Showing posts with label technorati. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technorati. Show all posts

Sunday 11 June 2017

Brzezinski's Technocratic Vision




My sources tell me that people like Brzezinski and Kissinger are just pseudo-intellectual veneer fronts for the basic divide and rule strategy of the ruling elite. This is why they look so inept when they snooker themselves with ideological reversals that faux intellectuals invariably provide a memory-wipe pass on.

That said, there's a more interesting technocratic element to Brzezinski's work which is worth reviewing in the interview above. The future seems less about FEMA camps and more about blue pill gamification chambers. 

Tuesday 29 May 2007

Switched On Kid

Yuvi Panda just kicked ass on the internet. He's a 16 year prodigy techno guru geek from Chennai (formerly Madras) on the East coast of India who is wired to the nines and blogs about IT stuff on a wobbly bandwidth-restricted internet connection. Some time back he did a post about the former Microsoft supremo Robert Scoble's blog presenting a lot of statistics gleaned from Technorati. He's just done the same for the mother of all tech-gadget blogs called Engadget which has a huge readership. I came across Yuvi through Scoble's 'shared' items blog feed as we both use the same Google Reader for zapping through RSS feeds (although incredibly Scoble does up to 600 a day, down from 1400). Scoble shared this pretty exciting post from Jason Calacanis one of the founders of Weblogs Inc and former GM of Netscape which offers Yuvi a job for project X on the spot.

If you do a
google on this enterprising young man you can see there aren't many digital stones left unturned and his entrepreneurial side shows through wonderfully . He realises that by delighting the digital blogging A listers he may get just that little bit closer to achieving his dream of working at Microsoft. I like this story, it's representative of how democratic the internet is which is a post I've touched upon but have lined up for more in-depth examination in the future.