So, did Coke beat Amazon to the punch, or is it just beta testing for them?
So, did Coke beat Amazon to the punch, or is it just beta testing for them?
Had a fine lunch yesterday at Earl's Sandwiches, but the real surprise came when we parked in front of CD Cellar. There in the window was a selection of 8-track tape cartridges. I almost didn't remember what they were.
Social media is turning us all into a nation of Herzogs, writers of whiny letters that we send out into the void. http://t.co/RqcNZnPSWu.
— The New Republic (@tnr) May 5, 2014
When you think about it, this is an odd posture to assume in front of our friends, even our Facebook "friends." Our complaint is meant to put us in the right and some other guilty party in the wrong; but because we are complaining to our friends, not the guilty party, the effect is to make us appear powerless. This is the letter we would send, the tone implies, if only—if only we could afford to antagonize our colleague, if only we thought the faceless corporation would respond, if only etiquette didn't make it impossible to confront a stranger. In this sense, it operates as a safety valve, increasing the passivity it implicitly laments—just as Moses Herzog's angry unsent letters did. What would happen if, instead of turning to Facebook to complain about ill-treatment, we actually went out and did something about it? What if all those unsent letters were turned into e-mails? It would be an angrier world, but perhaps a more well-adjusted one.
Six Postcards From Famous Writers: Hemingway, Kafka, Kerouac & More http://t.co/i67656Z8EJ
— Open Culture (@openculture) May 3, 2014
Wearable Robots on the Rise to Help Paraplegics Walk - ABC News http://t.co/jVaWNuh3CS
— Troy Schmanke, Ph.D. (@BrainDamageNet) May 2, 2014