Blogging since 1998. By David Wertheimer

Month: October 2002 (Page 3 of 3)

Content Management Summit

I attended the Content Management Summit yesterday and had a good time. Learned some interesting things. Among them:

~ The Internet is still a learning space. Different media sites have vastly different concepts of the best way to make money and present information. Marketing ploys are still widely created and debated. Ye olde Web is still a nascent sales venue.

~ Of the presentations I saw (from Technowledge, eMeta, and others), few actually said much about the products being hawked. Lots of explanations were given: here’s why you need this service. With the exception of Microsoft, no one explained how said service would help my business.

~ The term du jour these days is “pay per drink.”

~ No one can really agree what the heck a weblog is, and lots of people still haven’t heard of them. John Hiler actually had the chutzpah (naivete?) to declare, “Weblogs only cover interesting things,” using “interesting” to mean “technology and terrorism and not much else.” Hiler also described his company, Xanga, as attracting “a lot of [age] 50-plus people because they have nothing to do.”

I also enjoyed catching up with Cam and meeting scores of new people, including Nick Denton and several folks who thought I was the other David Wertheimer.

Jason Calacanis throws a good conference, and I am looking forward to Brian Alvey’s next Meet the Makers assembly in November.

Yeah, but it’s a big one

The 1 Percent Solution? in Clickz.

The most important line in this article is one the author glosses over: “There’s nothing wrong per se with charging for online content, provided you charge for the right things and do so in the right ways.”

The article then goes onto dissecting sites such as Salon, which charges users to not see ads, which is entirely counter to the basic ad-sales model, which asks for a definable viewing audience in order to proffer an effective purchase.

Still, an interesting read, and one worth considering for us media folks.

On the dog

Fun things to know about my new puppy Charley.

Things to know about Charley.

~ He is a coton de tulear, or more casually, a coton, pronounced “koh-TAHN.”

~ Charley was born July 13, which makes him just shy of three months old. He weighed six pounds at the vet September 30 and should grow to between 12 and 15 pounds as an adult. Technically, he was my fiancee’s birthday present, six months late, but Amy has declared him to be our dog, not hers.

~ With the exceptions of barking to get attention and nipping when playful, Charley is an extremely well-adjusted and well-behaved puppy. He is friendly and only a little bit shy; when confined he is paper-trained.

~ He likes his crate and sleeps through the night without complaint, unless we return home late—say, from a wedding at 3 a.m.—at which point he gets rambunctious and keeps me busy for two hours of play time.

~ Charley will chew on anything he can find. Literally. He likes his toys and anything stringed, like shoelaces, but he has discovered everything from pillowcases to cardboard boxes to the molding on the kitchen doorway.

~ He likes to see the world from his travel bag (well, he doesn’t complain) and he is very relaxed in a car (but not a taxi, just like his mommy).

~ Charley doesn’t shed, which helps keep the apartment looking clean. He does have stinky poop, which does not help keep the apartment smelling clean.

~ We have a webcam that allows us to monitor the puppy during the day. We did it for security purposes, but it’s just plain fun. (I’m not posting the URL online but it is available upon request.)

~ Having a puppy is hard, hard work, and worth every minute of it.

Charley

The subject was a year in gestation, the process lengthy and educational. Seven months passed from the first phone calls until the event; for a while, we were delayed, and we weren’t sure it would ever happen.

But on a happy dairy farm outside Montreal last weekend, Charley was waiting for us, and at long last, we have an adorable, incredible puppy.

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