A Theory of [Podcasts]
[A]udio demands certain things. It demands plot in a pretty straightforward way, or it demands authentic emotion in a pretty serious way, or it demands companionship. So those are the three reasons that I think people listen to audio. They want to be told a story, they want to feel a very personal connection, or they want to hang out with friends that they feel like they have. And the best shows do all three. And that’s what we’re going to be going for.
– Alex Blumberg, Gimlet Media
Sounds about right to me.
Americans for now seem to grudgingly accept that these are the trade-offs of living in the digital age — or else they fear that it is too late to do anything about it… once people are invested in a service — if they have all their social contacts on Facebook or years of email on Gmail, for instance — they have a hard time giving it up.
“It’s this modern economy that doesn’t really rely on price, but on connections and stickiness,” Mr. Rotenberg said. “The companies have done everything they can to make it impossible to go somewhere else.”
…
Pew offered some evidence that people are inured to the trade-offs of using digital services: Ninety-one percent agree or strongly agree that consumers have lost control over how their personal information is collected or used by companies. They are unsure what to do about it, though.
– Claire Cain Miller, Americans Say They Want Privacy, but Act as if They Don’t
Kiss me, I voted.
Please, please, please let the winners win big.
Apple Pay achievement unlocked.
I wrote a review of the new beer journaling app TapCellar
It’s a great app, you should check it out even if you don’t read my review.
Drew Linzer tweets:
A good election forecast zeroes in on the correct outcome as quickly as possible, without overreacting to daily noise
and shares a link to this New York Times article on The 11 Most Interesting Senate Races of 2014.
Every mobile app attempts to expand until it’s a social network. Those apps which cannot so expand are replaced by ones which can.
Originally posted as a response to Justin’s Theorem, but inspired by Zawinski’s law of software envelopment, duh.
Great podcast interview: The Nerdist with Grant Morrison.
When you say “ethics,” I hear “my preferences.”