The Social Network Actually Looks…Good?

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The Social Network is the upcoming movie about the start and rise of Facebook.  There is plenty of reason for skepticism as much of it is likely to be over-glorified, dramatic and intriguing then the actual birth was; but I have to admit, after seeing the trailer I’m intrigued.

I’ve read both Ben Mezrich’s “The Accidental Billionaires” and David Kirkpatrick’s “The Facebook Effect,” and while Kirkpatrick’s is reportedly much more realistic-and based on actual facts and interviews with key players-it is still riveting.  Which gives me hope – sometimes the truth is plenty exciting enough.  Let’s hope the producers feel the same way.

Here’s the trailer, let me know what you think.  Also, can I just say the remade “Creep” by Radiohead for this piece is perfect. Will you be going to see it come this October?

Via Movie Trailer: The Social Network | /Film.

What I’m asking on my job interviews

As I announced a few weeks ago, I’m leaving my current job and am on the hunt for the next great opportunity.  And while I’m sad to be leaving my current role, I’m excited about what the future holds and the opportunity to find the best fit for me and my next employer.  What I’ve learned over the last few years is that the most important thing is to ensure your world view lines up with the people you work with.  You need to understand, at their core, what drives and motivates them.  You need to really understand the goals of the leadership and the company in general.

I think this idea has been crystallized nicely in the two videos below.  The first is based on Daniel Pink‘s new book Drive, the second is a TEDx talk by Simon Sinek, that is based on the principles of his new book Why?

Both focus on this idea of what is the motivating factor in the office place.  And it comes down to much bigger things that simply monetary rewards.   It comes down to purpose.   And that’s what I’m looking for now – people who share the same purpose. The same outlook, the same opinion on what it means to run a successful business.

I’m looking for the Zappos, the 37 Signals, the Apple’s and all the other companies that aim to change the world and make great products and experiences.  I believe that if you do that the money follows.

If you believe that, then I’m interested in talking about how we can work together.

Taking Back the Word ‘Friend’

The word friend has been bastardized by social networks. From Tom at MySpace (your first MySpace friend, remember?) to the friend requests you get daily from people you never meet; we’ve changed what it means to be a friend.  It’s a shame we don’t have a better word for it – LinkedIn comes close with ‘connections’ – because true friendship, as this article argues, is not about collection (how many friends do I have?) nor about gain (am I friends with Chris Brogan? and what can he do for me?) but of a more enriching relationship steeped in the past of shared experience and built on a blurred sense of self.

It may be reassuring to look at Facebook and see your 700 friends, but how many of them will come sit by your side incapacitated in the hospital?  The article, and I, both suggest that this latter number is the more important and most fulfilling.

Friendships worthy of the name are different. Their rhythm lies not in what they bring to us, but rather in what we immerse ourselves in. To be a friend is to step into the stream of another’s life. It is, while not neglecting my own life, to take pleasure in another’s pleasure, and to share their pain as partly my own. The borders of my life, while not entirely erased, become less clear than they might be. Rather than the rhythm of pleasure followed by emptiness, or that of investment and then profit, friendships follow a rhythm that is at once subtler and more persistent. This rhythm is subtler because it often (although not always) lacks the mark of a consumed pleasure or a successful investment. But even so, it remains there, part of the ground of our lives that lies both within us and without.

via Roberto Greco’s Delicious Feed & original article: Friendship in an Age of Economics – Opinionator Blog – NYTimes.com.

A retail store to get excited about: LEGO

A new entrant to the world of branded, experience-based retail stores (think Apple, Microsoft, etc.) finally has me excited.  Lego opened it’s first store in New York (the grand opening is this week) and from the pictures, let’s just say, I hope they put one out in California within any type of driving distance from me.

My favorite part? Going in and seeing the look of happiness and wonder that would surely strike my son – I get chills thinking about it.  Lego is such a great brand because it inspires creativity and play, two things we tend to wring out of our kids in school, and I think this new store experience is a great way to reintroduce people to the creative enjoyment that is Lego.

via swissmiss.

The deal with ‘so’

Cover of "New New Thing"

Cover of New New Thing

So, as someone who starts many of his sentences with this particular adverb I find this whole article fascinating.  I wonder if my time near Silicon Valley had anything to do with my fondness of it as an opener.

So, it is widely believed that the recent ascen dancy of “so” began in Sil­i con Val ley. The jour nal ist Michael Lewis picked it up when research ing his 1999 book “The New New Thing”: “When a com puter pro gram mer answers a ques tion,” he wrote, “he often begins with the word ‘so.”’ Microsoft employ ees have long argued that the “so” boom began with them.

In the soft ware world, it was a tic that made sense. In immigrant-filled tech nol ogy firms, it democ ra tized talk by replac ing a world of pos si ble tran si tions with a catchall.

And “so” sug gested a kind of think ing that appealed to problem-solving types: con ver sa tion as a log i cal, uni di rec tional process, pro ceed ing much in the way of soft ware code — if this, then that.

via ‘So’ Pushes to the Head of the Line « Anand Giridharadas.

Shirky: Does the Internet Make You Smarter?

Cognitive surplus

One of the brilliant minds of our time, Clay Shirky, riffs on whether the Internet brings us all to the lowest common denominator of culture.  Do the dumb videos, memes and amatuer created content represent a crisis for our society or are they merely a byproduct of increasing mental productivity?  Shirky argues it’s the latter, and I agree.  Read the rest of his essay on WSJ.com, and pre-order his new book, Cognitive Surplus.

The present is, as noted, characterized by lots of throwaway cultural artifacts, but the nice thing about throwaway material is that it gets thrown away. This issue isnt whether theres lots of dumb stuff online—there is, just as there is lots of dumb stuff in bookstores. The issue is whether there are any ideas so good today that they will survive into the future. Several early uses of our cognitive surplus, like open source software, look like they will pass that test.

via Does the Internet Make You Smarter? – WSJ.com.

If you haven’t read his previous book Here Comes Everybody get it now.

Image via the WSJ.

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Six Writers Share Their Favorite Reads for Summer

A great collection of recommended summer reading by writers in New York Magazine.  I don’t know about you, but I love summer reading.  It started as a kid, and now I look forward to the longer, lazier days, reading at night and by the pool and catching up on the joy of reading a great book.

From the article:

Beach reads don’t have to be new best sellers or formulaic romances. In fact, summer is the perfect time to dig deep into books, classics and otherwise, you’ve missed. We asked exemplary authors in particular fields to recommend the books that matter most to them—the ones they keep going back to and, in many cases, that made them want to write. Their literary mix tapes, of a sort.

book covers

Image via New York Magazine.

Meme architects: The creators of Internet Culture

Here’s a great documentary from ROFLcon with some of the creators of the most famous Internet memes around. My favorite part? Most of them didn’t know what they were creating at the time.

via: How I Got Famous on the Internetz: David After Dentist, Keyboard Cat, Mahir, Alexey Vayner and More at ROFLCon | Motherboard.

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Video: Tribute to the 80′s Bullies

80

This video cuts together all the great bullies from those 80′s classics that we hold near and dear.  These are the guys that we love to hate. The guys that sweep the leg, chant “Nerds! Nerds! Nerds!” and can’t deal losing their best gal to a warewolf.  You gotta watch it if you lived any part of the 80′s.

Enjoy!

via: The ’80s Bully Megacut: Shoves, Wedgies, Putdowns, and Punches (VIDEO). hat tip to Very Short List.