Blog

  • Kim Komando still has an audience

    Back in my early days online, AOL went from the rising upstart (behind Prodigy and CompuServe, which it later bought) to the behemoth…before the Internet wave swamped most of the pre-Internet online services. A few of the early folks with content areas and services on AOL rode the wave, kept building their audience, adapted to the Internet, and continue to thrive.

    Motley Fool is the best-known example that comes to mind. However, Kim Komando is another online media entrepreneur from the early 1990s who still has a notable audience, both online and in other media. Her biggest asset, beyond her newsletters, is her weekly radio show…which is also a Fool characteristic. I don’t know radio that well, but I’ve seen a lot of folks who come from radio really thrive online, and vice versa. (Podcast, anyone?) Not sure why that is, but speculation for another time.

    How do I know Komando still has an audience that matters?

    Yesterday, January 20, 2007, OpenDNS was named the Komando Cool Site of the Day, with the headline “A safer way to access Web sites.” The writeup gives a basic, brief intro to DNS, and goes on to recommend OpenDNS with these words:

    OpenDNS provides improvements over other DNS servers. It offers protection against phishing attacks. Plus, it will correct spelling mistakes you make when typing addresses.

    Cool Site of the Day sounds very 1997, but we saw a notable surge of visitors to the website yesterday. Right on!

    We saw a corresponding rise in support requests, too. Because of the size of Komando’s audience, and her early & heavy exposure on AOL, there are several newsletter subscribers still on AOL and other dial-up providers. That highlights our need to keep explaining DNS, and why a better DNS matters, even as we focus on features for the tech-savvy. Our business can grow nicely with both audiences, fortunately.

    This is also a reminder to me that delivery matters. Yes, I’m an RSS fiend, but I didn’t give up email newsletters. All those who have yet to adopt RSS are still reading email newsletters regularly, even in a world where inboxes are never empty and spam/phish/junk are a fact of life. A trusted newsletter is a tremendous asset. Keep your content and frequency below the annoyance threshold, and it’s easier to delete the ones you don’t want than to unsubscribe.

  • Exercise, 2007-Jan-20

    Ran to the Apple Store and back for another power cord, killing two birds with one stone in just under 39:00 (with a break for purchase).

  • Lies, damn lies, and…

    Fascinating 22 minute video of statistician Peter Donnelly at TED explaining the impact of our general inability to interpret uncertainty. Logic doesn’t work here. I got his first example wrong, as he says most do. What about you?

  • Exercise, 2007-Jan-19

    Ran to work, 22:30.

    Task for near future = remove posts to the Exercise category from the main RSS feed. Those who visit the site itself (new theme, by the way) can follow my log, but I’m quite sure that this part of my sharing isn’t garnering new readers.

    Narendra, data ownership is keeping this info here instead of a widget… it’s not perfect, but it’s mine. 😉

  • Catch-22 in packaging

    Joseph Heller wrote an entire (astounding) book on Catch-22, but the always-fun This Is Broken website does it in one small photograph. Go look at “Scissors packaging at Staples.”

  • Exercise, 2007-Jan-18

    Caught the lights and traffic right on the run home from work, and felt pretty good, so 23:00.

  • Exercise, 2007-Jan-17

    Just a chilly run to work, gloves and hat and tights on, in 24:30, and the short bicycle ride home.

  • Exercise, 2007-Jan-15

    One gentle hour on the stationery bike on a sunny, cold day in San Francisco, heart rate around 130, reading The Atlantic, and then 30 minutes of weights. I need to get a bit more running in, overall, but felt productive all the same.

  • My first YouTube posting: stop-motion fun for three seconds

    Earlier this week, I played around with iStopMotion, from Boinx Software. Very simple and easy. Creating a stop-motion film entertains, although it can be a bit tedious, which is why I stopped at 3 seconds for this first effort. That’s 72 frames. Batgirl skid is where I posted the final result, although the boy tells me this is actually Catwoman. Oh well.