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Evan Williams describes himself as "an American entrepreneur, originally a farm boy from Nebraska, who's been very lucky in business and life." This statement might be true if he was merely responsible for one giant leap in the Web 2.0 world. However, as someone partly responsible for two monumental jumps forward, one has to conclude that he's being over-modest by attributing his success to luck rather than his capacity for vision, tenacity and good judgment.


In 1999, Pyra Labs, a company Williams co-founded, launched Blogger, a web-based service that put easy to use blog publishing tools in the hands of the masses and helped fuel the proliferation of the web log phenomenon. The company was sold to Google for an undisclosed sum in 2003. Williams however had caught the start-up bug, and left Google the following year to co-found Odeo.com, an aggregator and search engine for podcasts. The Odeo concept never really took off, but a side project started at the company did. The original five-character SMS shortcode-friendly name for that venture was Twttr.


Odeo was reorganized and re-branded as Obvious Corp. in 2006, and Twitter, which had added a couple of vowels to its name, became the center of attention. After winning SXSW's Web Award in March 2007, Twitter was spun off as an entity unto itself. Since then, Twitter has grown exponentially, with usership increasing by 900% this past year. The site has leapt over giants like LiveJournal and Linkedin in terms of monthly visits, rising from #22 (in Jan '08) to #3 (in Jan '09) in Compete.com's list of the Top 25 Social Networks.


Unlike other, increasingly cumbersome, social networking sites, Twitter's success lies in its simplicity. It has stayed true to its original concept: delivering brief Facebook style status updates to social groups in real-time via SMS. The service, which can also be accessed via RSS and the web, combats our propensity for digital diarrhea (which was, ironically, enabled by the likes of Blogger), by asking one simple question and limiting posts in response to 140 cellphone-friendly characters.


We tracked down Evan Williams (Twitter's CEO as of October 2008) -- via Twitter of course -- to ask him about the rules he tweets by, the people he follows, and his vision for the service's future.


Click HERE to read full interview at SuicideGirls.com.

If you liked playing with kaleidoscope's as a kid, click HERE.

If I Controlled The Internet

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A poem for the online world from comic, poet and super highway scholar Rives.


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Ghost Songs

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DM_CD_Flip_150.jpgRemember the good old days when, once every blue moon, you'd buy an album on CD and get surprised by a secret song? These unlisted ghost tracks were often hidden beyond the last song, and would reveal themselves after a brief moment of silence. Also known as "easter eggs," these elusive gems have been concealed by a myriad of artists from Dave Matthews to Dido and Nirvana to No Doubt. HiddenSongs.com has uncovered the secrets of many CDs, and has compiled a database of these invisible tracks. Click HERE to find out if your favorite artist or band has a ghost song entombed in the digital code of an otherwise ordinary looking compact disc.

DM_Daily Zen.jpgWhen most of us think "meditation", a room full of screaming traders is not the first image that comes to mind. Fluorescent lights, frantic phones, a bevy of television screens on every wall, even the most grounded of gurus would concede this environment something less than meditationally ideal. Of course, these are often precisely the times we could most use a dollop of transcendence. Enter: DailyZen.com.


In addition to inspiring quotations and e-cards, this soothing site offers an online meditation sanctuary accessible from any place with an internet connection, be that a Wall Street trading floor, a crowded airport, or your own sometimes less than calming abode.


Simply click "enter" from the DailyZen.com home page, and select "Meditation Space." From here you will be invited to pause, breathe, sit tall, and release your concerns as you enter a cyber-sanctuary peopled with fellow meditators from around the globe.


So sure, cyber-meditation may sound counter-intuitive, but when you're stuck in some I-banking cubicle (or ensconced in a houseful of children and chores), just pausing at the DailyZen meditation page and breathing for a moment can go a long way in restoring your calm and composure. To this we can all say "Om."



After Apple previewed their glamorous, supermodel-slim MacBook Air it seems weightier laptops are feeling the pressure to be thin. "Has Apple considered the implications of its glorification of thin models? Has it once considered the feelings of my 'big boned' HP, and how she's felt living in a society where you're only as attractive as you are thin?," writes the director of this Yahoo short video. "And what about the young processors that are at an impressionable age. Do they need this pressure? I think not."

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If You Like To Doodle....

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Don't Panic, Buy This

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Don't Panic.jpgTo quote the reassuring words written in large friendly letters on the cover of The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy, Don't Panic, buy this helpful USB panic button instead. An invention The Guide's dearly departed author Douglas Adams would no doubt have approved of, the USB panic button instantly replaces any dubious surfing material displayed on your computer screen with something more mother-in-law or boss friendly, like a photo of your spouse, dog, plant or a very important looking, and very non-threatening work document. Now all you need to successfully negotiate your way through the universe is a towel, which every H2G2 fan knows is the most "massively useful thing an interstellar hitchhiker can have."

Explore The Heavens With Google Earth

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Explore a hundred million stars and two hundred million galaxies with Google Earth 4.2. The new software upgrade, which you can download for free, uses imagery from the Hubble Telescope to bring the universe to your desktop.


"By working with some of the industry's leading experts, we've been able to transform Google Earth into a virtual telescope," says Lior Ron, a Google product manager.