Monday, October 29th, 2007

Will You Rent A Phone When Travelling Abroad?

Not me. Not in my wildest imaginations. Not for people who frequently fly from one “telecom island” to another either — it will be much cheaper for these people to simply purchase phones for each “island”. So who are the people likely to patronize such services?

There once was a big market for these services, but I don’t think this market is significant anymore … as cellphones are so cheap these days, and there are even more and more phones coming on to the market these days that speak all languages.

International Phone Rentals

[World Cellular Rentals]

Sunday, October 28th, 2007

An Open Letter To Guy Kawasaki: Please Don’t Be Evil

Dear Guy Kawasaki,

Guy KawasakiOctober 4. What’s special about October 4? That’s when you went evil. I don’t know why you of all people would do this, but there’s one thing that I can bet my very life on: that this is no way to change the world at all.

I’m writing this because this is something that hits a personal nerve of mine. For the past 12 months that I’ve been in bed fighting a heart disease that came unannounced (I’m 27), your writings, along with a select few others, have kept me going and staying strong.

That’s why it felt like my balls were being yanked … when I found this on October 4:

Evil Guy Kawasaki

Like my heart disease, this also came totally unannounced. At least others who have gone this route wrote about it before or immediately afterwards. Initially I dismissed this as probably one of those experiments. But two weeks on, and this evil deed continues.

Hello Guy, stop for a minute and ask yourself which is more important to you: the page views, or getting the your message across? And in this context, consider advertising as part of the message.

If you look at the screenshot above, you’ll realize I still have the “Signal Without Noise” in the feed title. Actually I’ve probably never visited your website more than twice since you change the title to “How To Change The World”. Yet with every single post that I read from you, I always had “Guy” in mind. I always know this is coming from Guy The Great, Guy The Technology Evangelist, Guy The Venture Capitalist, Guy Great Sushi guy, Guy with The Golden Touch — no matter where I read the content from.

So once again, ask yourself what’s more important: you and your message, or is it your website and its page views?

If it’s about advertising, why don’t you put those ads inside the feed? Afterall, if you’re asking people to visit the website to read the article so you can show them ads while they’re there — what prevents you from just bundling the ad with the feed and giving your users the choice to read it wherever we so wish?

Even better, you could publish two feeds — one feed with the full content with advertising, and a second, evil-inspired feed with only the excerpt. Who says you can’t eat your cake when it’s right there in your hands?

Seeing you use WordPress for your blog, the DualFeeds plugin makes this quite easy. If you can’t find the time to do this, create a temporal ftp account and give me a call or shoot me an e-mail. I won’t mind doing this for you, even with electrodes on my chest in my hospital bed.

But if you really must just be this evil, at least go the classic evil route. Forget about the statement:

[[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]

Now I don’t know about you, but I sense something very evil in that line. If (you think) your RSS subscribers are so dumb to not know that there’s more to a post than one sentence and a linked title, then I’m quite confident you don’t need these “dumb” people visiting your website anyway.

Oh, but then I may be wrong: Guy is a numbers guy — and those page views might be so important above anything else.

And when all is said and done, I still respect you, very much. I always have. And I always will. And no, I’m not un-subscribing from your feed like others have. It’s just that I keep “staring” your post in Google Reader — hoping to visit your site, someday, when I have the time, if I ever will — to read them.

Perhaps I’m taking this issue too personal. Well, thinking about it I know why: it is personal to me.

Good morning from my sick bed here in the sunny city of Accra, Ghana, where I call home.

Sunday, October 28th, 2007

Google Showing “Terrorism” Ads On My Blog

For some reason, Google has been showing “terrorism” on my blog, even though until this post, I’d never used that keyword in any post. The only reason I can think of now is that I share first name with Bush, America’s President.

How now, mate?

George Bush

Saturday, October 27th, 2007

The “Blogging Heroes” Book — All 30 Interviews Free

Blogging Heroes: Interviews with 30 of the World’s Top Bloggers is a new book written by Mike Banks. Wiley, the publisher, offered each of the subjects the opportunity to give away the chapter they’re in as a free pdf on their site.

And I set out to collect each of these “free chapters”. I’ve got 13 of them so far. I’m still hunting. If you know of any of these free chapters of this book, leave a link in the comments below.

  1. Chris Anderson, The Long Tail: blog post | PDF download
  2. Gary Lee, (Mr. Gary Lee) : blog post | pdf download
  3. Mark Frauenfelder, Boing Boing: blog post | pdf download
  4. David Rothman, Teleblog: blog post | pdf download
  5. Steve Garfield, Off The Tangent - Video Blog: blog post | pdf download
  6. Ina Steiner, AuctionBytes: blog post | pdf download
  7. Steve Rubel, Micro Persuasion: blog post | pdf download
  8. Grant Robertson, Download Squad: blog post | pdf download
  9. Scott McNulty, TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog: blog post | pdf download
  10. Gina Trapani, LifeHacker: blog post | pdf download
  11. Eric T., Internet Duct Tape: blog post | pdf download
  12. Mike Masnick, Tech Dirt: blog post | pdf download
  13. Mary Jo Foley, All About Microsoft: blog post | pdf download
  14. Victor Agreda, DIY Life:
  15. Joel Comm, JoelComm.com:
  16. Kristin Darguzas, ParentDish:
  17. Ken Fisher, Ars Technica:
  18. Chris Grant, Joystiq:
  19. Brad Hill, Weblogs, Inc.:
  20. Brian Lam, Gizmodo:
  21. Philipp Lenssen, Google Blogoscoped:
  22. Rebecca Lieb, ClickZ:
  23. Richard MacManus, Read/Write Web:
  24. John Neff, Autoblog:
  25. Deborah Petersen, Life in the Fast Lane:
  26. Peter Rojas, Engadget:
  27. Robert Scoble, Scobleizer:
  28. Dave Taylor, The Intuitive Life Business Blog:
  29. Frank Warren, PostSecret:
  30. Deidre Woollard, Luxist:

That’s 13, and 17 more to go! I’m going to update this post with the remaining 17 Interviews, as and when I find them. These seem to be the ones that have been published so far. Leave a link in the comments below.

Friday, October 5th, 2007

5 Pinky Ideas To Go Pink In October

Since I went Pink For October, I’ve had a lot of people e-mail me to ask what they can do if they have no websites. Well, website or not, there’s a lot  that anyone can do. Remember the bigger picture is breast cancer awareness, and the Pink For October initiative is just one of many events held all over the word to raise awareness about this disease. Here are 5 things that come to mind. Feel free to tinker about and come out with other creative ideas.

  1. Educate yourself. Breast cancer has no cure, and early detection is critical. The National Breast Cancer Awareness Month’s website (BCAM) has a ton of resources on the various stages of the disease. Spend some time there and learn a thing or two. And don’t forget to teach others what you learn.
  2. If you’re reading this, you probably have one or two social networking profiles (MySpace, Facebook, Hi5, etc). Both the NBAM and Pink For October websites have some badges you can put on your social networking profiles to help create awareness about Breast Cancer.
  3. Join your national / local events. NBCAM is an international celebration, and no matter where you live, there’s likely to be a national or local event going on. Find out and be a part of it.
  4. Start a local event in your community, work place, or even home! Organize a "Pink Day" at work and get your coworkers to wear pink clothing or accessories. Be creative and go wild.
  5. Donate for Breast Cancer research — Make a tax-deductible donation to any non-profit of your choice working in the areas of Breast Cancer research, treatment or awareness creation.

These are just quick ideas that came to mind. Head over to the official National Breast Cancer Awareness Month website and the Pink For October website for more ideas.

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007

I’m Going Pink For October

If you’re wondering why my blog has turned pink overnight, here’s why: I’m going Pink For October.

Pink For OctoberPink for October is an initiative started in August of 2006, in which sites all over the world change their templates to include the color pink, in support of Breast Cancer Awareness, because October is the month of Breast Cancer Awareness.

So what does that men to you, me, and this blog?

Throughout the month of October, this blog will spot the present pink colors (and more pink stuff in the coming days). In addition, I want to read a lot about Breast Cancer, and share my reading with you.

If you have a website, join in this all-important event, and lets all go Pink For October to raise awareness about Breast Cancer, and to support Breast Cancer research.

Head over to the official Pink For October website, and pick your choice from the available tools and lets go pink together.

Are you going Pink For October?

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