Year: 2005

  • The heard word

    These days it’s old news to say that marketing is a conversation, and that companies who ignore the blogosphere do so at their peril. (See Jarvis, Jeff for more.) Along with several other co-workers at FeedBurner, I’ve made monitoring the blogosphere part of my routine, thanks largely to services like Technorati. By setting up saved…

  • Giving gVisit a try

    gVisit.com is quite cool: insert a line of javascript in your website HTML, and it’ll spit out a Google mash-up of your website traffic against a map of the world. Here’s mine. Neat!

  • Favorite new blog

    I’ve been following the Long or Short? blog for a few months now, and it’s absolutely hysterical.

  • ProgressNow gets some ink

    My friend Bobby Clark gets some nice press in today’s Washington Post. Bobby’s the executive director at ProgressNow, whose website is geared towards organizing activists at the state and local level. This is exactly the kind of thing that is needed at a state level. Uptake has been slight so far, but I think they’re…

  • Let the bidding begin…

    According to Tristan Louis’s great analysis of the AOL acquisition of Weblogs, Inc., each inbound link at Technorati is worth around $564. Which means that my blog is worth around $150,000. Send your offers to rick at rklau.com. Heh. Update: Technorati just tweaked its index, and now says there are 413 inbound links, which means…

  • Interview on PC Talk

    A couple weeks ago I spent an hour in a wide-ranging interview about RSS, podcasting, advertising, and a whole bunch of other things related to FeedBurner. The interview, which airs nationally on Rich Levin’s PC Talk Radio program, is available online here.

  • WeMedia — We Market

    Rich Skrenta talks about how they launched Topix with one IM to my buddy Mike Masnick at TechDirt, Mike blogged it, and from there it launched the company. Gave the company immediate credibility from subsequent Google searches once journalists got pitched, then wanted to do due diligence before deciding to write about the company. John…

  • WeMedia — We Invest

    Susan Mernit asks why the investing and acquisitions are going to tools and platforms and not content/media. Rick Ducey says that the infrastructure changes the dynamics of how people participate, how content gets contributed. The platform drives the business model. Paul Gionocchio points out that the newspapers are investing in the new media plays, in…

  • WeMedia — Al Gore

    Al’s giving a fiery talk about how broken the marketplace of ideas is. I’ll leave the live-blogging to others (I’ll compile links shortly), but it’s an intriguing topic — especially considering the audience. I wonder how many times Jon Stewart is going to be mentioned today: we’re up to four times in the first two…

  • Morph – live blogging WeMedia

    John Burke is live blogging the sessions right next to me on Morph, one of the Media Center’s blogs. He’s much better at taking notes than I am. Guess that’s why he’s at the AP and I’m not. Update: Andy Carvin is also doing a great job on his blog taking notes on the sessions.