You are viewing an old revision of this post, from August 17, 2009 @ 07:17:11. See below for differences between this version and the current revision.
Say Everything is getting around. Here’s some links to recent coverage and related stuff:
My two favorite speaking gigs about the book are now both online. Fora.tv was there at the Hillside Club in Berkeley a couple of weeks ago. Here’s the video, in which you can, among other things, hear my “Top Ten Myths About Blogging”:
Also online now isa slightly different version of the same talk, which I gave at Microsoft Research earlier in July. Microsoft does a neat trick with timing the video and the presentation slides — but, warning, it will only work in IE.
Todd Bishop of Seattle’s TechFlash did a nice in-depth Q&A with me:
Q: What have blogs meant in the evolution of the Internet?
Rosenberg: I identify blogging as the first mass experience of having a read-write web or a two-way web or a user-generated web – all these terms mean the same thing. They mean a web that we create ourselves. 1994, 1995 was when people first saw browsers and got excited, and it took a good five, seven, eight years from that point for blogs to show people, this is what that vision is about – this is what it looks like when anyone can contribute..
Other Q&As are at Time.com, by Dan Fletcher. (But, hey, Time, what’s with the little red links every couple of paragraphs? Pretty crude.) And over at the NewsHour’s Art Beat blog, by Chris Amico. Also in Reason, by Jesse Walker:
Reason: Of the ’90s pioneers you write about in the first section of the book, are there any that you feel haven’t really gotten their due?
Rosenberg: In a way, that whole era is unjustly forgotten. The tech industry and indeed the online world have very little memory of history. One of my purposes in writing the book was to get it down while it’s still fresh in my mind, everyone’s still around to interview, and the pages can still be hauled out of the Internet Archive.
The Web moves really quickly, and we’ve had several generations of excitement. Today we have Twitter and Facebook and all of that, and people are having experiences in which they feel that they’re doing things for the first time. But nearly all of these experiences are things that people went through in the ’90s or the early part of the 2000s, whether it was revealing too much of your life and getting in trouble, or dreaming of some sort of utopia where we can all express ourselves and never get into fights. Telling those stories just seemed important.
On the review front, we’ve been in Business Week (“Gracefully written and well researched, Say Everything captures the drama of blogging’s rapid-fire rise”), the Seattle Times, the Christian Science Monitor and the Wall St. Journal.
Then there is Andrew Keen’s, in the Barnes and Noble Review:
Rosenberg criticizes mogul Barry Diller for suggesting that talent remains the one scarcity in today’s media. But this book is a glitteringly subversive argument against Rosenberg’s own thesis. It’s a beautifully written and meticulously fair narrative about the past, present, and future of the blog. Only somebody with Rosenberg’s incomparable ability could have written Say Everything. We are lucky to have his unique talent.
My point about Diller, of course, was never meant to suggest that talent is or has become widespread or universal. Rather, I took issue with the media exec’s smug attitude that the old world he inhabits already does a thorough job of locating and rewarding talent. But, er, I’d be foolish to argue too strenuously here!
I’m also grateful to all the bloggers who’ve posted about the book so far, including, but certainly not limited to, J.D. Lasica, Peter Merholz, Rafe Colburn, Paul Kedrosky (“funny, authoritative, full of great-great stories and anecdotes, and admirably even-handed”), Rogers Cadenhead, Ed Cone, Marylene Delbourg-Delphis, John McDaid, and Scott Carpenter (“An amazing job… It is a real joy to find a book like this one, where I can fall under its spell as I increasingly trust the author to tell a good tale”).
Post Revisions:
- August 17, 2009 @ 07:18:47 [Current Revision] by Scott Rosenberg
- August 17, 2009 @ 07:17:11 by Scott Rosenberg
Changes:
August 17, 2009 @ 07:17:11 | Current Revision | ||
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Unchanged: <i>Say Everything</i> is getting around. Here's some links to recent coverage and related stuff: | Unchanged: <i>Say Everything</i> is getting around. Here's some links to recent coverage and related stuff: | ||
Unchanged: My two favorite speaking gigs about the book are now both online. <a href="http:// fora.tv/2009/ 07/29/Scott_ Rosenberg_Say_Everything_ How_Blogging_ Began">Fora.tv was there at the Hillside Club in Berkeley</a> a couple of weeks ago. Here's the video, in which you can, among other things, hear my "Top Ten Myths About Blogging": | Unchanged: My two favorite speaking gigs about the book are now both online. <a href="http:// fora.tv/2009/ 07/29/Scott_ Rosenberg_Say_Everything_ How_Blogging_ Began">Fora.tv was there at the Hillside Club in Berkeley</a> a couple of weeks ago. Here's the video, in which you can, among other things, hear my "Top Ten Myths About Blogging": | ||
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Deleted: Also online now is<a href="http:// www.researchchannel.org/prog/ displayevent.aspx?rID= 29936&fID=6381">a slightly different version of the same talk, which I gave at Microsoft Research</a> earlier in July. Microsoft does a neat trick with timing the video and the presentation slides -- but, warning, it will only work in IE. | Added: Also online now is <a href="http:// www.researchchannel.org/prog/ displayevent.aspx?rID= 29936&fID=6381">a slightly different version of the same talk, which I gave at Microsoft Research</a> earlier in July. Microsoft does a neat trick with timing the video and the presentation slides -- but, warning, it will only work in IE. | ||
Unchanged: Todd Bishop of Seattle's TechFlash did <a href="http:// www.techflash.com/ QA_Documenting_ the_past_present_and_future_ of_blogs_52213217.html">a nice in-depth Q&A with me:</a> | Unchanged: Todd Bishop of Seattle's TechFlash did <a href="http:// www.techflash.com/ QA_Documenting_ the_past_present_and_future_ of_blogs_52213217.html">a nice in-depth Q&A with me:</a> | ||
Unchanged: <blockquote>Q: What have blogs meant in the evolution of the Internet? | Unchanged: <blockquote>Q: What have blogs meant in the evolution of the Internet? | ||
Unchanged: Rosenberg: I identify blogging as the first mass experience of having a read-write web or a two-way web or a user-generated web – all these terms mean the same thing. They mean a web that we create ourselves. 1994, 1995 was when people first saw browsers and got excited, and it took a good five, seven, eight years from that point for blogs to show people, this is what that vision is about – this is what it looks like when anyone can contribute.. </blockquote> | Unchanged: Rosenberg: I identify blogging as the first mass experience of having a read-write web or a two-way web or a user-generated web – all these terms mean the same thing. They mean a web that we create ourselves. 1994, 1995 was when people first saw browsers and got excited, and it took a good five, seven, eight years from that point for blogs to show people, this is what that vision is about – this is what it looks like when anyone can contribute.. </blockquote> | ||
Unchanged: Other Q&As are at <a href="http:// www.time.com/ time/business/ article/0,8599,1912249,00.html" >Time.com,</a> by Dan Fletcher. (But, hey, Time, what's with the little red links every couple of paragraphs? Pretty crude.) And over <a href="http:// www.pbs.org/newshour/art/ blog/2009/08/ conversation- writer-scott- rosenberg.html">at the NewsHour's Art Beat blog, by Chris Amico</a>. Also <a href="http:// reason.com/news/ show/134784.html">in Reason, by Jesse Walker</a>: | Unchanged: Other Q&As are at <a href="http:// www.time.com/ time/business/ article/0,8599,1912249,00.html" >Time.com,</a> by Dan Fletcher. (But, hey, Time, what's with the little red links every couple of paragraphs? Pretty crude.) And over <a href="http:// www.pbs.org/newshour/art/ blog/2009/08/ conversation- writer-scott- rosenberg.html">at the NewsHour's Art Beat blog, by Chris Amico</a>. Also <a href="http:// reason.com/news/ show/134784.html">in Reason, by Jesse Walker</a>: | ||
Unchanged: <blockquote>Reason: Of the '90s pioneers you write about in the first section of the book, are there any that you feel haven't really gotten their due? | Unchanged: <blockquote>Reason: Of the '90s pioneers you write about in the first section of the book, are there any that you feel haven't really gotten their due? | ||
Unchanged: Rosenberg: In a way, that whole era is unjustly forgotten. The tech industry and indeed the online world have very little memory of history. One of my purposes in writing the book was to get it down while it's still fresh in my mind, everyone's still around to interview, and the pages can still be hauled out of the Internet Archive. | Unchanged: Rosenberg: In a way, that whole era is unjustly forgotten. The tech industry and indeed the online world have very little memory of history. One of my purposes in writing the book was to get it down while it's still fresh in my mind, everyone's still around to interview, and the pages can still be hauled out of the Internet Archive. | ||
Unchanged: The Web moves really quickly, and we've had several generations of excitement. Today we have Twitter and Facebook and all of that, and people are having experiences in which they feel that they're doing things for the first time. But nearly all of these experiences are things that people went through in the '90s or the early part of the 2000s, whether it was revealing too much of your life and getting in trouble, or dreaming of some sort of utopia where we can all express ourselves and never get into fights. Telling those stories just seemed important.</blockquote> | Unchanged: The Web moves really quickly, and we've had several generations of excitement. Today we have Twitter and Facebook and all of that, and people are having experiences in which they feel that they're doing things for the first time. But nearly all of these experiences are things that people went through in the '90s or the early part of the 2000s, whether it was revealing too much of your life and getting in trouble, or dreaming of some sort of utopia where we can all express ourselves and never get into fights. Telling those stories just seemed important.</blockquote> | ||
Unchanged: On the review front, we've been in <a href="http:// www.businessweek.com/magazine/ content/09_30/ b4140074545626.htm?chan= magazine+channel_business+ views">Business Week</a> ("Gracefully written and well researched, Say Everything captures the drama of blogging's rapid-fire rise"), <a href="http:// seattletimes.nwsource.com/ html/books/2009484865_ br17blog.html">the Seattle Times</a>, the <a href="http:// features.csmonitor.com/books/ 2009/08/10/say- everything/">Christian Science Monitor</a> and <a href="http:// online.wsj.com/ article/SB10001424052970203609204574312243528286998.html">the Wall St. Journal</a>. | Unchanged: On the review front, we've been in <a href="http:// www.businessweek.com/magazine/ content/09_30/ b4140074545626.htm?chan= magazine+channel_business+ views">Business Week</a> ("Gracefully written and well researched, Say Everything captures the drama of blogging's rapid-fire rise"), <a href="http:// seattletimes.nwsource.com/ html/books/2009484865_ br17blog.html">the Seattle Times</a>, the <a href="http:// features.csmonitor.com/books/ 2009/08/10/say- everything/">Christian Science Monitor</a> and <a href="http:// online.wsj.com/ article/SB10001424052970203609204574312243528286998.html">the Wall St. Journal</a>. | ||
Deleted: Then there is <a href="http:// www.barnesandnoble.com/bn- review/spotlight.asp?PID= 29245&cds2Pid= 22560&linkid= 1437763">Andrew Keen's, in the Barnes and Noble Review:</a> | Added: Then there is <a href="http:// www.barnesandnoble.com/bn- review/spotlight.asp?PID= 29245&cds2Pid= 22560&linkid= 1437763">Andrew Keen's review, in the Barnes and Noble Review:</a> | ||
Unchanged: <blockquote>Rosenberg criticizes mogul Barry Diller for suggesting that talent remains the one scarcity in today's media. But this book is a glitteringly subversive argument against Rosenberg's own thesis. It's a beautifully written and meticulously fair narrative about the past, present, and future of the blog. Only somebody with Rosenberg's incomparable ability could have written Say Everything. We are lucky to have his unique talent. </blockquote> | Unchanged: <blockquote>Rosenberg criticizes mogul Barry Diller for suggesting that talent remains the one scarcity in today's media. But this book is a glitteringly subversive argument against Rosenberg's own thesis. It's a beautifully written and meticulously fair narrative about the past, present, and future of the blog. Only somebody with Rosenberg's incomparable ability could have written Say Everything. We are lucky to have his unique talent. </blockquote> | ||
Unchanged: My point about Diller, of course, was never meant to suggest that talent is or has become widespread or universal. Rather, I took issue with the media exec's smug attitude that the old world he inhabits already does a thorough job of locating and rewarding talent. But, er, I'd be foolish to argue too strenuously here! | Unchanged: My point about Diller, of course, was never meant to suggest that talent is or has become widespread or universal. Rather, I took issue with the media exec's smug attitude that the old world he inhabits already does a thorough job of locating and rewarding talent. But, er, I'd be foolish to argue too strenuously here! | ||
Unchanged: I'm also grateful to all the bloggers who've posted about the book so far, including, but certainly not limited to, <a href="http:// www.socialmedia.biz/2009/ 08/06/7-questions-for-the- author-of-say- everything/">J.D. Lasica</a>, <a href="http:// www.peterme.com/ ?p=761">Peter Merholz</a>, <a href="http:// rc3.org/2009/ 06/23/notes- on-say-everything/ #comments">Rafe Colburn</a>, <a href="http:// paul.kedrosky.com/archives/ 2009/06/say_everything.html">Paul Kedrosky</a> ("funny, authoritative, full of great-great stories and anecdotes, and admirably even-handed"), <a href="http:// workbench.cadenhead.org/news/ 3547/scott-rosenbergs-say- everything-covers">Rogers Cadenhead</a>,<a href="http:// edcone.typepad.com/wordup/ 2009/07/say-everything.html"> Ed Cone</a>, <a href="http:// delbourg-delphis.com/2009/ 07/say-everything- how-blogging- began-what-its- becoming-and- why-it-matters/">Marylene Delbourg-Delphis</a>, <a href="http:// www.torvex.com/ jmcdaid/node/1075">John McDaid</a>, and <a href="http:// www.movingtofreedom.org/2009/ 07/26/say-everything-by-scott- rosenberg/">Scott Carpenter</a> ("An amazing job... It is a real joy to find a book like this one, where I can fall under its spell as I increasingly trust the author to tell a good tale"). | Unchanged: I'm also grateful to all the bloggers who've posted about the book so far, including, but certainly not limited to, <a href="http:// www.socialmedia.biz/2009/ 08/06/7-questions-for-the- author-of-say- everything/">J.D. Lasica</a>, <a href="http:// www.peterme.com/ ?p=761">Peter Merholz</a>, <a href="http:// rc3.org/2009/ 06/23/notes- on-say-everything/ #comments">Rafe Colburn</a>, <a href="http:// paul.kedrosky.com/archives/ 2009/06/say_everything.html">Paul Kedrosky</a> ("funny, authoritative, full of great-great stories and anecdotes, and admirably even-handed"), <a href="http:// workbench.cadenhead.org/news/ 3547/scott-rosenbergs-say- everything-covers">Rogers Cadenhead</a>,<a href="http:// edcone.typepad.com/wordup/ 2009/07/say-everything.html"> Ed Cone</a>, <a href="http:// delbourg-delphis.com/2009/ 07/say-everything- how-blogging- began-what-its- becoming-and- why-it-matters/">Marylene Delbourg-Delphis</a>, <a href="http:// www.torvex.com/ jmcdaid/node/1075">John McDaid</a>, and <a href="http:// www.movingtofreedom.org/2009/ 07/26/say-everything-by-scott- rosenberg/">Scott Carpenter</a> ("An amazing job... It is a real joy to find a book like this one, where I can fall under its spell as I increasingly trust the author to tell a good tale"). |
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