I’ll Take the Red One, Please!

by lyn on July 28, 2010

Well, it’s about time!  We are finally starting to see the rollout of non-gas cars, and California is one of the areas slated for the initial introductions.  Where do I plug in?  More to the point, my wife wants to know where to plug in, really she wants to know that I can stick it some where, but it won’t be in our garage.  I’m an early adopter and gadget freak, and this really has my juices flowing.

I signed up on line for information on the Honda hydrogen car some while back, but I never got the call for an invitation to test one out for a year.  I signed up for ‘information’ on the Nissan Leaf on their website, but the information never showed up in my inbox.  My wife is elated.

This week the official announcement came from Chevrolet that their new Chevrolet, not Chevy, if you please, Volt will be rolling out this year for the price of only, choke, $41,000, not counting the $7500 tax credit from the federal government.  This is the perfect solution for running around town since it has a limited range of about 40 miles on electricity only.  I claim that is about my daily range in today’s world, but my wife has that scornful look only wives can get.  I’m still doing my math trying to find other justifications.

They come in red – her favorite color.  She’s not impressed.  She tell’s me to ‘stick it’ one more time, but alas not where.  For now all I have is this picture of this pretty red car, and I’m still searching for that 240 volt socket for my place to stick it.  What’s a digital guy to do?

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The Real Cost of our Need for Speed

by lyn on July 22, 2010

Sometimes you never know where a story is going to take you, and this is one of those stories.  At the beginning of the week I decided that I was going to comment on the recent NYT article – In a World of News, Burnout Starts Younger by Jeremy Peters.  This ran in the Media & Advertising section.  My focus was on the change in the media world that had gone from the 24 hour news cycle down to the hour by hour cycle that is being fed by online and cable news networks.

My point of view was how the change in the media / cycle was driving change by those who gather and distribute (started to say print) our news.  Staff was now living on the edge, getting up early and working late to capture the very latest scoop in order to feed the hungry news beast.  And then everything changed, again.

Shirley Sherrod, happened and the world grew indignant at the initial clip shown on cable and then network news.  The villagers of cable news called for her head…and low and behold they got it, immediately via a stop the car and dictate your resignation on a road in rural Georgia.  The problem then came later in the same 24 hour, old news cycle, that the story was wrong, the full clip was entirely different and a big mistake had been made.

Apologies have ensued, heads will roll (in the future), and pleasant phone calls were exchanged by the parties involved.  Now we have our senior government leaders blaming the new news cycle for forcing them to ‘jump the gun’ for their actions.

What I was trying to say at the beginning of the week is that we are living in a different media world where immediacy tends to trump ‘getting it right.’  It’s great to get my news on my new Droid X (shameless plug) with blazing speed anytime I need it, but I do miss the old get it right mentality of the 24 hour news cycle.

This is happening with all of our communications today, including all of our emails, blackberry.  Errors did happen on the old cycle, and I was usually handling those calls.  The difference now is that when we hit send – it is sent, and the whole world now has that news – you better hope you got it right – or get ready to field those nasty calls some of which could be coming from a gloating newspaper reporter, who however slowly is also looking for your head for your mistake.

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How to Polish a Tarnished Brand

July 22, 2010

Today we got word of the first step in polishing of a tarnished brand – one the is so close to me that I am absolutely giddy with anticipation for it to start.  Confession alert – my oldest offspring went to USC, and is one of the founders of Trojan Wire and web site since 2000 highlighting Trojan Athletics.  [...]

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From the Other Side of the Digital Divide

July 22, 2010

In another sign of the digital wave that appears to be becoming a tidal wave of epic proportions comes from recent iPad sales. Hey, I’m a true early adopter – day 2 for my iPhone in San Francisco in 2007, but this is getting crazy. Today Apple noted that they had sold over [...]

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The Trend Continues

July 22, 2010

The news is out and the trend line still continues for our daily newspapers in the U.S. It looks like the decline in paid circulation has slowed up, but the gross numbers are still looking pretty sad. Digital convergence is still having a great impact on subscriptions with many switching over to free [...]

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Life in the ‘Sunset’ Years

June 9, 2010

The Financial Times recently has said that the world is going to end in 5 years!  Not the total world, but the print world for newspapers and magazines.  Their rationale is that rising newsprint costs, delivery costs, declining subscriptions will lead to an inevitable end to ‘print’ as we know it today.
All of these things [...]

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Another Nail in the Coffin of Newspapers

May 3, 2010

This past weekend The Orange County Register filed an interesting story – one that chronicled their demise over the past several years. It was both amusing and sad. It was sad for me since I was an Advertising Director for them in the growth days in the mid 90s. In a wild [...]

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Votes for Sale

May 3, 2010

The Fundraising Congress : Its pathological reliance on campaign cash demands a radical change to the corrupt machinery.
That is the headline and tag line from an opinion posting in today’s LA Times by Lawrence Lessing. The link is at the end of this post. Read it, please. having spent nearly 10 years [...]

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Money Makes the World…and Politics Go ‘Round

February 4, 2010

The Fundraising Congress : Its pathological reliance on campaign cash demands a radical change to the corrupt machinery.
That is the headline and tag line from an opinion posting in today’s LA Times by Lawrence Lessing. The link to the post is at the end of this post. Read it, please.  Having spent nearly [...]

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We Sell Technology?

January 23, 2010

The funny thing about rain for a Californian, when you get over the frustration of having to close the sunroof on the car, and having to find a parking place close to where you are going so your don’t get absolutely soaked – you see things differently.  This week in taking my alternate course under [...]

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