All posts filed under: Good Old Trend

New media strategies, according to Rob Curley

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Good Old Trend

Rob Curley is a strange man, no doubt about it. But he has a knack for seeing the obvious when it comes to newspaper-centred web development. After creating an award winning Mark Twain site, an online music calendar and now lately an extensive podcast library in Naples, Florida – the time has come. He’s going to the Washington Post. And so he should. I visited him in Lawrence when I used to work for the […]

Identity through non-ownership

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Good Old Trend

As a follow up to my last post I thought I’d write about the trend that has interested me the most lately. The urge to own as little as possible, but at the same time have access to everything. This fits me the best at the moment. Trend consultant Kristina Dryza (who I’ll be meeting for tea tomorrow!) wrote an insightful report on this issue. You should definitely read all of it, but before you […]

Identity through consumption

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Good Old Trend

Buying physical things (clothes, cars, gadgets) as a part of creating your identity has been going on since the beginning of commerce. Strangely enough this is one of the few behaviours that haven’t followed us to the internet. Consumption on the internet in there, paying for premium levels or online shopping, but not the connection between the consumption of physical things and your online identity. Until now. First the steps that preceded this: 1. Identity […]

Office spaces on the go

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Good Old Trend

There’s a been a lot of media and not so much trend in this Good Old Trend blog so far. I’ll try to balance the two a bit more ahead. Lately in life there’s been a lot of work as well, but I guess that’s another story. Springwise have addressed the issue of workplaces for working men and women on the move. It’s an interesting development and one that I’ve been thinking about myself for […]

Dojo Sourceforge

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Good Old Trend

My colleague Hugo just wrote an interesting post about a new project that we are planning: On the subject of contribution, and I think that there is something missing in the way people contribute code. As I was planning to package all the interesting Good Old-code as a dojo library, I realized that there is no such thing as a dojo library: people are expected to contribute directly to the dojo toolkit. I think that […]

Why some have got the internet goin’ nuts

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Good Old Trend

I’ve been thinking a lot about intertextuality and connectivity lately. It connects both with Netocracy that I’m reading (although not with great haste I might add) and media strategies for a few clients that I have in mind. Eric Wahlforss went to see the Snakes on a Plane, and wrote an interesting passage about backchannels: We see a world that is becoming increasingly hypermediated. The idea of immediacy often attributed to the conversation seems to […]

Start competing with yourselves

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Good Old Trend

A lot of Bonnier in this blog to start off with, but being the size they are it’s difficult to avoid (or I’m just sucking up to them as this Bonnier-owned magazine implied :). Bonnier Newspapers have invested in HemOnline, a project that lets home-owners sell their house or apartment cheaper than using regular estate agents. The catch is that they have to take care of the viewings themselves. Johan Larsson at Internetworld implies that […]

Downloading – nothing more than a shift in value

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Good Old Trend

I’m re-reading Netocracy by Alexander Bard and Jan Söderqvist, a Swedish book that was slightly before its time when it was first released in 2000 (English in 2002). I will probably be referring to this book quite a lot in the next few posts as I think it’s more relevant now than ever. It’s not news in any way, but I aim to use this blog as some sort of mental notebook in order to […]

Startups for the sake of being startups

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Good Old Trend

I’m trying to catch up on some reading and found an interesting post by Ross Mayfield: The problem is there are too many companies being created that have no aspirations to be companies. Most survey the feature portfolio of tier 1 and tier 2 acquirers and are precision guided towards flipping within 18 months. Many make no attempt at generating revenue and most that do generate revenue from the advertising of other startups, let alone […]