Category Archives: Connecting

Hey Twitter! #FIXIT

Can’t Join the Conversation

Twitter recently took away the option to see replies that people we don’t follow made in conversations.

This truly has broken the system that was making Twitter a joy for many of us. We often found new connections and new people to follow because we would find them engaged in conversation. In a sense, eavesdropping grew the community.

Twitter has not even given us the option to open this channel. They’ve simply taken it away altogether. Now we can only see the replies of others to people that we follow — but no one else.

FIXIT Twitter

I have seen quite a bit of action on this particular topic (obviously by people that I follow).

@ikepigott spearheaded a campaign tonight that has been filtering quite often in the “retweet” stream:

@twitter – The Replies were not broken. You’ve made conversational discovery impossible. #FIXIT (and retweet)

If you agree that this is a function that is debilitating to your Twitter useage, get on your stream and let them have it! #FIXIT

And you can quote me on that. I’m @richpalmer.


Does your business ban social media at work?

Ragan Communications shared this video featuring Shel Holtz.

Holtz discusses why using social media at the office should no longer be taboo; in fact, it could prevent you from doing your job.


In Defense of Twitter – Musicians Perspective


Steve Lawson from Andrew Dubber on Vimeo.

Andrew Dubber recently interviewed bassist and music business thinker, Steve Lawson. They discussed the merits of Twitter, especially as it pertains to musicians. Lawson had posted an article called “Twitter Sucks, So Change Your Friends.”

I especially liked the point that Lawson made regarding how to use Twitter while you’re between albums/projects. He noted that this time is good for connecting with new people, carrying on conversation and building your “social DNA chain.”

Follow Steve Lawson: @solobasssteve
Follow Andrew Dubber: @dubber

According to his site,

Andrew Dubber’s New Music Strategies New Music Strategies attempts to unpick and explain what’s going on in the online music environment – and from that, develop strategies to help independent musicians and music businesses cope and thrive in a changing media environment.


Rules for Being Human

I was cleaning files from my computer this morning when I stumbled across this document. I don’t recall when or where I acquired this, but it seemed like something I should share with others. I certainly found reason for introspection.

I’m grateful that the document contained attribution to the original author. I would likely have not shared it, otherwise.

Rules of Life

(also known as “Rules for Being Human”)
by Cherie Carter-Scott

“Life is a succession of lessons which must be lived to be understood.” (Helen Keller)

Rule One – You will receive a body. Whether you love it or hate it, it’s yours for life, so accept it. What counts is what’s inside.

Rule Two – You will be presented with lessons. Life is a constant learning experience, which every day provides opportunities for you to learn more. These lessons specific to you, and learning them ‘is the key to discovering and fulfilling the meaning and relevance of your own life’.

Rule Three – There are no mistakes, only lessons. Your development towards wisdom is a process of experimentation, trial and error, so it’s inevitable things will not always go to plan or turn out how you’d want. Compassion is the remedy for harsh judgment – of ourselves and others. Forgiveness is not only divine – it’s also ‘the act of erasing an emotional debt’. Behaving ethically, with integrity, and with humor – especially the ability to laugh at yourself and your own mishaps – are central to the perspective that ‘mistakes’ are simply lessons we must learn.

Rule Four – The lesson is repeated until learned. Lessons repeat until learned. What manifest as problems and challenges, irritations and frustrations are more lessons – they will repeat until you see them as such and learn from them. Your own awareness and your ability to change are requisites of executing this rule. Also fundamental is the acceptance that you are not a victim of fate or circumstance – ‘causality’ must be acknowledged; that is to say: things happen to you because of how you are and what you do. To blame anyone or anything else for your misfortunes is an escape and a denial; you yourself are responsible for you, and what happens to you. Patience is required – change doesn’t happen overnight, so give change time to happen.

Rule Five – Learning does not end. While you are alive there are always lessons to be learned. Surrender to the ‘rhythm of life’, don’t struggle against it. Commit to the process of constant learning and change – be humble enough to always acknowledge your own weaknesses, and be flexible enough to adapt from what you may be accustomed to, because rigidity will den you the freedom of new possibilities.

Rule Six – “There” is no better than “here”. The other side of the hill may be greener than your own, but being there is not the key to endless happiness. Be grateful for and enjoy what you have, and where you are on your journey. Appreciate the abundance of what’s good in your life, rather than measure and amass things that do not actually lead to happiness. Living in the present helps you attain peace.

Rule Seven – Others are only mirrors of you. You love or hate something about another person according to what you love or hate about yourself. Be tolerant; accept others as they are, and strive for clarity of self-awareness; strive to truly understand and have an objective perception of your own self, your thoughts and feelings. Negative experiences are opportunities to heal the wounds that you carry. Support others, and by doing so you support yourself. Where you are unable to support others it is a sign that you are not adequately attending to your own needs.

Rule Eight – What you make of your life is up to you. You have all the tools and resources you need. What you do with them is up to you. Take responsibility for yourself. Learn to let go when you cannot change things. Don’t get angry about things – bitter memories clutter your mind. Courage resides in all of us – use it when you need to do what’s right for you. We all possess a strong natural power and adventurous spirit, which you should draw on to embrace what lies ahead.

Rule Nine – Your answers lie inside of you. Trust your instincts and your innermost feelings, whether you hear them as a little voice or a flash of inspiration. Listen to feelings as well as sounds. Look, listen, and trust. Draw on your natural inspiration.

Rule Ten – You will forget all this at birth. We are all born with all of these capabilities – our early experiences lead us into a physical world, away from our spiritual selves, so that we become doubtful, cynical and lacking belief and confidence. The ten rules are not commandments; they are universal truths that apply to us all. When you lose your way, call upon them. Have faith in the strength of your spirit. Aspire to be wise – wisdom is the ultimate path of your life, and it knows no limits other than those you impose on yourself.

The books

You can get copies of Cherie Carter-Scott’s books at Amazon.com. Here’s a link to If Life is a Game, These are the Rules:


Been in the Doghouse?

This video made it to on the BestViral.com Top 5 of All Time page. A good example of how viral marketing can boost your ROI. It was used by J.C. Penney to market their jewelry line.

What can YOU do to increase your project’s reach? Do you have a creative process that will send it to viral proportions?


The Christmas Song

I’m not a huge fan of karaoke, but I’m very impressed with the service at SingSnap. They have a huge catalog of songs. Many thanks to Mike Turner (The Gomem Show) for pointing me toward this site.


Arabian – From the Nutcracker

Here’s my daughter performing the Arabian piece from the Nutcracker. The event was held early this year due to a schedule conflict with the director.

The company members were calling this "Nut-o-ween." :D

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LetMeParty.com SMS Test

I am trying out an SMS text to blog service. Perhaps I’ll talk about this on my next episode of BlogsViewsandBlues.com.

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Barry Goldwater Quote

"A government that is big enough to give you all you want is big enough to take it all away."

Also,
"Equality, rightly understood as our founding fathers understood it, leads to liberty and to the emancipation of creative differences; wrongly understood, as it has been so tragically in our time, it leads first to conformity and then to despotism."

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Barr Answers Questions Bipartisans Ducked

Since he wasn’t invited to participate in the debates (and was denied the opportunity even after asking) Bob Barr sat down to answer questions provided by YouTube viewers.

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Ban Political Ads

What if we leveled the playing field? What if we could ban all the political television, radio, newspaper, etc. advertising?

Sure, let people put bumper stickers on their cars. Let them put signs in their yards. But let’s get rid of these ads and reduce the amount of campaign fundraising necessary.

Let the candidates go grass roots. Let people see ALL the candidates, instead of those that spend outrageous amounts of money getting slanderous adverts out there.

You don’t LEARN anything at all about a candidate from their advertising. They simply get name recognition and an opportunity to slam an opponent.

I look at the very down-to-earth messages that the Libertarian candidate sends out via social media and web sites. Why not encourage these candidates to send out their editorials to the various media outlets in the form of press releases, web posts, social media engagements, etc. But ban the big dollar advertising. Take those dollars and return them to the areas that need help. What if we sent these dollars back into programs that make a difference? There are so many that need them.

Sure, let the candidates stand up in televised debates. But eliminate the debate committee as it now stands. Bring in a committee representing each party — not just the donkeys and elephants. They have essentially forced out the others from the public eye — as they obviously want to do.

Yet, the public only knows what they see. And I believe that most people don’t take the time or effort to fully explore options. Most people follow the popularity contest or simply fall into a "brand loyalty" mentality with a particular party. Regardless of what that party currently offers.

Let’s level the field and let everybody speak. Stop the states from forcing non-bipartisan candidates from reaching the ballots. Stop the terrible advertisements from reaching broadcast.

Truthfully, have you really ever learned ANYTHING substantial about a candidates view on issues from their campaign ads? All I see is mudslinging.

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Storm Update – Day 6

Looks like people are trying to get back to normal. Many are doing more recreational activities today.
There were still approximately 60,000 without power as of yesterday.

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