Archive for November 16th, 2011

16 November
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Burt Rutan Is Up To Something…

Burt Rutan is up to something. He isn’t saying much about it, but whatever it is, you know it’s interesting.

There’s been plenty of speculation within the aviation world about whether Rutan would stop designing airplanes now that he’s retired from Scaled Composites. Imaginative and prolific, Rutan has been at the leading edge of aerospace design since the 1970s, and few thought he would simply play golf all the time. True to form, Rutan is working on a new aircraft design.

Rutan is famously secretive about designs that have yet to fly, though now that he is “retired” he is letting out a few more details than usual. The engineer told the Experimental Aviation Association he is tinkering with a design influenced to some extent by the lakes and rivers of Idaho, where he now lives after spending more than 40 years in the Mojave Desert. He also mentioned being influenced by the unusual Russian air/watercraft, like the MD-160 Lun-class ekranoplan, he saw shortly after the fall of the Soviet Union.

“It is a combination wing ship and seaplane,” he told the EAA.

What Rutan did say is he hopes to design a very efficient winged boat that could be used on a major body of water like Lake Coeur d’Alene and converted into a seaplane to navigate the small lakes and rivers nearby. There are a few other designs out there that use ground effect to “fly” just above the surface of the water, but no one’s seen anything like the design — known simply as 372-3 — Rutan is hinting at.

Rutan, perhaps anticipating the next question, was quick to tell people not to hold their breath awaiting DIY plans for their own plane. Before gaining worldwide fame for SpaceShipOne and Voyager, the first aircraft to fly non-stop around the world on a single tank of gas, Rutan made his living selling plans for aircraft he designed.

The Rutan faithful have long wished for a new design they could build and fly. But Rutan says he has no timeline for completing this project, and if it doesn’t work out as he hopes it could simply disappear.

Photo of Burt Rutan with SpaceShipOne: Mark Greenberg/Virgin Galactic

Via Wired Autopia: http://www.wired.com/autopia/

16 November
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Zynga CEO to Employees: We’re a Meritocracy

After an article in the Wall Street Journal suggested Zynga has been demanding that some employees surrendered stock options they were previously granted, Zynga CEO Mark Pincus sent a memo to employees, claiming the article paints the company in a “false and skewed light”.

In the note, obtained by Fortune, Pincus says dismisses WSJ’s claims, calling Zynga a “meritocracy” which has been built in an “ethical and fair way”.

“The wall street journal posted a story last night (copied below) which paints our meritocracy in a false and skewed light. The story is based on hearsay and innuendo which is disappointing but is to be expected as we move towards becoming a public company,” says Pincus in the note.

WSJ’s story claims that Zynga has decided that some employees have too many unvested shares, asking them to return a portion of them back or be fired. Fortune has another take on the story, claiming that Zynga’s management is well within its rights to “punish” employees who haven’t been performing up to the company’s standards by asking them to surrender unvested shares, basically describing the practice as cutting the employee’s pay.

It’s definitely an unusual practice, and one likely to raise controversy, especially before the company’s IPO. After it goes public, Zynga will likely have to implement clear and transparent rules and regulations on how it rewards – and punishes – the “citizens” of its meritocracy.

Zynga’s long-awaited initial public offering is due mid-November, with the company hoping to raise between $1.5 billion and $2 billion, at a valuation close to $20 billion.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

16 November
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The Illusion of Importance

Guest post by Francisco Dao

Most people view the social web as a tool for bringing people together and sharing ideas. They credit it with everything from democratizing media to enabling the protests of Arab spring, but they fail to see how these same community building attributes can fuel dangerous thought bubbles and lead us down paths of extremism.

By providing a forum for everyone, the web – especially social web platforms – allow us to connect with people we probably wouldnʼt be able to find offline. In most cases this is a positive trait. Advocates argue that this promotes greater collaboration and facilitates the sharing of ideas. But it has a darker side in that it can lead us down deep rabbit holes of thought by making small groups appear larger and more influential than they really are. Imagine someone who is a fanatical white supremacist and favors the reimplementation of slavery. As a percentage, like minded people would be a tiny number – perhaps .1%. In the real world, this would make it virtually impossible for this person to find others who share his views. But the internet provides a platform for everyone, and .1% of 300 million Americans is 300,000 people. Proportionally itʼs minuscule but for the racist looking for support, 300,000 is more than enough people to reinforce his ideas and lead him to believe that he has the support of the masses.

Iʼm not suggesting that the web is a bad thing, and I do believe its power to produce positive connections outweigh the negative aspects of where some of these connections may lead. But itʼs important to understand how our minds and the personalized social web create a feedback loop that blinds us to new ideas.

Research shows that it is natural human behavior to seek approval and avoid cognitive dissonance. Dr. Carol Tavris author of Mistakes Were Made but Not By Me describes decisions as being made at the top of a pyramid. Two people can begin with very similar beliefs but once they decide one way or the other – for example two moderates, one choosing Republican, the other Democrat – they then self identify and start sliding down the sides of the pyramid drifting further and further apart. This behavioral trait is built into all of us and makes true impartiality impossible. Our decisions will always be affected by previous choices that form our underlying beliefs.

Along with our need to avoid cognitive dissonance is our drive for social acceptance. In short, belonging to a group feels good. It provides support and reinforcement, a strong identity, and a sense that we are part of something greater than ourselves. Like all approval seeking tendencies, group belonging has itʼs roots in human survival. For millions of years the only way to survive was to belong to a strong core group – a village. If you were unwilling or incapable of fitting in, you were likely cast out and eaten by predators. Some would suggest that the modern world renders these human traits irrelevant but the modernization of the last 300 years is a blink of an eye in evolutionary terms and evolving past our instincts is not so easily done.

Contrary to the open collaborative world envisioned by internet utopians, the social web has instead mirrored our behavioral characteristics by evolving dynamics that push us into virtual villages. This is most apparent in how Facebook sorts our friends and decides what to show in our news feeds, although Googleʼs personal search results also share blame. Instead of showing us everything and letting us decide, Facebook and Google show us what they think we want to see essentially placing us into villages of reinforced beliefs.

As dangerous as this may be on the general web (see The Filter Bubble by Eli Pariser), nowhere is this thought bubble more prevalent than with the people building the platform on which it exist: Internet entrepreneurs. Unlike other industries that rely on old models of press to spread their message, much of the internet community is focused on building social media tools that are largely based on self promotion. Share your location, what youʼre eating, what youʼre buying, who youʼre with and definitely share what youʼre reading. Itʼs the equivalent of TV producers making reality shows about the lives of their friends. Essentially the social web has become itʼs own biggest advocate and unsurprisingly the entrepreneurs and their associates are its first adopters and the most adept at using it. The end result is a largely insular world of technology entrepreneurs using social media to reinforce each others beliefs in a virtual echo chamber that produces clone after clone of like “blank” for “blank” type companies instead of breaking new ground. From the outside looking in, it looks like a great club to be a part of where everyone seems to be the most popular kid in school. But this has resulted in a disproportionate amount of attention given to this segment of technology compared to say clean tech or industrial advances which arenʼt in the business of building their own media tools.

Some of the loudest noise emanating from the social web echo chamber has come from the death of Steve Jobs. The sharing of Jobsʼ quotes and wisdom have been deafening and yet I fear those who seek to pay tribute to his genius have fallen into the exact trap that Jobs railed against. It was well known that Jobs was an advocate of pursuing different interests and areas of study. Travel through India, design a staircase, study calligraphy, even his criticism that Bill Gates would have been a more interesting person if he had dropped acid or lived in an ashram speaks to Jobsʼ belief that ideas come from a combination of many sources. Jobs understood the importance of seeking knowledge outside his immediate realm and his resulting innovations made a major impact on several different industries.

Internet entrepreneurs have been given a blank slate to build a world that could only be imagined 20 years ago – a virtual world that will have great influence on the direction of the actual world. They can choose to be the architects of skyscrapers or the builders of tract homes. Most of us grew up in tract homes and they serve their purpose well, but as Jobsʼ put it, they donʼt leave a “dent in the universe.” I implore the internet innovators of today and tomorrow to get out of the echo chamber. Donʼt read the same books your friends read, seek out people who inhabit different spheres, stop believing what Techcrunch writes about you, explore the real world like Hemingway, Twain and Jobs and build a virtual skyscraper. The alternative is to slide deeper and deeper into a bigger bubble of small ideas.

Francisco Dao is the founder of 50Kings, a private community for technology and media innovators. He is a former leadership columnist for Inc.com, a lifelong entrepreneur, author and former stand-up comic. Follow him on Twitter.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Via Brian Solis: http://www.briansolis.com

16 November
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Sorry Muppets, Billy Crystal’s Hosting the Oscars

muppets oscars billy crystalDespite a grassroots Facebook and Twitter effort for the Muppets to host the 84th Oscars, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences chose eight-time host Billy Crystal. The Oscar vet is second to only 18-time host Bob Hope for most emcee stints.

The selection follows a whirlwind day of Oscar buzz. After Eddie Murphy backed out of hosting the Awards, now-selected host Billy Crystal’s name trended on Twitter.

In addition to Crystal, several other candidates stood out as potential hosts. Notably, the Muppets, weeks before their feature film debut Nov. 23, attracted a major following on a non-official Facebook fan Page “The Muppets Should Host the 2012 Oscars” as well as a Twitter account @MuppetOscars.

 

SEE ALSO: First Full-Length Muppets Movie Trailer Debuts VIDEO

It appears the Page was created earlier this year (a linked blog first posted in February), yet following the Murphy announcement fans rallied behind the campaign, ferociously commenting about “how awesome” a Muppets-hosted show would be.

Though the Twitter campaign — which has gained more than 11,000 followers — has been tweeting periodically throughout 2011, it revved up its efforts in the past day. Even though Crystal was chosen as 2012′s official host, the handle leaves Muppets fans with lingering hope for a cameo at the show.

 

@MuppetOscars 

In all seriousness, do you think Jim Henson’s beloved puppets would have made good Oscars hosts? Or was this campaign an Internet joke?


Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

16 November
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The unreasonable customer

There are a few reasons to tolerate the customer who makes unreasonable demands:

  • You promised you would
  • She helps you raise your game
  • Her word of mouth is very powerful
  • The cost of frequently figuring out which customers to fire is too high compared to the cost of putting up with everyone

It’s probably worth firing a customer if:

  • He willfully corrupts your systems at a cost to other customers
  • Your employees are prevented from doing their best work in the long run
  • His word of mouth can’t be changed or doesn’t matter
  • He distracts you from delighting customers that are reasonable

In general, organizations are afraid to fire customers, no matter how unreasonable. This is a mistake. It’s good for you.

By Seth Godin: http://sethgodin.typepad.com/

16 November
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LinkedIn Unveils Dashboard for Groups Statistics

 

 

LinkedIn has unveiled a new Group Statistics dashboard that allows group admins to drill down into the demographics and growth of their groups.

The new dashboard, as CEO Jeff Weiner describes it on Twitter, turns relevant information about each group into an infographic-style display. This information is summarized on a dashboard, but can also be broken down in three areas: “Demographics”, “Growth” and “Activity”.

“We’ve designed each infographic view to highlight the most important signals you’ll need to help you understand your group better,” LinkedIn Data Visualization Designer Anita Lillie noted in a post on the LinkedIn blog.

Let’s use the Fans of Mashable group as an example. The Dashboard summary shows Mashable with slightly more than 24,000 members, garnering 59 comments last week with 9% of its members located in the New York City area. Diving deeper using the “Demographics” tab, we can see that 4% of the group’s members come from the San Francisco Bay Area, Greater Los Angeles and London.

The Group Statistics dashboard also illustrates the group’s growth, displays how many new members the group has gained in the last week and shows a graph of the group’s week-over-week growth. The “Activity” tab highlights how many discussions occurred within the group. It even lets you know how many group members received a promotion or changed jobs.

The business-oriented social network has been placing a greater emphasis on its Groups feature in recent months. Last week, the company announced its members have created more than 1 million groups.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

16 November
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Mexican Blog Wars: Fourth Blogger Murdered for Reporting on Cartel

Gang members in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, killed and beheaded the moderator of a social network, the Houston Chronicle reported Wednesday.

“Hi, I’m Rascatripas,” read the note on a blood-stained blanket left with the body. “This happened to me for not understanding that I shouldn’t report on the social networks.”

The victim, known by his nickname “Rascatripas (Belly Scratcher),” was the moderator of a site called Nuevo Laredo en Vivo, which had posted information about the local drug cartel.

This is the fourth murder in the area in the past three months that appears to be related to victims’ social media activities. Another blogger on the same site, Marisol Macias Castaneda, was found beheaded in the same location as Rascatripas in late September. A couple of weeks earlier, two bodies were found hanging from a pedestrian overpass with a sign (pictured above) that threatened, “This will happen to all the Internet snitches.”

In the drug war that has killed more than 40,000 people since 2006, social media has become an important way for Mexicans to communicate news about drug cartel violence and to navigate cartel checkpoints and shootouts.

Contributors to Nuevo Laredo en Vivo urged participants on the social site to not abandon their efforts in response to Rascaripas’s murder.

“No need to worry,” wrote contributor Danlaredo as translated by Wired, “no way of knowing our data since WE’RE ALL ANONYMOUS, and the only way to know them, is that we disclose ourselves so PLEASE, follow the rules … and do not give your personal INFORMATION …. please!!!!”

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

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