“Web3 is my favorite new blog in years. Everything about it is just perfect.”

💬 John Gruber

I agree with @gruber


Propaganda for Good

“The Putin threat to this nation is still alive. It can still win. That’s because Trump was never Putin’s most dangerous puppet.

Rupert Murdoch is.”

💬 Dana Blankenhorn


“We were promised bicycles for the mind, but we got aircraft carriers instead”

💬 Jonathan Edwards

Bike - a ‘tool for thought’ from Hog Bay Software.

I assume the name emerges from the quote, but for thirty bucks not sure what it adds to the existing note/outliner world.


“I thought it might have been known in the office that after 34 years and 20 books I knew certain things about writing and didn’t want a copy-editor’s help with punctuation or the thing called repetition …

💬 V. S. Naipaul

Every writer has his own voice.


If You Don't Add Value - Why Are You There?

It is telling that someone like Doug Rushkoff can write these words;

Only individuals who create value for the company are awarded new stock proportionate to their contributions.

💬 Douglas Rushkoff

... without questioning the principle.

The corollary is of course that there are people that work inside a company that don't add value, which for yours truly is of course like a 'red rag to a bull' - because as the title of this post suggests, if you are employed by a company and not adding value to that company - then why are you there?

Stakeholder capitalism (apparently) 'solves' the problem.

‘Stakeholder capitalism’ is the buzzword du jour for business practices that strive to achieve more than profits and a high stock price.

💬 McKinsey

If you want to read more - you can:

Putting stakeholder capitalism into practice.

To be fair, the idea of 'Stakeholder Capitalism' has been around for several decades, although who actually coined the term is up for debate, with names including Klaus Schwab (Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum), Peter Drucker and Tom Peters.

Still wondering? This is not a bad primer.

So yes - it is not a new idea - it's just that as the world's conversation is moving into fairness and equality, as we see a (kind of) resurgence of Unions and as 'capitalists' are pushed into the corner of 'defending their position' ... the term is emerging and arguably being positioned as the logical next step for a 'sustainable economy'.

I wrote about this over three years ago when I shared a Ted Talk from Nick Hanauer. Today, that video has had over 5 million views. At the point of 'first discovery', I had not heard of Nick - but as I pointed out, the principles of what he was talking about are engrained in People First thinking.

Today, you can hear the same language when people talk about DAOs in the world of 'Web3' and quite a few other places.

But then many steps before 'Stakeholder Capitalism', there was something called 'The Cooperative Movement' which got its start in 1844 in Rochdale a small town in Lancashire, England.

So far, I have not read anything that clearly articulates the distinction between Stakeholder Capitalism and Cooperatives and which and why each might be better or worse than the other. Sometimes I wonder if 'cooperative' is too 'radical' in this world - so we keep inventing new words to describe the same thing.

I have always liked the New Values/Old Values - New Power/Old Power model originally developed by Jeremy Heimans and Henry Timms nearly ten years ago.

So, picking on a random target company like Uber, which despite hanging its hat on 'the sharing economy' is actually 💯 an 'old thinking' capitalist company.

Now consider a company called ATX Coop Taxi - a cooperative taxi service based in Austin that has been around for over 5 years. NO - they aren't as well known - but their service is a 'cooperative'.

The question is why hasn’t it taken off?

That is for another time.


”Digital transformation is the process of using digital technologies to create new — or modify existing — business processes, culture, and customer experiences to meet changing business and market requirements.”

💬 Marc Benioff


“It’s better to hang out with people better than you. Pick out associates whose behaviour is better than yours and you’ll drift in that direction.”

💬 Warren Buffet

Makes total sense to me.


Toast Generally Lands One of Two Ways

“The expansion of shelter-in-place, or as we call it, forcibly imprisoning people in their homes… is, in my opinion, breaking people’s freedoms in ways that are horrible and wrong… What the fuck!… This is not freedom. Give people back their goddamn freedom.”

💬 Musk in America in April 2020 re lockdowns

Meanwhile …

""

💬 Musk in China in April 2022 re lockdowns

Read The Whole Thing - spells out very clearly which side the bread is buttered on - and the struggles to ensure that the toast doesn’t land face down!


“All dads dress in the style of the last good year of their lives.”

💬 Jerry Seinfeld


“Spotify has long been an awful business. Investors are only now waking up to that reality.”

💬 Martin Peers - The Information


“The Senate has become a theater of performative behaviors by senators decreasingly interested in legislating, and preoccupied with using social media for self-promotion.”

💬 George Will

Yes George. Yes. It’s clear. Has been for a while now.

As for

“Amend the Constitution to bar senators from the presidency.”

Turkeys don’t vote for Christmas.


“If we don’t figure out how to allow people to talk in the public square without being threatened or lied to by clowns with megaphones, it won’t matter who ‘owns’ the megaphones.”

💬 Stowe Boyd

More


‘The Book’ in Readwise.


Lore - What Is It Good For?

Apparently - absolutely everything, (with apologies to Edwin Star). That said, a really GREAT series of articles by Venkatesh Rao on ‘Lore’ The Index To The Series

This is Part 7 of 7 : 🔗 Towards Management Metamodernism , from which I quote;

Just as Wallace noted, in 1993, that literary writing was increasingly substituting TV-watching for observation of life (which, as he pointed out, was understandable, since life itself was about sitting on a couch watching television), by 2007 or so, on the threshold of the global financial crisis, “external reality” to leaders meant the output of the literary-industrial complex.

💬 Venkatesh Rao - Ribbon Farm

(My bold reminding me of the UK series Gogglebox - an entire show where we the viewers watched other viewers watch television!)


Does anybody know Robin Rendle?

They should call him and tell him about Blot.

As I was reading this post from Jim about his setup I got wildly, incomprehensibly jealous; he writes about having a folder on his desktop that he can just throw stuff into and it publishes to a website. This, to me, is the absolute dream. The ultimate writing setup.

💬 Robin Rendle

Source


Vibe Shifts - Are You Part Of Them?

I never made the switch from photography to illustrations on my web properties, but I do very much remember when Unsplash seemed to suddenly be the ‘defacto choice’ for photography on many sites. More recently seeing Craft and others add the service right into their apps, I have felt for a while that I need to discover a new source of visual inspiration.

Was that due to that acquisition, or is it the uniquity of images from the Unsplash library? Are they related?

Case in point …. how many times have you seen this image?

Photo by Ian Schneider on Unsplash

According to Unsplash it has nearly 150 million views and has been downloaded 1,225,278 times - not recorded are the 2,397 sites I have visited that use this image!

So yes, I have noticed that I am struggling to find images on Unsplash that work for what I am writing about. Which is why I am eagerly waiting for my access to DALL-E 2 and … Midjourney … because I already have plans to change the illustrative approach to my blogs and social sharing.

I thought it was just me - until I read this today;

Sometime around 2015 there was a mysterious vibe shift in web design. It came so suddenly, and with so much decisive force, that it stood apart from the normal ebb and flow of aesthetic trends. It was like an invasive species taking over an ecosystem from a weaker competitor.

💬 Nathan Baschez

🔗 DALL·E 2 and The Origin of Vibe Shifts

I think when Unsplash (the free photography website) was founded in 2013 it killed the old vibe by democratizing access to great photography, and thereby ruining its function as a costly status signal. Companies then started using custom illustrations in their brand aesthetic because illustrations suddenly became much more rare and expensive relative to photos.

I’m interested in this little piece of design history because today I think history is on the brink of repeating itself. Now that we have DALL·E 2 (and other AI image generators), a huge portion of visual vibes will become democratized. What Unsplash did to photography, DALL·E 2 will do to illustrations, 3D renderings, and eventually all visual styles.

In other words: a vibe shift is indeed coming.


Me?

“I know nothing.”

💬 Private Schultz

But I have just been working through 🔗 Elon’s Giant Package … which is an alternative take on what is going on with today’s news.


“We really need to start treating people’s time as being more valuable than the organisation’s money.”

💬 Mark McArthur-Christie


“How about a rule that only stories that are not behind a paywall will be considered for a Pulitzer prize.”

💬 Dave Winer

… it’s a thought.


Loving the Lore thinking of Venkatesh Rao.