If you want to grow, you need new customers. And if you want new customers, you need three things:
1. A group of possible customers you can identify and reach.
2. A group with a problem they want to solve using your solution.
3. A group with the desire and ability to spend money to solve that problem.
Posting here to remind myself for future projects.
mama!milk is a Kyoto based jazz group with two key members Yuko Ikoma (生駒祐子) on accordion and Kosuke Shimizu (清水恒輔) on contrabass. Their new album Fragrance of Notes, released in Japan in Aug 2008, was selected as one of the 5 “Jazz album of the year” at Gilles Peterson Worldwide Award ‘09 (BBC Radio 1).
01 Rosa Moschata 02 Avant Fermentation 03 Antique Gold 04 Pale Anise 05 Anise 06 Intermezzo OP 32 07 Kujaku 08 Hourglass 09 Mano Seca 10 Rosa Mundi 11 Smokey Dawn 12 The Moon 13 Two Ripples 14 Sometime Sweet 15 Waltz, Waltz
The NYTimes.com’s recently announced article skimmer prototype (yet-unnamed) is described by its developer as “an attempt to provide the Sunday Times experience anytime”.
The keyboard browsing feature is simply a wonderful idea. Another proof of less is more.
01 JLJ Intro - Jay Loves Japan 02 Walkinonit - Donuts 03 Crushin’ (Yeeeeaah!) - Ruff Draft 04 Anti-American Graffiti - Donuts 05 Two Can Win - Donuts 06 Baby (feat Madlib & Guilty Simpson) - The Shining 07 So Far To Go (fet Common & D’Angello) - The Shining 08 The Official - JAYLIB 09 The Mission - JAYLIB 10 Let’t Take It Back - Ruff Draft 11 The Clapper - Welcome 2 Detroit 12 Featuring Phat Kat - Welcome 2 Detroit 13 Body Movin (feat J Rocc & Karriem Riggins) - The Shining 14 Won’t Do - The Shining 15 Don’t Cry - Ruff Draft 16 One - Welcome 2 Detroit
A few days ago I came across a great conversation between two well-known bloggers Fred Wilson and Jason Calacanis on the topic of life in public and the costs associated with it. Thought it’s a nice topic to share.
With a tragic story told about his friend Josh Harris and the Sundance-winning film We Live in Public, Jason wrote on his newsletter:
We’re all canaries in the coal mines now … We’re harvesting our lives and putting them online. We’re addicted to gaining followers and friends (or email subscribers, as the case may be), and reading comments we get in return. As we look for validation and our daily 15 minutes of fame, we do so at the cost of our humanity.
Fred, in response, points out that our social behavior evolves with changes in technologies and communication methods, and we as a society will be able to build real accountability while adapting this process. He then concludes with a following set of rules based on his own experience:
1. Keep your family out of it until they want to be in it
2. Be nice
3. Demand that others are nice back
4. Encourage the community to police the comments. Early on Jackson was my “bouncer” and now Kid Mercury has assumed that role
5. Take the nasty comments lightly and use humor to defuse them
6. Do not delete comments unless they are hateful to others, porn, or spam
7. Ignore the trolls even though it kills you
8. Be careful with photos. They greatest lesson I got was when I posted a photo of me on vacation looking smug. Bad move that I learned a lot from
9. Give more than you take
10. Enjoy yourself. Talking, discussing, and debating is fun. Keep it that way
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