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The Billion-Dollar Blackhole of Social Media
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The Billion-Dollar Blackhole of Social Media |
04/25/09
04/24/09
I even learned some HTML programming. I enjoyed the experience until I lost my password and then Yahoo took over. I loved egroups until Yahoo took over, too. Sigh. But I have friends from back in those days even now.
04/24/09
The GeoCities deal amounted to less than 5% of Yahoo's then-market cap, whereas a potential Google deal would have been more than 1/3 of Yahoo's summer-2002 market cap. Using the stock-currency equivalent, a $3bn Google deal would have been a $20bn deal, compared to the GeoCities deal.
And, most importantly, while that $20bn price tag looks good in retrospect, remember that Yahoo management would have been running Google in the interim. Would you bet $20bn that Yahoo could have turned the Google asset into something worth an eighth of a trillion dollars in seven years' time?
04/25/09
04/24/09
I'll never mention it again.
04/24/09
04/25/09
04/25/09
"Websites which..." makes you stop and wonder if he's talking about all Websites before you realize that he's not. The same thing happens to me whenever I read the Economist, so at least Owen's in rarefied company.
Since we're citing scripture, Strunk and White says: "The careful writer, watchful for small conveniences, goes which-hunting..." (Not to say Owen isn't a careful writer -- he is, which is why I bothered to say anything.)
Fowler has a long, entertaining passage on this that essentially agrees with my point. The author opines that some people use "which" in this way to sound more formal. I think that's the case most times, though I think it's subconscious ("I am Writing now, not merely speaking.")
James Kilpatrick, in "The Writer's Art," agrees with my advice to use the presence of commas as a general guideline, though "it will not work in every construction." He cites several examples that use "which" the way Owen uses it and says they "grate upon the ear."
And even the Chicago scripture, which I disagree with (as I often do), says only that Owen's usage is "more or less correct" and is usually employed by Brits.
AP Stylebook says it's "preferred" to use "that" in these instances, the exception being only when "that" is used as a conjunction elsewhere in the sentence. (Like, "He said that the part of his body which contained the most festering boils was...". Otherwise, it's "that contained...")
So it's not exactly a commandment to use "which" for "that" when there's no comma, but the usage is still clumsy, and unnecessarily so. The reason some grammar and style guides don't mention using commas as a rule of thumb is that it's a just rule of thumb. But as such, it works.
04/25/09
04/26/09
Now, counting down to the poorly thought out, faux-insightful rejoinder from you about my "rage" and "being online all the time" and whatever else you commonly say to the people who don't like your comments and are bored by them.....
04/27/09
04/27/09
04/28/09
Except that I do. Every day. And I have been doing the equivalent for 20 years, and now I write for some of the biggest, best-known publications on the planet. For a living.
Not sure what this has to do with anything, however, other than your being REALLY BOTHERED that I once complained nearly a year ago that you were plastering this site with twitty, addled comments. Many, many comments, every day, for months. You don't seem to be doing that as much, though, at least not here, so that's good.
Still, "won't stop commenting?" What the fuck are you talking about?
04/28/09
Well first Potatoes, let's discuss you for a second here, OK? First off, I think you are the one really bothered. After all, if my comments are addled, then why bother continuing an argument? You are the one who should just move on. But...you won't. And let's just say it's one of my personal flaws that if someone wants to prolong something silly like this, I have a hard time not biting.
Now, your issue with Owen and the "that" and "which" argument. You said you weren't going to raise the issue anymore. Then you did, at least two more times, about the correct usage of "that" and "which", making sure that anyone with enough time to waste (I know, I'm guilty here) really knows that 54% of the people agree with you.
Which is a perfect segue into the "won't stop commenting" issue. You wouldn't stop commenting about grammar when you said you would, and then when I read Gawker, well there you are again, spouting gems like this:
[gawker.com]
Tell me, what professional writer who, or anyone born after 1912 for that matter, uses the word "ninnies."
If you don't like the "verprivileged commentariat ninnies who tend to post here most often", then just read some other website, or at the very least, just refrain from commenting.
You really compliment yourself believing that I still care about what you had to say to me whenever it was. What really bothers me is a) if your comments aren't negative, then they're not very intelligent and b) I hate people who pick fights with the writers about writing. It's rude, it's bad form, it's subjective, and you end up looking bad - which...you did, especially when you continued posting comments about the issue! If you have an issue with Owen's writing, then discuss it with him privately, not in a public forum.
Now, more about you..
"Except that I do. Every day. And I have been doing the equivalent for 20 years, and now I write for some of the biggest, best-known publications on the planet. For a living."
I don't believe you. I read a lot of intelligent, insightful comments on this website and other Gawker sites. Never, ever from you, however.
Now, does this answer your questions to your satisfaction? I guess I'll see you here tomorrow to continue this pointless waste of life of an argument.
04/24/09
04/24/09
04/24/09
04/24/09
GeoCities, check. Compuserve, check. Aol before internet, check.
Aaron, I think you are me, but funnier and easternier.
04/24/09
04/25/09