


"You've been writing about Web sites, products, services and companies you love for years and you have yet to benefit from all the sales and traffic you have helped generate. That's about to change. With PayPerPost™ advertisers are willing to pay you to post on topics. Search through a list of topics, make a blog posting, get your content approved, and get paid. It's that simple."If you don't fully disclose your affiliations when talking about a product, you run the risk of reducing credibility to providing truthful reviews about products or services to customers. And that's wrong --very wrong.


If creating a movie or a slideshow and publishing it to the web seems like a challenge, we think you'll find that jumpcut makes it easy and fun. If you've been wondering what to do with the video you shoot with your snazzy new camera (or your phone), jumpcut is the perfect place for you to be creative. If video isn't your thing just yet and you just want to make cool slideshows with your pictures, jumpcut is still the best place. -Jumpcut siteI saw both Marc and Nick last week at Supernova and Bloggercon. Now you can see how Nick's mashed up Marc's vidoe
Andrew Martin of New Marketing has checked out my notes from Supernova regarding the conversation between Kevin and Jonathan Scwartz.


"Big companies have for years installed industrial-strength content management systems in the hope of sparking collaboration among workers. There was just one problem: People didn't use them." -Martin LaMonica, ZDnetI'm currently working on my fourth Enterprise Intranet and I've used several different CMS systems: Microsoft CMS (twice), Microsoft Sharepoint, Stellent, Plumbtree, Interwoven Teamsite --and a flurry of homegrown systems. By far, and waaay far, the best and easiest to use CMS system is this blog software by blogger --yup, and it's free.
Involved in Internet Advertsing? Don't walk blind, get resources to guide you.


Welcome to the Nokia Nseries N91 Blogger Relations Blog site. Here you will find blogger and media information that you can repurpose and utilize in your blog postings about the N91.The homepage is using a Blog platform, and they're pulling in customer testimonials such as from Adam Curry. Check out ZDnet's review on the phone and mention of the Blogger Relation Program. There's even a blogger support page --they're really catering to the segment.

Students rely on MySpace to preserve their mememories. Somewhere in the middle we're starting to see other services are starting to appear such as myYearbook, the young founders tell their story. Students can put their class schedules online, share notes, put stuff in their virtual locker, vote for folks and even leave 'signatures' in each others yearbooks.
"John Shin refuses to buy a copy of his high school yearbook. Instead, he’s turning to the Internet to preserve and share memories of his sophomore year."
"It all started during Spring Break 2005, flipping through a yearbook in my room and realizing it sucked. This is 2005 - why the hell is anyone buying yearbooks anymore?..."The next generation will take their social networks with them. I've been talking about the MySpace generation hitting the workforce and the impacts that will have --it's going to continue and be a significant change how companies will need to reach, communicate, and grow with their audience --it's a two-way transaction. We can see this shift occur as MySpace and SimplyHired (a job aggregating site) start to partner and offer job listings for MySpace users."...It could reinvent real life. It could make real life better. Making it easier to meet the people you see every day. Making it easier to approach the cute girl in a different class."






Left: Tantek (bearing his superhero logo --you can't see the cape to well) of Technorati and Andy Baio, upcoming.org. More pics here.










Left: San Francisco State University 










1) HP Demands Workers on site, Smart or Stupid?
we’ve tackled issues on the new policy that HP has demanded on reduced Telecommuting. Is this an effective way for employees to work? or does the office 2.0 empower and enable workers to connect online and by using collaborative technologies?
2) Are Corporate Marketer's going extinct?
With the ability for customers and prospects to connect and build networks and communities, are Corporate Marketing Departments, even relevent? If possible, what can corporate marketing departents do to stay relevent? We explore this issue from multiple sides and issues –dial in to hear.
3) Exactly how many logins and IDs do we need to use the web –is there a solution?
Too many gateways mean we all end up with far too much information to keep up with. When a beta tester and geek like Ismael Ghalimi ends up getting frustrated, then you know it’s time for Identity 2.0. Rather than having to keep up with 30+ passwords/logins and having to worry about APIs and the technical specifics of multiple platforms, Identity 2.0 would streamline all of this into one gateway that shared your data with the applications you allowed. Martin seems to think we are up to 10 years off from this. The discussion goes from why Passport didn’t work (um… it was from Microsoft) to the possibilities of a web without walls. Dennis asked if there were enterprise implications here. All in all it was a fascinating discussion of a fairly complex subject. We’ll devote a future full podcst to the topic.
You can find other PRT podcasts and subscribe at PodcastRoundtable
Left: Historic Hotel Utah, SF









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After cursory analysis of the Riya homepage, I've been thinking more about photo management. I'm still a being called a Flickr zealot, as I really think it’s the best way to manage, share and build communities around photo and life experience enthusiasts.
I’ve uploaded over 2000 photos in the last few months (view all my sets) –that’s a lot. I’m currently assigning group tags to each of the Sets that I upload. I often upload them by event or location but I don’t have the time to individually tag each one with names of individuals, and or unique objects.
Here’s an example of my flickr hiking trip on Saturday to
I'm going to continue taking more and more pictures (as will my friends and family with their cell phone or digi cam) the need for fast photo management will increase. I take my camera to nearly every event, and it’s often with me (or my cell phone is). I’ll bet that more and more folks will be like me, wanting to document their experiences, their life on the web.
more personal photos (which is increasing) = more photo management
For those of you following along and checking out my flickr photos, please forgive if I don’t tag them all the time. On a similar note, I cracked open Riya for the first time. Having uploaded my New Communications Set, (here's a Riya collection of mine and others) I was able to test out the features with a well known blogger community. I’m still playing with it and experimenting to provide a comprehensive review --deployed correctly, the community can assist to train faces to names and tags.
The issue for me is that I’ve purchased two years of Flickr Pro, (which allows more bandwidth to upload more photos), and I don’t have any intentions on switching to a different photo application --there's got to be a way to get the best of both worlds.
(In a few years, this same model will apply to online video sharing as the barriers to publish videos continue to decrease)

Another Web Strategist Review by Jeremiah





Jeremiah is a Global Web Strategist. These personal thoughts are his alone, and none others.