« Roof advertisements | Home | You don't need them, but they need you: It is their content, but it is your money. »

05 July '05 - 13:10

The one that blocks all the schmutz.

You got to go and read the story about Blake Ross' grandfather and Firefox - a rabbi is involved too! :))

This is how you do real 'marketing by family'!

btw, my mother and my aunt both call the firefox on their machines mozarella - because they mix up the Firefox and the Mozilla Thunderbird. They refer to the latter as 'the red thing'. It is just like they say string to the control key (which is "Steuerung" in German and therefore STRG). And they don't talk to one another about computer, the independently came up with it.

Like they called it on the one American Copywriter podcast: sometimes words and concepts just are grabbed by everyone because it lies in the air. :))



Was this article helpful?


3 comments
  1. Great story. Thanks for posting.
    toby 05 July '05 - 20:06
  2. I have coined around 30 neologisms for the blogosphere, and have some recognition online for it.

    One thing I do is just start using the words, like they’re already commonplace. People are in a hurry, so they just assume that my neologisms are commonplace, and thus start using them, as though playing “catch up”.

    Bloatosphere, blogistics, unblog, clinking, bloffing, zombie blogging, blogo-combat, many others, mostly self-evident. Bloffing = fluff blogging, clinking = cliquey blogroll linking, etc.

    Chris Ritke at 49 Media mentioned you in a recent post at one of my sites, saying that you were speaking of things similar to what and how I talk about them.

    So here I am and I’m here to explore.

    :^)

    I can always use additional blogo-combat allies. Maybe you hate what I hate, like mediocrity, passivity, and excessive diplomacy when sharp-tongued rebuke and scolding are more appropriate.
    steven streight aka vaspers the grate 08 July '05 - 18:42
  3. Hm, I don’t hate excessive diplomacy for just it, but sometimes it is annoying when people can do nothing else. And if you ask them for a straight answer, you won’t get them.

    If they are very good at it, it works. But many times you need to be a mind reader to get the meaning out of it …
    Nicole 11 July '05 - 00:58



Your comment:

Name:  
Remember personal info?

Email:
URL:


 



Notify:

Small print: All html tags except <b> and <i> will be removed from your comment. You can make links by just typing the url or mail-address.

Trackback link:

Please enable javascript to generate a trackback url

Last Comments

Kerry Nitz on "What can you do …
sceptic on The connected wor…
Luke on twitter downtime …
Oliver on The connected wor…
Oliver on The connected wor…
Sceptic on The connected wor…
Nicole Simon on Blogworldexpo 200…
Shellee Andrews on Blogworldexpo 200…
Janine on Aggressive men an…
Nicole on Blogging Web 2.0 …

Keep in touch

Feed for ctbk Complete Feed for ctbk
Connect with / Contact me

About

female. european. geek.

About Nicole Simon I love working with people and help them get successful, especially through the use of social software. Though I have been on the net for over a decade and have consulted SMB for years, I also understand the corporate side, as I have worked in a major corporation for 15 years.

If you need a name for what I do, I usually call myself a European New Media Specialist with a special interest in blogging, podcasting and second life. I also love to 'testdrive' products / concepts which is best described as Technology Implementation Analyst.

You can read more about me on my Xing profile or contact me for more information.

When I do interviews (mainly pre conference podcasts I put them up here: Bloxpert so I can seperate blog / podcast talk a bit more from the stuff here.

Useful Sounds is my personal podcast, and I also have a German blog. Living in Lübeck, Germany, a European point of view comes with everything.



Why ctbk? Smooth-tongued responses are for the timid ones, and if there are no challenges, there is nothing to gain either. :)

Archives