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Goal * * * *
This great sports drama follows Santiago Munez, an illegal Mexican in Los Angeles whose ability and persistence land him in tryouts for professional UK Football (soccer). The film is strong on family drama and does a great job of balancing sports scenes and the storyline. An excellent family movie with only a few implied sexual situations with secondary characters.
Facebook to open to everybody soon
Hey, just a few days after I took the time to set up a UW Madison Alumni email and forward it to my Google mail and I’m feeling all special and elite because I have a Facebook Account, Forbes reports that Facebook will open up to anybody very soon.
This will be really interesting to watch. Facebook is much, much smaller than Myspace but has a far more “elite” reputation among the college crowd. Will Myspace users move to Facebook? Run multiple accounts? Which service will new users choose?
Facebook turned down huge money recently, wanting a lot more for what they think is the most valuable social network environment. If I had to predict things I’d say they made a mistake turning down that money and opening up to all. They’llsee slower growth than they are expecting, reducing the perceived value of Facebook to less than what was offered.
Make Marketing, not War. Allocate 25% of military spending to a strategic global marketing initiative.
Yesterday I learned that the USA is the top donor to 1) Sudan and 2) Palestinian Territories.
(I already knew we were the top funder of the U.N.) This did not surprise me, but I’m always struck by how generous our Government is in areas where we are despised.
I’m not opposed to generosity – in fact I think we should send more money to poor and war-torn areas even if it means raising my already usurous income taxes, but it pisses me off that we don’t get a lot more credit for it because credit for all this generosity is deserved and, far more importantly, it is a strategic imperative in the fight against those who fight against us. I doubt the Palestinian or North Korean kids eating food provided by the USA are even aware of the source. They should be.
Given that the results of the “wars on terror” all over the globe are yielding dubious results – perhaps even solidifying the resolve of a new generation of “America Haters” – I propose we do what any good business would do at a time like this. We should reallocate our dubious spending toward something more likely to yield positive results.
My proposal is to establish a highly funded global marketing campaign by reallocating military spending to something that works better. The campaign’s goal will be to restore to the USA the type of international respect we had back in the 60’s. Then, Peace Corps folks would go into the hut of an African or Indonesian villager and find a poster of JFK rather than an arms cache. Why? Obviously not a simple equation, but the 1960’s villager saw the USA’s prosperity and and global influence as a blueprint for their own future prosperity and freedom. Now, a generation later, that villager is more likely to see the USA as exploiting him far more than offering hope.
The sad irony is that exploitation of poor countries is largely a mythology concocted by left wing intellectuals to justify their narrow world view that corporations don’t work well to raise the standards for most of the participants in societies that embrace the corporate capitalist model of development. Corporations do raise standards, and excellent examples abound of the contrast between non-corporate and corporate models of development.
The South Korean villager did in fact become very prosperous and lives in a society with a very high standard of living and reasonable freedoms, while his brother in North Korea struggles just to eat. The poverty in Africa is characterized by a *lack* of corporate capitalist participation, not by an excess amount of it as we’d expect with a “USA as exploiter” world view.
Cuba? Isn’t that the same guy in charge who has been there for forty five years? Has Cuba thrived by pulling themselves out of the corporate capitalist game for half a century? Hardly.
This is not to suggest that there is not exploitation by US corporations. There are plenty of examples, and one person’s exploitation may be seen by someone less fortunate as a road to prosperity. However I’d suggest that most forms of “capitalistic exploitation” are the exception not the rule, partly for the entirely selfish reason that the capitalist model seeks higher profits and this requires more consumers living at higher standards. Global prosperity is not a zero sum economic game, and in this fact lies the key to the success of the corporate capitalist model of development and the bankruptcy of most socialist paradigms.
Thanks to forces of “negative marketing” from self-serving and corrupt Governments, combined with many legitimate grievances against the USA’s imperial stance in global politics, the USA’s reputation appears at an all time low. Strategically this is leading to more terror and more terrorists. If we continue to respond militarily we 1) continue to kill innocent people, our own soldiers, and destroy infrastucture and 2) expend resources that could be put to better use.
Better use? Marketing the USA as a friend not an enemy.
Budget: $109,825,000,000 (25% of proposed 2007 military spend of 439.3 billion)
The US Military approach has failed to win the hearts and minds of the globe, and this puts us at increasing strategic risk. We live in the world’s most sophisticated marketing empire and it’s time we acted like it. Let’s just do it.
Outland * * *
What a great old Sci Fi movie. I miss the bleak sci fi noir thriller films like this of the 70 and 80s. Sean Connery and Peter Boyle are great as the law vs the greedy corporate manager on a distant mining colony of Jupiter’s IO. The storyline is not up to the superb sets and dark mood but this is a fun film
Mashup Camp 2 – Cassie and Drew
The youngest attendees are getting interviewed by David, who points out that they are the builders of the future….of mashups and the web.
Drew Dara-Abrams is a PhD student at UC Santa Barbara and sister Cassie, at age 16, led some sessions on social networking. She skipped High School (spending a week there) and goes to college now. Drew counsels the next breed of mashups to “think things through” a bit more. Good advice for all of us.
Mashup Camp 2
The technology providers have introduced themselves and now folks are pitching sessions. Note that unlike the play by play from Mashup University, I won’t be able to cover the flurry of information here at the main conference, a tsunami of ideas and innovation. The unconference model really brings out the good stuff.
Here are more resources:
I’m especially interested in sessions by Jeff – Amazon, Joseph – Plaxo, Adam – Google, Steve Microsoft Virtual Earth. IBM’s mashup maker sounds really neat.
Mashup University – AIMPages Module Microformat and Module Development
Wow, with a session title like that … you’ve got to love the internet …. or just replace it with acronym AIMMMMD
Review Microformats, which really clever people think are forming a key component of the new web.
Kevin Lawver with AOL is showing off some stuff at Aimcreate.com
AOL Module T: http://developer.iamalpha.com/profile/
AOL loves dojo
Use the module maker and it’s really easy to create modules.
Open web is becoming institutional, and that is …. good.
Mashup University – CNET will have the videos
David tells us that much/all of the presentations will be available as video after they get back to Boston and process the show. Go HERE for information about that next week.
Mashup University – Adobe KIWI project, ActionScript Libraries
Adobe Kiwi Project. Kiwi Project Blog
How can we pull protocols and standards into FLEX? How to build a different kind of mashup.
Note taking application demo…..<< demo connection down >> This always makes me feel better because I used to spend so many hours setting up travel internet demos and even after all the work you’d still have some problems. Even here in the heart of Silicon Valley the internet … still has shortcomings.
Hey, good job with a composed resurrection of his connection and presentation…
but…I’m lost.
As a non-developer it’s often hard to know if I’m lost due to stupidity or just being unfamiliar with the particular application background and/or code to understand.
I think usually the case is that the presenters are SO familiar with the background and their own tools and acronyms that most presentations to developers are accessed by only a few who have experience with the tools.
ActionScript 3 APIs libraries – he’s not got much time to describe … go here to find them.
After comments by search engines about the difficulties indexing FLASH elements I’m concerned that Adobe is not thinking broadly enough about how the FLEX development will index properly. Ultimately search indexing is the key to the success of most web based projects so I’d like to see a LOT more concern about how hard it still is to get FLASH properly indexed. Could FLEX projects wind up stranded due to heavy reliance on intergrating the presentation with FLASHesque items?
UPDATE: They think FLEX will solve some of the Flash indexing problems, since FLEX output is in HTML form.