Is there one link, story, picture or thought that you saw online this week that you think somebody you know must see?
My friends: Alistair Croll (BitCurrent, Rednod, GigaOM, Human 2.0, the author of Complete Web Monitoring and Managing Bandwidth: Deploying QOS in Enterprise Networks), Hugh McGuire (The Book Oven, LibriVox, Bite-Sized Edits, Media Hacks) and I decided that every week or so the three of us are going to share one link for each other (for a total of six links) that each individual feels the other person "must see".
Check out these six links that we’re recommending to one another:
- The Thomas Paine Affair – Bogsource.com. "There’s a lot of noise in the US about the constitution and God. So, I found this biography of Thomas Paine (from Bogsource) fascinating: it shows a face of the founding fathers as deists, and the life of a man who variously pissed off the church, Robespierre, the King of England, and Federalists. It also reminds us of an earlier attempt to marry church and state, filled with ‘huge, days-long tent revivals were held where speakers pounded their Bibles and preached fire and brimstone against the non-Christians.’" (Alistair for Hugh).
- RSA Animate – First as Tragedy, Then as Farce – RSA Comment. "RSA’s animated videos are the other TED. I know you’re a big fan of thought provocation. Until last week, I hadn’t heard of the Royal Society for the Encouragement of the Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce. It’s the original Smart Person’s Conference, featuring proto-geeks like Franklin, Darwin, Bell and Hawking. It’s over 250 years old, and their presentations are unique: a cartoonist illustrates the talking points live." (Alistair for Mitch).
- Facing The Heat – Stanford Magazine. "I have a personal rule for this link-picking exercise: I don’t allow myself to pick articles that appear in the Editor’s Picks list from Instapaper, because that is just too easy. I had *two* articles lined up, and *both* later turned up in Editor’s Picks. Anyway, I read some other great things, one was this refreshingly candid interview with climate scientist Stephen Schneider, about the strange, frantic state of the climate debate. Stephen Schneider died on July 19, 2010 after suffering a pulmonary embolism." (Hugh for Alistair).
- Analysis: What are the Web’s Top Sources of Referral Traffic? – ReadWriteWeb. "This one is for both of you, though maybe you guys already know it, given how much of your businesses revolve around analytics. But if you want to know how to get traffic to websites, it’s important to know: where does all the traffic come from? An analytics company, Woopra (great tool, by the way) has sliced and diced their numbers and the answer is: Facebook, Stumbleupon, YouTube, and, of course, Google." (Hugh for Mitch and Alistair).
- Will Zynga Become the Google of Games? – The New York Times. "The Internet is going through another massive shift with the soon-to-be-launched Facebook Credits. With over 500 million accounts, it looks like Facebook is set to launch their own economy, and they’re starting with their own monetary system. Zynga – the online social gaming developers – have made tons of cash with both Farmville and Mafia Wars in Facebook to date, and their evaluation is pretty insane. Social gaming companies, virtual goods and online credits look to be the next big thing (if they aren’t already), and this fascinating article takes you a couple of scratches beneath the surface." (Mitch for Alistair).
- No Secrets – The New Yorker. "The breaking news this week surrounding WikiLeaks is just another example of how journalism, mass media, freedom of information and open networks are colliding and creating new constructs of what is news, how it is edited and how it is curated. This is a long (and fascinating) article about Julian Assange – the man behind WikiLeaks. Too many people are trying to vilify him without really understanding what the platform is and how it can change democracy, media and our own interpretation of the news. Who knows maybe this will re-ignite interest in Data Libre?" (Mitch for Hugh).
Now, it’s your turn: in the comment section below pick one thing that you saw this week that inspired you and share it.
Cool links. Thank you Mitch, Hugh and Alistair for sharing. I do lots of reading on weekends, so your picks are most welcome.
??I was in inspired by a couple of posts that came across my Tumblr dashboard this week:??The first is an incredible public art installation by Stefan Sagmeister. Using more than 200,000 euro cents, he recreated a sentence from his list of life lessons, “Obsessions make my life worse and my work better” on a square in Amsterdam. ??
The other is a post from Start-Up Quotes, wisdom about startup: ??It’s hard to do a really good job on anything you don’t think about in the shower. – Paul Graham
Thanks for adding Leona. We try to do this every week (been at it for a while now). You should also check out the hashtag #sundayreading on Twitter. There’s lots of goodness there as well.
What a great idea, Mitch. I loved the article on Thomas Paine…well written and what an insight. Posted it on FB for my daughter to read as she is doing her Masters in History. Keep up the great ideas! Will join #sundayreading, for sure!!!
Feel free to add your interesting links here or just tag them #sundayreading on Twitter.
I found this TED Talk from Nicholas Christakis very interesting. It showcases how much we need to participate in social networks. Even more than that, actually. Take 20 minutes and check it out:
http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/nicholas_christakis_the_hidden_influence_of_social_networks.html
I was fortunate enough to see this TED Talk live… such an impressive study and the insights behind it were amazing.
HI. I feel like a late bloomer. I’m devouring your book, Six Pixels of Separation. I am grateful for the instruction to this exciting world. I am finally understanding what it’s about and how to work with it. I’ve dabbled – but like a baby who is just learning to walk, I’ve stumbled. This has been not only helpful – I cannot put it down. Thank you! I hope I did not fumble here.
It’s never too late. The timing is perfect, and that was the whole point of writing the book in first place (to get new people to jump on in here). No fumbling. No stumbling. The whole idea is to share ideas, thoughts, etc… Welcome in and feel free to take some more steps…
Hi Mitch, long time listener, first time commenter (just kidding I’ve commented before)
I love what you guys are doing with sharing these links, I haven’t even finished the post yet and I had to tell you how informative the post on point #3 was. All I can say is WOW! Keep finding the content that matters and tell me your opinion of it and you will continue to grow your already large following.
You’re doing some great work Mitch, it makes it all the more sweet knowing you’re from Canada 😉
Cheers,
Jeph
Sorry, point 4 the ReadWriteWeb post, 3 was good too but 4 I loved!
Thanks Jeph… we’re having tons of fun with sharing the links for one another.
Mitch – you might have read this already, but I want to share it anyway. Paul Graham’s thoughts on The Acceleration of Addictiveness:
http://www.paulgraham.com/addiction.html
I had not seen it – thanks for adding it.
Their Cityville Secrets Guide is a serious eye-opener. I took
the effortless way out and went to a Farm – Ville fan
internet site and got an email with the best 10 crops to plant.
There are some who following Farmville tips from others have gone
on to make level 20 in just over a week.
Consejo # 5 Proteinas – Los alimentos ricos en protenas te
ayudar a sentirte lleno. Nuestro organismo no puede quemar la grasa que durante muchos a.
Siempre es posible poder eliminar peso y quemar la grasa del abdomen pero hay que tener cuidado con
los miles de metodos que podemos encontrar en el mercado que puedan
afectar nuestra salud y traer consecuencias irreparables.