millions of new businesspeople into the RSS world. This is HUGE. Outlook is probably the most used application in the world after Internet Explorer (and, on my desktop, is used more often than IE).
Via: [Scobleizer - Microsoft Geek Blogger]
Saturday, December 24, 2005
Wednesday, December 21, 2005
Word of Mouth
This following post, from the excellent Church of the Customer Blog, serves to underline how truly powerful blogs (as the largest connected word of mouth network there is ever likely to be) are today, and are going to be in the future given the rate at which the blogosphere continues to grow. Blog search tools that help consumers zero in on product reviews and new services that aggregate product reviews and present them back in meaningful, helpful, inventive ways are likely to be technologies worth investing in.
Word of mouth is the chief influencer when it comes to purchase decisions, no matter the age group, according to a new study.
A few times per year, Big Research surveys a panel of 15,000 people; across the board, the panel ranked word of mouth as the most influential medium for buying stuff.
The 10 top list of most influential media, all age groups:
1. Word of mouth
2. TV
3. Coupons
4. Newspaper inserts
5. Read article
6. Direct mail
7. Magazines
8. In-store promotion
9. Cable TV
10. Internet advertisingWord of mouth that drives sales is the result of existing customers talking about your remarkable product, service, people, or experience, not because you put a guy in a chicken suit on a website.
Via: [Church of the Customer Blog]
Tuesday, December 20, 2005
Another find in the "Blog This Later" folder
I found a gem from several months ago, which is actually two posts from the 43Folders blog about building a smarter to-do list. Here are some things I've snipped from the two articles that I found useful...
(1) Keeping an updated accounting of the things I'm committed to, is a smart thing to do.
(2) A to-do item should not be framed as project (e.g. create presentation) it should be framed as the next action, “the next physical, visible activity that needs to be engaged in, in order to move the current reality toward completion (e.g produce 4 draft ideas for the theme of my presentation)”
(3) If you frame a to-do as a physical activity it's easier to visualise yourself doing it
(4) Phrase the to-do in a form like: “VERB the NOUN with the OBJECT.” So, instead of "Year-end report,” use the more accurate “Download Q3 spreadsheet from server.” And, instead of “Get with Fred,” try “Email Fred on Monday to schedule monthly meeting.”
(5) Keep the to-do list about the now, use a separate list (someday/maybe list) for things that can't be addressed yet.
(6) Reflect on the list to check that items on it are the best use of your time, that you are the best person to do the task, that the task should be done now, and that the task really does need to be done.
(7) Treat the things on your list as a serious comittment.
(8) When you get an item that get's stuck, try a to-do that addresses why the item is stuck.
The full articles are here and here.
Actually the more I think about stuff like this, the more I think I want to focus my blog on Getting Things Done (the David Allen approach to stress free productivity), the visualisation of information using Mind Mapping (I use MindManager software from Mindjet), and personal productivity hacks. At the end of the day though I can always write about whatever is on my mind.
Technorati Tags: GTD, MindJet, MindManager.
Phil Spector
My wife, Linda, asked me if Phil was still alive and I checked out his Wikipedia entry, where a couple of things stood out:
(1) Spector had admitted in an interview with the British Daily Telegraph that he suffers from bipolar disorder and that he considered himself "relatively insane".
(2) On February 3, 2003, Spector was arrested for murder after the body of 40-year-old actress Lana Clarkson of Los Angeles was found at his mansion in Alhambra, California. Police responded to a 911 phone call from one of Spector's neighbors and discovered Clarkson, who had been shot and was pronounced dead at the scene. On November 20, 2003, Spector was indicted for Clarkson's murder.
Sad.
Blogging's First Family
And now Robert's son, Patrick, is blogging over at Mini Scobleizer.
The Sun: Maggots found on patient
I'm glad I wasn't eating my breakfast when I read this.....
A GRIEVING daughter told yesterday how she found MAGGOTS crawling on her stricken mum’s face in hospital.
Horrified Nyree Ellison Anjos saw the fly larvae near a feeding tube attached to mother Christine at Gloucestershire Royal.
Via: [A Welsh View]Naked Conversations
According to Amazon.com the book is available on January 24th, but the Amazon.co.uk site suggests it's available from January 3rd. Nice to see us Brits getting something first for a change (although I suspect that one of the dates is a typo). I'll go and pre-order my copy now.
Update: I did a search for the book via Froogle. Interestingly the book is still referenced as "Blog or Die" (which was going to be the book title at one point in time) by some retailers including Tesco, Play.com and DVD.co.uk. Pricing shows quite a variance, ranging from £12.74 to £15.29.


