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Top Links of The Week: Week Ending Feb. 21, 2010

February 21, 2010 Leave a comment

Image Ironic1.com

Best Online Planning Tools Redux – 25 lttrs n th alphbt. Awesome — best collection of Planning links I’ve found anywhere.

Trans Siberian Railway – A virtual journey on Google Maps. It’s the closest thing I’ve ever seen that brings the travel experience to your computer.

Blaise Aguera y Arcas demos augmented-reality apps at TED. This is an incredible presentation that shows one example of how far technology has come in the past few years.

Living Stories – Google’s newest experiment in presenting online news. I especially like the timeline feature.

Great article from Esquire: Roger Ebert Cancer Battle

Top 10 Free Ways to Discover New Music Online

“The sociology of drinking” – Malcolm Gladwell’s newest piece for The New Yorker.

The greatest movie scene ever? – Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus!

Categories: LINKS

Top Links: Week Ending Feb. 14, 2010

February 15, 2010 Leave a comment


Firestarters (5 reasons why employing people who blog is more important than ever) - Neil Perkin

Is It Possible to Opt-Out of Social Networking? – Not The User’s Fault

Want to Spread News on Twitter? It’s Who You Know, Not How Many – Fast Company

Five Must-Read Posts from Last Week – Servant of Chaos

Bacon Cheese Turtleburgers – This Is Why You’re Fat

How to Get Your First Job/Placement in Planning by Life Moves Pretty Fast

Who Says the Future Needs an Advertising Agency? by Bud Caddell

IfWeRanTheWorld- Interesting social experiment

Jamie Oliver’s TED Prize wish: Teach every child about food

Categories: LINKS

Top Links of The Week Ending Feb. 7, 2010

February 8, 2010 Leave a comment
Categories: LINKS

Armchair Activism

January 23, 2010 Leave a comment

Some food for thought courtesy of various quotes I’ve found on the web this week, which all pretty much have the same idea:

Now, in 2010, we have more resources at our disposal than at any other time in history to create positive changes culturally, economically, politically, etc. The internet has become a sounding board for people to voice their opinions. Occasionally, it has been used as a tool to gather individuals for local, all the way up to global causes, but we’re still at the early stages of harnessing the collective strength of online communities.

Here’s a MLK quote I found on Tumblr via The Consumerologist

“We will have to repent in this generation not merely for the vitriolic words and actions of the bad people, but for the appalling silence of the good people.”

A quote from the blog Stuff White People Like in a post about the recent Conan O’Brien hoopla:

But no, white people will solve this problem the way that they solved the election crisis in Iran – through Facebook and Twitter status updates. In 2009, millions of white people took 35 seconds to turn their twitter profiles green, and consequently sent a very powerful message to the leaders of Iran. Their message was that they wanted their friends to know that they would stop at nothing to ensure freedom and democracy for the Iranian people. Thanks in large part to that effort Iran is now completely democratic. With that issue settled, white people are launching a similar campaign for Conan that is sure to have similar results…

For you see, while white people will fiercely support Conan O’Brien in any public forum, they always fail to support him in the only way that actually helps – by watching his show.”

That above quote, of course, is meant to be funny (it is), but it’s also very true. My point isn’t to say that people changing their avatars, status updates and retweeting are useless (these activities generate a great deal of awareness). My point is that we need to do more.

3rd quote, from Umair Haque (emphasis mine):

By design. 20th Century organizations were built to have strategic intent. The point of a strategic intent is merely to best rivals. That’s the opposite of an ambition: it’s just combat. Yesterday’s organizations were missing the burning desire to improve on yesterday in their very DNA. That’s what reduced them to passionless machines — and it’s what ultimately made our lives smaller, our economies less vibrant, and our societies poorer.”

Last quote, from superamit on Tumblr:

Do something compelling. There’s a trillion people writing blogs that need something to write about. There are magazines hungry for content. There are hundreds of thousands of people bored on the internet wanting something to look at or do. For the most part, people have exceedingly low standards on the internet. But, I think people are hungry for better. Make something better. People will notice.

Frank Chimero
Categories: LINKS

Best of the Web – Week Ending Sept. 25th

September 25, 2009 Leave a comment

A collection of the most interesting things I’ve found this week. Lots of great stuff for Planners and Strategists.

SecretToCreativityh/t Faris Yakob on Tumblr

87 Cool Things from Google at Adweek 2009

Google Internet Stats – Nice resource for Planners and Strategists.

YouTube: Fast.Forward – Google and The Wharton School have partnered to gather and provide quick perspective on managing the change in the marketing landscape.

How To Be A Better Brand Planner via BrandTwist

Planner Reads – Project by Bud Caddell aggregating the most shared content from Planners and Strategists. Sign up here – the more, the merrier.

Nine Scientifically Proven Ways to Get Retweeted on Twitter via Fast Company

Nice collection of downloadable articles on AccountPlanning.net, mostly written by John Griffiths, who writes the furtherandfaster blog

Download the first edition of Dsplaced magazine, “an experiment in collective storytelling” by two Strategists, Jinal Shah and Mansi Trivedi

Open Book Test for Planners: The interview questions I ask and why by Scott Karambis on the Please Feed The Animals blog

One of my favorite videos this week. It’s an ad for Allan Gray investing that explores what would have happened if James Dean didn’t die so young:

Categories: LINKS, PLANNING

Friday Link Love: Week Ending 5/22/2009

Categories: LINKS

Friday Link Love: Week Ending 5/15/09

This is a list of some of the links I’ve bookmarked or found especially interesting. I’m thinking of making this a weekly list I post every Friday.

The New York Times envisions version 2.0 of the newspaper

Diddit

Keep track of what you wanna do, share stories about your life experiences (your “diddits”), and meet people like you.

40 Useful and Creative Infographics

CoffeeDrinksIllustrated

imdoingmypart.org

Find small actions you can do for Energy, Happiness, Waste and Water.

Media Arts Mondays: Data Visualization Tools

Twitshirt

Sell your Tweets on Twitshirt

NotCot.org

Growing network of design sites


McDonald’s Is Winning More Than The Value Wars
via Advertising Age

Newspapers and Thinking The Unthinkable
by Clay Shirky

How David Beats Goliath – When Underdogs Break The Rules by Malcolm Gladwell

Where is Everyone?

In this article, we are going to take a little tour through the history of information – or more specifically where to focus efforts if you want get in touch with other people.

marketflow1

DubMeNow

Dub is your mobile business card. The goal driving DubMeNow is developing better ways to communicate, network, and exchange contact information – all from your mobile phone!

The Psychology of Attention 7 Part Series via PsyBlog

Halting Russia’s Population Collapse via BBC News

Categories: LINKS
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