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The Five Stages of Social Media Grief

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Reality check: the new era began a while ago

Warren Stephens and Walter Hussman
Warren Stephens and Walter Hussman have joined forces to create a blessed spot for conglomerate media and move towards paid content at 'ludicrous speed.'
Today, each of the NWA Newspapers ran a story about the merger signaling “a new era” for news in our corner of the state. They even said “This region shall have the strongest, healthiest, newspapers in these United States.Read more of this post.

It's not a revolution if nobody loses.

I'm reading a book, Here Comes Everybody by Clay Shirky. It is a brilliant analysis of how social technology is affecting our behaviors. It's the kind of book that makes you want to underline every paragraph and write in every page's margin.

I'm thinking of using this title as a textbook for an experiment. I'm pondering a series of posts which could constitute an online crash-course in social technology.Read more of this post.

Rome in a day

In a recent editorial by the Northwest Arkansas Times, Greg Harton criticized me for not focusing on what's most important. You can read his editorial, titled Rookie Years, and my response below. (Note: Greg's editorial represents his personal opinion, not the Times' editorial board. I mistakenly attributed the article to the board, instead of to Greg himself. I apologize.)Read more of this post.

Good Faith Governing in the 21st Century

A picture of a local business that has banned talking about Facebook.
Is social media valuable, or just useless chatter?
Governments (and the elected officials that operate them) have a duty to communicate with their entire constituency, or at least make a good faith effort. In the old days, that meant nailing a notice up in front of City Hall, and in modern times it has come to mean radio adverts and column inches.Read more of this post.

Facebook and Fayetteville

In Fayetteville, Arkansas, around the local papers have around 14,000 and 8,000 subscribers, for a total of 22,000 (ballpark).
When Facebook has almost 30,000 Fayetteville citizens using the service (almost half of the population!), shouldn't we take note and change some policies to reflect that? I think so.
Here's a breakdown of the Facebook users in Fayetteville:Read more of this post.

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