Archive for the ‘Netiquette’ Category

Screen-to-screen Salesmen (VOL043)

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

My friends and I all had jobs we hated while we were in high school. I worked the fast-food circuit, flipping burgers and trying to avoid burning myself while deep-frying chicken patties and french fries. I guess it taught me some basic cooking skills, so it wasn’t all that bad. I very much preferred it over one of my buddies’ jobs; he took a gig as a door-to-door salesman. He had to wander through neighborhoods, knock on strangers’ doors, and deliver a sales pitch for vacuum cleaners. I wasn’t much of a people person back in those days, so I would have taken the greasy kitchen over his job any day of the week.

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Lovely Spam, Wonderful Spam! (VOL040)

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

Welcome back to the podcast! This week’s edition: Lovely Spam, Wonderful Spam!

In the world of geek, there are few things more humorous than a sketch by the famous British comedy team Monty Python. One of my favorites is the Spam sketch, in which a man and his wife go out to breakfast and nearly every item on the menu contains Spam. Most items contain Spam multiple times, such as “Spam, bacon, sausage, and Spam.”

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The Cybercouth Tiger Returns (VOL032)

Friday, September 11th, 2009

Welcome back to the podcast!

This week’s edition: “The Cybercouth Tiger Returns.”

It’s been a while since we’ve heard from our friend and loyal listener, the Cybercouth Tiger. Today he joins us with more tips for how you can observe common courtesy when communicating at light speed.

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The Butler Did It!

Friday, September 11th, 2009

It is quite rude to reveal the conclusion of a novel or film to someone before they have completed the work on their own.  Doing so ruins their enjoyment and may result in them choosing not to see the work through to completion at all.  An information dense e-mail message is another story altogether.

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Don't Let Cyber Cool Make You Cyber Crude

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

Are you sending mixed signals about who you are? One of the problematic beauties of the Internet is the ability to define yourself in multiple ways. People often use multiple personas on social sites such as Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn and Twitter to define themselves in multiple ways. The problem comes in because the nature of the Internet is to link things together. In some ways, it is fantastic that you can post in one place and automatically have the post repeated in others, but it can end in disaster. When convenience leads to complacency and you make a post about your exploits during a night out with friends that also posts to the very serious persona you were hoping would land you your dream job, you may discover that you have earned a merit badge in podiatric marksmanship.

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