If you see something…
But, you know, attribute it.
Silly me. I thought flying on 9/11 would be easy. I figured most people would choose not to fly that day so lines would be short, planes would be lightly filled and though security might be ratcheted up, we’d all feel safer knowing we had come a long way since that dreadful Tuesday morning 10 years ago.
But then armed officers stormed my plane, threw me in handcuffs and locked me up.
A chilling account of running afoul of another passenger’s paranoia – and the security apparatus it set in motion – in post-9/11 North America.
I manage to avoid a whole lot of horseshit because I’m white, male, straight and middle-class. It gives me a truly skewed view of the world; pieces like these serve as corrective lenses.
There’s a lot I like about OS X 10.7 Lion. But one big problem I’ve had is persistent difficulty logging into iChat. It’ll say “Offline”; I choose “Available”… and nothing happens. No feedback, no error message, just a messaging client that stays offline.
But I’ve found a fix (at least, one that works for me). Just force-quit the imagent process; it’ll restart automatically. Now see if you can log in.
If your reaction to that is “force-what-the-who?”, then I’ve made a quick minute-and-a-half video showing you how:

By now, Twitter’s media stereotype as the place you come to share details of your last meal is finally starting to fade, giving way to a growing understanding of its real impact on the world.
And while a lot of attention has been going to Twitter as a tool for marketing and PR, Twitter is also emerging as a powerful tool for social change. From fundraising to pay for a Cambodian student’s tuition to organizing the street protests that marked the Arab Spring, people around the world are using Twitter to advance important causes.
Now there’s a new guide for anyone hoping to make a difference in the world using social media: Twitter for Good: Change the World, One Tweet at A Time, by Claire Diaz Ortiz. (If her name sounds familiar, that may well be because she leads social innovation and philanthropy at Twitter.)
I enjoyed her talk at BlogWorld last year, where she set out her TWEET (Target, Write, Engage, Explore, Track) model of Twitter effectiveness. So I’m looking forward to reading the book, which launched today.
And if you are too, good news. Until midnight tonight, Twitter for Good is Twitter for Good for Free: you can download the electronic version at no cost from Amazon, Barnes and Noble and iTunes.
And if you miss that deadline, you can always enter to win a copy on Claire’s blog.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Licence. Please attribute to Rob Cottingham with a link to the content's original page on this web site. For more information, contact Rob at rob@robcottingham.ca.
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