The MOB On Social Media

I could be wrong, but I have this thought that sometime in the future, historians will refer to newspapers as protoblogs. Furthermore, they will refer to blogs as “proto social media.” Here’s the deal for 2010 and beyond:

Whatever is real cannot be threatened;
Whatever is not both mobile and social does not exist.

By “mobile,” I mean “able to be both accessed and interacted with, by means of an app on a mobile device like an iPhone, Droid, etc.” An instance of this is the Powerline Mobile App, mentioned in February 2010.

John Hinderaker writes:

We’ve designed mobile applications that allow you to access Power Line directly on your iPhone or Blackberry, specially formatted for the small screen. Now you can read PL posts wherever you go. Our mobile app includes, along with our own posts, a breaking news feed from Breitbart.com, so, wherever you might be, you can always stay up to date on the latest news.

I’m here to tell you that the next blogging platform will have a mobile-app-constructor, where you will decide what kinds of things should be included in your blog’s mobile app (news feeds, cool blog feeds, social media feeds, etc.). Like the Powerline app, the blog mobile app of the future will be available on multiple platforms (iPhone, Blackberry, Android, Windows Mobile). If you don’t like this, or find it too complicated, you had better get used to having a relatively small influence in the world.

By “social,” I mean “leveraging social media to sell one’s products, make the case for one’s ideas, or advocate for one’s causes”

By “leveraging,” I mean “Skillfully taking advantage of existing networks of relationships and communities.”

By “social media,” I mean “any platform that allows people to quickly build relationships based on common interests.” There are quite a few social media platforms out there, but a “Big Four” seems to have emerged (Twitter, Facebook, MySpace and YouTube), and anyone who is not using all of these sites is leaving influence on the table.

After some rummaging around, I have discovered that the Minnesota Organization of Blogs (MOB) prefers Twitter as a social media platform. I’m not particularly shocked by this. Twitter fits the MOB demographic. I found all of 3 MOB members of Facebook. When I was doing the rummaging, I was only looking for Twitter accounts, but on further, review, I should have looked at all of the Big Four. If you want to be influential, you have to get over your social media preferences.

Here is the MOB on Twitter, as of March 2010.

@echozoe – έχω ζωη
@toni100 – Bear Creek Ledger
@mrclm – Because I Said So
@bradley0569 – Brad Carlson
@Anokaflash – Centrisity
@conradzero – Conrad Zero
@douglasbass – Crossword Bebop
@PainterPancakes – Faithmouse
@ChadTheElder – Fraters Libertas
@bspward – Brian “Saint Paul” Ward, Fraters Libertas
@Atomizer77 – Atomizer, Fraters Libertas
@Sisyphus_in_GP – Sisyphus, Fraters Libertas (also at Nihilist In Golf Pants)
@Nihilist_in_GP – Nihilist, Fraters Libertas (also at Nihilist In Golf Pants)
@DerekBrigham – Freedom Dogs
@FreschFisch – Fresch Fisch
@GOPMommy – GOP Mommy
@EdMorrissey – Hot Air
@LadyLogician – Ladies Logic
@marketpowerblog – Market Power
@martyandrade – Marty Andrade
@MplsCrime – Minneapolis Crime Watch
@MDETweets – Minnesota Democrats Exposed
@Nihilist_in_GP – Nihilist In Golf Pants, (also at Fraters Libertas)
@LearnedFoot – Learned Foot, Nihilist In Golf Pants
@Sisyphus_in_GP – Sisyphus, Nihilist In Golf Pants (also at Fraters Libertas)
@DavidStrom – David Strom, Our House
@mmarteen – Margaret Martin, Our House
@plar – Peace Like A River
@dirtymushroom – Rambling Rhodes
@AAARF – Residual Forces
@scsuscholars – King Banaian, SCSU Scholars
@mitchpberg – Shot In The Dark
@LookTrueNorth – True North
@truthvmachine – Truth v. The Machine
@davegj – Uncommon Sense

Where was I? Oh, yes. By “does not exist,” I mean “has no discernable cultural influence.” You may not like this future, but I’m afraid it doesn’t care. It’s something any blogger worthy of the name will want to at least contemplate.

I hereby declare that as Minnesota’s conservative media federation, the MOB is behind the curve regarding social media. I’m looking forward to having a few chats with some MOB members about this at the MOB Party on March 13.

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One Comment

If you are like me then you read online stuff differently than you read paper.

I find it difficult to read online articles with the same depth that I read papers or books. Sometimes I have to print out the online stuff in order to concentrate on it.

Nice meeting you at the MOB.

Jim

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