Friday, September 14, 2007

Just a tag line, bragging, or an excuse?

Mitch Wagner over at InfoWeek had an interesting editorial about people who include "Sent from my {mobile phone or iPhone or Blackberry}" in their e-mail messages. I know of a few people who do this because they want to offer an appology for short (blunt?) replies. I also know of a couple people who do this because it was the default when they got their phone (nice marketing, Blackberry).

In the editorial, Mitch quotes liberally from a Slate story that suggests the 'Sent from my Blackberry' tag line either acts as "...a subtle signal to my correspondents that I'm getting a lot done" or "...gives the impression that you're on the move but still chained to work". The Slate author (Paul Boutin) seems to have a double standard, suggesting that when these tag lines mention an iPhone instead of a blackberry they "...conjure an image of a doofus who wants you to know he has an iPhone".

Mitch then goes on to raise a more interesting point, suggesting that regardless of the type of phone involved these tag lines are "...symptomatic of a workplace culture that places more emphasis on effort than results."

Ouch. But maybe he is on to something...

Thursday, September 06, 2007

Writer's Block...unblocked.

One of the cool features of Live Journal is a little promotion going on called the "Writer's Block". It is sponsored by HP, and appears as a question on each Live Journal user's home page (sort of like the Dashboard on Blogger, but with more options reflecting the variety of social networking tools within Live Journal).

These "Writer's Blocks" are simple questions that encourage a response, for example:
- What's been your biggest influence in making you a better writer?
- What's the best advice you've given or gotten for taking good photos?
- If you could travel back in time to spend a day with someone, who would it be and why?

Each statement is presented individually, with navigation buttons to move through the question. There is also an "Answer" button, clicking it lauches the editor with the question filled in and ready to take your response. The entry is also automatically tagged and, presumably, writing a response enters the author in a contest for HP stuff.

Sunday, September 02, 2007

Blog in search of a topic

I've come to the conclusion that all great blogs have a topic, a unifying theme that ties the entries together and establishes an expectation amongst the readers of the blog. This blog is lacking in that category. The unifying theme? Things that I was thinking about when the post was written. Sure, that is technically a theme, but not very good for establishing an expectation amongst readers.


With that shortcoming in this blog in mind, I've launched an eight month initiative to identify a topic. Why eight months? Because I've got another long-term project I'm currently working on that should wrap up in eight months. In the meantime, I'm planning on trying out various blog topics. Today's topic: State Constitutions and their relationship to the US Federal Constitution. Yep, sounds nuts. In other words, 'and now for something completely different'. Speaking of other words, here's a quote:

"An important distinction exists between the federal and state constitutions. The U.S. Constitution contains grants of authority from the states to the federal government. All powers not specified in the federal constitution are retained by the states. This means that the U.S. Constitution identifies what the federal government can do, but the state constitutions tell the state governments what they cannot do."

- Reed, Shedd, Morehead, & Corley, 2005, The legal and regulatory environment of business