Home

Bio & Disclosures

Discussions


xFruits

2007 Events

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Previous topic
Next topic
inactiveTopic Tuesday, February 27, 2007
started 2/27/2007; 2:30:14 PM - last post 2/28/2007; 6:22:08 PM
Doc Searls - Tuesday, February 27, 2007  blueArrow
2/27/2007; 6:30:14 PM (reads: 7013, responses: 3)
Lesswire 
 Greenville Online: House backs free Web for all. That's the South Carolina house. Still, the idea is hardly what you'd call neutral: The idea is to leverage the state infrastructure and work with private Internet providers, Loftis said. A basic level of service would be free inside the state, but the providers would still charge fees for faster speeds... And I don't mean that as a position on Neutrality, either. Just to illustrate how hard it is to come to an Understanding here — not only about what the Net is, or what the Web is (the headline, fwiw, confuses Web with Net and both with wireless), but about exactly what roles governments and businesses should be playing here. Read the comments to find much the citizens also know. One should think carefully before making new laws here.
 Anyway, catch it before it scrolls behind the paywall.
 Pointage from MuniWireless.
 By the way, if you care about this subject (or these subjects) — and you should — please try your best to get to F2C (Freedom to Connect) in Silver Spring next Monday and Tuesday. Last year's was outstanding, and David Isenberg has put a lot of work into making this year's better. I had planned to make it (even bought plane tickets), but conflicting local obligations will keep me home. Still, I'll be listening in for the whole thing and participating as best I can.
 
Where it's worse than you have it now 
 Tunisian Prison Map mashup. The blog.
 Bonus link: Who's happy and why. Where I find that Armenia is one of the unhappiest places on Earth right now. Here's one Armenian blog among many.
 Thanks to Ethan Zuckerman for the pointages. Ethan gets my vote for the Best Blogger on (as well as of) Earth right now.
 
The sole of Starbucks 
 Companies have souls. I said that in a speech I gave to a retailing conference in Lucerne on September 20, 2000, not long after Cluetrain came out. They have human purposes that transcend mere economics. These purposes have little to do with short-term opportunities, and nothing to do with cashing out or starting another business.* For example, Nordstrom has the soul of a shoe store. Wal-Mart has the soul of a five-and-dime. (That's something Lee Scott, the CEO of Wal-Mart, told me after attending that very speech — and agreeing with it.)
 With this in mind, read about the kick in the particulars that Howard Schultz is giving to Starbucks, which is becoming the McDonalds of coffee (plus hip nostalgia music, and breakfast muffins, and baguette sandwiches, and games for kids on the road, and...)
 That last link, in AdAge, is full of jive about "crispness of experience", "maintaining the authenticity" and so on. But it's simpler than that. Starbucks has the soul of a coffee shop. That's what Howard Schultz is saying, and demonstrating, when he says his chain needs to "get back to the core". The core is coffee. Not CDs and sandwiches.
 What bothers me most about Starbucks these days is that the chain started by creating and serving a taste for good espresso-based drinks, and then milked-down the product as it built up its huge roster of stores. As a result, most Americans who go to Starbucks actually think a cup of hot milk with coffee flavoring is actually a good cup of anything. This is a perversion of the Italian original that verges on the tragic.
 * No, not all companies. Verizon, I would argue, has no soul. (Or, if it does, it's akin to that of Frankenstein's sewn-together monster, but with lots of "work". Note to Verizon employees: I'm not talking about you personally.) In fact, I suggest that any company that relates to its customers only through surveys, or seeks constantly to minimize and aggregate contact with customers and users has a soul in peril, if it has one at all. (I got two survey calls from the same company today, and up until then I thought I had a personal relationship with it.) Anyway, that's all another thread.
 So, to help Howard and company get back to their core, here are a few small suggestions.
 1) Turn down the music. I've heard that stores use loud music to drive two things: a) sales of CDs and b) idle customer asses out of the store. I doubt the latter is true, but in many stores the music is unbearably loud. So please: stop.
 2) Get the milk/coffee ratios back to the original Italian values. Today even an order for the smallest cappuchino ("tall") is still likely to be way more than 50% milk at most Starbucks stores. This is wrong and needs to be fixed.
 3) Go back to real commercial espresso machines. Too many Starbucks now feature automated machines that any idiot can use. I don't know what you call these things, but they are made to move customers through faster, and probably do a decent job; but they're not the same as the kind where you grind the coffee, tamp it into the portafilter, twist it onto the group head, and extract the coffee with the push of a button or the pull on a lever (the latter being quite rare these days). I know this involves a capital expense of a high order, but the payoff will be worth it.
 4) Give your employees better training around what makes great espressos and cappuchinos. (Lattes are too milked-down to serve as a reference point.) Don't hire them if they don't grok the basics.
 5) Get more involved in local communities. Peets puts on workshops that educate customers on great coffee drinks. That's a good model. Do the same.
 I need to get to a meeting now, but I'll add more later.
 
Be there now 
 Great lunch talk going on right now (12:45pm EST) at the Berkman Center. Matthew Pearl gives the literary vision of copyright. Copyright was drawn around a mess. Kipling, Poe, Twain, Cooper, Whitman, Dickens... Very interesting stuff. Here's where to find the webcast.
 [Later...] It's over now. Click here to find the recorded version once it goes up.
 
Busyness 
 Got home Sunday afternoon and, as usual, Santa Barbara had nicer weather than everything else I saw under airplanes in three thousand miles that stretched from Boston to San Francisco before arriving at SBA, one of the nicest little airports (with one big runway) in the country.
 We had an Oscar party at our house on Sunday night. Ellen DeGeneres was an outstanding host — better than any since Billy Crystal, I believe, and maybe better than him too. The results were mostly predictable, but we still had fun. The only downer was having to watch a low-def show on our high-def Sony flat screen. The only ABC source we could get was our local affiliate, KEYT/3, which radiates from a mountain we can't see from here, so the over-the-air signal sucks. But we do get it via satellite over Dish Network, so it ironically makes a 50,000 mile trip from the station studios, which we can see across town from our house. KEYT also isn't running hi-def on its assigned UHF channel (27) yet anyway. And we can't get HD from Los Angeles either (too far away, too many hills and mountains on the signal path), so the only high-def ABC station we can get "normally" is KGTV from San Diego. It comes in about half the time, and we didn't luck out on Sunday night.
 Early on, the Dish receiver also crashed. It does suck that digital satellite and cable TV systems are all closed. With Dish, all I can get is a Dish-built and -branded receiver/PVR. I got the top one, but it's still slow to respond to the remote, has a moderatly clunky UI (meaning it's not opaque and is mostly usable) and crashes often. The only consolation is suspecting that the alternatives from the cable company and DirecTV are worse. (Last I checked they were, but at this point I don't know.)
 Anyway, yesterday was all errands and catching up with family business. I'll be back in the saddle today.

discuss

Joe Berkemeier - Re: Tuesday, February 27, 2007  blueArrow
2/27/2007; 9:33:32 PM (reads: 779, responses: 0)
Doc:

We love our DirecTV receivers with the TiVo software. Of course, the latest ones are closed (until the hackers figure it out, which I trust they will) but the older ones are much more open ... mine's running the latest TiVo software (intended for standalone boxes), I can schedule recordings from any web browser via gotomydvr.com, and I can even use TiVoTool (tivotool.com) to automatically download/transcode shows onto a video iPod.

discuss

Ric - Re: Tuesday, February 27, 2007  blueArrow
2/28/2007; 1:56:10 PM (reads: 784, responses: 0)
Where I live (Adelaide, Australia) Starbucks struggles - we have had three generations of Italian espresso spoil us for good coffee. Melbourne also has a great history of good Italian cafes as well - Starbucks just doesn't cut it (talking of McDonalds - even the McCafes here do a better job of coffee than SB!)

discuss

CZ - Re: Tuesday, February 27, 2007  blueArrow
2/28/2007; 10:22:08 PM (reads: 1274, responses: 0)
Doc, I couldn't resist the bait. Your swipe at Verizon -- the company not anyone personally -- begged for a response at Verizon's PolicyBlog.

I hope it's recieved in the spirit with which it was intended, which you can infer (we are afterall a NY company) from the headline, "We got your soul right here!"

http://policyblog.verizon.com/policyblog/blogs/policyblog/czblogger1/239/we-got-your-soul-right-here-.aspx

CZ w/Verizon

discuss




Copyright 2009 The Doc Searls Weblog

Membership : Join Now : Login

Create your own Manila site in minutes. Everyone's doing it!

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Blogroll

 
Search archives

Santa Barbarians
Edhat
SB Independent
SB Newsroom
Kevin Barron
Blogabarbara
Craig Smith
SB*Free Press
Joe Andieu
Patrick Gregston
John Quiimby
Das Williams' dad
Katy Pearce
Taymar Pixley
Lisa Gates
Cookie Jill

Everybody else
Spot-on
RageBoy
MysticBourgeoisie
David Weinberger
Miscellaneous
Dave
Berkman
John Palfrey
IT Garage
Bret Fausett
Susan Crawford
Bruce Sterling
Steve Lewis/Bubkes
Hak Pak Sak
Brad Kava
Brad Templeton
Sheila Lennon
Don Marti
Steve Urquhart
Wes Felter
Brad DeLong
Tom Evslin
Brian Oberkirch
Dean Landsman
Hugh MacLeod
LAist
Jeremy Ruston
Geoff Jones
Vaspers the Grate
Sig Rinde
Chris Albritton
Ronni Bennett
Thomas Hawk
Kevin Bedell
Howard
Bryan
Deep Fun
BoingBoing
edhat
Terry Heaton
Jay Rosen
Kim Cameron
George Lakoff
Scott Rosenberg
Larry Lessig
Jim Thompson
Jeff Jarvis
David Isenberg
Stephen Johnson
Tim Oren
Geoff Moore
Rex Hammock
This is Broken
Max Sawicky
Stuart Hughes
Dave Pentecost
John Perry Barlow
Mary Hodder
Dan Gillmor
Steve Gillmor
Dean Landsman
John Stodder
Seth Finkelstein
Renee Blodgett
misbehaving.net
Ruby Sinreich
Ed Cone
Julie Leung
Ted Leung
Ken Coar
Flemming Funch
Mike Sanders
Marc Canter
Joi Ito
Ethan Zuckerman
Doug Kaye
Jon Lebkowski
Judith Meskill
Allen Searls
Esther Dyson
Christopher Lydon
Russell Beattie
Tim Bray
Brian Millar
Mark Pilgrim
Michael Hall
Backup Brain
Frankston, Reed
Britt Blaser
Brent Simmons
Loic Le Meur
Leslie Winer
Mike Taht
Eric Raymond
Volokh Conspiracy
Steven Levy
Lisa Rein
Skywave
Epeus' epigone
Glenn Reynolds
James Taranto
Frank Paynter
Ross Mayfield
Dana Blankenhorn
Ken Bereskin/Panther
Daily Wireless
Filchyboy
OxBlog
Bryan Field-Elliot
Rajesh Jain
Oliver Willis
Gary Turner
Michael O'Connor Clarke
Jennifer Balderama
Kevin Werbach
Amy Wohl
Phil Windley
Fulcrum
Real Joe
Greater Democracy
Mitch Ratcliffe /biz
Mitch Ratcliffe/soc
Wayne Robins
VivaCapitalism
Cut on the bias
Howard Greenstein
The Poor Man
Mickey Kaus
Dave Sifry
Buzz Bruggeman
Ben Hammersley
Matt Jones
Paul Andrews
John Robb
Schoolblog
Tom Shugart
Matt Welch
Blur Circle
Denise Howell
JY
BlackHoleBrain
Chris Pirillo
Marek
Tony Pierce
Chris Nolan's
Spot On

Wil Wheaton
Meg
Brian Linse
Dan Pink
Dawn Olsen
Craig
Yoz
The Head Lemur
Ev
Jeremy Zawodny
Susan Kitchens
K5
Anu Gupta
Jonathon
Fishrush
Dave Ely
Euan Semple
Eric Norlin
Paul Boutin
James Lileks
David Williams
Mary Wehmeier
Bruner Blog
Halley Suitt
Webword
Ann Salisbury
Om Malik
Moxie
J's Notes
Meesh
NUblog
TBTF
Cam
Seth Finkelstein
Tom Matrullo
Chip Hoagland
Deborah
Fortboise
J.D. Lasica
Photodude
Phil Wolff
Andre Durand
Eric Hansen
Mike McBride
Jeneane Sessum
Chris Nolan
Gonzo Engaged
Michael Mussington
UseTheSource
Wes
Adam
Sam Ruby
Miguel
Frank Field
Rebecca Blood
Joshua Allen
Cluetrain
JOHO
EGR
Searls site
Scoble
AKMA
Kottke
Tomalak's Realm
Tim O'Reilly
Mitch Kapor
Bill Quick
Dan Bricklin
Lou Josephs
Alan Reiter
N.Z. Bear
Todd Morman
Zeldman
Glenn
Joshua
Rex Hammock
Matthew Thomas
Brian Dear
Baylink
Burningbird