We will be splitting the guest shows out into a separate series, but until we do, Salon #30 had us welcome the one, the only Doc Searls. Co-author of The Cluetrain Manifesto and The Intention Economy, alumni fellow at Harvard University’s Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, Project VRM leader and open source champion.
Books, references and links
- The Cluetrain Manifesto
- Project VRM at the Berkman Center at Harvard
- The Intention Economy, When Customers Take Charge, by Doc Searls
- Linux Journal
- We’re in the Epilogue Now, via the Doc Searls blog
- Where Journalism Fails
- Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media
- Moral Politics by George Lakoff
- Customer Commons (How good customers work with good companies)
- Subprime Attention Crisis by Tim Hwang
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So much to comment on. Doc Searls, who I had never heard of before, was a great guest. I think the concept of a salon doesn’t need to be restricted to the regulars and allows for guests.
For now I’ll add a meta-conservative perspective. The nurturing family political metaphor is only ever a choice after achieving a certain level of safety from the dangerous world.
Bah! So how do I reply to your “BLOG”? Or is it a “VLOG” now?
A friend sent your email “AXIS”, and I tried to reply. No go.
Well, in answer to your question “…smallest bookstore still contains more ideas of worth than…”
– It has to be Newton Minow. Some at the FCC called him a minnow.
I don’t care. It all stinks. Even Ms. Lafumeuse stinks of Gitanes smoke – she banned me from her poutine pub anyhow.