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Monday at 5:10 pm - Link
Louis Gray doesn't have to read. He knows. - Cyndy
I so knew you were going to say that, Cyndy - Louis Gray
And...well, there's no need to really type this, is there? - Ontario Emperor
Louis feeds friend feed's friends - Alan Wilensky via twhirl
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Alan Wilensky posted a message on Twitter
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Alan Wilensky commented on a blog post on Disqus
Monday at 9:56 am - Link
"It sounds an awful lot like Engine Yard's Heroku for Ruby on Rails" - Alan Wilensky
Tumblr
Fred Wilson posted an item on Tumblr
Sunday at 1:13 am - Link
I don't mean to beat a dead horse - but the anyone who rides the French TGV comes back to the USA and says, "why can't we do that?" A high speed train that would allow workday commuting between Boston and NYC - Alan Wilensky via twhirl
alan, WHY can't we do that? your thinking on that please? - gregory lent
Federal Govt. subsidizes Air traffic systems and Highways, but only a platry sum for passenger rail, which does not extend to the right of ways. Commiting to a natuional High Speed rail infrastructure would be a huge economic boon, and would create more opportunities for the workforce. This could be a long article, I amy blog it. - Alan Wilensky via Alert Thingy
please do .. railways haven't paid for themselves in cheap gas times, freight went by truck? but now ... what looks like a problem, "high" oil prices, is maybe a boon for creating better alternatives ... pray for 300 bucks a barrel ... :-) - gregory lent
Not sure how much subsidy Eurostar ended up getting but it's definately the way to get to/from London/Paris and London/Brussels - Andy Davies
Twitter
Amy Guth posted a message on Twitter
FriendFeed
Marc Canter posted a link
July 15 at 4:57 pm - Link
Marc Canter, the last honest man in social media - Alan Wilensky via twhirl
Implying everyone else is dishonest? tsk tsk - Brian Sullivan
neat REBUTTAL Brain :)- - Peter Dawson
There are many charlatans and snake oil hawkers of social media - Canter is not among them.. - Alan Wilensky
marc is one of the true greats and the father of multimedia... and he owes me a lunch at kokkari! ;-) - .LAG
I was there in the early 90s, and I went to Macromedia to pitch him - boy can he yell. I was rebuffed. Always respected the man. A giant. - Alan Wilensky
Flickr
Fred Wilson published photos on Flickr
A Building Next To The Promenade
The Promenade Plantee From The Street Below
Flowers In The Promenade Plantee
Promenade Plantee and the Surrounding Buildings
The Promenade And The Street Below
July 11 at 7:46 am - Link
This is all making me miss France terribly. Enjoy! - Kate Brodock via twhirl
nice! is this from the n95? do you still have one? - Zach Landes
i took these with my bberry curve. i lost my n95 the second day in europe. here a link to a post about the promenade plantee where i took these photos along with an animoto video http://avc.blogs.com/a_vc/2008... - Fred Wilson
Those are probably the nicest shots I've seen taken on a Curve. - Kevin Bondelli
i get great shots on my curve. everything on my flickr account is from a curve. it just doesn't work well in low light or long distances. - Fred Wilson
Go ride the TGV, it's France's best post WWII achievement. - Alan Wilensky
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Alan Wilensky commented on a blog post on Disqus
July 12 at 5:27 am - Link
"You've made it! When people parody, it means you broke through. I mean, the twins were big news (and they should grow up, be healthy, and wise, and etc.) but this is big. You should be feeling lucky!" - Alan Wilensky
FriendFeed
Social Media: David Cohn posted a link
July 11 at 9:05 pm - Link
You got that one on the nose - there is very little 'social' about it. It's over sold, overworked, and in all its incarnations, underdelivers - Alan Wilensky via Alert Thingy
I prefer the term "Vote for Obama or you are Blocked" media... welcome to the Blue State Hippie Farm where one offense becomes a Gated Community. Welcome to Scoble's private feed of tyranny. - Noah David Simon
FriendFeed. :-) - Robert Scoble
Heh I was pretty distasteful of it 6 months ago - (http://www.search-engine-war.c...) - maybe it just needs to be called some thing else? Communal Intelligence? Professional Internet Stalking? Gregarious Expression? - HollowMarkeD
FriendFeed FTW! - Susan Beebe
I'm tired of the phrase and the debate. - David Weiner
What is the other media, unsocial? - Stephan Miller via twhirl
+1 David Weiner - Susan Beebe
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Alan Wilensky commented on a blog post on Disqus
July 9 at 7:33 am - Link
"Who's the Irish guy that founded it with Mike Arrogant? Teare, yeah, Kieth Teare. Did you ever read JP Donleavey? That guy Teare was like a character tight out of, "The Destiny of Darcy Dancer, Gentleman". A real Irish rogue. Ooops, another racial gaffe." - Alan Wilensky
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Alan Wilensky commented on a blog post on Disqus
July 9 at 7:28 am - Link
"Critiquing Feldman's parody takes a kind of subtlety that is in short supply. I watched it - typical Feldman. I knew he would catch shit for it. I never in my wildest dreams that you, Rizz, would catch hell for the analysis. He is a really bright guy, and, like Lenny Bruce, he was want to push the envelope. Back in the day, that envelope got stretched in every which direction. Today, you can't even open it. A guy at the FT R lab where i was on contract used to complain about the, 'stupid Indians running the place" - I reminded him that we were Jewish and wouldn't take too kindly to the Indian guys saying, "Who do these Jewboys think they are, smarter than us". It all got said, until I broke the ice with all of us present; I said to the Indian guys, "Do you really think that you Indian guys are smarter than the Jews? Come on." Mind you, they have a great, dry sense of humor. My boss said, "Yeah...but if we all worked together, the Indians and the Jews, we could take over the world"." - Alan Wilensky
FriendFeed
Social Media: Ben Parr posted a message
July 5 at 7:49 pm - Link
I am already spending way more time in Twitter and FF than on Facebook, and I suspect this trend will continue, especially if every time I log into Facebook I have to ignore these stupid requests... - Marc Dierens
Ben it is really hard to say, but Face Book is a walled garden! In the long run walls cave in and a community is destroyed! Here on FF we may disagree, fight, even raise hell, but we come to turns with each other and respect each other! It is all out in the open, for everyone to see! - Igor The Troll
Marc, i share the same pattern with you. Twitter, FF and Plurk are where i'm spending most of my time on, rather than Facebook. Many of my friends lost interests in facebook as well. but some of them still love to stay long time there, as Facebook offer limited storage for photos. - Jansen Lu
Facebook has become overpolluted with viral applications. It's lost the KISS principle. I see it fading, as will MySpace. I see social networks being like nightclubs - they have a shelf life. - Craig Thomler
it will eventually plateau, as MySpace has, perhaps within the next 6 months. What I don't know is whether the decline will be slow as with MySpace, or quick. - Duncan Riley
Facebook has reached a plateau, at least as far as its relevance is concerned. It will be around for a good long time but I doubt it will be anywhere near as vibrant as it was 9 months ago. - Steve Spalding
Wow, we all seem to agree with each other! I like the Night Club metaphor, it is really right on spot here! - Igor The Troll
It will be one of many social networking providers, who are working with a standard (social) networking service of the internet, which grow up from the data portability initiative. - Sebastian Küpers
within 5 years, desired, acquired, faded, upbraided, reorged, deformed, non-performing, storm warning, gone. - Alan Wilensky via twhirl
I definitely think it will continue to grow & be bigger & better than Facebook. It's the social network I use most often (that's not including aggregators, microblogs, etc). - ChaCha Fance
it depends, most likely it will devolve into a mess like MySpace and a more usable site will open up. - Darren Daz Cox
I'm with Alan Wilensky ;) - john conroy
Facebook is old hat, tiresome crap trying to re-invent itself with new functionality which doesn't reach the user cuz of all the blinding spammy apps!! Prediction: FB will continue to grow (it IS mainstream now) and will loose luster like LinkedIn already has. - Susan Beebe
Facebook has acheived mass popularity....something that Twitter/Friendfeed etc only aspire to do. Annoying as it is Facebook will be modestly bigger in two years and be worth over $15 b unless, of course, the American economy crumbles entirely. - chantelle via twhirl
@Susan - LinkedIn lost its luster? Please explain. It just raised a billion and I have tons of people joining the network still. - Ben Parr
Ben: I have nearly 1,000 "connections" so obviously I know LinkedIn well; in fact, I am the founder of the FriendFeed Friends Group http://www.linkedin.com/e/gis/... so do respect the app. But did you notice that they have built a walled garden with zero integration with any other app? This is a stale socnet strategy, maybe just me but I think they need to open up their app, e.g. status updates would be so easy to update via twitter... hello?! - Susan Beebe
Ben, is there away to message all group members at one time? I am still lost on LinkedIn! - Igor The Troll
fade! please!!! *fg* - Dieter Schwarz
Facebook sucks - no great potential - Igor Poltavskiy
@Igor - One of LinkedIn's great weaknesses is its lack of features and search for Groups. I've heard from internal sources they're working on it, but they've got so much on their plate. But so far, no. I'd still like to message my 200,000 member Facebook group, but that still can't be done. - Ben Parr
I have concrete proof FB will fail: Former New Jersey Governor Jim McGreevey left the site after his posts on people's walls started showing up on gossip sites. If that's not a harbinger... - David Shankbone
David, there is something about the Internet you need to realize! Nothing is private, not even emails! - Igor The Troll
I wasn't the subject of that anecdote. - David Shankbone
Maybe God has smiled on you that day! ;-) Or you just got lucky! You seem to be just as popular as I am! - Igor The Troll
Bigger. Not public. - Hutch Carpenter
I think that's why he left. I think people are just going to have to own up to themselves more with social media, cameraphones, Twitter, e-mail, Gawker, etc. Mine as well just be honest about yourself lumps and all. It's freeing. - David Shankbone
Digg
Andrew Badera dugg a story on Digg
July 5 at 6:58 am - Link
Cause geeks often look at the world logically and listen to George Carlin. :-) - Robert Scoble
The gods don't scale. - Jack Carlson
side effect of asking lots of tough questions, you start to get some answers that make sense. - Nathan Eckenrode
As a fellow geek we better be sure we're right, because if we are wrong it's gonna be bad. - Blackopsmanners
Blackopsmanners: my idea of hell is being forced to sit next to Jesse Helms for eternity. Of course HIS idea of hell is probably sitting next to me. So, who is in hell? - Robert Scoble
Geeks are generally tech freaks and when you see item after item made by man changing the way your life is lived then it becomes pretty easy to accept that man invented god not the other way around. - Jeff Jones
Geeks are more educated and the more education a person has, the more likely they are to look at our world logically, and choose atheism. - Granteezy via fftogo
I think it has a lot to do with rarely humbling oneself enough to admit that they don't, "know it all" or "have all the answers". It's generally about humility, which geeks tend to have very little of. - Trevor Carpenter
I cannot disagree more Trevor. Atheists are the ones saying "we don't have all the answers". Deity based religions certainly claim to do so. - Jeff Jones
Trevor: Jeff is right. I used to be very religious. I found that most of the people who were religious were not humble at all and weren't able to look at the world without having any answers. Our minds are very strong pattern recognizers. It takes a lot of humility to turn off the pattern recognizer and just accept you don't have the answers. But, this is why I call myself an agnostic. I'm not certain there is not a God. Just like I'm not certain there is one, either. - Robert Scoble
To Jeff and Robert. I certainly can understand what you are saying. However, I separate out the religious from the genuine Christian. The majority of the "religious", including many who clam Christianity, are far from humble. They are generally far from God too. I would not say that those who are legitamately close to God claim to to know it all. In fact, they would say that God knows it all, and we can't know it all. My statement about geeks not being humble is more poking fun than anything else. - Trevor Carpenter
I'm a card-carrying member of a deity based religion as Jeff calls it. Christian is what I am and I certainly don't claim to have all the answers. In fact, I have very few. That's why I need/desire the deity. Right? Sadly, there is an unfortunate number of folks on both (many?) sides of this argument who give their own group a bad rap. I'm just trying to not be one of them. The way I see it, God is the one who created the patterns we're recognizing so I'll accept that He has the answers I need. - Lisa L. Seifert
Trevor: I was in a church of people all of whom considered themselves as "genuine Christian." Part of the problem is that religious people assume they really know what makes someone a "real believer." - Robert Scoble
Thank you, Lisa. - Trevor Carpenter
Lisa: the thing is, anyone who professes to "believe" has already put something in their pattern recognizer that simply isn't there. Or, have you really seen God? But I'm going to beg out of this. I learned in the 1990s that these conversations never convince anyone and just piss people off. So, "Hide" is earned, have fun. - Robert Scoble
Robert. Sure, I know what you're saying. No belief system is worth anything if it in fact doesn't claim to be the "right" way. Without taking this too far...I'm coming from a traditionally reformed, Bible believing worldview. All that to say, Lisa is right. Even those on my team have harmed your view of true Christianity. - Trevor Carpenter
just think of a computer software program that has a certain set of rules....if then statements, etc....then think of DNA and explain...then who set the rules? randomly appeared? - Pokai
You're welcome, Trevor. (For what?) Robert: I'm sad that you're hiding the conversation. Nobody's pissed off. (Yet??) And I'm certainly not reading that anyone is trying to convince anyone of anything. I'm simply seeing different opinions here. And I like that. As far as seeing God: not in the way I'm assuming you mean. But I see the God-Effect everywhere, not to be confused with the Scoble Effect. ;-) Ocean, Wind, my own body-muscles, bones, blood, organs, blah, blah, blah. Standard argument. :-) - Lisa L. Seifert
I'm with Scoble on this one, hide earned! - Granteezy
thanks lisa, I think we should whip Scoble into the posted 60 foot monster wave (by Mitchell Tsai) and see what happens to his belief system....then he can tell us what happened to George Carlin :) - Pokai
Because few deities are open source. - Craig Thomler
I am of the view that historically and currently that Established Religions are a cause of a lot of Evil in the world and that has always been a major switch off for me about any Church. - David W
pokai, i know you ended with a set of rhetorical questions but what i'm inferring from your tone is that you're drawing a tangent that can't be supported. no one necessarily had to set rules for DNA for them to assemble randomly based upon thermodynamic stability. and then for them to interact with other molecules... - Kambiz Kamrani
because they don't like the fact that there is something they cannot explain? or maybe because they don't like the fact that there is something that is (could be) controlling them? - Timo Zimmermann via twhirl
@ Robert, I think it's unfair to paint whole groups of people as one things or another: muslims, Christians, Jews, Atheists, Agnostics, et. al which is probably what bothers me most about these discussions. Not the facts of what's right or wrong, but rather the debate normally centers around painting a wide brush across an over-generalized groups of people. see "why are geeks often atheist?" I know a lot of smart people who believe a lot of different things ... - David Adewumi
I think the questions of humility/uncertainty vs. "we know whats best" views of religion can correspond well to the tech world...there are entrepreneurs looking for what has been the missing, the algebraic X, the unknown that hasnt been built yet or thought of (think of major advances like RSS or SNs a la twitter or friend feed...and then there was the aol way of thinking where they thought they could comprehend entirely the social aspects of the web in a closed platform...geek doesnt always = athiest - joshuabacker
One reason the I am turned off by religion is that each one tends to believe that their version is the only version. Some even to the point of professing to kill others that do not believe the way they do. There is very little tolerance of other points of view. Most Christian religions profess tolerance of others and I'm sure their are some groups that do practice this, but I find significant hypocrisy with most religious institutions between what they preach and how the really act. - Jeff P. Henderson
ok kambiz, interesting, but what makes the same genetic material become a frog, dog or human? - Pokai
@Pokai, Mutation. - Jeff P. Henderson
Lisa, I was simply thankful for your comments. They were spot on. - Trevor Carpenter
I really loved this part of the article:The absence of proof does not mean there is no proof at all; but it does give a strong reason to doubt if there is any. Geeks have conditioned themselves to think logically, just as the religious have been conditioned to replace logic with trust in what they are told. What can be extracted from this is that geeks are not atheists simply because they may know "more" but also because they choose to think differently (whether or not they think superiorly is a question for another debate). - Lisa L. Seifert
I agree david. I wonder why intelligence is their defense. - Pokai
pokai, Jeff nails it. but let me clarify one thing -- the same genetic material doesn't necessarily exist in a frog, dog, or human. a frog has a different genome (set of genes) from a dog and a human. these different genes arose through mutations during various biological processes like DNA replication, and gamete production. they are continually evolving by way of natural selection. the frog, dog, human, share a common vertebrate ancestor but they all have diverged from that point into separate species. - Kambiz Kamrani
Continued from previous post: I liked that part for the reminder to keep thinking. I don't ever want to be conditioned to think one thing only whether I'm wearing my Christian hat, my geek hat, my caretaker hat, etc. I don't think we can generalize either way. I agree with David - and with Jeff regarding hypocrisy. It's one reason I hesitate to enter into discussion of beliefs. I know I'm being lumped right now by some of you; but I'd rather try to state my own point of view than sit back and be lumped. - Lisa L. Seifert
I unhid this for a second just to see what direction it went in. I'm hiding again. Some things haven't changed in 10 years, I see. Sigh. See, I used to participate in every religious thread in Visual Basic Programmer's Journal's CompuServe forum (after moving them to that magazine's "OffRamp" which is where we moved stuff that went off topic). The conversations always degenerated just like this one has into calling the other side names. No one ever learns anything. So, Lisa, sorry. I'm getting older I guess - Robert Scoble
than you kamrani and jeff for your clarification, - Pokai
Bye, Robert... Does this mean you won't come to the parties I host at the Ritz once I move to HMB?? ;-) I'm sure I'll get the chance to discuss greater issues such as religion with you at some time when there will be no name-calling. :-) - Lisa L. Seifert
i think scoble just faked hiding, but he is still reading...funny how scoble made the first comment on this post... - Pokai
Oh, no. Do not doubt. Scoble is THE hider. :-) Eventually, he may look back, but he is the best of the hiders. I hide because he has inspired me to do so... Seriously. I always forget about it until he evangelizes it. Then I hide again. - Lisa L. Seifert
@Jeff "One reason the I am turned off by religion is that each one tends to believe that their version is the only version. Some even to the point of professing to kill others that do not believe the way they do." Now replace 'religion' with (culture, style of government, monetary system, nation, state, language, et. al) and you will see this is not an effective argument. See current war in Iraq/Afghanistan for an example. Is that really about religion? - David Adewumi
Up to this point, I can't find one person, on either side of the discussion calling anyone a name. Where are the name-callers? (excluding Lisa's, "Scoble is THE hider.") - Trevor Carpenter
This is a misconception - Alan Wilensky via twhirl
wow, I step away for a night, and look what I miss! - Andrew Badera
FWIW, I was born, christened, raised Roman Catholic. I was even an altar boy, but that was mostly due to the boredom I experienced, sitting in the pews. I don't claim to have all the answers -- I lean more towards labeling myself an agnost than atheist these days -- but I know, quite for certain, that organized religions don't have it any more right than I do. - Andrew Badera
Nobel physics Stephen Hawking: No need the God model - Igor Poltavskiy
Creators of religions (or any influential belief system) are interesting (perhaps as much for their pathologies as anything else). Followers of belief systems created by others are not interesting, at least in that aspect of their lives that is organized around a script that they didn't create. They are sleep walkers. - Sean McBride
First, not all deity-based religions claim to be the right and only way. In fact, Judaism is based on the idea that it is right for Jews and probably not right for anyone else. It's partially because of this sense of exclusivity that probably fuels Antisemitism. Also, when a lot of people say 'religion', they usually mean just Christianity because it's all they know. It's unfair to other religions to be so blindly grouped. - Akiva Moskovitz
I was raised in a Christian household and definitely see HUGE problems with Religion and the "Church" at large. In fact, I am so bothered, I stopped going to church as a result and am routinely offended by the all non-sense/crap espoused by religious groups and church organizations. I believe God exists. I have no unbelief in this regard as I have personally experienced some wonderful spiritual events (2 miracles in fact - 1 documented by dental x-rays). I see tons of fallacies with religion - very sad. - Susan Beebe
Akiva - ethnic nationalist ideologies -- particularly messianic ethnic nationalist ideologies -- are by definition exclusionary, polarizing and a trigger of violent conflict with ethnic outsiders. Universalist religions like Christianity, Islam and Buddhism are largely attempts to overcome the problems and limitations of ethnic nationalism. - Sean McBride
On my good days I'm an agnostic, my bad days an atheist. On the whole all religions try to describe the same thing, make sense of our world and how we should conduct ourselves. I remember being at my Grandmother's funeral (Catholic) and thinking that the words (return to Christ etc) were so comforting ... and it was then that I thought they were wrong. Those words are designed to be comforting and that was by human design IMO. Seek god in your own way and live accordingly - see Stranger in a Strange Land. - AJ Kohn
Where do you get those statistics that geeks are typically athiest? Faith takes courage and conviction. I am a Christian as are many of the riders I know. - Dave Ploch
Sean, last I checked, 'universalism' isn't achieved by oppression, forced conversions, or the outright murdering of people of differing beliefs. Furthermore, Buddhism shouldn't be grouped with Islam and Christianity because Buddhism isn't a proselytizing religion. In fact, I would say that Buddhism and Judaism are more universalist than Christianity and Islam for this very reason. They say, 'You do your thing and we'll do ours.' Not, 'You do our thing or we're coming after you.' - Akiva Moskovitz
Faith mentality: don't question me, don't challenge me, believe and do what I say. Hacker mentality: question everything, challenge everything. Guess which mindset produces the more interesting creative work. - Sean McBride
Akiva: Judaism (especially in its Zionist mode) is an ethnic nationalist ideology or cult organized around the interests of a particular ethnic group. Ethnic nationalism is the direct antithesis of universalism. Buddhism bears little meaningful resemblance to Judaism or religious Zionism. Christianity and Islam have committed many crimes over the ages, that is true. Aggressive fanaticism and intolerance seem to be central features of nearly all monotheistic/Abrahamic cults. - Sean McBride
I don't want to seem ignorant or prejudiced, but is Judaism not highly non-universalist? Laws against marrying non-Jews etc. - Alexander Carlill
Alexander, the best way I can put it is how a Rabbi once put it to me: 'It's better to be a righteous non-Jew than to be a non-righteous Jew.' In other words, Judaism prefers people to follow a different religion that is better suited to them rather than be forced to become Jewish. To me, that's more universal. Live and let live. - Akiva Moskovitz
Sean, and there it is. I'm ringing the bell. - Akiva Moskovitz
Alexander: Judaism is intensely ethnocentric at the core, but various currents in the Jewish tradition have tried to move in a more universalist direction -- Reform Judaism, Reconstructionist Judaism, secular Jewish movements (how about Einstein?), etc. Notice how much of the Old Testament revolves around wars between "Israel" and other ethnic/nationalist groups ("the nations") -- it's the dominant motif of much of the Bible. - Sean McBride
Akiva: I see. I'm going to stick with atheism for the foreseeable future, but I think I'm relatively righteous... Thanks for the info. - Alexander Carlill
Alexander, oops, yep. I should've written 'a different religion, agnosticism, or atheism.' I did not in any way mean to imply that only religious people can be righteous. The two, sadly, are sometimes mutually exclusive which is something Judaism seeks to avoid. - Akiva Moskovitz
Akiva -- to which branch of Judaism are you referring? Some factions are incredibly intolerant; others are the soul of tolerance. Some of Israel's chief rabbis have made public statements that are extremely intolerant towards various ethnic and religious groups (including towards other Jewish religious factions). One finds the same problems in the Christian and Muslims worlds -- fundamentalist voices of intolerance often drown out more reasonable voices. See, for instance, John Hagee on Roman Catholicism. - Sean McBride
Sean, how about not hijacking this post to yet again aggressively espouse your opinions on Judaism (and Israel)? - Akiva Moskovitz
Akiva -- has the discussion suddenly become too sensitive for you in some way? You sound like you'd like to censor it. Let me ask again: which branch of Judaism are you referring to here? Orthodox? Conservative? Reform? Reconstructionist? Seems like a perfectly reasonable question. Also, a great deal of Christian fundamentalism in America revolves around Israel, does it not? Bush reportedly started a disastrous war in Iraq largely because of his religious beliefs. Iran may be next. - Sean McBride
Sean, it's very clear that you have a bone to pick and you can chase me around FriendFeed until your Keds fall apart but I am not going to feed your hunger. Thus, reasonable or not, I am not answering your questions. You seem only to be interested in answers that can fuel your soapbox, anyway. If this makes you feel superior or victorious, that's fine. That's a delusion I will lose no sleep over. - Akiva Moskovitz
Akiva -- you haven't replied in a rational way to a single particular point I've raised here -- your responses have been emotional. And this is very typical behavior for religionists of all kinds -- they have difficulty handling a rational discussion about non-rational beliefs. Judaism is a very complex subject -- the tradition includes numerous competing and contradictory factions. Overgeneralizing about Judaism, Christianity and Islam is an intellectual error, in my opinion. - Sean McBride
Actually, my responses have been very rational. I'm just addressing your motives and not your points. You just can't seem to understand the fact that you are not entitled to someone's answers just because you ask them questions. - Akiva Moskovitz
Akiva -- you're addressing motives, and not the substantive points being addressed in this thread? That is not how reasonable people conduct rational discussions and debates. If you can't handle logical, factual and civil challenges to your beliefs, probably public discussion forums aren't a favorable medium for you. :) For others here, I will simply reiterate: there are several strains of Judaism, some extremely intolerant, some very tolerant. This is a fact known to any serious student of world religions. - Sean McBride
Ah, more smug responses with implied insults. Gotta love the Internet. - Akiva Moskovitz
Akiva -- a simple question: is Judaism a monolithic tradition (as you have implied), or is it a diverse and self-contradictory tradition? Do the ultra-Orthodox agree with Reform Jews? Do the ultra-Orthodox even agree with one another? (They do not.) No wonder geeks and hackers for the most part try to steer clear of religious squabbling and wars! -- it tends to be a real energy-waster. - Sean McBride
Akiva: I wasn't accusing you of implying anything, merely commenting on my own situation. So no need to apologise. - Alexander Carlill
Jack: but neither does twitter, and geeks love that. - Alexander Carlill
Twitter
Fred Wilson posted a message on Twitter
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Alan Wilensky commented on a blog post on Disqus
June 29 at 2:55 pm - Link
"oops, there I go again! Forget that I wrote that - selling mobile apps and systems to the service industry is a stupid idea, obviously. You can delete that comment." - Alan Wilensky
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Alan Wilensky commented on a blog post on Disqus
June 29 at 2:53 pm - Link
"I believe that there are sustainable, subscription-based mobile data businesses that can provide a rate of return greater than any portfolio based investment. These opportunities are all located in the professional services market for mobile work flow and work order management, and have been horribly under served by the big ERP companies, established mobile applications vendors, and the VC biz. There are millions of independent, service based businesses that need better mobile apps, and they are willing to pay their 25-50 / mo. in perpetuity to get these services. What a portfolio! For a relatively small investment in a few J2ME apps backed by a hosted cloud type back-end, you can be sitting pretty with 30k subscribers. Yet, this has been the hardest sell, to potential investors, that I have ever faced." - Alan Wilensky
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Alan Wilensky commented on a blog post on Disqus
June 29 at 1:56 pm - Link
"You, sir are the archetype of the former gentleman farmers who tended their fair properties in New England, and then served a few months as legislators in the nation's capital. Then, at the end of the legislative session, these fine men, taking nothing from the process but their sense of satisfaction in serving the public good, would return to tend their fields and lavish loving attention on their indentured. Some had offspring with the aforementioned, I surmise. Instead of a pastoral, agrarian patriot, Fred Wilson, you sow and reap great ideas and capital; lead us, oh brave stalwart, lead us all armed with hoe, rake, and weed-whacker, and we Yankees all from New England, a militia of VC hopefuls, will march down RT 95 to the nation's capital and create a new fund of trust stored up for our fellow citizens. The true equity in our cause being a new era of honest political service, the exit being an end to the bought and paid for politician." - Alan Wilensky
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Alan Wilensky commented on a blog post on Disqus
June 29 at 1:40 pm - Link
"What has the marked the essential stench of today's brand of politics? I would say that it has been the gradual creation of a professional political class, i.e., the family business, which includes a revolving door of legislators and their staffs instantly transiting into high level lobbying and fed contractor positions. The ability to wield influence has become a goal unto itself, thereby creating an attitude of expediency to get elected, no matter what the rhetoric must sound like. And also, to stay in office, to align all one's moves to preserve one's office, so that any courageous act to truly serve The People, at one's potential political disadvantage, is no longer palatable to today's politicians. Self interest has permeated the society, starting with the politicians of this privileged professional class. It is obscene that one must raise millions to take a Senate seat, 100s of millions to run a competitive presidential campaign. The two current candidates have so many..." - Alan Wilensky
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