To do list on steroids. Create a simple yet effective list that focuses on results. Create due dates, count downs, completion percentages and multi-task management system. Focus on the goal of the result and keep everyone involved informed. A simple app like this can manage complex projects to grocery list.
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Archive for the ‘innovation’ Category
IDEA #23: Results List
Wednesday, February 11th, 2009IDEA # 22: Digital Wallets and Smart Utilities
Sunday, February 8th, 2009When will I be able to carry only my phone (iPhone)? I know the technology is there to transfer funds digitally with bluetooth and even other secure connections. I see a digital wallet enabling consumers to pay at vending machines to retailers with their phone. Take the scanable apps and the new way common things are getting done. I also see apps that manage every other aspect of your life. The iPhone and Blackberry platforms are pushing some innovation. I see smart utilities that buy and sell stocks, check physical mail, clean house, order food, and just about anything you can think of. Innovation is everywhere and the phone is going to be an invaluable tool for the future of just living.
IDEA #21: Scene DVD
Saturday, February 7th, 2009I am sure this is a product, I just don’t know about it.
I have a wall mounted flat screen TV that every once in a while, I think it would be cool to turn into a Fireplace, Aquarium, Surf, Coy Pond, Rotating Mountain Scenes, Snow falling and other scenes that create a scene or experience. One DVD that have all these in chapters and repeatable. Tell me about it…
IDEA #20: Holiday Cheer
Friday, February 6th, 2009Decorate the yard, house, car and office with cheer. This is more for a handy guy than myself. Yet, think about the potential of such a service. With a country obsessed with holidays, doing these things right is important. Franchise the service would work even better. I even heard of a service that would Flamingo someone’s yard, meaning they would stick hundreds of plastic Pink Flamingo’s in your worst enemies yard or as a prank. Lots to potentially cheer about here for a hard worker who only wants to work during the holidays.
IDEA #19: StreamFish
Thursday, February 5th, 2009IDEA #18: BuzzMouth
Wednesday, February 4th, 2009IDEA #17: Revtree.com
Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009IDEA #16: Jack of all Professions
Monday, February 2nd, 2009IDEA #15: Career White Papers
Sunday, February 1st, 2009Much like technology companies have White Papers, Case Studies, Testimonials and explanations of what their technology does. I believe Companies will have these in the future explaining what it is like to work there. This is a new recruiting tool that will provide another viral method of recruiting, something that can move around the web and in email.
A Glimpse at the Future of Journalism
Sunday, December 28th, 2008A Glimpse at the Future of Journalism
- Posted by: Cliff Kuang , Atley Kasky
- Posted from Good Magazine
- on December 20, 2008 at 9:00 am

What will the news look like after the newspapers disappear?
Journalists and analysts are once again thrashing around, tearing out their hair, spilling ink, and burning pixels over the fate of newspaper publishing. The latest catalyst: the bankruptcy of the Tribune Corporation.
It’s no secret that the industry’s future is bleak, and death is always a worthy story. But you seldom read about ideas for completely overhauling the industry. I don’t know why—music and cars get that treatment all the time. Perhaps it’s too much to ask journalists to prescribe their own cure—like asking a surgeon to perform a heart transplant on herself. Yet the ideas do exist. A brilliant one is Spot.us.
The site was seeded with a grant from the Knight News Challenge, a competition that rewards start ups creating new platforms for journalism. Spot.us is a clearinghouse for publicly funded journalism. Anyone can post news tips, and journalists can also pitch stories to users, who can then donate towards the reporting and writing of a story. Whether it lives or dies, the genius of Spot.us is that, unlike basically every publication started in the last 100 years, it isn’t based on ad revenues. If a story’s worth reading, the theory goes, the readers should be willing to pay for it directly.
To understand why that’s unusual, it’s important to realize that most newspaper profits don’t come from subscription or newsstand sales, but rather from the advertisers. Industry observers still believe that this basic structure will hold online, though it likely won’t be able to support massive organizations like Tribune Co. But the premise of basing some smaller version of old media on advertising is probably flawed, because advertising itself might rest on a rotting business model.
Why? First, you could argue that we live in a world drowning in advertising and it has taught us to more effectively tune ads out. If we haven’t quite learned that lesson, it’s being accelerated online—revenues, per reader, are far lower online than they are for print. That pattern is interpretable in two related ways: First, ad impressions aren’t as valuable online—for every ad dollar that a print reader brings in, an online reader brings in just ten to fifteen cents. That’s due to the nature of the web, which has users actively seeking relevant information, so they can more easily ignore ads—rather than passively consuming them in a newspaper or an hour of television. Meanwhile, the web offers advertisers incredibly rich ways of tracking how well their ads are performing, which means it also provides a truer pricing mechanism for ads. Ads have thus come up wanting; they never were as worthwhile as the ad agencies and management consultants had hoped—and companies know that now.
If the ad model is breaking down—which seems to be the case—journalism’s production model needs a revision. That’s the greatest promise of a site like Spot.us: It’s a glimpse into the DNA of a new-media baby that’s not even born yet. Once you’ve mulled its basic structure, it’s easy to imagine dozens of alternative versions. For example, geopolitical consultancies are printing money by writing reports for firms operating in dicey regions. Journalists could do that same work, if they simply had a site connecting them with the proper clients. (As on Spot.us, publishing rights could be structured into the deal.)
The crossroads that media now faces recalls a similar situation from the interstice between the Renaissance and the Industrial age. At that time, the model that supported writers and the written word changed completely. Writers, who once depended on the largesse of a patron, suddenly had to earn their money from a publisher. (The changeover eventually led to the rise of advertising.) Early on, self-published pamphlets and myriad (scurrilous) “news” sources littered European streets.
Sound familiar? We now live in the rubble of an obliterated system. We can hear a million new voices, on blogs and Twitter. The media is becoming more specialized—think of how narrowly focused the best blogs are—but also more trivial and shrill.
My guess about the shape of publishing’s future is that there won’t be a “bridge” between this phase and the next. Rather, in a situation analogous to 200 years ago, we’ll see the wholesale collapse of our present big-media system, and its replacement with another that severs the cord with advertising revenue. In the meantime, we’ll get teases of the future, through sites like Spot.us, as investors and charities like the Knight Foundation do the hard work of panning for new ideas.
(Image: Derived from a photo by Flickr user eschipul.)



