Bros will be Bros
These pics scream “We are Bros and we don’t give a …”
Finger pointing asserts your dominance over bro-haters.
Liberty Bowl Saturday. We are gonna Pillage ECU Pirates.
Thoughts Become Things
These pics scream “We are Bros and we don’t give a …”
Finger pointing asserts your dominance over bro-haters.
Liberty Bowl Saturday. We are gonna Pillage ECU Pirates.
The Box, formerly the Band Box, I located on South Main Street in Little Rock. It’s a tiny red building that screams old school. Thy have some very dated literature and Busch POS inthe walls. You don’t get menus cause it’s posted on the wall. There are no windows and the staff will hollar at you if you don’t say hello upon entry. Go there. Eat a cheese burger.
ring·er 2 (r ngr)
n.
1. One that rings, especially one that sounds a bell or chime.
2. Slang A contestant entered dishonestly into a competition.
3. Slang One who bears a striking resemblance to another: a ringer for his father.
|
Burnin money.
Federal Reserve Note being put to good use.
A look of satisfaction.
Remember the OLPC (One Laptop Per Child) project? It’s a U.S.-based, non-profit organization that aims to create a cheap, mobile personal computer for kids in developing countries. And while their XO-1 laptop is still being shipped to countries such as Rwanda and Uruguay, the folks at OLPC are working on a next generation device, and (surprise) it’s a tablet.
Originally, the next OLPC XO was supposed to be a two-screen foldable device named XO-2, but plans for it were scrapped. The XO-3 is a bit more of a conventional beast, falling in line with the current tablet buzz that originated with rumors of the fabled Apple tablet, which may or may not be what the Cupertino giant is currently working on.
It’s just a concept at this point, but it’s poised to have a 8.5 x 11 touchscreen, a camera on the back of the device, induction charger and a foldable carrying ring on one of its corners. The design looks a tad too optimistic for a cheap device (the price is supposed to be $75), since it’s extremely thin (thinner, for example, than an iPhone), but hey, it’s a concept, why not make it beautiful while it’s still cheap?
According to Engadget, the XO-3 should be coming to the market in 2012, and the OLPC has two updates to the current version — the XO-1.5 and the XO-1.75 — slated to fill the gap until then. It’s a bit far off, but if this is the future of cheap, mobile computing, I’m hopping on the bandwagon.
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This concept better become a reality. I can’t wait to see more tablets on the market. OLPC is moving the ball forward with the quickness. I will buy this machine, put Chrome OS on it and it will be the shit.
The boys at Sullivants Liquor know how to upsale wine. Wes said “We think both brands are targeting the same audience, it just made sense for this placement.”
PM’s are back up but I haven’t read any news as to the bounce back. I’m hoping it’s just a small correction. $100 down last week was painful but you are still up big if you bought more than 3 months ago.

As for the indices, US markets in the green. I guess paper is still trading hands for now.

In three hunts I saw 0 deer. Saturday evening hunt was rainy and cold. Too wet to have a fire at camp so we smoked a deer ham and hit the dirt roads in the pickups. No poaching happened. Saturday morning was cold and loud, sounded like movement in every direction except shootin lanes. Finally Sunday evening came and once again… Nothing. I guess that big buck is waiting on me to slip up, then again, maybe I’m waitin on him to slip up.
View to the NE, you can see the auto corn feeder in the distance, small yellow object about 50+ yards away.
View to the NW, tripod feeder.
Interesting article if you care about social media.
This time last year, I wrote about the 10 ways social media will change 2009, and while all predictions have materialized or are on their way, it has only become clear in recent months how significant of a change we’ve seen this year. 2009 will go down as the year in which the shroud of uncertainty was lifted off of social media and mainstream adoption began at the speed of light. Barack Obama’s campaign proved that social media can mobilize millions into action, and Iran’s election protests demonstrated its importance to the freedom of speech.
This guest post was written by Ravit Lichtenberg, founder and chief strategist at Ustrategy.com – a boutique consultancy focusing on helping companies succeed. Ravit authors a blog at www.ravitlichtenberg.com.
Today, it is impossible to separate social media from the online world. Facebook reached 350 million users last month — 70% of whom are outside the US — and it accounts for 25% of the Web’s traffic, nearly one in five people on the web use Twitter, and 94% of enterprises plan to maintain or increase their investment in enterprise social media tools. The social media conversation is no longer considered a Web 2.0 fad — it is taking place in homes, small businesses and corporate boardrooms, and extending its reach into the nonprofit, education and health sectors. From feeling excitement, novelty, bewilderment, and overwhelmed, a growing number of people now speak of social media as simply another channel or tactic.
So what will social Web bring next? What will “being connected” mean? What will the next experience be for the 2 two billion people who are connected to the Internet? Here are 10 ways what we’ve called social media will evolve in 2010.
By this time next year, social media will no longer be “social media” — it will be an integrated, unquestionable component of your online and offline experience. Last year we spoke of cross-platform integration across media sites. Open APIs and OpenID made that possible, and even LinkedIn announced last month that it too will finally open its APIs. 2010 will be about integration and a single, cohesive experience across platforms as well as across products and devices — Web, mobile, TV, and video — will become near-inseparable experiences.
Users will access content from any device or platform, co-create and mashup their photos, videos and text with traditional content while interacting with each other. Publishers will create new kinds of content for the connected world, and the last years’ lull in good entertainment will finally be lifted. This trend will cut across all of our activities — from playing games to shopping to emailing and texting — nothing will be lost; everything we do will be gathered and streamed together, allowing people to view their world of activities as if it were projected in front of them, open to change, review and input at any point in time from any device or online tool.
With Web technology maturing and the near-elimination of previous barriers such closed platforms and discrete logins, companies will now look to innovate the way they use existing technology, rather than focus on technology enhancements themselves. We will see a move to leverage existing assets — content and capabilities — in new ways, turning information to wisdom and insight to action. Whereas once user research required focus groups and usability tests, companies will utilize the Web’s capabilities to achieve the same. Naturally occurring conversations will be utilized in product innovation and design, and companies will create incentives for people’s attention and engagement while repurposing and analyzing content and engagement in new ways that will deliver valuable input.
Worldwide, the iPhone alone accounts for about 33% of mobile web traffic and IDC predicts the number of mobile web users will hit one billion by 2010. As the technological barriers come down, people will increasingly use their phones on-the-go to access social networks, search, read content and find location-based information. Our phones will be used as a central hub and beacon — enabling a slew of new capabilities and experiences.
2009 marked the year of open Web, and divergence of content, making content available anywhere, anytime, by anyone and to everyone; it was the year content exploded across the web, platforms and devices. The issue Google solved so magically — content find-ability — will become all but moot in the coming years. Instead, content relevance and quality will become the key focus. In 2010 we will start to see convergence as companies take measures to own their own content, its location and its cost. Last month, Rupert Murdoch announced he may opt News Corp out of Google, instructing it to de-index its publications from the search engine and giving exclusive rights to Bing for a fee. This means that content publishers will be able to determine where they make their content available and at what cost.
With the growth of user generated content and the dwindling relevance of search results, people will gradually shift their trust from large aggregators like Google, Microsoft and Yahoo, and move to searching and finding content at specific locations and, eventually, creating and integrating their own content hub into the rest of their personal digital experience. “People don’t realize that everything they do — on Facebook, Ning, Google and with their credit cards — is being collected, tracked, analyzed, owned and monetized by these companies who provide (so-called) free services. It’s not a healthy model.” Says John Faber, COO of af83, a Drupal development house and co-founder of the upcoming DrupalCon.
It was easy to forget that enterprises and large institutions are the originators of some of social media’s pillars: listservs, forums, intranets and collaboration tools. As social media became a public domain, enterprises have been cautious participants, predominantly in the product space, with few visionary leaders like Zappos, IBM and Dell. But cautionary they are no more. With a reported average of 25% increase in funds allocation toward social media activities, in 2010 we will see a surge in adoption of social media across product, services and solutions companies.
Having the need and the funds, enterprises will determine the next generation of social experiences. They will push enhancements that meet their needs, specifically around monitoring, automation, alignment with the sales cycle and integration with existing systems, expanding social “media” to encompass the ecosystem of social computing across solutions, and making them actionable for the company. Jive, blueKiwi, Remindo and Sharepoint support companies internally. Most recently, Salesforce.com released Chatter, designed to turn the corporation, and CRM, social. With its APIs opening later this year, “Chatter can become a new layer over its Force platform, already being used by 68,000 customers, enabling companies and developers to leverage the Salesforce infrastructure in a secure environment,” said Bruce Francis, VP corporate strategy Salesforce.com.
Next page: ROI Will Be Measured — and It Will Matter
Return on investment on social media activities has been challenging to most companies this year. Surveys show only 18% of companies say they saw meaningful return on investment from their social media activities while the other 72% report modest, no return or inability to measure the return on their investment in social media. While the definition of ROI is evolving to better fit the world of relationships and networks, the ability to demonstrate ROI in hard numbers — not in followers or fans — will become a baseline business requirement in 2010. Already, both traditional firms and startups are working feverishly to demonstrate they can turn hype into science. But, only those companies who will be able to analyze and predict hard returns on investments will last.
Virtual worlds, games and avatars were just the beginning of the online-offline integration. In 2010 we’ll see a greater push on this front as distance and physical walls will matter even less. Augmented reality — already integrated into Yelp’s latest geo-tagging enabled application — will allow users to find relevant information and people depending on their location; Twitter360 will help people find each other, connect and see updates by location all while on the go through their mobile device. People will be able to scan products on shelves but process the sale online; you’ll never need to ask for a business card again at events — and you may actually get promotions and discounts that match your interests.
An economic downturn coupled with the surge of social media eliminated many traditional marketing and PR roles. But this year, we’ll see the return of professionals to the field. Enterprises will turn back to marketers who specialize in understanding customer psychology and who are experienced in addressing these both offline and online. Research and development divisions will turn to customer experience professionals to draw on user needs and ideation as part of their product improvement and innovation process, and sales and support will continue to deliver services online. Expect to see job postings for social media managers, social media psychologists and social media executive administrators to help manage the infinite tasks involved with communities and social media campaigns.
2009 revealed the growing role women play online. Women make 75% of all buying decisions for the home, and 85% of all consumer purchases. Social networks have at least 50% female members, and it is women ages 35-55 who make up the fastest-growing population on Facebook — not the expected Gen-Y population as previously anticipated. Previously limited by organizational hierarchies and job demands, women today are free to create, express and promote themselves using social media channels. Innately excelling at communication, relationship building and multi-level attention, women will take the reins on their careers and network becoming both a sought-after consumer segment as well as driving business strategies for social-media-connected companies.
Next page: Social Media Will Move Into New Domains
As social media becomes integrated into our experiences online, it will have an impact on verticals such as nonprofit, job training, education, and health care. University of the People — a UN-backed initiative to offer free education in emerging markets — is using the power of distance learning and virtual collaboration. Obama’s campaign for job training also highly relies on the power of online interaction. “The top 10 companies to work for are going to become learning companies. Instead of having 10% of time to philanthropic activities, they’ll spend 10% of time on learning or teaching,” says Chris Heuer, founder of Social Media Club and director at iStrategyLabs. “Sites like I’m Too Young For This, and Know Cancer Community prove that no topic is too complex for social collaboration.”
“These site help people connect and share information previously only available to their doctors,” says Jennifer Benz of Benz Communications, a consultancy that works with companies to introduce social media capabilities into employee benefits and health care communication. “Companies who integrate social collaboration and conversation into health care find they have more knowledgeable employees and patients who can make smarter choices and improve the quality of their care.”
Social Media as we knew it even 6 months ago has changed. By this time next year, it will have become fully integrated into everything we do online and offline. By the end of this year we’ll see a move toward greater control over content and companies will fight over social media land grabs in preparation for the future.
By next year, we will no longer speak about social media technology but about what we’ve been able to do with it. We will discuss power of ownership and only accept quality, relevant content. As we move to automatically accept a narrowed selection of the mass content online, we will begin to crave larger reach again and the natural process of chaos and order — constriction and expansion, convergence and divergence — will repeat itself in an ever-accelerating pace.
Whether you are an individual, a startup, small business or a large corporation, an online presence and an ongoing conversation with your constituents is a baseline requirement — and will take time and expertise. Companies are diverting resources and rethinking their traditional outreach strategies. “Whether you’re recruiting, looking for investment, trying to get buzz — you need to be visible,” says John Nogrady, director, emerging business at Microsoft bizpark, and serial entrepreneur. Brian Zisk, founder of SFMusicTech, which is taking place in San Francisco this week, says “If you’re out there as a genuine contributor in the community you can reach out to many people. Take the FooFighters’ free Facebook concert, or Zoe Keating — a local artist with over 1.2 million fans online. Their ability to connect with their fans was made possible because of the Internet.”
As you read this, it may seem far reaching but so did a presidency won through the power of online community not too long ago. Whether you are a novice finally giving in to the pressures to “get on social media,” someone who is highly experienced, or a visionary already looking for the next big thing, you will play a role in social media in the coming year even through your simple, daily actions. And as the social media wave dissipates into the vast ocean of connected experiences, the term itself will become an entry in dictionaries and encyclopedias and we will embark on a new era of knowledge, accessibility and experiences unbound by distance, time or physical walls.
Photo by Francois Bouly
Pics only.

These drums were the shit.

These brats are happy and hoppy, simmering in Pale Ale.
Get yer game face on, I obviously mean business
I feel like I’ve missed the boat. Several groups have formed in Little Rock which promote social media and the internet in general, namely, Central Arkansas Refresh and LRTweetup. Anyways, tonight is another tweetup and I’m sure there will be a few twilfs in attendance. It’s pretty neat to think about how the social web isi actually bringing people together and they are even raising money for a charity. I could do some link love and spread the good word of the big players in the social meidasphere but the list is too large. Anyways, those of you in attendance tonight, have fun, I might bring my ugly mug.
The sad state of affairs in gold land: the premium for the 1 ounce Gold Eagle coins has expanded from $59 to $99, Krugerrands are not available for sale in most places, and this most recent development just out of the US Mint: the one-tenth ounce American Eagle inventory at the mint has been depleted, almost instantaneously after the coin was made available for purchase. This occurred the day after the mint announced the release of fractional Eagle Gold Bullion Coins in one-half ounce, one-quarter ounce, and one-tenth ounce weights. As Coin News reports:
The Mint sold 345,000 coins to its authorized purchasers for a total of 58,000 ounces of gold. That, without a single one-ounce size leaving Mint doors.
Sales of 2009 one-ounce sized gold eagles are expected to resume in
“early December” while the production of the 2010-dated American Eagle
Gold and Silver One Ounce Bullion Coin are expected to begin in Jan.,
2010.
So no sooner did the Mint start selling the new 1/10 ounce denominated gold pieces, than they ran out.
The US Mint ran out of one ounce 2009 American Gold Eagle coins
last week which caused their temporary suspension, and now the
fractional sizes that were just launched are either gone or being
allocated following record one-day sales.
This is the notice sent out by the Mint to authorized purchasers:
Due to strong demand, the American Eagle Gold Tenth-Ounce Coin
inventory was depleted. The inventory for the half-ounce and
quarter-ounce coins remains very limited. We will offer the remaining
half-ounce and quarter-ounce coins for sale via the United States Mint
standard allocation process.
And indicative of the massive gold demand, the …
If novelty is your thing, then you’ll be pleased to discover that Coca-Cola has finally launched their Coke Zero Facial Profiler.
As you may recall, we covered the announcement of the facial experiment back in October, and were intrigued by the application’s premise: using Facebook to find your digital double.
Now that app is live, we put it to the test and found that it works as promised. Once you connect your Facebook account with the Coke Zero Facial Profiler, the app will scan your photos (you can also use your webcam to snap a beauty shot) and use facial recognition software to match your face against others in their database.

Once the matching process is complete, voilà, there’s your digital twin staring back at you. You can then share your match on Facebook or Twitter or grab a URL to share with your friends (here’s my match). Should you be so bold, you can also contact your match on Facebook.
While the premise itself is kitschy, the application experience is pretty slick and some of the matches are surprisingly so dead-on that you might even do a double take. Try it out for yourself, and let us know your thoughts.
Over the past year, Mashable has written extensively on the value of social media to small businesses. We have also contributed regularly on this topic to the American Express Open Forum.
From the fundamentals of Twitter branding, to the importance of blogging, to getting work done with some great online tools, small businesses face many challenges when trying to understand how to use social media. However, taking the time to learn how to leverage social media and technology to benefit your business will pay big dividends in the long run.
Whether you’re just signing up, or primed for some advanced social marketing, the posts below have all the tips, tricks, and wisdom you’ll need to take your brand to the next level.
Start here for the basics on how and why your business should be implementing a social media campaign.
Sign up, stay on message, and utilize some leading sites and apps that can give your business a social edge.
These posts have real-world advice and examples of how businesses have succeeded on social networks. From Facebook to Twitter to LinkedIn and beyond, here are the resources you’ll need to get started.
- Social Media 101: How to Avoid Alienating Your Customers
- Why Should Traditional Businesses Care about Social Media?
- 10 of the Best Social Media Tools for Entrepreneurs
- Putting Social Media in Real Life Context for SMBs
I’m on twitter, chillin, surfin, searchin and @bryanjones drops a link to a website, I had to click. Low and behold it is a website that features only mixtapes. Here’s the link thankgoditsmixday.com/. I’m trying to figure out who is behind this site but my detective skillz are low level. Anyways, if you like a good mixtape check it out and figure it out.