geek!daily

... it is by will alone i set my mind in motion ...

Reports of the Business Card's Death Are Greatly Exaggerated, or why bzCards != biz cards

Caught the article "rmbr launches mobile app to get rid of business cards" on VentureBeat which covers the announcement rmbrME, the new electronic connection tool from rmbr. (note: the rmbr.com site, which launched as a photo organizing site, currently redirects to rmbrme.com) The general idea is to trade vCards over email, IM, SMS, etc. and get rid of those pesky piles of pasteboard. If the ease of use isn't incentive enough, they're mixing in the funware idea via contests and leaderboards.

You may have guessed by now, but I think they've got the beginnings of a good idea and a poor implementation. I'm particularly amused by rmbr founder Gabe Zichermann's assertion that the business card's time has come and gone. Here's why I think he's wrong:

  1. Business Cards Are Infinitely Customizable: I can quickly extend or personalize the information provided by my business card*. I can also correct bad information on the spot*, e.g. my title's changed, or I have a new phone number. And the only device required is any writing instrument.
  2. Business Cards Don't Require Information Exchange: I don't have to ask you to give me contact info in order to give you my contact info. This preserves a level of anonymity which should not be undervalued. I wouldn't give contact info to everyone I've accepted a business card from; I've later chosen to contact some of those people.
  3. Business Cards Are Trivial To Distribute: I can hand you a business card in just a few seconds, less if I'm already handing them out. I can place a stack of business cards in a tray on a counter to be taken by those interested without having to make any contact at all. I can drop them in the fishbowl of an excellent bakery and cafe in Wilson, NC in hopes of winning some goodies for the next time I'm there. I can hand it to someone who doesn't have a device. These examples all demonstrate the business card's continued practical utility.
  4. Business Cards Are Static: They provide a clearly limited, time-sensitive set of information about me. If I change jobs, companies, phone numbers, email, or what-have-you, your data isn't current anymore. Effectively, the data ages and, in doing so, provides me some additional privacy with regards to those people with whom I've not formed a more permanent relationship than the original business card exchange (which, if I have, I likely want to provide a more dynamic link to my contact info). This is also true of a vCard exchange, but unclear with regards to bzCards. In my opinion, the lack of an analog to this aging process is a flaw in social networks which is becoming evident; it's currently all or nothing.

That said, I applaud the attempt toward a more dynamic contacts list and easier connections. There are some pieces still missing that, imho, are being overlooked by folks headed in that direction, but they'll come soon enough. And I'm utterly underwhelmed by the idea of competitions to send out the most business cards. It's quality, folks, not quantity.

* The business card with hand-written phone number comes from a 1997 Mother Jones article. Ironically, that lovely corrected business card image is from the "Why Use It?" page of MyDetails.biz, another digital business card replacement.

 

2008.08.20 in Business, Identity, People, Social Networks | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: business cards, bzcards, digital identity, rmbrme

Cosco Busan, SF Bay, and Kurt Schwehr

Sometimes I'm dense. I've been reading Kurt Schwehr's excellent electronic work log (wlog? ;) for months and didn't even think to share it in the wake of the Cosco Busan allision (a term I wouldn't have known with Kurt's help =). If you're a geek, you should just read his whole blog as it's rich in very cool stuff you don't see every day ... but if not, here's his postings to date regarding the whole affair:

  • SF Bay Bridge Allision
  • An Allision Seen Through AIS
  • Cosco Busan Oil Spill
  • Spill Update
  • Cosco Busan Links
  • Google Earth - SF Oil Spill

Alameda's beaches haven't been hit hard (surprising, really) but there's a lot of cleanup still to be done. Grrr.

2007.11.16 in Environment, People, Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Ms. Teen South Carolina

I'd taken peripheral notice of the Ms.-Teen-South-Carolina-Answers-A-Question meme but hadn't checked it out because, frankly, I knew what I'd find: we'd all be laughing at a teenage girl who, despite spending an inordinate amount of her young life seeking beauty, poise and grace, blew it when presented with one of the slow-pitched softball questions pageants gently lob to their beauty queens in waiting.

I just watched the video this morning and it was all I expected and more. Frustrating and saddening, seeing how many people are reveling in a teenager's moment of anguish using it as the basis of fallacious arguments against Southerners (I'm one), Americans (me again), and nearly any other way they can slice this to get at their favorite love-to-hate-'em group.

Then I saw this video response, courtesy The Real News Junkies:

Right on. STFU, y'all.

2007.08.31 in People | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Boobs, Injuries, & Dr. Pepper

Okay, this is a geek blog. And a lame one as I so rarely link to someone else's blog. Come to think of it, this is pretty much masturbation to techporn in prose for all that I care about readership. I'm no linkwhore.

So you know it's serious if I say, YOU MUST READ THIS BLOG. Particularly, THIS ENTRY.

You'll blow milk out your nose. And she ain't gonna clean it up for you.

Link: Boobs, Injuries, & Dr. Pepper.

2007.06.27 in Fun!, Parenting, People | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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