Laid Off? Tell Your Horror Story Anonymously on Telonu
Feb 25, 2009 Mashable
When are you most likely to vent about your employer? Well, for some jobs, maybe every day as soon as you leave the place, but for a lot of people lately, probably right after they become the latest victim of a layoff. Telonu, a site that lets people anonymously review their employers, is looking to capitalize on this trend with a section specifically for the laid off: Layoff Talk.
To tell your story, simply head over to the new “layoff central†section and find your ex-employer to add your take on the layoff. Or, just write a new story and fill in the blanks. Telonu is completely anonymous, though it does ask what your relationship was with the company.
Today, the service added a widget so you can display the service’s layoff counts on your own website or blog, though, personally, I’d be more inclined to click some of the compelling headlines associated with layoff stories, like “Replaced by a College Student†or “Laid Off in the Cafeteria.â€Â
Tracking layoffs in and of itself seems a bit morbid, but there is certainly a need right now for people to vent, and the anonymity of Telonu provides a good outlet for it. On the other hand though, it’s hard to read much into anonymous reports, given there are so many sour grapes when it comes to being let go from an employer.
We also wonder about the site’s chances of attracting advertisers, or if it will meet the same fate as the popular but un-monetizable anonymous gossip site, JuicyCampus, which was forced to shutdown earlier this month.
Meanwhile, if you are currently looking for work, check out some of our fantastic resources below.
Job Hunting Resources from Mashable
- 30+ Websites to Visit When You’re Laid Off
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9 Must-Try Adobe AIR Apps for Better Productivity
Feb 25, 2009 Mashable
Elliott Kosmicki is the founder of GoodPlum.com, a productivity and personal development blog for home business owners. You can also follow Elliott on Twitter.
Adobe AIR came along and changed the application world overnight. Developers could now use their web app knowledge and translate that to an application that ran on a PC, Mac or Linux desktop. For users, such as myself, we all of the sudden had the ability to find desktop apps that we loved, and use them across all of our systems in the exact same way.
With this new age of “application neutrality,” I wanted to take a brief look into some Adobe AIR apps you have to at least try. Each one is focused on increasing an area of productivity.
1. Tackle Tweets With TweetDeck
For the business owner, blogger, or developer, Twitter has become a must-use tool to maintain a healthy network and customer base. TweetDeck is, in my opinion, the top of the line when it comes to Twitter interaction.
View your feed, all replies, trends, and even searches in just a single window! Another great feature of TweetDeck is the ability to sort your contacts into Groups. I have a group for work and a group for Madison, WI that keeps my peep-tracking on easy street.
Tip: Instead of using the standard reply section in TweetDeck, setup a search for variations of your username, full name, business name, etc. This allows you to capture ALL mentions to you! My reply search looks like this: @ielliott OR @ielliot OR “Elliott Kosmicki” OR “goodplum.com” OR “Good Plum.”
2. Stay Focused
If you’ve used WriteRoom for Mac, Q10 for PC, or PyRoom for Linux (all of which I use), you will more than likely find Focused of interest.
Focused allows you to write in fullscreen mode. This removes distractions while writing and is now the only way I write (as I am far too easily distracted). So instead of using a different program, depending on your platform, you can simply install Focused on Adobe AIR on each of your systems.
3. Time Tracking With Kronos
For those who use 37signals’ Basecamp product, you might want to take a look at Compuccino instead, as it integrates directly into your tasks there. For the rest of us who want a simple way to track time on projects, there’s Kronos.
Simply setup projects and start tracking how much time you’re spending on them! It’s a great way to either find out how you’re spending (a.k.a. wasting) your time, or just as a simple way to stay on task.
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4. Moderate WordPress Comments With Moderator
This is an early but very delicious release. If you have a blog that receives a regular stream of comments, it’s always in your best interest to moderate them as often as possible (as well as reply and build relationships, of course).
Moderator allows you to do all this right from within an Adobe AIR program window. Know in advance you’ll also have to install a plugin on your WordPress site for this to work, but it’s worth the few extra minutes of time spent!
5. Google Reader in ReadAir
I don’t know if Google Reader needed improvement, but this Adobe AIR app called ReadAir has me hooked. Essentially, the application allows you to read your feeds in an email-like interface – I love having my reader open in a separate window anyway. The OSX-like theme is just icing on the cake (they’re working on Windows themes, too).
6. Text Snips With Snippely
If you’re a programmer or writer that constantly re-uses bits of texts, this may interest you. Snippely allows you to categorize bits of text information that you can easily recall at any time.
The interface and organization of Snippely is awesome, I just wish they would allow two things: keyboard shortcuts to auto-enter a snippet, and some type of server-sync so I could access my snippets from any computer. Nevertheless, a great product.
7. Task Alerts With RTM Notifier
If you use Remember The Milk, RTM Notifier may be a handy add-on you’ve missed. It adds some basic functionality to your RTM workflow in a simple, small application you can leave open in your system tray.
Check it out, but as it did with me, it may leave you wanting more.
Note – Toodledo users, there is also a very basic Adobe AIR app for you too. Check it out here.
There REALLY is a glaring hole in to-do apps for Adobe AIR. Anyone have anything planned you’d like to share?
8. Lifestreaming With AlertThingy 3
A late entry into my list comes AlertThingy 3. Version 1 was a FriendFeed-only application and I just never tried version 2. Version 3 integrates Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, Yammer, and many more tools I use daily into one interface. Similar to TweetDeck (#1 on this list), you can expand the program to see multiple lists of information such as your Twitter feed, a Twitter search, plus your Facebook news feed. You can update all of these services right from AlertThingy as well.
I’m not sure if this will replace TweetDeck for me, but it really is nice to look at and seems to do much of what I need (except groups). Now if it could only add Digsby-styled instant messaging and run to Starbucks for me!
9. Google Analytics in Desktop Reporting
Please note, this is NOT yet released. However, the developer had previously released an Adobe AIR application to digest your Google Analytics which is now unavailable. The success of that product has spawned an entire suite of new products, soon to be released.
Imagine having all your Google Analytics data sucked-in to an AIR app that will allow you to pick it apart and analyze it in all new refreshing ways.
If you’re interested (as I am), be sure to find out more at the Desktop Reporting site.
Remember, YOU Are the System!
No matter what you do, there will always be a never ending stream of applications released. Whether it’s for Adobe AIR, the web, or the latest mobile phone. Go ahead and try things, but if there’s one tip I can recommend the most it’s to pick something and stick with it – at least for a while. Otherwise, you might end up needing an app for your Attention Deficit Disorder, which isn’t in beta until winter of 2012.
Elliott Kosmicki is a web developer and marketing specialist for an Internet Retailer Hot 100 company in Madison, WI. When he’s not absorbing marketing strategy and personal development material, you can find him writing for Good Plum – a productivity and personal development blog focused on the thoughts of home business owners, freelancers, and dreamers. You can also find Elliott on his personal summary page, and on Twitter.
More Adobe AIR app resources from Mashable:
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Howard Lindzon and Friends Launch New Investment Fund for Social Apps
Feb 25, 2009 Read/Write Web
pimg alt=”socialleveragelogo.jpg” src=”http://www.readwriteweb.com/images/socialleveragelogo.jpg” width=”69″ height=”57″a href=”http://www.howardlindzon.com/”Howard Lindzon/a, a hedge fund trader who created the high profile short video show a href=”http://wallstrip.com”Wallstrip/a and then sold it to CBS, today launched a new fund to invest in social applications. The 8 person group is called a href=”http://www.socialleveragellc.com”Social Leverage, LLC/a and will presumably compete with a handful of other small funds to get a piece of the hottest new apps before they seek more substantial funding./p
pThe new fund’s portfolio currently includes the most popular Twitter client a href=”http://tweetdeck.com”Tweetdeck/a (also funded by a href=”http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/01/16/twitter-me-this-tweetdeck-secures-angel-funding/”a constellation of other small stars/a), Lindzon’s Twitter for stock tips service a href=”http://stocktwits.com”StockTwits/a and a href=”http://www.wallhogs.com/”WallHogs/a, a bizarre company that prints over-sized vinyl wall hangings from user uploaded images. Who will Social Leverage back next? We can only wonder, it’s sure to be interesting./p
p align=”right”emSponsor/embr /a href=’http://d1.openx.org/ck.php?n=13998amp;cb=13998′ target=’_blank’img src=’http://d1.openx.org/avw.php?zoneid=11205amp;cb=13998amp;n=13998′ border=’0′ alt=” align=”right” //a/p
pWe find the fund’s launch of interest because we find Lindzon of interest and we like the idea of someone giving small sums of money and social media help to cutting edge social media experiments./p
pobject classid=”clsid:D27CDB6E-AE6D-11cf-96B8-444553540000″ width=”437″ height=”347″ align=”right”param name=”movie” value=”http://www.viddler.com/simple_on_site/952578ab” /param name=”allowScriptAccess” value=”always” /param name=”allowFullScreen” value=”true” /param name=”wmode” value=”transparent” / embed src=”http://www.viddler.com/simple_on_site/952578ab” width=”437″ height=”347″ type=”application/x-shockwave-flash” allowScriptAccess=”always” allowFullScreen=”true” wmode=”transparent” name=”viddler” /embed/objectThe fund describes its strategy in part via its past success. “We’ve taken traditional business models (ranging from finance to video to entertainment, media, and more) and transformed them using social networking and internet media.” Lindzon in particular deserves a sympathetic ear since he did figure out how to create a web video content company from scratch and turn it into acquisition bait by a huge old media company. The show was reportedly a href=”http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/05/13/cbs-acquires-wallstrip-for-5-million/”sold for $5 million in May of 2007/a but was a href=”http://www.labnol.org/internet/cbs-discontinues-wallstrip-video-podcast/6412/”shuttered by CBS last month/a. Toward the show’s final days it tended to be heavier on the cleavage than on the financial news or analysis anyway. A slogan on the bottom of Lindzon’s personal blog reads “Due Diligence is for Underperformers.”/p
pSocial Leverage says it will provide everything from user acquisition to revenue stream generation to help with financial filings to the companies it funds. Presuming all parties can get along well enough, we expect that the fund will act as all-around allies to their portfolio companies in ways that more traditional funds do not./p
pBoth StockTwits and Tweetdeck seem to us as exciting as investment in a Twitter app is likely to be, though we’re not sure what to think about the wall hanging company./p
pWe look forward to seeing a href=”http://www.socialleveragellc.com”Social Leverage/a in action and eagerly await announcements about which crazy ideas the fund gives a financial lifeline in the future./p
stronga href=”http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/howard_lindzon_and_friends_lau.php#comments-open”Discuss/a/strong
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Etsy is an International Word of Mouth Phenomenon (Charts)
Feb 25, 2009 Read/Write Web
pimg src=”http://www.readwriteweb.com/images/etsy-logo.jpg”Wouldn’t you love to have people in every corner of the globe talking about your website face to face and on their blogs? That’s the enviable position that online crafts marketplace a href=”http://etsy.com”Etsy/a finds itself in according to a href=”http://www.etsy.com/storque/etsy-news/survey-says-international-seller-survey-results-are-in-3455/”survey results the company published today/a. Word of mouth and personal blogs are the primary way people around the world are finding out about the site and there’s an active community of craft sellers on Etsy from every continent but Antarctica./p
pAt a time when marketers are obsessed with getting traction on Facebook and are just beginning to take users outside the US seriously, Etsy’s survey of its international members is fascinating – as is the company itself./p
p align=”right”emSponsor/embr /a href=’http://d1.openx.org/ck.php?n=13997amp;cb=13997′ target=’_blank’img src=’http://d1.openx.org/avw.php?zoneid=11205amp;cb=13997amp;n=13997′ border=’0′ alt=” align=”right” //a/p
pimg alt=”Etsyscreen.jpg” src=”http://www.readwriteweb.com/images/Etsyscreen.jpg” width=”607″ height=”481″ /p
h2Etsy is Hot Stuff/h2
pEtsy is an online marketplace where people set up shops to sell physical goods they have made by hand. Knitters, painters, potters and musicians use Etsy like millions of other people use eBay. The Etsy community also meets offline, though, at Etsy-sponsored craft fairs in cities around the globe. /p
pEtsy means business, too. It’s raised more than $30 million in venture funding and has the backing of people from places like Facebook and Flickr. Probably the hippest VC fund in tech, Fred Wilson’s Union Square Ventures, is an investor – as is early Facebook fund Accel./p
pThis Fall Etsy started looking for a Director of International Marketing and announced major plans to expand its support for international buyers and sellers./p
h2The International Profile/h2
pTraffic monitoring services indicate that about half of Etsy’s website traffic is coming from outside the US. Where do all these people live? The company’s survey of almost 1600 international sellers showed that these members come predominantly from the UK and Europe, with healthy chunks from Canada and Australia. Sixty-seven different countries were represented and 97% of the respondents were women./p
centerimg alt=”etsygraph1.jpg” src=”http://www.readwriteweb.com/images/etsygraph1.jpg” width=”332″ height=”364″ /center
pFrench, German and Spanish were the most popular languages spoken after English. Almost everyone said they preferred to be paid for the crafts they sell by PayPal, a great sign that PayPal’s international woes may not be as bad as they used to be./p
pThe most interesting parts of this survey may be how respondents learned about Etsy and how they promote their shops beyond the site. Word of mouth was far and away the leading way people discovered the site, something that any other website would be insanely jealous of. Discovery by blog was also bigger than search and advertising./p
centerimg alt=”Etsychart2-1.jpg” src=”http://www.readwriteweb.com/images/Etsychart2-1.jpg” width=”510″ height=”227″ /center
pHow did people promote their shops? Their personal blogs are the number one way, they said. Take that “post-blogging” cynics!/p
centerimg alt=”Etsychart3.jpg” src=”http://www.readwriteweb.com/images/Etsychart3.jpg” width=”415″ height=”337″/center
pThat’s a snapshot of Etsy’s method of international growth. We thought it was remarkable enough that we wanted to share it with readers here./p
stronga href=”http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/etsy_is_an_international_word_of_mouth_phenomenon.php#comments-open”Discuss/a/strong
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Don’t be Silly – The Kindle 2 is No Threat to Audiobooks
Feb 25, 2009 Read/Write Web
pimg alt=”kindle_2_logo_feb09.png” src=”http://www.readwriteweb.com/images/kindle_2_logo_feb09.png” /A few weeks ago, just after the introduction of the new Kindle 2, the a href=”http://www.authorsguild.org/”Authors Guild/a#160;a href=”http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-10161104-93.html”complained/a that Amazon’s eBook reader had a text-to-speech function. According to Paul Aitken, the Guild’s executive director, this meant that Amazon would have to a href=”http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123419309890963869.html”pay for audio rights/a for every book downloaded onto the device. Today, Roy Blount Jr., the Guild’s president, echoed this sentiment in an op-ed piece in the a href=”http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/25/opinion/25blount.html”New York Times/a./p
p align=”right”emSponsor/embr /a href=’http://d1.openx.org/ck.php?n=13995amp;cb=13995′ target=’_blank’img src=’http://d1.openx.org/avw.php?zoneid=11205amp;cb=13995amp;n=13995′ border=’0′ alt=” align=”right” //a/p
pThis somewhat odd piece by Blount opens with a comment about how the author’s father died because he was the president of too many ‘well-meaning organizations.’ While it is not clear that this has anything to do with the Kindle 2, it is surely meant to set the mood for the rest of the article./p
pimg alt=”kindle_book.png” align=”right” src=”http://www.readwriteweb.com/images/kindle_book.png” /Blount argues that the Kindle is sold and marketed as a “new, improved, multimedia version of books.” That is a strange statement, given that Amazon barely mentions the text-to-speech functionality on its a href=”http://www.amazon.com/Kindle-Amazons-Wireless-Reading-Generation/dp/B00154JDAI/ref=amb_link_83624371_1?pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DERamp;pf_rd_s=center-1amp;pf_rd_r=0HKD4J4RRTYJA19K57GRamp;pf_rd_t=101amp;pf_rd_p=469942651amp;pf_rd_i=507846″own site/a (though, granted, Amazon’s CEO Jeff Bezos does mention it whenever he a href=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FgxSR72TWrY”talks/a about the Kindle 2 in a href=”http://www.thedailyshow.com/full-episodes/index.jhtml?episodeId=218387″public/a)./p
pBout also argues that the voices of the Kindle 2 are “quite listenable.” And indeed, the text-to-speech function of the Kindle 2 a href=”http://www.examiner.com/x-4255-Philadelphia-Tech-Gear-Examiner~y2009m2d21-Amazons-Kindle-2-voice-technology-impresses”represents/a the current state-of-the-art when it comes to commercially available screen readers. But nobody would want to listen to these voices for a long period of time. They still can’t replace the work of experienced voice talent and can become rather a href=”http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=13432″annoying/a if you have to listen to them for too long./p
pAs Henry Blodget a href=”http://www.businessinsider.com/kindle-2-rips-off-authors-and-publishers-says-authors-guild-2009-2″points out/a, authors are already getting paid for the sale of the book on the Kindle, and now they (or the Guild members that represent them) also want to get paid for the audio rights on top of this. Maybe more importantly, it should also be acknowledged that most users might never make use of the text-to-speech feature in the Kindle, so Amazon would have to charge users extra for a right they might never make use of./p
pSadly, instead of lauding Amazon for bringing the book into a new era (or at least trying to do so), the Authors Guild has decided to focus its efforts on arguing about what is essentially a non-issue. /p
stronga href=”http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/kindle_2_audiobook_controversy.php#comments-open”Discuss/a/strong
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