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Net Neutrality 12-11-2006

December 11, 2006 by Liz

Net Neutrality Links

I’m adding this link to the Net Neutrality Page.

SavetheInternet.com Coalition Calls on New Congress

Companies like AT&T, Verizon, BellSouth and Comcast pushed the FCC to remove Net Neutrality protections last year and have since spent more than $150 million to keep Congress from reinstating the nondiscrimination rules that enabled the Internet to become an unprecedented vehicle for free speech and economic innovation. But in the end, they couldn’t overcome widespread public opposition, and Congress would not pass a telecommunications bill that failed to protect Internet freedom.

[ . . . ]

“We look forward to working with the new Congress to craft a comprehensive broadband policy that will preserve the open character of the Internet,” added Gigi Sohn, founder and president of Public Knowledge. “Consumers were the winners when Congress chose not to pass legislation during the session just ending that would have given control over delivery of Internet content to the telephone and cable companies and, in addition, would have given control of consumers’ use of digital media to the FCC and entertainment industries.”

The more than 850 groups in the SavetheInternet.com Coalition also include the National Religious Broadcasters, the Service Employees International Union, the American Library Association, Educause, Gun Owners of America, Future of Music Coalition, Parents Television Council, the ACLU, and every major consumer group in the country. The coalition also includes thousands of bloggers and hundreds of small companies that do business online.

Want to know what you can do?
MA Bell Monopoly Versus the Free Internet — Tell the FCC Net Neutrality Is Not Negotiable

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related
NET NEUTRALITY PAGE

Filed Under: Business Life, Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog, Trends Tagged With: bc, Gigi-Sohn, Net-Neutrality, Public-Knowledge, Save-the-Internet

Brats: The Highly-Adapted, New Model Human!

December 9, 2006 by Liz

Not Just Kids at Heart

Trendspotters 101 logo

Have you bumped into full-grown adults lately who seem to have missed the maturity train? Maybe you’ve been one. I know I have. I’m not talking about kids at heart. I mean kids in most all behaviors including these.

  • short attention spans
  • unexplainable sense of fashion
  • heightened need for fast action, novelty, and sensation
  • lack of respect for tradition
  • unpredictability, and lack of balance in priorities
  • a tendency to overreact

When I was a kid, we had a name for when we acted too much that way.

I found out his week — we’re no longer brats!

Now at least one scientist, B.G. Charlton, is saying that immature behavior is the best thing going for the human race.
[Read more…]

Filed Under: Business Life, Outside the Box, Strategy/Analysis, Successful Blog, Trends Tagged With: bc, Bruce-Charlton, flexibility, Geeks-and-Geezers, innovation, Joi-Ito, psychological-neotony, Warren-Bennis

Words in a Safety Box . . .

December 8, 2006 by Liz

I've been thinking . . .
When I was in college, my mom told me about a box that she kept in the back my bedroom closet. It was there the whole time I was growing up. The box was a torn, sad, brown corrugated, hardly worth remembering — but I remembered it. From time to time, as a tiny curious person, I would crawl back into the deep, dark depths of my closet to see what secrets were kept there.

I was not too good at refolding box tops and that box had the four sides folded in –in the way people do when tape isn’t an option. The center where they met had been smashed from years of heavier boxes being set upon it. In every way, it was a box perfectly designed never to capture the interest of a child. So the box could, and did, hide in plain view most of my childhood.

Inside that box, at any given moment, sat about twenty percent of my current ownership of toys. Every so often, my mother would rotate a few toys into and out of that box. She said that I never missed the toys that went into the box. She said that when toys came back out, I acted as if they were brand new. My mother said the box taught me to take care of my toys and value them. My mother should have been a child toy psychologist.

Over the years, I’ve come to think of that broken brown box as a toy safety box.

I’ve often thuoght I wish we had a safety box like that for words.

Important words get tossed around like old toys do. Some words once had truly great meanings — words such as truly and great. They seem to have lost their depth and sparkle. In my heart, I know that the first time someone wrote yours truly, it meant more. So, too did the word, sincerely. Do people think what they are saying when they write them? What about when they write Love?

I wonder. What about when we write wonder?

Words are so important. They need the depth of meaning that they were born with.

Good once was good. Nice used to roll nicely off the tongue. Beautiful it was so breathtaking, it never needed a very to help it. Imagine how great something or soemone great used to be — someone like Alexander.

Joy might be the word I miss the most.

At one time joy filled a heart. I think about joy. I wish for joy, and I wish joy for my friends, and yet when I write the word, it seems shallow, not conveying how deeply I wish for them.

Joy is exponentially greater than the happiness we all seek, but the word has been made flat like old soda. Now it calls up thoughts of Seasons Greetings and green box bottoms with clear covers in drug stores every November. It’s laced with cranky people standing in lines at cash registers. How can I wish true joy when it conjures up images of chaos and too much to do?

I wish we could hide words the way my mother hid my toys. I wish we could place them in a safety box, back in my childhood closet until they were new again.

We might have to learn a few new words. We might to stop and think about the words we choose, but maybe that could lead to new thoughts. Would that be so bad?

We might even leave some words in the box to stay there until we understood their power — words we don’t need, words that hurt., words that separate people.

It would be good to take heartfelt words off advertising. where we don’t really mean them. That might lead us to find new ways to express ideas. We could let the words we put away stay gone for months and see how we do at communicating.

When we brought the over-used words back, we might find that we think differently about them. We might not use them not so frequently, not so frivolously. We might not put them on billboards.

I want to know joy, good will, and peace as something more than words on a Christmas card.

Joy. Love. Beauty. Quality. Forgiveness. Peace. Hope. Truth. Friend. Hero. Loyalty. Value. Add your own words here.

I wish you all of those words — the real ones.

Liz's Signature

adapted from letting me be

Filed Under: Business Life, Motivation, Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, Ive-been-thinking, safety-box-for-words, thinking

Net Neutrality 12-08-2006

December 8, 2006 by Liz

Net Neutrality Links

I’m adding this link to the Net Neutrality Page.

Net Neutrality Alert : FCC Chair Tries To Ram Thru ATT Merger

Imagine : a 5 minute wait for a Daily Kos page.

Imagine : that political blogs – perhaps the major channel now for political dissent in the United States – suddenly became hard, very slow, to access while corporate websites popped up in your browser quick as a corporate CEO robbing a pension fund.

Well, execs from the ATT and BellSouth Corporations that are seeking approval for a merger from the FCC have said they’d love to make that happen.

ACTION ITEM : Send Letter to your Congressperson or Senator protesting Kevin Martin’s attempts to violate FCC ethical guidelines and ram through an AAT/BellSouth merger that would threaten the Net Neutrality.

Media on this :

John Nichols in The Nation : http://www.freepress.net/19566

Josh Silver on the Huff Post : http://www.huffingtonpost.com/josh-silver/latest-washington-ethics-_b_35706.html

Want to know what you can do?
MA Bell Monopoly Versus the Free Internet — Tell the FCC Net Neutrality Is Not Negotiable

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related
When Did AT&T Become Not For Profit? Was I Absent that Day?
MA Bell Monopoly Versus the Free Internet — Tell the FCC Net Neutrality Is Not Negotiable
NET NEUTRALITY PAGE

Filed Under: Business Life, Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog, Trends Tagged With: AT+T, bc, BellSouth, Daily-Kos, FCC, Kevin-Martin, Net-Neutrality

Net Neutrality 12-07-2006

December 7, 2006 by Liz

Net Neutrality Links

I’m adding this link to the Net Neutrality Page.

Net Neutrality Is Clear

[ . . . ] I’m cited in the second paragraph of the current Wikipedia article on Net neutrality. Here’s how the article begins:

Network neutrality is a general principle of Internet regulation which states that a network is neutral if it satisfies all application needs equally. For example, a perfectly neutral network would not give better service to some web sites than others, and it is argued that it would likewise not favor web-surfing or blogging over online gaming or Voice over IP. It is also guided by the assumption that the public good is maximized by limiting Internet innovation to the edges, where things are often easier to change, rather than the core of the network.

However, it has no completely precise, agreed-upon meaning. One prominent net neutrality advocate, Cluetrain Manifesto author David Weinberger, expresses frustration at his attempts to reach a precise understanding: …I recently spent a day—sponsored by an activist think tank—with a dozen people who understand Net tech deeply, going through exactly which of the 496 permutations would constitute a violation of Net neutrality. Caching packets within a particular application area but not according to source? Caching application-based non-cached application-based packets? Saying “Hi” to all passing packets, but adding, “Howya doin’?” to only the ones you like? Patting all packets on the back but refusing to buy some lunch? The whole thing makes my brain hurt.[1]

[ . . . ] FWIW, I agree that the paragraph that cites me should be edited out. It is unencyclopedic. It also is used to make a point that it in fact does not support. . . .

Want to know what you can do?
MA Bell Monopoly Versus the Free Internet — Tell the FCC Net Neutrality Is Not Negotiable

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related
NET NEUTRALITY PAGE

Filed Under: Business Life, Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog, Trends Tagged With: bc, Cluetrain-Manifesto, David-Weinberger, Net-Neutrality, Wikipedia

Business Rule 3: In PRM, the First Test Always Outweighs the Final

December 6, 2006 by Liz

People Relationship Mathematics

Business Rules Logo

In the world of textbooks, I worked on problems in Discrete Mathematics for kids. Discrete math includes finite algorithms that do not go on beyond a particular problem or scenario. I have decided that in order to keep the world in balance, I’m adding to that a distinct pattern I’ve noticed about business, PRM — People Relationship Mathematics. PRM is about what folks mean when they say, “do the math.”

In general career management, PRM is more diverse and applicable than traditional mathematics. Every thing we do relates to the people and how we relate to each other. If we do the math on that idea from the very first moment, business life can be much more of a pleasure. Take it from me — I remember well the days I didn’t know that.

Let’s start from the beginning. Beginning — that’s a great word. There are more beginnings than we might suspect. Here are a few:

  • first day at a new company
  • first day in a new role
  • first day with a new boss
  • first day with a new client or new customer

Any one of those and you’re the new guy all over again. Whether you go to work at a home office or one down the road, Personal Relationship Mathematics says you have to show up.

Showing up is like long division, a whole lot trickier than it looks. Showing up requires paying attention to everyone and everything that’s going on. It also means doing the best work that you’ve ever done–beginning, middle, and end.

Day one –- that’s 100 days in PRM –is when you build a concrete foundation. What people think, decide really, about you now will determine whether they will forgive you then. The relationships you forge on the proverbial day one are your safety net.

Do the PMR to pass the first test. The first test always outweighs the final.
[Read more…]

Filed Under: Business Life, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, business, life., Perfect Virtual Manager, Personal-Relationship-Mathematics-business-thinking, stress, working-smart

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