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Three Deaths of a Media Icon
April 1st, 2007
Last week it was announced that Life magazine would cease publication, again. This is the third death of the magazine since it was founded in 1936. Life was a weekly from 1936 to 1972, when it first stopped publication. It was revived as a monthly in 1978 but then shut down again in 2000. It was resurrected as a newspaper insert in 2004 but never really took hold in that iteration which was an incredibly misguided strategy to begin with.
Life was, simply put, the greatest showcase of quality and historically important photographs in the middle part …
This week at the Consumer Electronics Show there are hundreds of companies touting new gadgets that are “revolutionary†“innovative†“at the cutting edge†and “totally coolâ€. I will leave the descriptions of all these to the mainstream media as they already excessively cover this convention. Instead I will give you some view on the larger trends that are clear.
Connectivity
We are rapidly moving to total connectedness. Whether you are in the office, in the home, on the road, or anywhere in the world you can be connected to information, data and billions of people. Bill Gates spoke of the fact that …
Technology Advances, Privacy Declines
December 15th, 2006
One of the trade offs we seem to have accepted during the past 20 years is a loss of privacy. None of us say we approve of that, but we have embraced technology in such a way that a diminished sense of privacy has occurred. The portability of storage and computing, as discussed on this blog in earlier posts, is a major reason. The easier small storage devices and laptops are to carry, the higher probability of theft.
It was revealed the other day that a laptop, with personnel records for 382,000 Boeing employees was …
The Midterm Elections Close One Door and Open Another
November 10th, 2006
The mid-term election was certainly a shining example of Democracy in all its imperfect beauty. The will of the people was clearly apparent. A President and his war were clearly rejected. The American political conversation moved back to the middle. The founding fathers vision of a government of checks and balances has been taken up by the electorate. Change, discourse, consensus, compromise, bi-partisanship and a clear desire to chart a new course was the message of the electorate.
It feels like a door on a time and mind set has closed and a new one has opened. The six years since …