Sam Harrelson

Sam's Personal Stream of Life 
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The New Lost Generation of pseudo-Minimalists

Go read the whole Internet-Age Writing Class Syllabus...
"Instant messaging. Twittering. Facebook updates. These 21st-century literary genres are defining a new "Lost Generation" of minimalists who would much rather watch Lost on their iPhones than toil over long-winded articles and short stories. Students will acquire the tools needed to make their tweets glimmer with a complete lack of forethought, their Facebook updates ring with self-importance, and their blog entries shimmer with literary pithiness. All without the restraints of writing in complete sentences. w00t! w00t! Throughout the course, a further paring down of the Hemingway/Stein school of minimalism will be emphasized, limiting the superfluous use of nouns, verbs, adverbs, adjectives, conjunctions, gerunds, and other literary pitfalls..."

Students must have completed at least two of the following.

ENG: 232WR—Advanced Tweeting: The Elements of Droll
LIT: 223—Early-21st-Century Literature: 140 Characters or Less
ENG: 102—Staring Blankly at Handheld Devices While Others Are Talking
ENG: 30—Advanced Blog and Book Skimming
ENG: 231WR—Facebook Wall Alliteration and Assonance
LIT: 202—The Literary Merits of Lolcats
LIT: 209—Internet-Age Surrealistic Narcissism and Self-Absorption

http://www.mcsweeneys.net/2009/4/20lanham.html

Sent from my iPhone

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Filed under  //   education   facebook   learning   mobile   technology   twitter   web2.0  

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I Wish All My Asheville Friends Were Using Gowalla

I finally got around to installing Gowalla on my iPhone (since Asheville isn't cool enough to be a trendy FourSquare city yet).  

Gowalla could be an amazing little application and feels a great deal like Twitter did when I first started using the service in 2006 and saw the potential but couldn't get anyone besides SF geeks to use the service. 

So, if you're in Asheville (or not) join up so we can make great use of Gowalla locally.

And once you do join up, friend me up.

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Filed under  //   gowalla   iphone   location   mobile   technology   twitter   web2.0  

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Twitter Ad from AMEX

Saw this on WeatherUnderground's Asheville forecast page just now.

Interesting appropriation of Twitter for driving leads.

I wonder how effective it is or how specific/large this ad buy might be?  I haven't seen it elsewhere, but AMEX probably doesn't advertise on sites like Adbusters or Pitchfork that I frequent often :)

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Filed under  //   advertising   twitter  

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Locked Out of Twitter

Well this is unfortunate. 

I tried to login this morning and noticed that Tweetie was giving me an error message. So, I went to the website and got this notification.

Ugh.

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Filed under  //   twitter  

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Google Wave Screenshots

Here are a few shots I've collected from kicking the Google Wave... ugh... tires? Interestingly enough, I can just drag-n-drop the pics straight onto a wave and then post straight to Posterous with the posterous robot. Fantastic.

Maps, Docs and Pics are incredibly easy to insert and edit (neato map tagging features that would be helpful if you're in a discussion about a place or meet-up):

Tweety Robot:

OAuth Integration with Twitter:

Full Twitter Stream:

If I were a news reporter, this would be killer.

I can't wait to see how Wave plays out when it is released to more folks.

Update: Well, the image attachment didn't work from the Posterous Robot over to Posterous... hmm...

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Filed under  //   Google   Google Wave   Posterous   twitter  

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Fantastic: The Idiot's guide to Webfinger



I'm excited about the future of web identification. This is the blueprint for sure.

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Filed under  //   Google   identity   oauth   openid   technology   twitter   webfinger  

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T(t)witter Is (will be) a Protocol

davewiner: Imagine if a company owned the FTP or HTTP protocol? http://tr.im/woIW - twitter.com

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Filed under  //   twitter  

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Back to the Finger Future

Back in the day you could, given somebody's email address, type finger email@example.com and get some information about that person, whatever they wanted to share: perhaps their office location, phone number, URL, current activities, etc.

The finger protocol, sadly, died.

Fast-forward to Web 2.0. We're currently bickering about how we do interop between all these social web services, and even how we represent a person's identity. The two main identity identifer camps are email addresses and URLs.

In another year, we'll all be back to using this forgotten standard.

VAX and gopher next up for resurrection?

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Filed under  //   Google   identity   twitter   webfinger  

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My OS (In Perpetual Beta)

Sent from my iPhone

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Filed under  //   37signals   backpack   friendfeed   GMail   GTD   Moleskine   Pinboard   Posterous   productivity   twitter  

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The Future is Like-able (thx @scobleizer)

Just subscribed to Robert Scoble's Twitter Favs (RSS link) in Google Reader. Got the idea from this FriendFeed convo:
Hmm, how do I import my Twitter Favorites into FriendFeed. FriendFeed doesn't work with the RSS feed I found.

I'm confident that the future of the RSS subscriber / Twitter Follower / Facebook Friend paradigm will (continue) to shift towards being based on Likes.

Facebook does this well, FriendFeed does this well, Google is really getting into this well (with more emphasis on Likes and Shares in Google Reader) and ultimately Twitter will start pushing this functionality more (and let us not forget the Posterous Favs option).

Soon, it won't matter how many followers/friends/subscribers you have, but how many Likes you chalk up... and that has much more emphasis on quality.

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Filed under  //   facebook   friendfeed   google reader   Posterous   rss   twitter   web2.0  

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