Lifehacker – Top 10 Productivity Basics Explained
Lifehacker – Top 10 Productivity Basics Explained
Saving this so I can check it out some time when I’m being more productive.
Lifehacker – Top 10 Productivity Basics Explained
Saving this so I can check it out some time when I’m being more productive.
I like that Ben Stilller (@redhourben on Twitter) took this humble-yet-funny approach to introducing his online presence to the new Web:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bCt6XcxemKo&feature=channel
His short video where he introduces Mickey Rooney to Twitter is cute too:
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f30D3LSe-kY&feature=channel
Twitter’s real-time search index is not tracking everyone’s updates, and their people search is not showing everyone either. This has been reported at Twitter support, but they have not posted any news or fixed the problem for over a month.
How to check
To see if you are impacted by this, go to Twitter Search and search for: “from:yourusername”
without quotes, and with your Twitter username instead of “yourusername”
Lots of other people are having the same or very similar problems, as you can see in this support thread at Twitter (which has been open since June 4) about the tweets missing from the public timeline/search, and this one (open since May 29) about the people missing from People Search.
It’s pretty easy on the surface to see why this isn’t good, but it might not be quite as obvious why it’s a big enough deal to bother doing something about. There are a lot of ramifications for the Twitterverse that spring from this problem.
People who are not included in Twitter’s search index:
The bottom line is that until the search index is fixed, a large population of twitterers being arbitrarily excluded from a lot of the functions that make twitter so cool and useful. Not only are they at a disadvantage in trying to grow their network and spread their message, they are unable to do everything they could be doing for and with the Twitterverse–which does a disservice to everyone on Twitter, and to the natural organic growth that should be occurring in the community there.
The worst part about this is that these “hidden” folks have a much harder time even getting this issue out there, since they can’t hold a hashtag-based awareness campaign, and in many cases can’t be heard by the “influentials” on Twitter in order to get the word out. And Twitter seems to be pretty silent on this issue.
So it’s up to everyone to realize that this problem affects all of us on Twitter, and to demand that they make addressing this problem a top priority.
NOTE: Yes, I know Twitter is free, but let’s not kid ourselves: the people who created and run Twitter are going to make a great deal of money, and it is the “twittizenry” that has brought about the growth and momentum to make that the case. We are the value in Twitter; and I’m pretty sure the people who run it know that.
We just need to let them know what’s important to us. In this case, ending the second-class status that has been applied for whatever reason to some unknown population of Twitter users. Or to put it less dramatically:
Dear @Twitter: Please solve your search index problem. (Plz RT)
Ideally, they will respond quickly and let us know what’s up, and we won’t have to apply much pressure. They may even have a solution in the works, and all that we need to do is get some loud enough voices to ask them what’s going on.
That’s where you come in.
If you have any other ideas or know of a better way to get the search fix moving along, and/or get Twitter to be more forthcoming about it, please post them in the comments below. (But if you know of someone missing from search, make sure you post about it at Twitter’s support ticket (here and/or here first.)
I’ve been writing copy in various capacities for the past 12 years or so. Here are some examples of my business and copywriting.
Since December 2005, I have been working as a freelance consultant for Project Simplify, a business simplification services company based in Nevada City, CA. My duties have been widely varied, and have included website development, copywriting and editing, business and marketing consulting, and quite a bit more.
You can read a testimonial about my skills from Project Simplify’s founder here, and another blog post that she wrote about my work here.
Here are some of the specific things I’ve worked on:
Website copy
Here are some examples of copywriting I’ve done for Project Simplify.
From Project Simplify’s Hire Us page:
The Simple Website Solution
The New Biz Systems Setup
The PS Simplifier Service
*In all of these cases, I wrote the base draft text, and then applied
revisions and edits based on discussions with the client Project
Simplify in order to create the final version.
Newsletter writing and editing
Since May of 2006, I have served as co-editor and a writer for Project Simplify’s newsletter, The Simplifier (previously The Weekly Simplifier).
In that capacity, I have proofread and edited all of the 80 (and counting) issues of the newsletter, along with Project Simplify’s founder. I have been responsible for the original content in the sections titled “In The News”, “Featured at ProjectSimplify.com”, and “Keep Smiling” for all 80+ issues as well.
You can find all of the past issues on the newsletter archive page here.
Additionally, I wrote for the other sections of the newsletter in a few instances:
-I wrote the introductory “Note from…” section in issues 20, 19, 13, 11, and 9.
-I wrote “This Week’s Simplification Tip” in issues 15 and 16.
Articles
I also wrote two articles which were featured in the newsletter and on ProjectSimplify.com:
You can find a varied assortment of other things I’ve written, designed, and otherwise created at works.lancebrown.org.
Weekly Social Feed Digest for June 28th | The Real Lance Brown
June 28, 2009 @ 4:12 pm
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