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by Scott Hanselman.
Original Post: News Flash - I'm a Luddite
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Feed Description: Scott Hanselman's ComputerZen.com is a .NET/WebServices/XML Weblog. I offer details of obscurities (internals of ASP.NET, WebServices, XML, etc) and best practices from real world scenarios.
If I had a nickel for everytime someone called me a Luddite,
I'd have 5 cents.
Main Entry: Ludd·ite Function: noun
Etymology: perhaps from Ned Ludd, 18th century Leicestershire workman who destroyed
machinery : one of a group of early 19th century English workmen destroying laborsaving
machinery as a protest; broadly : one who is opposed to especially technological
change
- Luddite adjective >
>
>>
Dave Winer: Carl, every time some new form of communication
there are always people to say it's unnecessary or no one wants it. I've even been
one of those people from time to time. ;->
Your friend's mistake is that this isn't a replacement for PowerPoint, it's a replacement
for drive-time radio, or radio listened to while exercising, or radio not listened
to on long airplane flights or drives. (Where reception is non-existent or only idiotic
right wing idealogues are available. They can be entertaining, but after a while you
yearn for some adult conversation.)
Anyway, PowerPoint, which btw, I had a hand in inventing (Smooth segue. Apparently
Dave invented the bulleted list and the slideshow. Here he remind us of one of his
many places in history...), is a disaster for communication (...then
as a technological bad-boy bashes it), it should be wiped off the face of
the earth, a crutch for freaked-out speakers, and the people who have to listen to
someone wade through a PP presentation know all too well that as soon as the first
slide is up, people start falling asleep, checking their email or reading blogs. Now
they'll have a new choice, put on the headphones and listen to one of the verbal incontinents [sic] your
Luddite friend is so dismissive of.
I've been an Audible Subscriber since its inception and use it for NPR as well as
AudioBooks.
I did a nationally syndicated Wireless
Trip across the country in the Spring of 2000 that distributed via MP3s
and produced by a local AM radio station. A fewlinks.
I've still got the MP3s, perhaps I should post them.
I've be a PodCast subscriber since .NET Rocks started using PodCasting.
And I'm saying simply:
It's ironic as we were all up in arms two weeks ago about RSS's use of bandwidth,
now we're using RSS as a pointer to a 40 meg MP3.