The 5 Idiots You Will Encounter At The Gym
The 5 Idiots You Will Encounter At The Gym
Physics is unforgiving. Nature is predatory. We do not walk through a passive landscape.
—Richard Siken, BOMB 2011
(Source: bombmagazine)
In business, you must be willing to change, evolve, and even completely discard your plans at any time. It all depends on the demand for your product — simply because you think you have a revolutionary product in mind, and build it exactly as you envision it, does not mean you will become a success unless there is high demand for it.
This is because success in business is not entirely dependent on you, you also must answer to your customers. If your market is demanding X and you give them Y, you won’t make it out of quarter 1.
“TK4LOM”. The “Crystalized” Stormtrooper helmet is covered in individual Swarovski crystals. An original piece created by John Carlucci.
That’s icey… I would need a matching photon cannon to match though.
Nova Spivak suggests that the leading social networks will not readily figure out how to interoperate:
Social assistance will be the next frontier spawned from social networking, and we’re all going to need it. We’ll require help managing our online relationships, tying our streams together, sifting through the noise, keeping up with what matters personally, finding who and what we need, and remaining productive.
Google+, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Microsoft will all struggle to deliver acceptable signal-to-noise ratios to their users. But they will be focused on solving this problem within their silos, rather than across all platforms. I call this approach “vertical social assistance” because it focuses on assisting people only within particular networks. Because each service is biased toward its own social graph and content, it’s unlikely that any of them will help solve the social overload outside their walls. Understandably, it’s not in their interest to enable users to make better use of competing services.
This world of fragmented messaging systems is akin the early days of email in the 1980s, when users of one network were unable to communicate with another. It was a mess. Eventually, email gateways were created to link these disparate networks. But the problem wasn’t fully solved until everyone adopted a single set of standards, and all the email networks connected into one common fabric.
Unfortunately, the unification of email networks and standards immediately killed of a lot of the smaller email networks and client makers. But through simplification, the world became less complex and more connected.
The question is, will something like this ever happen for social media? Will we see the social networks connect into a common fabric anytime soon? Right now, the major social networks own the content — it’s captive on their platforms. If that were to change, and you could read any social media message anywhere, they would have to compete on features alone — and that’s another can of worms.
What I call “horizontal social assistance” is the opportunity to access and use social media messages in a unified way. This approach is different from the vertical social assistance approach because it would span across all networks. The users of social networks need this capability in the same way they needed email unification. However, until all the social networks agree on standard profiles, messages, contacts, groups and streams, it’s not going to happen. And to be frank, such an agreement is highly unlikely in the near future.
But it could happen if some neutral party takes the initiative.
Maybe one of the three or more start-ups you’re involved with Nova?
But Nova seems to think that the world is standing still, except for what entrepreneurs are doing. The social operating systems are coming, and they will accelerate the integration he seems want, and then dismisses as impossible.
1. Be Consistent
Skipping one day can easily lead to skipping more. Just being consistent for a few days often gives me the motivation to keep going for months.
2. Consider Exercise an Escape
When I started realizing that my workouts were quality “me” time I started valuing them more. A long…