patrix + communication 21
S#*@ scientists say
october 2011 by patrix
How do you define "aerosol", or "manipulation"? What about "organic", "mutant" and "confidence"?
The truth is that scientists often say words that do not mean what the general public thinks they mean. And that's a problem. If you're not speaking the same language, miscommunication is inevitable. There's a new paper up in Physics Today, which argues that it's the responsibility of all scientists to think about the colloquial meanings of words and talk in a way the public can understand.
But here's the first step: Making it clear to scientists which words cause communication problems. You can see the list from the Physics Today paper above. Meanwhile, the Southern Fried Science blog has added to the collection, and Southern Fried Science blogger Andrew Thaler is looking for more suggestions. You can add words that you think scientists and public use differently to Thaler's Google Docs spreadsheet. If you've got a good alternative for a confusing word, add that, too.
Via Mountain Beltway
Post
climate_change
communication
Culture
evolution
Science
talk
from google
The truth is that scientists often say words that do not mean what the general public thinks they mean. And that's a problem. If you're not speaking the same language, miscommunication is inevitable. There's a new paper up in Physics Today, which argues that it's the responsibility of all scientists to think about the colloquial meanings of words and talk in a way the public can understand.
But here's the first step: Making it clear to scientists which words cause communication problems. You can see the list from the Physics Today paper above. Meanwhile, the Southern Fried Science blog has added to the collection, and Southern Fried Science blogger Andrew Thaler is looking for more suggestions. You can add words that you think scientists and public use differently to Thaler's Google Docs spreadsheet. If you've got a good alternative for a confusing word, add that, too.
Via Mountain Beltway
october 2011 by patrix
Facebook's Timeline Will Impact Your Career
september 2011 by patrix
The advent of Facebook's new Timeline feature gives you, your colleagues, and your customers a whole new set of reasons to share your moment-by-moment news, photos, and reflections. Instead of a flat list of stories on your wall, and a glob of biographical data on your profile, the new Timeline creates a visually attractive story of your life dating all the way back to the date of your (reported) birth. If and when Timeline gets rolled out to Pages (as Facebook is already hinting), we will see brand presences change in much the same way: into dynamic, chronological, and visual stories.
But the business impact of Timeline will be felt long before it arrives on brand pages. As Timeline rolls out on individual profiles, anyone who has both a professional career and a Facebook account will have to rethink the relationship between them. Timeline is going to change the way Facebook interacts with our professional lives. Here are the changes to watch for — and the ways you can make them work for you instead of against you:
1. You'll know too much about your colleagues: If the folks in the C-suite have remained largely inscrutable until now, expect at least some of them to fall prey to Facebook's enhanced charms. Just as it's hard to resist mugging for a camera, it may be hard to resist Facebooking just to make your Timeline look prettier, more interesting, or simply less food-centric. That can easily lead to oversharing — which is especially problematic if the person sharing Too Much Information is the public face of your organization. And you don't have to be the CEO to worry. The Timeline lays so much out in a browsable form that you need to assume that it will be used as part of hiring processes, client assessments, and even just colleagues wanting to know the name of your new puppy.
You can take full advantage of Timeline without oversharing yourself. If you want to build a Facebook Timeline as a personal scrapbook or intimate communications channel, set up an "inner circle" friends list and make it your default level of privacy for all your posts, or even set your default privacy levels to "only me."
2. Your colleagues will know the "propersonal" you: If you were holding onto the idea that Facebook could be your personal haven while you build your professional profile on LinkedIn, it's time to let that fantasy go. The Timeline offers an opportunity for you to tell the story of your career in a uniquely compelling way, so you need to consciously tackle the challenge of building a propersonal profile that will position you appropriately in the eyes of employers, clients, or colleagues.
To create a strong propersonal profile, you have to start by burying any inappropriate content. Use the new privacy setting called "limit the audience for past posts," so that your entire history becomes invisible to everyone except a select group of friends. Then, go back through the timeline and select a representative, but flattering range of posts and photos that you will share publicly. Complete your career information and flesh out any gaps with additional posts or photos (which you can backdate). Review your new Timeline and make sure the story it tells is consistent with the chronology in your résumé, and more importantly, with the way you present yourself in other professional contexts.
3. You'll know more about yourself: Even those of us who use Facebook for professional purposes rarely look back further than the past few weeks' worth of updates and comments. Facebook Insights may tell you the longer-term story in analytics, but that is different from re-reading the cringe-worthy, tone-deaf update you wrote on your first wall post back in 2007. Now that Timeline encourages us to turn back the clock, many of us will get a fresh perspective on how we present ourselves to our colleagues and the world — and we may not like what we see.
That perspective could be as valuable as a year's worth of executive coaching — if you seize the opportunity to take a hard look at where you spend your time and attention. Before you check out your Facebook Timeline, jot down the professional highs and lows of your past few years. Now look at your Facebook Timeline and compare: Did your big work breakthroughs come when you were barely updating (and perhaps a bit more focused on your job)? Or did your flurries of online activity correlate with the times when you felt especially alive and attuned to the pulse of your organization? You may gain surprising insights into the relationship between your social media life, your professional success, and your personal satisfaction.
Facebook's positioning of Timeline as a kind of digital scrapbook suggests that Timeline will primarily be used as a way to look back on one's own life. Every experience we've had with social media to date — including Facebook itself — suggests the opposite. Each new way of sharing or curating our life experiences becomes another opportunity for self-narration, and we spend as much time investigating, critiquing, and engaging with other people's presences as we do in reviewing our own. With the advent of Timeline, that balance needs to shift — at least until you're confident that the story you're telling is a story you can live with.
Communication
Internet
Social_media
from google
But the business impact of Timeline will be felt long before it arrives on brand pages. As Timeline rolls out on individual profiles, anyone who has both a professional career and a Facebook account will have to rethink the relationship between them. Timeline is going to change the way Facebook interacts with our professional lives. Here are the changes to watch for — and the ways you can make them work for you instead of against you:
1. You'll know too much about your colleagues: If the folks in the C-suite have remained largely inscrutable until now, expect at least some of them to fall prey to Facebook's enhanced charms. Just as it's hard to resist mugging for a camera, it may be hard to resist Facebooking just to make your Timeline look prettier, more interesting, or simply less food-centric. That can easily lead to oversharing — which is especially problematic if the person sharing Too Much Information is the public face of your organization. And you don't have to be the CEO to worry. The Timeline lays so much out in a browsable form that you need to assume that it will be used as part of hiring processes, client assessments, and even just colleagues wanting to know the name of your new puppy.
You can take full advantage of Timeline without oversharing yourself. If you want to build a Facebook Timeline as a personal scrapbook or intimate communications channel, set up an "inner circle" friends list and make it your default level of privacy for all your posts, or even set your default privacy levels to "only me."
2. Your colleagues will know the "propersonal" you: If you were holding onto the idea that Facebook could be your personal haven while you build your professional profile on LinkedIn, it's time to let that fantasy go. The Timeline offers an opportunity for you to tell the story of your career in a uniquely compelling way, so you need to consciously tackle the challenge of building a propersonal profile that will position you appropriately in the eyes of employers, clients, or colleagues.
To create a strong propersonal profile, you have to start by burying any inappropriate content. Use the new privacy setting called "limit the audience for past posts," so that your entire history becomes invisible to everyone except a select group of friends. Then, go back through the timeline and select a representative, but flattering range of posts and photos that you will share publicly. Complete your career information and flesh out any gaps with additional posts or photos (which you can backdate). Review your new Timeline and make sure the story it tells is consistent with the chronology in your résumé, and more importantly, with the way you present yourself in other professional contexts.
3. You'll know more about yourself: Even those of us who use Facebook for professional purposes rarely look back further than the past few weeks' worth of updates and comments. Facebook Insights may tell you the longer-term story in analytics, but that is different from re-reading the cringe-worthy, tone-deaf update you wrote on your first wall post back in 2007. Now that Timeline encourages us to turn back the clock, many of us will get a fresh perspective on how we present ourselves to our colleagues and the world — and we may not like what we see.
That perspective could be as valuable as a year's worth of executive coaching — if you seize the opportunity to take a hard look at where you spend your time and attention. Before you check out your Facebook Timeline, jot down the professional highs and lows of your past few years. Now look at your Facebook Timeline and compare: Did your big work breakthroughs come when you were barely updating (and perhaps a bit more focused on your job)? Or did your flurries of online activity correlate with the times when you felt especially alive and attuned to the pulse of your organization? You may gain surprising insights into the relationship between your social media life, your professional success, and your personal satisfaction.
Facebook's positioning of Timeline as a kind of digital scrapbook suggests that Timeline will primarily be used as a way to look back on one's own life. Every experience we've had with social media to date — including Facebook itself — suggests the opposite. Each new way of sharing or curating our life experiences becomes another opportunity for self-narration, and we spend as much time investigating, critiquing, and engaging with other people's presences as we do in reviewing our own. With the advent of Timeline, that balance needs to shift — at least until you're confident that the story you're telling is a story you can live with.
september 2011 by patrix
Email Mistakes That Irritate Smart People
email
etiquette
communication
fave
march 2011 by patrix
There are a lot of ways to send an email and given that it is a tool that many of us spend a large chunk of our day using I thought I would share some of the annoying things I come across when reading email.
march 2011 by patrix
Globish: the worldwide dialect of the third millennium
march 2010 by patrix
More than a lingua franca, the rapid adoption of 'decaffeinated English', according to the man who coined the term 'Globish', makes it the world's most widely spoken language.
language
english
developingworld
communication
pb
march 2010 by patrix
Rhetoric, Politics, and the Obama Phenomenon
march 2010 by patrix
Interesting conference on the Obama phenomenon in downtown Bryan Wish I could attend but regd.is closed. Grrr!
conference
Obama
academics
communication
texasa&m
collegestation
bryan
texas
march 2010 by patrix
Nil by mouth by Roger Ebert
january 2010 by patrix
So that's what's sad about not eating. The loss of dining, not the loss of food. It may be personal, but for, unless I'm alone, it doesn't involve dinner if it doesn't involve talking. The food and drink I can do without easily. The jokes, gossip, laughs, arguments and shared memories I miss.
culture
health
food
memories
communication
nostalgia
nefa
january 2010 by patrix
How To Fight
january 2010 by patrix
Yet verbal fighting, like physical fighting, is a skill. Domestic fighting can be learned. One can become very good at it — although almost nobody is, because almost nobody thinks it's necessary to learn this skill.
howto
lifehacks
advice
communication
argument
debate
nefa
january 2010 by patrix
How Apple Does Controlled Leaks
january 2010 by patrix
Monday's article at the Wall Street Journal, which provided confirmation of an Apple tablet device, had all the earmarks of a controlled leak. Here's how Apple does it.
apple
news
marketing
journalism
communication
press
strategy
information
business
nefa
january 2010 by patrix
In defense of Twitter
april 2009 by patrix
the whole breakfast question is a huge straw man periodically pushed across the tracks in front of speeding internet technology. There is much that happens on Twitter or on blogs or on Facebook that has nothing to do with small groups of people communicating about seemingly nothing.
twitter
culture
kottke
socialmedia
internet
communication
nefa
fordesipundit
april 2009 by patrix
Localization Problems: A Cellphone's Missing Dot Kills Two People, Puts Three More in Jail
april 2008 by patrix
The lack of a single dot over a letter—product of a faulty localization of the cellphone's typing system—caused a chain of events that ended in a violent blood bath
news
bizarre
turkey
cellphone
communication
nefa
april 2008 by patrix
Question Box: the Internet for remote places, no literacy or keyboards required
march 2008 by patrix
The Question Box is a project from UC Berkeley's Rose Shuman to bring some of the benefits of the information on the Internet to places that are too remote or poor to sustain a live Internet link.
communication
community
development
education
Internet
media
mobile
technology
NEFA
march 2008 by patrix
Bluetooth helps Facebook friends
august 2007 by patrix
A team of UK researchers is combining the power of social network Facebook with communications tool Bluetooth to learn more about human interactions.
bluetooth
facebook
socialnetworking
NEFA
communication
social
networking
august 2007 by patrix
How To Exit A Conversation
august 2007 by patrix
The only real rule I can think of is to stay polite. No matter where you are or who you’re talking to, maintaining a civil attitude goes a long way
conversation
social
communication
lifehacks
howto
NEFA
august 2007 by patrix
If you want to persuade a woman, look straight at her
april 2007 by patrix
Not only are people more aroused when they are looked at directly, but if you consistently look at the person you speak to, you will have much more social influence over that person than you would if you averted your gaze.
psychology
communication
women
lifehacks
NEFA
april 2007 by patrix
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