Can’t shake it.

I am still fighting this cold a got a week ago which partially explains why it has been so quiet around here lately.

The other part of the silence has been boredom. I haven’t found any of the conversations going on lately very interesting. I don’t know what else to say about how business should be using blogs. I don’t know what else to say about how ‘blog’ was the most looked up word this year (except that it means that people don’t have a clue what blog(s) are; it is a step on the path to understanding; it is not a success I would celebrate). Can we start some new conversations in the new year?

So you can see I am a little cranky. I am going to crawl back under a blanket and take a nap. Maybe I will wakeup in a better mood.

Latest Entertainment Premise: People Lie

There are two new television shows that are partially based on the premise “People Lie”.

The first is Fox’s House M.D. The main character Dr. Gregory House is an expert in infectious disease. He believes talking to patients is a waste of time and any information they give will only mislead a proper diagnosis.

The second series is the yet to be released NUMB3RS from CBS. The crime drama boasts big-name actors (Rob Morrow) and directors (Ridley Scott and Tony Scott). The tagline in the ads is “People Lie. Numbers Don’t.”

This idea that “People Lie” is going get more attention as people read Malcolm Gladwell’s new book Blink.

Still sick

I think last night was the worst of it and I am now on the mend. I slept most of the day and night. I am trying to take it easy today and make sure my son is busy with things to do.

More soon…

Remember to put together your Top24 and send them to me. We have 13 people thus far. The more, the merrier.

Defining Victory

There is an outstanding article in the WSJ today about how the U.S. Army is rethinking its strategy. The idea of taking down a country by capturing its leaders doesn’t work. Iraq has shown that clearly. What I find amazing about the article is how soon the Army is reconsidering its thinking.

They are changing measurements:

A recent directive, prepared by Mr. Rumsfeld’s office and still in draft form, now yields to that view. It mandates that in the future, units’ readiness for war should be judged not only by traditional standards, such as how well they fire their tanks, but by the number of foreign speakers in their ranks, their awareness of the local culture where they will fight, and their ability to train and equip local security forces. It orders the military’s four-star regional commanders to “develop and maintain” new plans for battle, hoping to prevent the sort of postwar chaos that engulfed Iraq.

They are changing their capital investments:

The Army is discarding or delaying big parts of its longstanding plans. It recently announced it has pushed back introduction of its new lightweight fighting vehicle for several years, to 2014, freeing up $9 billion. Earlier plans had called for all of the service’s combat units to be built around the light, quick, armored vehicle.

The Army now thinks it will need a mix of slower-to-deploy, heavy tanks as well as light fighting vehicles. This will allow commanders to swing quickly between tasks, the Army says, from handing out emergency rations on one block to conducting an all-out battle with insurgents on another. Commanders in Iraq have found that 70-ton tanks, which literally shake the ground as they move, can help ward off guerrilla attacks simply through intimidation.

“The answer to complexity, volatility and uncertainty is always diversity,” says Brig. Gen. David Fastabend, a senior officer in the Army’s Futures Center, which does long-range planning.

The service recently canceled its $12.9 billion program for Comanche helicopters. Instead of spending the money on 121 stealthy Comanches — designed to evade high-tech enemy radar — the Army is spending the money to buy 825 attack and cargo helicopters and planes of the sort being used daily in Iraq.

They are changing their training:

In addition to putting them through months of mock raids, the colonel also gave each officer about a dozen books on Iraqi culture and counter-insurgency operations that he expects them to read in their spare time. The Army doesn’t have a standard reading list for troops to read before deploying to Iraq, so Col. McMaster, who has a doctorate in history from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, prepared his own.

The article also talks about how they are bringing experts from city planners to anthropologists to help with wargaming.

Critics will say the Army should have know this for a long time. I want to applaud the speed at which the leadership is adjusting the changing environment.

I think there is also a lesson about for business: Is your competition is same as it use to be? Are you using the same-old tactics and not getting the expected results?

Packers vs. Eagles

I don’t know which was more embarrassing – the 4 and 26 play in last year’s playoff game or the entire team’s performance yesterday.

I think last year was the year for the Packers to make a run at the Super Bowl and they couldn’t get it done.

I don’t see how they can do it this year.

RSS with Full Entries

A few kind folks told me that my feeds were not coming across with the full text of entries.

If you are having that problem, please update your link to:

OR

You can let your RSS reader auto-detect the feed (that is where the problem was).

A Penny For…’s Top 24 of 2004

I think this tells of the story of my year pretty well. These represent things I have done and thoughts that I still think are important:

  1. Business Blog Book Tour
  2. Building Properties
  3. Would You Like Technology With That?
  4. Business in France
  5. MmmBop
  6. Building a Business
  7. Food and Thought
  8. Selling Chopper Style
  9. Comic Book Advice: What You Are Not
  10. Seinfeld on Attention Span
  11. Prices Are Rising
  12. Wiki @ A Penny
  13. I Want It Now
  14. Marketing is Definitely Hard
  15. Worthwhile Thoughts
  16. Doing More Stuff (With Ben and Jackie)
  17. Podcasting
  18. Beer.
  19. Filling the [Vioxx] Gap
  20. Why I Left
  21. Note to Pixar
  22. [Brett Favre]…Keeps Going and Going
  23. Gamesmanship in the Air
  24. This Year’s Holiday CD

Weekend Music – This Year’s Holiday CD

A couple of years ago, I started making a holiday CD for family and friends. It serves as our Christmas card each year.

I start with buying one of the cool pre-printed CDRs at 5inch.com.

Then, it normal takes me a week or two to figure out what to put on there. This year, iTunes made that easier. The growing collection of music made it alot of fun. I do recommend getting off their canned lists and doing searches on song titles. You get a better selection of songs to choose from.

With further ado, here is our 2004 holiday CD:

  1. Carol of the Meows | Guster | Carol of the Meows (1:24)
  2. Elf’s Lament | Barenaked Ladies | Barenaked for the Holidays (3:39)
  3. Do You Hear What I Hear? | Bobby Vinton | Kissin’ Christmas
  4. Hot Rod Sleigh | Toby Keith | Christmas to Christmas (3:38)
  5. O Holy Night | Barenaked Ladies | Barenaked for the Holidays (1:09)
  6. Gaudete | Mediaeval Baebes | A Winter’s Night (2:16)
  7. The Christmas Song | The Ravonettes | The O.C. Mix 3: Have a Very Merry Chrismukkah (2:12)
  8. Applalachian Snowfall | Trans-Siberian Orchestra | The Christmas Attic (4:12)
  9. Please Come Home For Christmas | The Eagles | The Very Best of the Eagles (2:30)
  10. My Favorite Things | Barry Manilow | A Christmas Gift of Love (2:29)
  11. Sleigh Ride | Barenaked Ladies | Barenaked for the Holidays (0:48)
  12. I Can’t Wait for Christmas | Mindi Abair | Happy Christmas – Single (3:39)
  13. Must Be Santa | Raffi | Raffi’s Christmas Album (2:30)
  14. The Nutcracker Suite | The Brian Seltzer Orchestra | Boogie Woogie Christmas (7:15)
  15. Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer | Barenaked Ladies | Barenaked for the Holidays (1:01)
  16. Jingle Bells | Frank Sinatra & Orchestra And Chorus of Gordon Jenkins | A Jolly Christmas by Frank Sinatra (2:02)
  17. This Christmas | Yutaka | A GRP Christmas Collection (4:02)
  18. Bring a Torch, Jeannette Isabella | Bob Rafkin | Six String Christmas (2:26)
  19. O Christmas Tree | Jimmy Calire Piano Trio | Spirited Christmas (3:33)
  20. We Wish You a Merry Christmas | United State Army Field Band | Christmas Celebration (0:58)
  21. Christmas Time at Home | Rhonda Vincent | A Very Special Acoustic Christmas (2:47)
  22. All I Want for Christmas Is You | Mariah Carey | Merry Christmas (4:05)
  23. Let It Snow, Let It Snow, Let It Snow | Ricochet | 16 Biggest Hits: Christmas (2:02)
  24. The Most Wonderful Time of the Year | Andy Williams | Andy Williams Live – Christmas Treasures (2:37)

Social Customer Manifesto

I wish there were less manifestos, but I think you might want to subscribe to Christopher Carfi’s Social Customer Manifesto.

Here is his customer manifesto:

  • I want to have a say.
  • I don’t want to do business with idiots.
  • I want to know when something is wrong, and what you’re going to do to fix it.
  • I want to help shape things that I’ll find useful.
  • I want to connect with others who are working on similar problems.
  • I don’t want to be called by another salesperson. Ever. (Unless they have something useful. Then I want it yesterday.)
  • I want to buy things on my schedule, not yours. I don’t care if it’s the end of your quarter.
  • I want to know your selling process.
  • I want to tell you when you’re screwing up. Conversely, I’m happy to tell you the things that you are doing well. I may even tell you what your competitors are doing.
  • I want to do business with companies that act in a transparent and ethical manner.
  • I want to know what’s next. We’re in partnership…where should we go?

The latest essay on “Blogging is not for me.”

Joseph Epstein writes an one of those oh-so clever and plithy editorials in today’s WSJ. This one is titled “Blog, Blague, Blog”. As far as I can tell you need to subscribe to be able to see it. I do find it a little interesting that the editors didn’t make this available on the Opinion Journal.

I have decided to post the whole essay here. If I am pushing fair use a bit, I apologize.

Blog, Blague, Blog by Joseph Epstein

No big surprise, I suppose, in Merriam-Webster’s recent announcement that “blog” was the word most looked up on its Internet sites during the past year. Bloggers were much in the news; in fact, they often turned the direction of the news, and made a fair amount of news on their own. Bloggers caught up with many campaign lies during the past presidential election; by catching him out in shoddy journalistic practice, they cost Dan Rather an honorable departure from a long career.

Bloggers have become something of an auxiliary media, often doing the grubby journalistic work of picking up the essential threads left hanging by the major, or mainstream, media.

At their best, they resemble that small stockholder who ruins what was supposed to be a smooth stockholders meeting by pointing out that the company’s top executives seem to have been making ungodly profits by putting asbestos in the products of corporation’s baby-food company in Latin America. Politicians, journalists, public figures generally, have been served proper notice: Beware — Little Blogger is watching you.

* * *

A blog, for those who have not yet looked up the word, is a journal kept by a private individual and made available on the Web. The etymology of the word derives from web log. (Through available software, a blog can also send its readers to other pertinent material through hyperlinks.) Persons who keep such journals are known as bloggers, their activity as blogging. Blogs, like private journals kept in pre-computer days, tend to be updated daily.

A name for habitual readers of blogs has not, so far as I know, been invented. Blogettes wouldn’t be bad, if it didn’t suggest exclusive feminity. The best available for now is probably blogophiles. There must be lots of them out there, for some blogs are thought to have large followings: Andrew Sullivan’s blog, for example, and that of the notorious blog gossiper Matthew Drudge used to get frequent mention.

After admitting all the successes of bloggers in politics and journalism in recent years, I myself remain a bit of a blogophobe. My problem with blogs is, to stay within computerese, a RAM problem. RAM is, of course, random access memory, denoting how much information one can store in one’s computer, or, in human terms, in one’s brain. Those little gray cells, as Inspector Poirot likes to call them, are dying off in impressive numbers in all of us; and do we wish to spend many of them reading blogs, in which a large percentage of the material cannot be relied upon, and lots more of which is beside any possible point? Well to remember that the French word blague, pronounced the same as blog, means to talk chaff, to hoax, to humbug.

Professional journalists may be under an obligation to check 12 or 15 blogs each morning. As an amateur, a mere kibitzer, I am not. I do not have enough RAM left in my brain to accommodate bloggers in the distant hope of gaining a bit of inside information, I cannot really accommodate them in what I think of as my intellectual hygiene. Forget inside information, it’s all I can do to handle outside information.

As for my intellectual hygiene, it begins with writing in my own, private, written-in-longhand journal, which I have been keeping for some 30-odd years and which no one else has ever seen. It continues with a brisk reading of the New York Times, beginning always with its obituaries (the only news that, as Ezra Pound said about literature, stays news). The Wall Street Journal is next. After checking my e-mails, with its many fine offers of cheap Viagra and chances to meet cheating housewives, I click over to ArtsandLettersDaily.com, which reprints a good selection of recent articles on culture and intellectual life in the Anglophone world.

I also subscribe to 12 or so magazines, from the English Gramaphone to the imprecisely named GQ, standing for Gentleman’s Quarterly (it comes out monthly and, with its explicit advice on sex, is decidedly not for gentleman). At night I watch “The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer,” and try my best to steer clear of CNN or “Larry King Live,” not always with success. Information overload is, decidedly, threatened.

All success to the best of the bloggers. But, as the Jews of Russia used to say about the czar, so I now find myself saying about them: May they live and be well, but not too close to me.