March 29, 2005

BlogNashville is open for registration

Link: BlogNashville.

The BlogNashville event is open for registration.  The program spans Thursday, May 5 through Saturday, May 7, with May 7 the main conference day.  The program for the 7th is also now posted - looks like lots of interesting topics.

September 02, 2004

Weblog as memory aid

Of all the reasons to blog that I've seen, I don't remember anyone mentioning a blog as a form of memory aid - sort of annotated bookmarks. I've found that this is a useful way to think about certain posts - things that I am interested in sharing and commenting upon, but also things that I want to be able to find again quickly. For some things, I find that the context provided by a post is better than the context-free reminder provided by a bookmark. I mean, haven't you had the experience of clicking on some bookmark that you've set and looking at the site or page that comes up and going - huh? what was I thinking when I bookmarked this.

August 26, 2004

Information Force Multiplier

Jeff Nolan, one of my favorite venture capitalist bloggers, has an interesting piece on the internet and blogs as a CEO's information source multiplier. Jeff Nolan: Information Force Multiplier

I think Jeff is right about CEO's being able to use their employee's weblogs as a way to monitor the health of the organization. I suspect in high tech industries like software, this is already reality. I'd also be willing to wager a small bet that in a few years time the healthiest and the sickest companies will be those with the heaviest volume of employee blogging with all those mediocre places in the middle mostly silent. Jeff says he's gone away to think about this some more; we'll check back and see what he comes up with.

March 16, 2004

Weblog maintenance

I'm spending a little time this morning doing weblog maintenance. Blog-entropy has set in around the lists of weblogs I read, books, and music. Time for a little spring list cleaning. So far what that amounts to is adding more weblogs to the lists of ones I read and separating out the business/econ related weblogs from all the other stuff. I'll have to get to my music lists and reading lists later.

Spring cleaning does seem appropriate - spring is in full bloom here in southern California. My azaleas are looking great this year and not yet in full bloom. Almost everything else is looking great. Walking the dog around the neighborhood means walking past one yard full of flowers, and associated smells, after another. It's interesting to walk the same route in day-time and then again at night. In the day, you focus on the flowers: the colors and shapes of the plants; at night, when it's too dark to really appreciate the colors, the smells dominate the experience. At least for me - smells seem to be the main thing for my dog at any time, but then I think she's smelling other things than I.

November 05, 2003

Blinding flash...this takes discipline

I started weblogging partially to have a place to think through or present my opinions on various issues but also to create a daily reason to write. I'm never going to finish any of the half dozen writing projects that I've noodled on if I don't develop the discipline to sit down and write on a regular, preferably daily, basis. Good idea, not so good execution so far. I'll do better.

November 03, 2003

New Dog - beta

In my first post I declared this blog to be an alpha release. After posting for a few days and decoding the mystery of blogscurities like trackback, I'm comfortable enough to escalate the release level to beta. I anticipate a week of serious blogging will push me over the line to production status. Now on to bookmarklets!

October 31, 2003

Who says there are no editors on blogs?

The immediacy of blogging and the lack of editors in weblogging has been a hot topic of discussion among the blog world's big thinkers. See here on Kausfiles for more on the topic. But I couldn't even get this thing named by myself. I was ready to name this blog "old dog new trick" but my wife jumped in with "I don't want to think of you as old - how about new dog old trick instead". Hmmm. Maybe an editor isn't always a bad thing.

Recent Reading

Now Playing

  • Solomon Burke -

    Solomon Burke: Nashville
    Third in a series of very good albums by Solomon Burke. This one was produced by the great Buddy Miller in his home studio. Lots of good Nashville-based supporting artists. Burke can still use that tremendous voice of his to great effect on almost any style of music. You can hear him struggle a bit with one or two of the songs on this album but overall it's a very listenable and enjoyable album. (*****)

  • Sonny Landreth -

    Sonny Landreth: Grant Street
    Very good live album - good sampler of Landreth's work from a number of his CDs plus a couple of cuts that I don't think he has ever released on a studio CD. The first live CD from the premier slide guitar player. (*****)

  • Sonny Landreth -

    Sonny Landreth: The Road We're On
    This is one of last year's CDs that somehow got shuffled to the side for a while...now it is in constant rotation on my iPod and on the car CD player. Landreth is the king of slide guitar players (imho) and this is a solid effort. Not his best maybe, but overall quite good. (****)

  • Roomful of Blues -

    Roomful of Blues: Standing Room Only
    Roomful of Blues' latest really delivers. This is the second CD featuring lead singer Paul Dufresne and he has settled in very nicely indeed to fronting this perpetually hot, perpetually reinvented horn-driven blues band. These last two CDs are among the best in Roomful's long history - and that is saying quite a bit. Highly recommended. (*****)

  • Rodney Crowell -

    Rodney Crowell: Fate's Right Hand
    The latest from a consistently interesting songwriter. Some pretty dark songs but then that seems to be par for the course with Crowell. (****)

  • The Dixie Hummingbirds -

    The Dixie Hummingbirds: Diamond Jubilation
    Wonderful gospel music. This is the Dixie Hummingbirds 75th Anniversary CD...amazing. As Isaac Hayes says in the liner notes..."in the beginning, after the word, before rock 'n roll, and before there was rap, hip-hop, disco, punk, funk, metal, soul, Motown, rock-a-billy, before bebop, doo-wop, and the big band swing, there was the Dixie Hummingbirds." Long may they sing. (*****)

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