The latest from our favorite internet celebrity.
This is a little nuts...even for him. Hard to decide whether he intentionally dialed up the craziness/oddness factor or this is just genuine Tay. Either way, good for some renewed water cooler chat and more hype for the everyday celebrity- brought to you by YouTube.
Share ideas that inspire. FALLON PLANNERS (and co-conspirators) are freely invited to post trends, commentary, obscure ephemera and insightful rants regarding the experience of branding.
Monday, February 25, 2008
Guilty Pleasure: Tay Zonday Crashes Into Weird
Posted by
avin
at
2/25/2008 09:28:00 AM
2
comments
Labels: Contagious, cult of the amateur, Guilty Pleasure, Media Snacker, Social Media, Word of Mouth, YouTube
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
Ignorance of Crowds, too
Murray and I are in an ongoing tug of war about the Wisdom/Ignorance of Crowds. Found this interesting counterpoint (Murray's side) at Strategy+Business magazine about the limits of peer production and some case examples. And to the question of rightful "creators" in a participatory/UGC environment, the conclusions drawn in this article helps guide us.
Some excerpts:
The bottom line is that peer production has valuable but limited applications. It can be a powerful tool, but it is no panacea. It’s a great way to find and fix problems, to collect and categorize information, or to perform any other time-consuming task that can be sped up by having lots of people with diverse perspectives working in parallel. It can also have the important added benefit of engaging customers in your innovation process, which not only allows their insights to be harnessed but also may increase their loyalty to your company.
-First, peer production works best with routine or narrowly defined tasks that can be pursued simultaneously by a big crowd of people. It is not well suited to a job that requires a lot of coordination among the participants. If members of a large, informal group had to coordinate their efforts closely, their work would quickly bog down in complexity. The crowd’s size and diversity would turn from a strength to a weakness, and the speed advantage would be lost.
-Second, because it requires so many “eyeballs,” open source works best when the labor is donated or partially subsidized. If Linus Torvalds had had to compensate all his “eyeballs,” he would have gone broke long ago.
-Third, and most important, the open source model — when it works effectively — is not as egalitarian or democratic as it is often made out to be. Linux has been successful not just because so many people have been involved, but because the crowd’s work has been filtered through a central authority who holds supreme power as a synthesizer and decision maker.
But if peer production is a good way to mine the raw material for innovation, it doesn’t seem well suited to shaping that material into a final product. That’s a task that is still best done in the closed quarters of a cathedral, where a relatively small and formally organized group of talented professionals can collaborate closely in perfecting the fit and finish of a product. Involving a crowd in this work won’t speed it up; it will just bring delays and confusion.
via Strategy+Business Magazine
Posted by
AKI SYSTEMS 2600
at
9/18/2007 10:57:00 AM
2
comments
Labels: cult of the amateur, Interactive Mass Interactive, peer production, UGC, User-Created, wikinomics, Wisdom of Crowds
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Cult of the Amateur
Dan Meth created this video homage to all the viral video superstars (to-date) evolved from our YouTube era.
Internet People - Watch more free videos
Posted by
AKI SYSTEMS 2600
at
9/11/2007 05:51:00 PM
0
comments
Labels: Brave New Media, cult of the amateur, Guilty Pleasure, Mass Interactive, ROI of Blogging Web 2.0, Social Marketing, User-Created, wtf?