Lucky 7

Here we are again. Another chance to dazzle you with ITSinsider secrets. Thanks Charlie for giving me another opportunity to talk about myself in the blogosphere. Don’t you know I’m shy? 🙂 I did this a while ago for Luis Suarez at year-end ’07. The list was 8 then, so maybe the recession has impacted the true productivity required to get this job done. You can see those 8 here.

So, first the rules:

  • Link your original tagger(s), and list these rules on your blog.
  • Share seven facts about yourself in the post – some random, some weird.
  • Tag seven people at the end of your post by leaving their names and the links to their blogs.
  • Let them know they’ve been tagged by leaving a comment on their blogs and/or Twitter.

Now, my 7 wonders:1. My middle name is Regina. It is Latin for Queen. ‘nuf said.2. I take in strays.3. My favorite writing instrument is a Papermate black flair felt tip pen. Second favorite is a #2 Dixon Ticonderoga pencil.4. My (yet unrealized) dream has always been to live on a horse farm.5. In the 90s I had a powerhouse of advisors to my company including Esther Dyson, Gary Fernandes, Mort Meyerson, and John Oltman. (But didn’t tell anyone.)6. I married for love and divorced for money.7. I’ve only flown first class to Europe.With that, I’ll harass the following 7 people to keep the party going:Jude HammerleLauren CooneyEmanuele QuintarelliLawrence LiuDavid TerrarKimberly HatchSigurd Rinde

Are We the Sum of Who We Follow?

I was surprised to find that @ross (Ross Mayfield) only follows 315 people, yet is followed by 7,718. I know I have purposely kept my following list contained because I try to limit my following to folks in the enterprise 2.0 space. (See my dorky video from my Twitter bio.) To be frank, I was relieved to see I made in onto Ross’s follow list, but– there it is again, that weird Twitter vanity/status thing throwing its ugly wrench into what is supposed to be an emergent, egalitarian social web.There are two ways to look at this. The first is literal. We are the sum of who we follow in that all the knowledge we absorb comes to us via Twitter and our followers. With the exception of other “news” feeds (alerts, blog readers, traditional MSM), for most of us, we get our news from Twitter. Even @timoreilly, the father of web 2.0, admits to consuming news this way. What’s more important is the influence factor. If a majority of people I follow on Twitter think a certain way, chances are I’ll think that way too. Okay, there are obvious exceptions, but you know what I mean. In this way, Twitter is, sadly yes… a lot like high school. If the popular kids think clogs (fast foward 2009, netbooks) are cool, so will I. What does that say about me? I’m I just a grand follower, a mindless conformer, persuaded by popular opinion? Is the sum of what I think a product of those thinking around me? How is this very different from traditional advertising and its power to mold perception? Okay, the difference is it’s not a controlled, scripted message from a single producer, but the result is the same.The second way to look at this is more crass and the antithesis of what the social web is supposed to be about. You’d interpret the statement to mean: I value the insights of (ONLY) these people I follow. They are somehow “more worthy” of my attention. So, my social badge/status becomes the herd of smart people I’m following. (Hello… this mostly means you know who they are, not that you have a personal relationship with them.)I don’t mean to pick on @ross at all. My ratio is lopsided too. But, frankly, as I scanned Ross’s follow list, I felt a little like Eve in the Garden of Eden. The devil whispered in my ear: “If you follow everyone Ross follows, you’ll know everything he does…” Okay, that was weird. (But I did think,”What a great Twitter app: Snap up Followees of the gods.”)Whatev… what say you about all this? Is @ITSinsider simply spending too much time on Twitter?

Gtalk Identity Theft?

Eek.   Be careful with Gtalk or maybe Adium. I reached out to my friend in Australia, Stephen Collins (@trib), to ask him a question.  Although he appeared to me on my IM client, adium, as Stephen Collins, it soon became obvious I was not talking to Stephen.  Gtalk had somehow switched identities to another friend of mine, Jeanne Bissell-Privett in Ohio.  Could have been really embarrassing.   Sailors take warning!

Media_httpsusanscrups_cqcej
Media_httpsusanscrups_sbgdh