Here is the exclusive podcast (40 mins) with Robert Scoble and Shel Israel the authors of “Naked Conversations”. Robert and Shel are at CES talking about blogging and podcasting at CES.
I had a chance to sit down with them for this exclusive Podcast of their book. Naked Conversations will be available Jan 9. It will prove to be a great resource for corporations and individuals to learn about what works and what doesn’t work with blogging. Great stuff.
The full transcript of the podcast with Robert and Shel is available here.
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Copyright ©2008 PodTech.net. All rights reserved. Modified: Sun, 07 Sep 2008 20:21:45 -0700
January 7th, 2006 at 5:41 pm
[…] The podcast is posted on PodTech.net here. […]
January 8th, 2006 at 5:36 pm
[…] But, for me and Shel Israel, there was another “best moment.” Yesterday at about 8:30 a.m. when Shel handed me a copy of our new book. It looks awesome! Here’s a picture of Shel holding the book moments after we met. We proceeded to give a presentation to the top book buyers in the world (including the top ones from Borders, Amazon, Barnes and Noble). We had a spirited and interesting conversation. Much like this conversation that John Furrier (who is the #7 podcaster on iTunes) had with us last week. […]
January 11th, 2006 at 3:56 am
I enjoyed the interview, and I will get the book. But, one thing I disagree with is the idea that regular folks’ view of authenticity is driven or mediated by whether a person blogs or not. You commented that Howard Dean is inauthentic because he wasn’t running the BFA blog, Joe Trippi was (paraphrased) seems to disparage the view of the Gov as authentic and truth-telling.
I was a very early Deaniac. In fact, Howard and that community got me to vote for the first time in my life (albeit for Kerry, but I digress). For a middle-aged AfricanAmerican/Cherokee expat woman, voting, and voting rights should have been automatic. But they weren’t because I didn’t trust the authenticity of the American political system, and the politicians that seemed to infest it.
Dean came along when I was extremely angry at Bush (I had just finished writing a book about his malapropisms called ‘Bush in Wonderland’). As a regular, non-wonky, non-techie person, I didn’t care that Howard didn’t do most of the blogging himself. I cared that he did what he said he would do, that he lived his life in accordance with his beliefs, and his actions spoke a whole lot louder than his blogging needed to.
He was very clear about being uncomfortable with computers in general, and not really knowing what he had unleashed in Americans hungry for authenticity…
I say all that to note that regular folks, who aren’t the tech savvy, or the politics-savvy, for that matter, might care more about other things than whether the candidate had some grand blogging scheme when he started out. I certainly did, which is why I’m chair of democrats abroad japan today - and Gov. Dean is head of the DNC, put there and appreciated by the growing grassroots that supports him: whether he blogs himself or not!
dailykos posts that help widen the view of the Gov.:
Howard dean Flattens Wolf Blitzer on Abramoff Scandal
The Dean Misinformation Campaign