Archive for June, 2009

Weekly Insider 6.30.09

Most-hated online ad formats
Want to annoy online viewers? Use one of these ad formats.

The chemistry of cravings
Can a chocolate chip cookie be as addictive as a cigarette? Not quite, but this New York Times article details how food makers have tapped into our brains to leave us craving more.

BlackBerry etiquette
What do you think when you see people tapping away on their BlackBerrys during a presentation? This story offers varying viewpoints on being constantly connected.

White House press conference flap
The traditional White House press corps are up-in-arms after Obama invited a Huffington Post blogger to ask a question submitted by an Iranian. Read more here.

Clients in the news 6.26.09

BSA LIfeStructures
Building a better AEC file cabinet
Cadalyst
BSA LifeStructures uses M-Files to manage all documents, without changing how architects and designers work

Atlas World Group
New homes construction on the rise
Ozarks First –Springfield, MO
Atlas sees increased demand for moving services

Cook Medical
Cook Medical eyes future expansion opportunities
Irish County News
Product approval will increase Cook’s global reach

The cowardice of anonymity

mary hayes 150x150 The cowardice of anonymityMy office window overlooks the convention center development site in Indianapolis. Since the RCA Dome’s demolition, my colleagues and I have enjoyed a bird’s-eye view of the construction, and we’ve marveled at its complexity and efficiency. When I learned that a worker had been killed at the site, I took the news strangely personally. Looking for information, I logged on to the Channel 6 website, and then indystar.com, the Indianapolis Star’s website. What I found there disgusted and angered me. It didn’t surprise me.

Today, in addition to the who, what, when, where and why, news readers are subjected to the ignorant, insensitive comments anonymous posters leave behind under the protection of our constitution’s first amendment. I’m not buying their defense. Freedom of speech implies responsibility—that if you want the right to voice an opinion, you better own the words and the ideas that you express. Afraid or unwilling to do that, your voice should be silent. If your comment isn’t one you would share with a grieving widow face-to-face, or on a note signed by your own hand, spare an innocent family and keep your petty thoughts to yourself. Please, you anonymous little cowards, shut up.

Today, instead of reading the paper online, I’m looking out my window and thanking Stanley Roberts. May he rest in peace.