Category Archives: Work Stuff

All the news that’s fit to…what?

Funny story: Apparently Steve Jobs hates the NY Times iPad app.

Been thinking a lot about my own news consumption habits lately (as in…oh…the last 8 years). But especially today, because I totally missed the Nashville flood until my friend Whitney tweeted about it this afternoon. Honestly, hadn’t heard anything about it.

I spend pretty much all day every day immersed in tech news sites.When it comes to non-tech news, I get almost all of it from The Daily Show and from links I see posted on Twitter (I follow mostly journalists and news organizations on Twitter).I also read The New Yorker, Wired, and New York magazines, but those aren’t really sources of “hard news.” On a day-by-day level, my news consumption is admittedly a bit scattershot.

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Tweeters Never Prosper

Man, everyone’s in a tizzy over The Washington Post’s new social media guidelines for reporters. The full text of the policy is on PaidContent.org, but to summarize, WaPo expects its editors and journalists to be responsible on Twitter/Facebook and not post anything that might be construed as editorializing.

Bloggers are having all kinds of fun opining on how restrictive and backwards the policies are. Journalists should be able to say whatever they want, right?! (TechCrunch rails on WaPo here). I disagree with just about everything in that post. News organizations have a huge stake in maintaining objectivity. They owe their very existence to it. In the case of reporters, they’re paid for their unbiased take on news events. Why should WaPo let them go shoot their mouths off on Twitter? Credibility and the perception of objectivity of the kind that WaPo relies on is not easily obtained, but it is easily lost.

PCMag has a much more relaxed policy, mainly because they see Twitter as a traffic driver to the PCMag.com site and a way for writers/editors to build PCMag’s cachet on the social network. But the staff’s tweeting runs the gamut. Brian Heater (@bheater) has a feed full of non-sequiter jokes–no tech stuff at all. Sascha Segan (@saschasegan) and Cisco Cheng (@ciscoc) are, in my opinion, some of the best tech tweeters, providing their followers with all kinds of good info.

But that’s only one approach to the Twitter issue, and it’s too early to say if it’s the right one. Would PCMag be better served by keeping all those writers locked up and making them supply that info for publishing on the PCMag web site/blogs? I don’t think so, but perhaps. Would they have a right to enforce such a policy? Of course. After all, Twitter is, in some respects, a competing publishing platform.

Lastly, TechCrunch’s bloggers always seem unable to grasp the idea that not every news outlet can be or should be or wants to be just like TechCrunch, and that there’s a need for different news outlets with different goals and models. I’m glad TechCrunch does what it does, and it does it well; but we need some WaPos and some NYTs and some PCMags too.

Update: I meant to include this story from Mashable, about Texas Tech football telling the players to stop tweeting after a couple of them said negative things about the team and head coach. Seems like a no-brainer to me.

I’ll Miss You, PCMag


Today’s my last full day at PCMag, after working there for five and a half years. It was my first (paying) job in the media, and my boss, Vicki, was the one that hired me. And, incredibly unusual for a media company, our PCMag.com team has changed very little in the past five years–most of the people on the PCMag.com online team were there when I started, or were hired soon after. I think that’s a real testament to quality of the workplace and the quality of the work the team does.

As with any group of people that have spent so much time together, we’ve built some tight bonds and our own culture, which I’ll really miss. I’m leaving PCMag of my own volition, but it’s still going to be hard to leave the friends and the job behind. So I thought I’d make a list of all the things I’ll miss about the place. It’s mostly for myself, but also so the people I’ve worked with will know how I feel upon leaving. Here’s the list:

The Lunchtime Music Jams
Almost every day, a group of us eat lunch in my office and listen to music on GrooveShark.com. We choose a theme each day, and go around the circle picking songs that fit with the theme. We have the snobbiest of indie music snobs (Brian) and the poppiest of American Idol fans (Jen), so the playlist we create is bizarre and delightful. It’s like a midday party every day!


The Creative Mischief
Creative people have fun in creative ways, and I’ll never forget the pranks and games we played in our downtime. Office laser-tag wars. An office filled to the ceiling with balloons. A 50X-scale recreation of the PCMag.com homepage on Vicki’s office wall. Epic Rock Band and Karaoke nights. The Battle of Hello Kitty vs. Bobblehead Michael Miller. The many, many one-joke websites we launched. The mischievous idea that morphed into a full-blown podcast with thousands of listeners (oops!)

The Toys
We are literally surrounded by toys in the office, and encouraged to play with them. We have PR people emailing us, begging us to accept new toys to play with. That’s quite a nice situation to be in.

The Smart People
Top to bottom, PCMag is full of smart people. Those analysts in the PCMag Labs know everything, and it’s fun to associate with guys like that. And of course I’ll miss the intelligent, fun editorial and production teams.

The Nerds
Seriously, PCMag has some NERDS. You think I’m a nerd? Get Brian Heater, Eric Griffith, and Whitney Reynolds together–it’s like they’re speaking a different language (probably some mixture of Klingon, high-elvish, and parseltongue).


The Creative Freedom
Vicki has always left me to my own devices, to a large extent. When I wanted to launch a software blog (AppScout), she and Jim Louderback both encouraged it and facilitated it. When I wanted to write a fun story or review a cool new game or attend a nerdy tech conference, she’s always given me the green light. And she was very supportive of the PCMag After Hours podcast, even when it became more like PCMag Workday Hours. That kind of freedom at a workplace is rare, and I’ll miss it very much.

The Grammar Fights
Words cannot express how much fun it is to have it out with co-workers over grammar and usage. Hashing out the perfect wording of headlines might actually be my No. 1 favorite workplace activity, and I love that there are plenty of other people at PCMag who feel the same way. I hope my successor discovers the trove of good headlines that is Whitney Reynolds (she’s not technically an editor, but more than once I’ve given her dull headlines or dreary copy which she miraculously made fun and interesting).

The News
It’s fun working in the media. You get to meet interesting people and always be in the know on the cool tech stuff that’s happening. I love the churn of the daily news cycle, and though I wouldn’t call myself a *real journalist*, it’s been fun to participate in the news world in the limited capacity that I did.

The Events
Even more than the daily news grind, I’m going to miss covering events. I’m seriously going to be depressed come early January when half the world is in Las Vegas for the Consumer Electronics Show. It’s stressful, it’s exhausting, and I’m pretty sure it’s my favorite four days of the whole year.

Web Surfing
Facebook? Twitter? Digg? It was my job to check them regularly/obsessively. :-)

I’ve only highlighted the fun stuff, of course. Here’s my list of things I didn’t like about PCMag:

Just kidding. I’m not blogging about that.

A Star-Studded Tech Podcast


Those of you who don’t follow my Twitter feed—and you absolutely SHOULD, because every tweet reads like it was spun from pure gold—probably don’t know about the little podcast that I co-host for PCMag.com called PCMag After Hours. My co-host Brian Heater and I chat about technology with tech-industry luminaries and PCMag’s own experts.

Basically, every week Brian and I sit in my office and make a list of people we really want to talk to; we’ve had guests ranging from an editor of The Onion to Trent Reznor to a tech-industry venture capitalist.

This week, everyone on our list inexplicably agreed to participate in the show! Our friend Natali Del Conte from CNET is our in-studio guest, talking about her new video project for CBS, and we also talk to Gary Vaynerchuck (of Wine Library TV), Xeni Jardin (of BoingBoing), and comedian Marc Maron (of Air America).

Listen/watch here, or you can subscribe to the PCMag podcast feed on iTunes.

The Overwhelming Suckitude of June 2009

June sucks. Can I just go to sleep and have it be July when I wake up? It’s rained like every day this month. Two of our closest friends in the city, the lynch pins of our entire social circle, are moving at the end of the month—to L.A., no less! (What, a Laker championship isn’t enough, you greedy, greedy town?) And I just found out this week that some of my closest work buddies are leaving the company.

June sucks.

I’m blaming the economy. It cost my wife her great job back in the early days of it, it’s driven my friends away from the city to cheaper parts of the country, and it’s resulted in an incredible amount of job loss among friends of mine at work and in the media and tech industries.

I keep waiting for it to start feeling like The Grapes of Wrath or Cinderella Man or something—will it ever? There’s been a slight behavioral shift in spending habits and so on, and everyone’s a bit more pessimistic now, but at what point do we start internalizing the attitudes of the era, like our grandparents did with the Great Depression? Are we going to be a generation that comes out of hard times forever altered? Or does this particular point in history even qualify as a “hard time”? (After all, unemployed people lined up today outside the Apple Store to plunk down credit cards for a new iPhones; our grandparents would have boxed their ears for such extravagance).

Anyway, I now have first-hand knowledge of urban flight. Almost all my Wall Street friends and acquaintances have left (luckily, they all still read my blog), as have quite a few other young professionals that were supposed to be the future of this city.

So, didn’t mean to get all weird about it, just wanted to share my informed opinion that June sucks, and especially June 2009. If any of you can think of any redeeming qualities for June, please share. But know that if you tell me it’s sunny and nice where you are, I will respond with vitriol.

Real Music with Fake Instruments

My friend/coworker Brian Heater and I are launching a new tech podcast for PCMag.com this week, and I was tasked with creating some theme music for it. Inspired by cutting-edge electro-music makers like my friend Nathan Bowen and by the desire to do something a little geekier than the theme for PCMag Radio (Anything At All, by my band Mere), I decided to try a thought experiment: What if I used the fake plastic instruments from Rock Band to make real music?

I cobbled a quickie demo version together, and I think it sounds kind of cool. I didn’t get crazy with the music hacks; I just used the drum pads, the pedal, the guitar strummer switch, and the fret buttons, and then that metallic sound is me hitting the drum frame with drumsticks. I applied a few audio filters to some of the sounds, but tried to do so sparingly (I wanted it to retain the plastic-toy sound of the instruments as much as possible). The main cheat I did was to tweak the sound of the pedal. Originally, it was was almost silent, but now it actually sounds kinda like a bass drum.

The one addition I’m still trying to figure out is how to add notes, either in the form of a melody or a bass line. Any ideas? If you think of any, lemme know!

Here’s the clickety clack:

Mere’s Anything at All:

Finally: SXSW Recap + Pics + Video

Totally dropped the ball on providing a SXSW recap, sorry. Some high points:

• Chugged club soda with almost all of my Austin friends and many of my SF friends.

• Saw the best hair-metal cover band in history do Journey songs better than Journey.

• Watched from the VIP booth as thousands of maybe-too-enthusiastic guys swarmed around a stage for a live taping of DiggNation

• Asked one of the lead Facebook dudes some tough questions about the redesign (but maybe not tough enough…still hate it after two weeks)

• Watched guys from Firefox, IE, Opera, and Google Chrome spar over Web standards

• Met Dooce, and listened to her, the “Stuff White People Like” guy, the Lolcatz/Failblog dude, and the original Wonkette talk about the secrets of blogging with my friend, the Passive-Aggressive Notes girl.

• Met a lot of my tech-reporter-blogger heroes (whom I won’t name here out of embarrassment).

• Sat on a panel of judges with iLike‘s Ali Partovi to evaluate some new music startups that are launching soon.

• Maybe danced just a little bit. But not too much. But maybe a little.

• Flew home to NYC to find out WE’RE HAVING A GIRL!!!! (yeah, I buried that tidbit way down here so only the real blog readers would see it!)


• Flew back with Mere to play a show.

• Had a lot of fun hanging out in Austin with the band

• Local friends like Cindy and Piet showed us around and took us to the spots where the locals hang out when we got sick of the SXSW crowds

• Ate a ton of awesome barbecue at Stubbs and Iron Works.


• Saw a flier for the Mere show on the sidewalk in downtown Austin. Loved seeing Mere’s name in Austin, even if it was underfoot on the sidewalk!

• Mere show went well, considering the lineup changes and the fairly thin crowd (though it wasn’t as thin as it looks in the video). It was a fun day for a barbecue and live music, and it was fun to have friends there. And hey, the trip was free! Video travelogue of the trip is embedded below (part 2 of a 2-part series on YouTube, sorry so long).

Music = Happy. Music Marketing = Sad.

Every year I attend music industry conferences, and every year they make me sad. I was at a conference today that focuses on digital/online music marketing, and on the one hand, it’s fascinating to hear the analysis and research that goes into supporting and promoting bands.

On the other hand, it’s terribly disconcerting to hear men in suits talk with total confidence about “what kids want,” and to know that they can back up their claims with reams of data and user studies. It’s equally disconcerting to hear bands spoken of as products or, at best, brands. “We stripped down the web site of [band name withheld] to just a simple navbar and a personal blog. Our unique users and page hits shot up, merch sales tripled, and we made a lot more money on ad impressions and CPM. It also translated into much higher rates of user engagement and user loyalty.”

I haven’t had this much of a music buzzkill since I last read Pitchfork.

Would You Pay for Online News?

A lot of old men are doing the rounds on talk shows and in newspaper columns talking about how to save newspapers. Subscriptions are down, the costs of paper and ink went up recently, and advertising is cratering, both the online and offline kind. And for each publication, thousands of paying print subscribers are being replaced by millions of not-paying online subscribers.

AdAge’s Simon Dumenco is recommending that everyone in the media have a “Plan B” ready, because there won’t be another job for you in the industry if you get fired. Yikes.

How to avoid the death of the news media? There are lots of solutions out there. One is better advertising. Online advertising has a bad reputation, and with good reason. On the one hand, online advertising gives you better stats than TV or print ads, because you can track results in real time (how many viewers click on a banner ad, where they are geographically, what site they’re on, did the mouse click convert to a sale, etc). The problem is that the data doesn’t show online ads as being all that effective. Most of us have trained ourselves by now to ignore or disable banner ads, flashing lights, popup ads, and especially those hideous fat-stomach ads that are everywhere right now. I can’t remember the last time I clicked on an ad on purpose. The same-old same-old online ads just don’t work that well right now, and if they don’t work, advertisers won’t by them; if advertisers don’t buy them, the online newspapers and magazines won’t make enough money to keep going.

Another solution is requiring $$ to access content. The former editor of Time magazine has a pie-in-the-sky fantasy of micropayments, in which we’d all pay a few cents for every news story or site we clicked on. There are some aspects of the plan that I love (for one, the quality of online journalism would have to drastically increase to satisfy a savvy, paying customer base—you couldn’t just post a press release and call it good). I don’t see how this could be implemented though.

An informal office pool I conducted showed that none of my colleagues would pay for news. There are simply too many places to get free news…why go to a news site that makes you pay? The Time editor, Walter Isaacson, is right that the demand for news has never been higher. But there’s an enormous oversupply to sate that demand; not just from newspapers and blogs, but also from citizen journalists, Twitter users, and so on.

Two examples: 1) You see that crowd of 40 reporters flocking around the guy leaving the courthouse? They’re all going to get the same 10-word quote. Oversupply. 2) Have you ever gone to news aggregators like Google News or TechMeme and seen how they’re basically a list of 20 stories that were each covered by 200 news sites? Oversupply.

And the juxtaposition: The best picture of the US Airways crash in the Hudson River was posted by some guy on Twitter long before anyone else had one.

Where there’s no scarcity, there’s no value, and I doubt there will ever be a scarcity of free news on the web. If 200 news sites band together to charge subscriptions for access, there will always be plenty of free sites to plug the hole and reap the traffic.

Anyway, I guess my answer for the old media men is maybe there IS no answer. News-gathering is expensive; maybe large news organizations simply won’t be able to survive with the new economic limitations. Or maybe 80% of them will close up shop, providing the remaining 20% with enough scale to survive. In any case, the outcome of this will probably be the loss of lots of independent, valuable-to-society-but-not-in-a-monetary-way news oranizations.

And television, you’re next. Corinne and I watch unhealthy amounts of TV, yet we haven’t watched a commercial in five years. And you don’t make jack from iTunes sales and we both know it. Good luck.

The Case for IE

Just posted a story on PCMag.com today about the best add-ons for Internet Explorer 8. Now, I know most of you are using Firefox (55.93 percent of you, to be exact). And I applaud those of you who are using Chrome (1.82 percent), Opera (0.3 percent), and especially the Playstation Portable browser (one guy, I’m guessing).

Further, I know that: 1) IE comes from the big, bad Microsoft Mothership; 2) It’s heresy to say anything bad about Firefox, ever; 3) Some things about IE make the lives of web developers a bit…difficult.

And hey, I use Firefox every day on my Mac at home, and I write about Firefox extensions too, and the browser works fine most of the time. BUT, I really do like IE7 better than FF3. I haven’t done any kind of formal speed tests, but it feels much faster. It starts up faster, it loads pages faster, almost everything on the Web works with it, and I never get that weird system-resource suck with IE that I sometimes get with Firefox. And all the features I like about Firefox have IE add-ons that replicate them (the free IE7Pro add-on does most of them itself).

After a couple weeks with IE8, I think I’m sticking with the next generation of Internet Explorer as well. It’s not perfect, of course. It crashes on my Windows machine more than Firefox does on my Windows machine (but not any more than Firefox does on my Mac–it freezes up or crashes all the time and it drives Corinne crazy).

Anyway, I rarely hear my online friends and associates say anything nice about Internet Explorer, so I thought I’d share a different POV. What browser do you use and why? And Chrome/Opera/PSP users, please identify yourselves!