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Saturday, June 1, 2002
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Saturday, June 1, 2002
started 6/2/2002; 10:54:11 AM - last post 6/6/2002; 2:30:39 AM
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Doc Searls - Saturday, June 1, 2002 
6/2/2002; 2:54:11 PM (reads: 4551, responses: 3)
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From the email bag 
Subaverage shares Jack Valenti's testimony in 1982 on the VCR. The full text is here.
Christophe Ducamp of Elanceur.org: Blogonomics: making a living from bloging. His Radio blog is here.
More later. And later. 
A persistent image: the long white arm of light from a lighthouse on shore passing silently by at 2:30 in the morning. That's when we went to bed. I just got up and I'm late for the morning sessions. No breakfast.
We'll arrive in Vancouver with our bodies on Adak time.
discuss
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xtof - Re: Saturday, June 1, 2002 
6/3/2002; 6:33:42 AM (reads: 710, responses: 0)
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Blogonomics: making a living from blogging
Self-organized networks of bloggers offer advertisers access to previously unarticulated demographics... [read or print the article from Henry Copeland-PressFlex] ;-)
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Mark A. Hershberger - Re: Saturday, June 1, 2002 
6/4/2002; 7:33:08 PM (reads: 625, responses: 0)
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From http://mah.everybody.org/blog/2002_06_02_blog#id77342731
These "making money on the Internet" pieces
continue to be almost exclusivly about "monetizing" content.
That is, slapping ads on otherwise interesting reading --
intentionally distracting the reader.
As far as I'm concerned,
the only advertising I'm willing to put up with is intensely
personal, and I don't mean "personalized". Intensely personal
advertising is Dave Winer or Doc Searls. I'm
interested in many products these guys mention because
they are interested in them, and, usually, they have a
personal stake in the product. Doc flogs his book and Dave flogs
Radio and people buy because Doc and Dave care about what they sell.
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Bernie Dunham - Re: Saturday, June 1, 2002 
6/6/2002; 6:30:39 AM (reads: 1197, responses: 0)
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This has been a great working-vacation to Alaska: the MAC Mania wireless project was successful, but not perfect, and I have had a wonderful time with my fellow geeks. There are people whom I know I will only visit with during a Geek Cruise, an interesting context for friendship. There are others with whom discourse will be online rather than conversational over the telephone, on their web logs and via email. The Alaska trip was entirely different than the two Caribbean trips I have attended with Geek Cruises.
I suggest we start planning the "blog in the Bahamas" cruise ASAP.
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