Ernst-Jan Pfauth
Note down your observations, says Gay Talese
"Now is a great time for another Movable Type. Writers would love a way to push serialized content straight to tablets, and the experience would be a boon to readers. Tablets are the best way to read, and Newsstand is the equivalent of RSS for non-geeks."
What Wordpress did for blogging, someone should do for tablet publishing
"Saying blogging is dead is like saying creativity and personal expression is dead"
Matt Mullenweg, founder of Wordpress
Do you want to see the future of digital advertising?
Newspapers should send combat units to the online field
The blogger and the murderer; an interview with Choire Sicha
The president’s Secret Service agents looked a bit perturbed, but Mr. Van Duzer said that he got permission first. Speaking to reporters after, he said an agent “said I was alright as long as I didn’t take him away.”
"With so many people competing for attention — everybody has a digital camera, everybody has a Tumblr account — you’ve got to be willing to do a lion’s share of the work before anybody notices you."
Work, even when nobody’s watching, says Brandon Stanton of the hilarious and touching photo blog Humans of New York in an interview with Storyboard.
"Digital subscriptions for FT.com overtook average daily print circulation in the first half of 2012 for the first time, according to results published by owners Pearson today. The latest results report that FT.com subscriptions were up 31 per cent year-on-year to 301,471, with a 29 per cent rise in registered users to 4.8 million."

This is huge.

And they didn’t even need an app for that.

"

SecondLife has 1 million active users. That’s almost the exact same number it had at the peak when everyone was going ape-shit about it — when it was on the cover of BusinessWeek as the next big thing, when staid companies like IBM were building out SecondLife presences, when politicians were holding press releases inside of SecondLife, when Duran Duran and Depeche Mode were holding concerts there.

That number never fell, Rosedale says. If that was an amazing accomplishment then, it should still be an amazing accomplishment now that they’ve sustained it in a world where websites are fads that quickly come and go. More impressive, there are $700 million a year in virtual goods transacted inside of SecondLife every year. That’s more than enough to make the company very profitable.

"

SecondLife didn’t fail (via thijsniks)

I love a good debunk.