I'm testing the quote feature, pay no mind.
The big ones get mentioned in this seven-line poem: blogs, Pinterest, Kindle/Nook, Twitter, and Facebook. The ABABCBC rhyme scheme holds it together.
Scrolling down goes late at night,
So says the third line, four meters like the rest. We are too busy online, are we not? That's the point of this poem. I should know.
I was able to get this poem out tonight, thanks to my new writing plan.
The background to this Cloudburst poem got placed here rather than on the website because Tumblr has a lousy interface and Cloudburst is going to move away from there before long.
First it was the Heartbleed bug. Now WP Jetpack announces a major critical security update for a bad bug. After the Mozilla action, seems like the Internet is having a hard time of it.
I've abandoned #FireFox, using Safari and Opera at the moment, but I don't know if they'll really serve me. Am missing some key functions. This has shaken up much of what I do on the Internet. As well as other well-worn neural paths. I need to update my OS, but that will have to wait. In the meantime. ...
Many of our sites are down this morning: BNc, FMag, etc. We're hoping to back up soon.
— J. Randal Matheny (@jrmatheny) March 1, 2012
Processing your inbox is your work. It's not something extra you have to do, or some distraction that doesn't belong in your life...unless of course you feel the same way about your physical mailbox. Like it or not, dealing with all your email is as much a part of your work (and required to do your job as well as you can) as keeping lists, clearing your head, or doing regular reviews. Yet consistently, we come across a resistance people have to driving their inboxes down to zero on a regular basis—as if that's a luxury reserved for those who don't get much input or don't have anything better to do. It's a critical component for keeping you in a clear, current and creative space to work and play at your best.
"Multitasking erodes cognitive control. We lose our ability to say that this is important, this is unimportant. All we want is new information."
In contrast, when readers open a printed book, "there's nothing else going on except words on a page, no distractions. It helps train us to be deep thinkers."
Carr, 52, told AFP he's not optimistic society will switch off en masse but it's important to look clearly at what it might be losing.
The internet is a wild free for all. It is an unregulated mass of free speech. It is, for all intents and purposes, the only such unregulated mass of free speech going today. That’s why people love it so. You can put up parody. You can post your made ravings on the convergence of string theory and mozzarella cheese sticks. You can even make stuff up and email it to all your friends. It’s up to the reader to filter out the truth from fiction, just like every other source of information in the world.
The truth is out there. It’s just not the government’s job to make sure that’s what is on the internet.
Art thrives on constriction. Screenwriters and poets have long known that if something is worth saying, it's worth saying as briefly as possible. With Twitter, the rest of the world is finding that out.
Go Quick Bible Truths! http://twitter.com/bibletruths