@Charley I will always remember when my mom told me about “K.I.S.S.” (Keep It Simple Silly). I’ll be sure to check out the Zen Habits blog as I could use more “simple” in my life. Thanks for sharing!
]]>I took a little social media break this week – and some time to think about my online reading/learning habits. So, this discussion caught my attention.
Unlike Charley, I found the question to hard to answer .. maybe it is the getting back from vacation slowness but also I realized that I read a lot of sources/blogs and look for patterns than cite a favorite blogger.
After reading Debra’s framing: Does the blog offer consistent insight and education about an area I want to learn about?
I realize that I read to not only read to learn, but part of learning is seeing patterns — and I guess if I had to pin myself down to “favorite” bloggers I’d mention a few that do a good job of covering a wide range of sources.
Two come to mind.
Aliza Sherman (http://gigaom.com/author/alizasherman/) not only is she a superb writer, but she obviously reads widely and links to a wide number of sources.
Stephan Downs (http://www.downes.ca/cgi-bin/page.cgi?post=54473) who writes a blog and daily newsletter of links with some pithy, thoughtful commentary on them.
Anyway, thanks for the food for thought this morning
]]>I also think when I read Julien Smith’s In Over Your Head http://inoveryourhead.net/. Julien’s writing is honest and candid and makes me want to view the world in new ways, which can’t be done without thinking.
]]>1. Seth Godin: http://sethgodin.typepad.com/
He posts often with short, insightful, out-of-the-box comments. Not a week goes by that I don’t learn something valuable from him.
2. Zen Habits: http://zenhabits.net/
Practical advice on making life and living simpler and more meaningful.
]]>Here are my two blogs that meet these frameworks:
1. Shel Israel’s Global Neighborhoods: http://globalneighbourhoods.net/. Shel thinks a lot about social media, and is willing to challenge conventional thinking. He often asks readers to think about a different approach to citizen journalism, social media, and nonprofit technology.
2. Jeff Hurt’s blog: http://jeffhurtblog.com/. Jeff Hurt is an association conference planner, but his blog posts always touch on topics that are broader. Recent blog posts include “6 radical work changes coming in the next ten years” and “time to build bridges and create new brain alchemy.” He’s an original thinker and a generous blog commenter as well.
If I could, I would also include Beth Kanter’s blog: http://www.bethkanter.org/. I learn something new about how nonprofit organizations use social media in almost every single blog post.
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