
Wired’s SXSW: Mat Honan Fake-Twitters South By Southwest Again made me pee a little.
It’s a webtwopointoh / dbag / socialmedia mashup.

Wired’s SXSW: Mat Honan Fake-Twitters South By Southwest Again made me pee a little.
It’s a webtwopointoh / dbag / socialmedia mashup.
I’m so glad a real writer is thinking about this stuff.
Earlier today Techdirt ran an article by Mike Masnick titled, “Why Aren’t We Trying To Solve The Too Big To Fail Problem?”
He’s absolutely right in bringing this to the table. Maybe there’s no solution – but we need to do our best to consider this issue.
He’s articulated so well something that’s needed to be stated for so long. It’s not a new issue. It’s been going on at least since the seventies – I’m thinking of Lockheed. It’s why we have Amtrak. In the eighties it was the S&L thrifts.
In the case of Lockheed, the “too big” was in the sense of national security. The aerospace giant produced too much secret weaponry to become vulnerable to foreign control.
With the railroads, “too big” meant to integral to the national transportation infrastructure – and again the national security aspect reared its head. Additionally in the case of the railroads, and probably most significantly, too many paychecks came from the same bank account.
Perhaps businesses ought to be forced to split when they reach a certain size? Like cellular division? I’ve long harbored the belief that when single organizations reach a certain size, despite the “economies of scale” that develop, certain bureaucratic inefficiencies develop diminishing returns at a certain scale.
Under specific circumstances the scope of an organization might become more of a hindrance than a boon to the organization. In nature, organisms almost always arrive at an equilibrium with their environments (ecosystem). Both in terms of the size of their populations and the physical dimensions of the species themselves, organisms generally don’t exceed the capacity of their environment’s ability to sustain them.

Just found this funny little service – some of the web 2.0 stuff makes me want to scratch my head more than housing prices circa 2007. This is definitely kinda sorta neat, but I’m not sure how much I’d use this. It’s certainly great to know this app is exposed as a web service, and it’s more fan than you’re average text-to-speech program, but why do I need the random animation?
Anyway, it could be used for devious fun – I think it’s worth checking out what one person did with it when they wanted to rant about the audio they were forced to listen to while waiting on hold for Sprint customer service.
From Joe’s Daily.

Mr. Mullet
“Give somebody else a bad hair day”
Leave it to my false idols at Williams Street to come up with a video game incorporating that incorporates the Kentucky Waterfall.
Mr. Mullet on AdultSwim.com.