Tea Forte Lumiere

12.25.2008
I'm sitting on the futon waiting for my tea to steep in a gift I got from my Secret Santa. Some of the info you're used to getting - like price and selection of comparable gifts won't be available as I got this for the holiday and didn't do any shopping of other lines or brands before purchase.

But I might say that this product already has no equal in my house.

The silverware drawers are chock-full of infusers and assorted ways to brew loose tea leaves, but none seem as classy and complete as this tea set.

The Lumiere comes with ten infusers (different flavors of tea in tall triangular sachets), a double-walled Morehouse Glass for sipping the tea, and a glass tea tray for holding your used or new tea bag.

Here are some photos.









Along with the Morehouse Glass is a lid with a hole in the center. This allows you to fit the unique tea bag 'leaf' through the hold and keep the steam inside the glass.

The double-walled construction really keeps the outside cool to the touch. In fact I think I burned my tongue when first sipping from this glass because I was lulled into thinking the tea was cooler than it was.

You can find more info at Teaforte.com, but if you're a tea lover give this set - or likely any of their sets a try. I'm giddy that it's so refined and allows me to enjoy proper tea properly.

Four out of five stars, mostly because I can't imagine it was too inexpensive.

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All Groups Are Not Created Equal

12.15.2008
Guest post by: Mike Langford CEO, Founder and Funder of Tweetworks LLC
Mike is a serial entrepreneur with passion for making a difference in peoples lives. In addition to his roll at Tweetworks, Mike is a principal at the investment advisory firm Course Pilot Financial. Prior to launching Course Pilot he held a variety of roles as a member of the finance teams at Fidelity Investments and State Street Corporation. Mike earned his MBA from Boston University’s School of Management.


See Mike's Tweetworks Profile

People Like to Group Things


It's human nature to categorize and lump stuff together with similar meanings. I'm playing pop anthropologist here but it most likely goes back to pre-historic times when being able to quickly assess the meaning of something meant the difference between lunch and being lunch. "Animals that hop are tasty. Animals with fangs are scary." Think about it, there are very few things that we encounter in our daily lives that we haven't categorized (grouped) at some level either passively or overtly.

So the appearance of groups in social media tools shouldn't be a surprise. It's a good thing, people need them so they can handle what can seem like an overwhelming volume of connections and activity. How groups are implemented, what is grouped and why, is what we should focus on when we think about their value.

Current Grouping Methods for Twitter

Below are my answers to Jeff Cutler

You asked how the groups on Tweetworks differ from those on Tweetdeck. We should also mention other grouping services like Twittgroups, Twellow, and Twitterpacks.

Grouping Contacts

Tweetdeck's groups function is pretty much like the grouping you use for your contacts in MS Outlook or Address Book on the Mac. It allows you to group or categorize your contacts, in Tweetdeck's case they are called members (which are pulled from the list of people you follow on Twitter). This is great and very useful. If you want to see what's happening with people you follow who you know are writers then create a writers group and watch their tweets. It is very good for compartmentalizing your time and efforts on Twitter.

The challenge for Tweetdeck groups is that they are localized and user specific. I have no idea how you've grouped me or other users on your desktop. So, while you may decide that I like to talk about Project Runway because we had a conversation about it last week at the WBUR tweet-up, I have no idea that's how you are grouping me.

Listings and Directories

Twittgroup, Twellow, and Twitterpacks function more like open directories. In keeping with the Project Runway example, you might find a list of Project Runway fans on any of these sites. Think the Yellow Pages for Twitter. Twittergroup has gone step further than the others and added a Twitter Search query to each group. Click a link in each group and it brings you to the query results where you'll see a list of tweets that are hopefully related to the grouping.

Groups of Conversations by Topic

Tweetworks groups however are opt-in discussion forums with threaded conversations. If you like to talk about Project Runway you can come to Tweetworks and either form or join a Project Runway group. If the group is a public group anyone can join in the fun, even people who do not have a follower/following relationship with each other. If the group is a private group you can limit the participants in the conversation.

The difference is profound in that the reason people use Twitter and follow the large numbers of people they follow is to have the reasonable ability to have conversations on the topics that interest them. The downside with that model is that it comes with a crazy amount of noise. You followed someone because they mentioned Project Runway but now you've got to see their tweets about Underwater Basket Weaving. Instead of following hundreds or even thousands of people, might it be easier and actually more rewarding to follow the 10, 20, 30 topics that interest you most? Further, if the focus is on the conversation and the posts are threaded instead of sent into the time line ether might you expect more robust conversations to materialize?

Resistance is Futile

I know some users love the free flowing banter of Twitter just the way it is. There is a lot of appeal to the chaos and it is a big part of what made Twitter grow so quickly. "No license, no traffic signs and no speed limits. Let's ride!" But, even the most ardent resisters of order embrace a hashtag or two now and again to connect their conversation with those of others. And while this minimalist, early adopter convention works just fine for the professional tweeters the coming mass adoption wave will struggle if some order isn't made available. With Tweetworks we are simply making the process a bit easier.

Magazine Madness - I'm so behind edition

12.09.2008
I'm currently using stacks of magazines to help uncurl a new rug. The stacks include current issues of ESPN The Mag, Wired, Popsci, BestLife, The New Yorker, MacLife and about 17 other magazines.

At this point, I pause to share with you - dear reader - the futility that is my subscription model. Use my learning experience to avoid pain and frustration. Do NOT subscribe to 20 magazines. EVER. No matter how much time you think you have, the reality is that all the magazines show up at the same time and suddenly a wide-open calendar becomes bogged down in glossy-page madness.

Add to that a quest to write 50K words in November (DONE, THANK YOU!) and you have a recipe for a library's worth of periodicals. Here's another in what will likely be a never-ending series of magazine time-saving reviews.

To refresh your memory, I read the magazines and share with you pertinent articles. Then you can recycle or use the rest of each mag for fireplace fodder. If you agree or disagree (GASP) with my opinion, please post your thoughts in the comments.

Here we go...

Poets & Writers Magazine - Nov/Dec 2008 issue



Most of the issues of P&W are pretty helpful. Upon opening this issue I feared that the editors had gone off the rails and only included poetry. I'm not smart enough to understand the nuance of poetry, so I though I had wasted $5.95. Not so.

Even with the heavy poetry slant in the beginning, the magazine pulled out a win with a few good pieces. First is the special section called MFA Prep that starts on page 78. This piece gives the not-so-harsh-reality behind MFA programs across the nation and the specifics on applying for an advanced degree as a writer. It includes easy-to-understand charts and shares financial info broken down so even a writer can understand it. Good piece. Makes me want to run across the country and enroll at Purdue.

Next, page 70, was an interview with Chuck Adams of Algonquin Books. The Adams interview is sixth in a series called Agents & Editors and left me feeling as if I had learned some secrets about the publishing world and gotten to know a pretty smart editor at the same time.

The writer, Jofie Ferrari-Adler does a good job of asking the right questions...and I skeptically wondered which ones weren't used until I saw the note at the end of the piece saying: "Read an expanded version of this interview" at PW.org/magazine. OUTSTANDING.

Lastly, the market info in every issue is great and that's worth the entire price of admission. Grants, awards and submission deadlines are given for dozens of programs, publications and organizations. If you're a writer, pick up this issue or pay for an online subscription.

BestLife Magazine - November 2008 issue



This magazine is an add-on subscription. If you're unfamiliar with my terminology, it's an appeaser. How's that? Still don't get it? Well you wouldn't be getting this magazine on its own, but if you had subscribed to a mag that went under, you might get this publication. Essentially, BestLife - from what I can tell - shows up in my box to make me forget that the defunct Cargo Magazine had five year's worth of subscription money in its coffers before it tanked.

So I get a wannabe Esquire in my box pretty often. I'm not sure what mag went under to get me on BestLife's list, but it is a Rodale publication so it could be anything from Mountain Bike (now folded into Bicycling) to Details or Cargo or other.

But we're all about reading not kvetching, so here we go.

This month, BestLife has some good stuff in it. Here's the quick report.

The Dangerous Skies expose on page 112 tells what challenges Obama will face when he takes the Presidency in terms of keeping our airports secure from terror. The article also shows you how to make a bomb out of coke bottles and a bunch of stuff you could find at a Home Depot or local hardware store.

The writer lays out the info in an easy-to-understand manner (not the bomb stuff, the dangers still in our airports) and conducts meaty interviews with people like inspectors who are on the front lines every day. The piece is scary and informative. If I were to knock anything about the article, it doesn't reach high enough into government to speak with real accountable people. But I don't imagine the writer could have gotten an interview anyhow, so I still give it an A.

Mark Adams' column on allowing your children to fail is poignant and well-written. Adams touches on the tenets of allowing your offspring (of which I have none, but can relate because the way he teaches is the way I was raised) to reach for things and learn the ramifications of their actions. Simpler, if you don't let your child leap for things, how will he or she ever realize what happens when they miss?

Don't allow me to get all soapboxy on the issue of parents who pamper their kids to the point of not allowing them to play sports in which people keep score. But do allow me to praise Adams for keeping things realistic and explaining to new dads how it's supposed to go. Good work. It rang true and was a fun, informative read without being preachy.

As you might hope, the cover story also got my attention. But only part 2 of the multipart piece. The second part of The Best Adventure is titles The Trip That Changed My Life. In it are seven rules of travel, multiple photos, lots of quick stories from famous and not-so-famous people. It makes for a great read and starts on page 130.

The last two magazines on my list are Budget Travel and Inc. Each is a quicker read than the previous tomes and therefore I'm going to list out what was good with each and let you continue your day.

Budget Travel - November 2008 issue



Travel tips are FANTASTIC every issue. They give 20 Tips each month and I rarely read through it without finding half a dozen great ideas. This issue they start on page 16. An example is replacing your luggage wheels with Rollerblade wheels for a more rugged and durable base on your suitcase. Brilliant.

The travel blog section is light, but informative. I harbor a little anger at the mag for labeling this a 'travel' piece, but I guess it applies. The eight steps are basic for anyone who blogs about anything. It's called Expert Advice because it's written by a travel writer and blogger, but honestly, if you know how to leave a comment here on JeffsNotes, you know how to write a travel blog. That's on page 36.

Page 45 gave the real gem this issue. It's a Vacation Rental Handbook. If you've ever spent time overseas - in whatever direction - you know that hotels are heinously expensive and renting is the way to go. Budget Travel gets to the nitty gritty and shows you how to figure out all the details before your next trip. Would have saved me some time if they had this out when I rented a place in Paris for two weeks in 2007. C'est la vie.

Inc. Magazine - November 2008



Inc is trying to hard to keep pace with the newest tech companies and they really fell down this month. Not because the writing was bad or because their layout was horrible - both were fine. No, Inc missed the boat because their cover story and subsequent trumpeting of Kevin Rose feels fake now that Rose has closed down Pownce and is in slightly more dire straits than he was three months ago when the writers were compiling their Rose stories.

Yes, Kevin Rose of Digg fame is a true entrepreneur. But he's fallen a notch in some eyes and none of that comes through in the Inc issue. Blame it on the deadline cycle for magazines. Not to begin a whole commentary on how the news machine should revamp itself to tell features with depth in magazine form and put the rest of their news online...but that might be where we're headed.

Ironically, that's exactly what Rose's model is. Aggregating the news via the opinions and work of 30Million subscribers/users of his online sites. It's a good piece, but I think you're better off buying the magazine for the 6 Ways to Soup up your PC and the story on how water might become the next big opportunity.

That's all for now. I still have about 10 November mags to plow through. If you'd like to submit a review here, just leave a comment and I'll get in touch.

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Television - Psych

12.04.2008
I love the show. I love the actors. I love the comedy. And the theme song is outstanding.

The band, Friendly Indians, have put the song right on their site for fans of the show to download. Here's the link.

Not much more to say about that other than I'm also a fan of bands getting listeners by releasing some of their music for free. In the same way I get editors to grab my work by posting my columns at a few of my blogs, they let consumers listen before buying. Good work.

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Ratchet and Clank - Going Commando for PS2

11.28.2008
During a holiday season in which Wii, XBox360 and PS3 are the rage, the venerable Playstation 2 seems to plod along, unassuming.

Add to that quiet confidence the fact that hundreds of games, maybe thousands, already exist for this platform and you might think it's difficult to find a new standout.

I've recently found TWO.

Ratchet and Clank (the first game) and Ratchet and Clank - Going Commando, are two fabulous entertainment options for your PS2.

The premise behind the first one is that Captain Drek is planning to destroy the galaxy and Ratchet (a cat/fox/adventurer) and Clank (a mini robot) are given the task of capturing Drek and saving the galaxy.

The game goes through nearly 20 levels that take Ratchet and Clank to different planets and space stations.

A variety weapons allow you to fight an increasing level of enemies and big bosses at the end of each level. I was able to beat the game in about three weeks of casual play.

The second version of the game is similar, but about the same degree of difficulty.

Neither version is as good or intricate as Legend of Zelda, but it's good clean fun for most ages.

And if you keep finding new games for PS2, you won't be tossing away a ton of money on the newer, more expensive game systems.

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I am Now Publishing on AddsYou.com

Social Publishing Network | AddsYou
http://www.addsyou.com
username=MjAwOC0xMS0yOCAxNjo0MTo1Mw==

Blooming Buds - Fun, Basic Earbuds

11.24.2008
Got an iPhone or iPod? Or even a Zune or iRiver? Then you need earbuds. Sure, your device came with a set, but after a while those get grungy and beat up. Why not replace the standard set of 'buds with something that has a bit more personality?

That's where BloomingBuds come in.

These new-to-market earbuds are nearly identical sound-wise and size-wize to the set that comes with your music player. But the fun part is that you can snap decorations into the back of the earpieces to give your headphones a different look.

At $15 or so, BloomingBuds have dozens of snap-ins in categories that are great for boys, girls, men and women. Take a look...



Here are some other designs you can get...



And here's how they plug in, a simple hex snap keeps the inserts secure.



To learn more, go to MyBloomingBuds.com. These items make great stocking stuffers or fodder for under the Channuka Bush.

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Fung Wah Bus Lines

11.11.2008
Based on one trip to the Big Apple - and I'm writing this as the bus careers around bends and over bridges and generally avoids disaster by the tin of its teeth - I am not sure that I can recommend Fung Wah buses for anything more than barriers in a paintball game or as obstacles in a Jeep orienteering competition.

Just the fact that I'm writing this is proof that I want to get something down in electrons before I die. The bus keeps harring me from side to side and up and down and my typing looks like I keep smashing my face into the keyboard. Which will likely happen soon.

Further, the reason I can be so definitive about the Fung Wah experience is because I took a marvelous, gentle and safe trip to New York City on a competing bus line this morning.

MegaBus deposited me nicely at 31st Street with nary a scratch on my person and hardly a worry in my head.

I'm barely out of Manhattan on Fung Wah and I'm thinking I better FTP my entire hard drive to a safe site so that it doesn't perish in the fireball that will certainly occur somewhere around Sturbridge.

What? Points? I can't even give Fung Wah two stars out of five because I don't know anyone that would pay $15 to be tortured for four hours - even if it meant saving a buttload of money on gas and transportation fees.

Just to be clear, I had to retype that last paragraph SEVEN TIMES because the bus was tossing me around like the boats in The Perfect Storm.

You decide if the tone or content of this message are hyperbole of if I'm just kidding around and Fung Wah has put the Fun back in Fung Wah.

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Bigelow Vanilla Chai Tea

11.07.2008
Instead of wasting my brain cells watching yet another episode of CSI Miami, I decided to give you a quickie review of a product.

Lainie shared with us one of her tea reviews the other day and her content is much more structured than what I’m going to provide you with here. As you know from earlier columns here, I don’t provide you with much pricing detail for magazines and little items.

In fact, I didn’t even provide you with the price of tickets for the showing of Martha Mitchell Calling. That’s going to hold true for small items and consumables here on Jeffsnotes.com for the foreseeable future.

Today we take a shot at tea. That’s right, a consumable. Bigelow Vanilla Chai tea.

If you’ve worked with me at any of my freelance assignments or taken a stroll through the study and the kitchen at my compound, you realize that I’m a hoarder. And one of the things I hoard the most is tea.

Here’s just a few of the teas I keep on hand.

And the Bigelow Vanilla Chai is right there on the bottom left.



While Bigelow might be a standard, off-the-shelf tea brand, they make some pretty flavorful and easy-brewing blends.

Let’s start with the flavor. This stuff is strong. When I get a Chai Tea Latte at Panera, I add whipped cream for flavor and that is not quite creamy enough. The Bigelow teabag packed enough creamy and spicy flavor to negate the need for milk.

Purists might be annoyed by my addition of sugar, but I like a slight sweetness in my teas and Chai is no exception.

According to the description on the back of the tea packet, Bigelow says the Chai is “a delightful blend of tea and exotic spices.”

It goes on to say, “It is often brewed with milk, which gives Chai a wonderful, creamy characteristic. In Bigelow Vanilla Chai we have added the flavor of vanilla, offering you a whole new dimension of Chai.”

It is a whole new dimension and here’s my bottom line...

If you like strong spiced tea, this is a nice little tea for you to try. It could be a little strong for some tastes and definitely has character. You can get it at any supermarket for around $3 a box. I’d suggest having it in the afternoon or as a post-dinner brew - if you don’t have an issue with strong flavors or caffeine.

So many review sites give stars as a measuring stick. I give Bigelow Vanilla Chai four stars out of five for flavor, body and freshness.

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Martha Mitchell Phones It In - Sort of. Play Review

11.04.2008
While I liked the Nora Theatre Company’s production of Martha Mitchell Calling, I was under the presumption that the show would have more depth and a more complete story.

In fact, there were some actors listed in the program who got credit for voices, yet they never showed up on stage and the scenes and voices shown on screen at the back of the stage were all from news reports of the day.

Unless I’m mistaken, none of this richer content was used in the show.

Needless to say, the show was an interesting way for people my age to learn more about a time in our nation’s history many people would as soon forget. Until I went to the production I hadn’t even known about this woman and the effect she had on the presidency.

Shown in three, run-together acts, Annette Miller does an admirable job of carrying the production and allowing the audience to grow with Martha. We are given a complete background of her personality and of her relationship with John Mitchell.

We’re also - as stated in a Boston Globe review - shown how “Watergate was at once Martha Mitchell's reason for fame and the cause of her destruction.”

The upside of the play was the acting of Miller and Timothy Sawyer as John Mitchell.

The downside was that if you didn’t grow up in an age where the instruments of information exchange were only TV, newspapers and radio, you’ll find some of this a little unbelievable. Especially in an age - and time (election day today) - where so much commentary and information is shared online.

The after-show discussion touched on this, but many of the mature audience members didn’t have a grasp on how far-reaching and influential the Internet has become. Many didn’t even know what a blog was and therefore still believe that there could be a Martha Mitchell in today’s administrations.

I believe they’re right. But the Martha Mitchells that we see today would be Twittering, blogging, podcasting and emailing their discoveries around the world instead of picking up a pink Princess phone and calling a reporter to discuss them.

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Xtra Laundry Detergent - Required EXTRA

10.31.2008


I've been doing laundry for at least a dozen years. I've developed a male perspective on how clothes should be washed and therefore am prone to ruining some of the weaker fabrics in my ensemble, but they were going to be culled from the herd anyway.

To that end, I'm not a Woolite guy or even a Tide super care guy. I go with the laundry detergent that is on sale and promises to get my stuff clean.

Xtra Laundry Detergent is one of those brands. I also like Arm&Hammer (mostly because what's better than a hammer for slamming bad stains out of clothing, but I digress.

So I've been using Xtra for a while and only realized today that this stuff isn't really worth the effort it takes to lift the bottle. For about 2/3 the price of the 'real' brands, Xtra requires me to add twice the amount of detergent.

Soiled clothes have been coming out of the washer still soiled when I use a regular 'dose' of detergent and I've had to waste water, time, energy and detergent to get them clean.

*I know this for a fact now that I've got a roommate who doesn't use the Xtra brand. She uses a name-brand which will remain nameless. And her clothing (and the clothing of mine that slips into her laundry unannounced) gets clean in one pass.

So, if you're all about being cheap in the supermarket aisles, go for the bottle of Xtra. But I warn you that the detergent will clean out your wallet in the long run because you'll be doing twice as much laundry in the long run.

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Technology Jones on Mojo

10.30.2008
On Comcast channel 881 (MOJO), the show Technology Jones is shown twice a day. I happened upon it Wednesday afternoon when I wrapped up a column for a client and decided to reward my overworked brain with some ‘fun’ relaxation.

I decided against podcasts and blogs and even online chatting for a little session with my television. But I couldn’t stay away from the topic of technology for long, even if I was able to forsake the physical versions of it.

Interestingly, that’s just the premise of this lighthearted, quasi-reality program.

The couple or person featured on the show has to give up their current technology gadgets for a week and only use products that were available in a prior year. In today’s program, the couple is charged with using technology from 1983.

No Internet, hardly any affordable cell phones (they gave them a bag-phone), no digital cameras (they got a Polaroid), no Tivo, no DVDs, no CDs. WOW.

Well, while the show topic gives me a hive because I’m not sure I could be without my iPhone, laptop or cellphone for very long, the episode was a winner.

I wouldn’t say that full-on hilarity ensues, but I can tell you that the challenge is very real. Aside from the relationship stress that not having gadgets causes, the genius of seeing how other people cope is well worth the 30-minute investment.

This particular episode showed the Technology Jones’ crew removing six or seven cell phones from the couple and then an additional five or six cell phones from their home. They replaced all the kids’ toys with stuff like Rubik’s Cubes, Cabbage Patch Kids and rudimentary games.

The best part was seeing them drop off a computer with only a floppy drive at the couple’s office.

The only drawback I saw was that the show’s producers didn’t remain entirely true to the availability of 1983 tech. I say this because I purchased a cell phone in 1999 and the couple was provided with the same model...which didn’t come out until many years later.

Regardless, if you get a chance to veg out in front of the TV, assuming Technology Jones hasn’t taken you back to 1932, I recommend you give this show a shot.

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Best of the Web - 10-29-08

10.29.2008
I'd better start dating these "Best of the Web" posts because I'm planning to do them at least once a week.

If you've got suggestions for reviews you'd like to see here OR if you'd like to submit a review, just leave a comment in one of the posts. We'll get back in touch and put you to work.

Onward.

This week I did some poking around the Web for fun sites. If you look at my latest entry on Bowl of Cheese, you'll see the mindset that I'm in is slightly off kilter. So enjoy this handful of sites. Tomorrow we'll either do another magazine review or a slice of life event/consumer review.

Adflip - Want to get all nostalgic about advertising from another date? Just go here and click around. There are ads from each of the last few decades. And there are ads here for products that might not even exist anymore.

It's like a little time machine advertising style. Look at the old cars and the odd food ads. Do you think we've advanced at all with our new CG (computer generated design) and our different color palates? Or do you long for ads that are avocado green, just like our fridges and dishwashers used to be?

Stuff Journalists Like - This site is a light-content destination (so far) as it only started this fall. But it already mimics perfectly the fascinating and popular site - Stuff White People Like.

As the site is written by professional writers (not just one author) you'll get to see different writing styles and some unique takes on stuff journalists are purported to enjoy. Disclaimer here: I have submitted a column for inclusion on the site recently but it has yet to be published.

PseudoDictionary - Quirky and less useful than Urban Dictionary, but still lots of fun. Maybe today's list could be the time-waster's version of the Best of the Web. Some words are spot on and others don't make a ton of sense. The authors of the site boast that they have more than 24,000 entries in their database so you'll find something here to make you giggle. And maybe you'll even start using some of the terms you discover.

Phobia List - Just what it sounds like. If you have a phobia you want to name or know the name and need a phobia's description, this is the place for you. Very unlike one of my other blogs - Things to Worry About - this is real-world knowledge from a guy who's been compiling phobia info for years.

Go take a look. What are you afraid of?

Meez - Do you ever wonder how all your friends on social media sites like Facebook and Twitter have avatars that look cool and new? I do..or did..until I looked at Meez. You can go here and create a character and then use that character as your avatar in a variety of places.

It costs nothing and doesn't require any skill. Just go through the menu of gender, body type, skin, hair, make-up and other features. Then you're done. Take a screen shot for use on some services or just upload the 3-D avatar for use on others. Like I said about today's list, light but fun.

That's it for today. Share your thoughts in the comments.

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Magazine Three-For-One: Fast Company, ESPN the Mag & Conde Nast Traveler

10.28.2008
The pile of magazines on my desk has started to block the bottom of the window looking out over the farm here in suburban Boston. So I've decided to take an active role in whittling down that pile, recycling the glossy paper, and sharing the information in these publications.



Also, if I neglected this stuff any longer the issues would be so out of date you wouldn't be able to find them on any newsstand, much less in your mailbox, the library or even on a friend's or colleague's coffee table.

Let's jump right in...

Fast Company shouts on its cover about the best design gurus in the world, a feature on Marcel Wanders, a profile of Samsung and Target, and a neat little piece on the 52 gadgets they love. But I think the most valuable article in the October issue is the one on page 95.

It's the column by Dan and Chip Heath on why companies make it so difficult for customers to praise employees, the process and the firm in general.

The Heaths explore the productivity gains that people exhibit when they receive direct compliments versus their regular daily output. In one particularly well-written sentence, we learn "A thank-you from a customer, then, creates a radiating halo of happiness-employees feel recognized, customers feel joyful, and there's less coughing."

The coughing comment comes from the Heaths' contention that appreciated employees have a better health level than those who aren't appreciated.

Elsewhere in Fast Company is the aforementioned gadget article. Although it's misnamed on the cover, I like the piece and the editorial connection it has to the cover theme.

The feature starts on page 157 and is called Design Factories. On the following handful of pages there are 52 WIDGETS (not gadgets) that the magazine loves. Everything from sleek watering cans to thermometers to video game systems to phones, golf clubs and eyeglasses.

These gadgets/widgets blend cool looks with superior function. There's some stuff on the list and on these pages you might never connect with design excellence (like the Adiri Natural Nurse Bottle - as all it does is mimic a woman's architecture), but after a closer look you'll be won over.

Finally, Robert Scoble goes on a rantpage about how technology is ruining the newspaper industry. He stridently feels that if managed correctly, the newspaper firms that are around today can survive if they use tech to share their coverage and serve their advertisers.

While this column is passionate Scoble, it has a point. The one thing I wish he touched on more was the inclusion of citizen journalism as a factor in news organizations' demise and the necessity of skilled, trained reporters regardless of the media's eventual form.

Condé Nast puts out about a billion magazines and some are fantastic. I'm not a full-on fan of Traveler, but that's because I like Budget Travel Magazine and also because I can't afford a lot of the trips featured in Condé's publication.

On the October cover, Traveler has Asia Now, Paradise on Sale, and Endless Summer. Both Paradise and Asia tout great values. The Endless Summer piece talks about getaways to Hawaii, Mexico and other locales.

As with most magazines these days, Traveler gives you a full page (20) about their online options. They push you to the Web for more participation with other travelers on their forum. They give you short tip articles and they promise the chance to win a dream trip. Aside from that, there are lists and polls and a number of travel guides.

I say good job with the value-add, but enough Web talk let's go inside.

The Word of Mouth section is great as usual. It gives a series of one-page snippets and tips on half a dozen places and a few products. The info is easy to digest and seems useful. I'm not sure I can vet it yet because the places listed are Bangkok, Indonesia, Hong Kong and a few other spots I haven't been. But these parts are well-written.

The main section - StopPress - covers Central Asia. The 'Stans as the author calls them, are explored in great detail with neat little manners tips, an overview of each country/region, and details on prices and places to stay and visit.

Remember my caveat about this magazine? Well, in the hidden gem of Kyrgyzstan, hotels can be had for $310 and up a night. Some lesser-priced options are available, but this is what I fear every time I read a Traveler piece. I'd rather have a clean place to sleep for $100 a night and spend the rest of my money on food and entertainment.

Otherwise, the writing is descriptive and the pages on each place offer consistent details including The Big Picture, The Draw, Best Time To Go, Hassle Factor, Special Safety Concern and more. I like the layout and how the piece is editorially thought out.

In StopPress as well are a couple other gems. Wendy Perrin has a report on affordable (really) hotels and Kevin Doyle presents you with some interesting thoughts on whether you should give money to locals while on location in their home country.

Finally, the most fun I had in pawing through Traveler this month was with Boris Kachka's feature on etiquette in China. It's chock full of straight talk about how to act, react and what to expect when in China. From mealtime to social situations, and even driving, it's all here.

And in the last of our Three-For-One review, we have ESPN The Magazine. I have a pile of these and my schedule doesn't allow me to get through them in any semblance of a timely manner. The ones we're looking at this week are the 11.20, 11.21 and 11.22 issues.

I don't know where this issue convention came from, but suffice it to say, I use these mags as rest-room and time-killing fodder. These three issues feature (in order), an NHL Preview, an NBA Fantasy Preview, and an NBA Preview. This time of year fantasy sports have taken over the minds and souls of many sports fans. ESPN has recognized this and spends a good portion of its paper on that reality.

Inside each issue is the fabulous Sports Guy. Bill Simmons is from the Boston area which already makes him great. But his writing style, breadth of topic, conversational tone and real-world vignettes are fun to read and informative.

The column in the 11.20 issue talks about rules and Simmons uses golfers, poker players, baseball managers and NHL teams as examples to make his point that the world should follow the Simmons' set of rules. The little photos in each piece only serve to make them more fun to read (witness the Ted Knight/Judge Smails photo).

Another stellar writer on staff at ESPN is Luke Cyphers. He tackles the oft-talked-about issue of doping and uses the Lance Armstrong unretirement as the keystone to his column. Well-argued and written (and not only because I'm a cycling fanatic).

These two guys are in most every issue unless Simmons is taking another of his 14 vacations a year. But he's still a treat to read.

Also in each issue is the ZOOM section. Here, a series of amazing photos of sporting events grab your eye. I love the one in the 11.22 issue of the Rutgers College football team doing a drill. The symmetry of the photo is cool as is the way in which color on the field and in the uniforms makes the image pop.

Another piece I always look for is the Answer Guy. He tackles tough questions like why plays are called downs and why Nascar cars only turn left. It's done in a fun conversation with true experts and some pretty amazing research. You won't always get a definitive answer, which is also part of the fun. But this piece will always make you think.

Lastly, truly, is the Life of Reilly column on the back page. He's skilled, insightful and fun.

Ultimately, I read ESPN The Magazine for the writers and not especially for the data. I can find a lot of sports news online and to me, it's the personality and the commentary that drives the value of this subscription for me.

If you've never picked up an issue, take a look. They have regular little sections that cover all major sports and events within each league. They also do bang-up profiles on the big names and tiny names in all sports. It's deceptively light reading that informs you without much effort.

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Harney & Sons English Breakfast Tea (review)

10.26.2008



Greetings! My name is Lainie Petersen, and Jeff was kind enough to allow me to guest blog a review on my favorite beverage-- tea! Enjoy!

Tea Name:
Harney & Sons English Breakfast Tea

Brand: Harney & Sons

Type: English Breakfast (China Black, 100% Keemun)

Form: Paper tea bag, individually wrapped.

Source: My mom’s pantry.

Cost: 50 Teabags for $9.50

Review: Harney & Sons is generally a safe bet for any fine tea, and their English Breakfast Tea is no exception. This is a straightforward China black which looks, tastes, and smells like “proper tea”: Medium brown in the cup, rounded nose with a bit of spice (a very little bit of spice) in the back, and a soft, yet distinctive taste.

Where it really shines, though, is with the addition of some full-fat (i.e. whole) milk, and a stick of rock candy sugar. Oh my stars…this is just the sort of tea one wants on a cold morning! So yummy, so comforting. The addition of the sugar and milk, incidentally, bring forward the latent spice notes. Remarkable.

Recommendation: This is an excellent and convenient English Breakfast tea, particularly when prepared with sugar and a bit of milk. While I am not normally a fan of either in my tea, the qualities of this tea are actually amplified by these ingredients.

More reviews, tea news, and commentary can be found at my tea blog: LainieSips.com

Noble Barnes & Noble

10.24.2008
One of the primary ingredients of Jeffsnotes.com are the media and magazine reviews. I read the endless supply of periodicals coming into my mailbox so you can make an informed decision on which ones to purchase and read.

Oddly, right after I finished my recent recap on The Atlantic, I found myself at Barnes & Noble purchasing a couple new magazines. My pea-sized brain wasn't working too well and I promptly bought the newest Atlantic as well as a copy of Poets and Writers Magazine.

Today, as I was going out to interview some people for a newspaper article I ran into the mailman. We discussed the weather, raking leaves and the Red Sox. And then he handed my my mail. Right on top was the same issue of The Atlantic I bought last Friday.

Well, this isn't a review of The Atlantic as I haven't had time to read it and my periodical pile is about 15 deep right now. No, today's review is just a collection of thumbs up for Barnes & Noble's retail operation.

Their policy is to disallow any periodical returns. But when I spoke with the manager at the local B&N today, he agreed that common sense should prevail. He could see I hadn't pawed the magazine and that it was still in salable condition.

He also saw that I had two more magazines in my hands ready for purchase.

Here's to retail shops that don't go nose cutting and face spiting just to maintain their policies.

The result of today's exchange was a happier client (me) and more money toward Barnes & Noble's bottom line because I bought one more magazine than I would have AND because I'm telling you guys about my good experience.

If you've got a good or bad customer service or retail purchasing experience, please share it here.

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Corporate Interaction - TripAdvisor Gets It

10.23.2008
While poking around the Internet and having discussions with a few potential clients about my role as a corporate blogger, I came upon an article about TripAdvisor.

The piece, see link above, practically shouts about the need for companies to be open and honest with their customers and uses TripAdvisor as a good example of companies that understand communication.

Be it with product descriptions, return policies or even management bios, the world is now chock full of tools that allow anyone to poke around and find out the most intimate details of anyone's life and of any company's product.

Don't be the firm to make the mistake of trying to fool your customers. The house of cards could come tumbling down quicker than you can sign up for a Twitter account and say you're sorry.

Oh, today's review is just a simple nod in the direction of any company that's doing things the right way. And a shake of my head to those companies that haven't yet opened the conversation with their customers.

-30-

Wired Magazine - 16.10 - October 2008

10.22.2008



Wired Magazine is so content-rich that I often save it for plane flights, brainstorming mornings or train travel. It's regularly so brilliant that I don't trust myself to use it as my before-bed reading as I'm likely to read something and then have crazy Einstein dreams all night long.

Coincidentally, the October issue features the 2008 Smart List as its lead feature. This piece starts out by explaining that the magazine has spoken with 15 smart people who have "big ideas about how to fix the things that need fixing" for the next president - whoever that might be.

From telling the next president that he shouldn't pay much attention to India and instead focus on places like Mexico, Canada, Egypt, Colombia and Uzbekistan, to the dictum that Washington DC has to become aware of how to use the Web and finally enter the 21st century, this is mind-wrenching stuff.

Looking for a lighter piece? Wired always has fun stuff like the interview with John Hodgman on page 108. Writer Adam Rogers does a great job in letting Hodgman explain how he's an expert on everything and how his next book - More Information Than You Require - proves that assertion.

Other highlights in this issue include the one-page piece telling you exactly what's inside Orbit Gum. Don't be surprised, it includes formaldehyde. Tasty.

And be sure to flip over to page 68 for the product test of three cell phones that purport to be iPhone wannabes.

Near the back of this issue is the profile of Weird Al Yankovic by Brian Raftery. The author spends enough time with Yankovic to detail the artist's decades in the business from his first music video 25 years ago to his recent 47-stop tour. You'll learn a lot about the musician's motivation and creative process in this nicely paced article.

And lastly, there's a true science feature that talks about how some scientists are trying to put a barcode on everything on Earth. Maybe not ON each tree, animal, and curtain. But they're showing it's possible to code things so perfectly that identification becomes easy as reading a number.

The quote on a photo of moths says, "Barcodes work for cans of soup. Why not bugs?"

-30-

Cambridge Police - Detail Review

10.21.2008
Try to understand how little a detail cop does when standing around at a work site. Well, this cop went out of his way to hassle a taxi from Boston.

Last Thursday morning, he kicked those two women out of the cab and lectured the taxi driver.

All the while, cars were careering through the intersection vacated by the detail cop.

For that, I give the Cambridge, MA police a failing mark.



-30-

The new Verizon

10.20.2008
If you can believe it, I went to the Verizon store the other day and was floored!

The SOP (standard operating procedure) for years at Verizon was to restart your commitment to the conglomerate with any change you made to your plan.

For example...

add a line and you've got a new two-year plan;

buy a new phone, you've got a new two-year plan;

change your voice plan, two more years.

But not now. I learned that Verizon has QUIETLY rescinded that policy and now you can change your plan every day of the week without any added commitment.

I'm thrilled. This is how it used to be when Cellular One was around, pre T-Mobile, pre Cingular, pre Verizon's idiocy.

I give this move two very enthusiastic thumbs up.

Rumors on the West Coast also indicate that the Early Termination Fee is destined for extinction soon. When that happens I'm going to change my provider every day for a month just to get back at the companies for all the hassles they've put me through in nine years of cell-phone service.

But for now, Verizon has started to do things right.

-30-

Best of the Web

10.19.2008
A regular feature here on Jeffsnotes.com will be my quick jaunt around the Internet looking for interesting, informative and fun stuff.

Here's what I found today...

Cake Wrecks - so much fun. A true time-waster that makes you wonder how many stupid people exist.

Bad Parking - I submit photos to this site occasionally because I am constantly wondering who is handing out licenses to the blind.

Chris Brogan - there are plenty of smart people around us and Chris is one. He's prolific, insightful and creative. And we're lucky to have him right here in the Northeast. If you get a chance to talk to him, introduce yourself and ask a few questions. Then open your mind and ears while he enlightens and entertains you. Smart people get high review marks.

Dvorak - John C. Dvorak has been writing columns on technology and business for years. But he still keeps a blog going and posts to it every day. Some of the stuff is inane. Some is smart. All of it is worth a quick look.

Bicycling.com - A site rich with info on the sport Americans love again now that Lance Armstrong has injected (bad verb use) himself back into the Tour de France for 2009. You can follow that journey at one of my other sites - TDF09.com - and you can read about all things cycling at Bicycling.

News of the Weird - Think our election system is disorganized and in need of an overhaul. Read this story.

Scam School - are you into podcasts? This one is worth a look. I'm not saying it's as intelligent as Slate Magazine or NPR, but it's unique and often fun.

Steve Garfield - Steve is another guy who finds a way to jam 61 hours of work into each 24-hour day. Last week he did breakfast in Boston, jetted up to NH to see Barak Obama, then got back in time to teach a class at BU and do his daily radio show. This link is of his Obama video.

That's it for today. If you have ideas for Best of the Web on Jeffsnotes.com, leave them in the comments.

Atlantic Magazine - October 2008

10.18.2008
With John McCain on the cover, this issue of Atlantic covers some interesting topics, not the least of which is how technology and the Internet are shaping the upcoming election process.

In Planting the Rightroots by Reihan Salam, we learn how the Democrats have harnessed the power of grass-roots fundraising via new media while the Republican party is lagging behind.

Salam concedes it's a turn from when the conservatives used to slam the donkeys in campaign contributions using direct-mail campaigns.

He also comments on how online tools helped Ron Paul "amplify the message of a determined minority."

Essentially, the Salam piece attributes an electorate's outrage as the driving factor in motivating people. It's not the media (new or otherwise), it's the message and the cause.

In other parts of this month's issue, Jeffrey Goldberg explores whether John McCain has ever met a war he didn't think could be won.

Goldberg's most telling pullquote in the story is:

"There are some obvious, even eerie, parallels between Admiral John McCain's steadfast commitment to victory in Vietnam, and Senator John McCain's dogged pursuit of victory in Iraq."

Personally, I think this attitude has been on display for the entire viewing public in each of McCain's debate performances. And this has resulted in flagging support of the McCain/Palin ticket.

The coolest article I found in this month's Atlantic is Eric Hanson's neat little piece titled Innocence and Experience.

The article counts up from 1-100 and gives readers neat information tied to the age of famous people and the accomplishment or event that happened to them at that age.

For example, 11 says, "Giacomo Casanova experiences his first orgasm, 1736."

And 23 says, "Neil Young joins Stephen Stills, David Crosby, and Graham Nash to form Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, 1969."

-30-

A slight change in approach

For a while I've been examining ways to use my uncommentary.com site for good, not evil.

It seems that I've found a way to offer commentary on all things consumable (travel, magazines and media, technology products, and more) right here at JeffsNotes.com.

Please leave me comments if there's something you'd like me to review or if you have comments on one of my opinions.

I'll soon be posting here with increased regularity.

Cutler, Novel Ideas, Jeff Cutler is Novel Ideas

8.12.2008
Now it seems that there are two other Novel Ideas companies in the nation. I'm guessing the count is much higher, but when I opened my writing services firm on January 1, 1992 I didn't realize that the world would shrink so much as the Internet brought us together.

With my Novel Ideas writing site at Ideas2Words dot com - www.ideas2words.com - I attract a modest amount of business. But as you can guess, the reason my Novel Ideas site isn't at NovelIdeas.com is two-fold.

One - the name was taken. Pure and simple. Novel Ideas is a bookmark company in North Carolina. Good name. Fair product. I was too slow.

Two - NovelIdeas looks like Noveiideas or NoveLLdeas when written out. Having two of the same letter - unless you're google - in your domain name is bad news. So I haven't pursued it.

But now there's a writer marketing herself and her company - Novel Ideas - out in the western part of the United States.

What to do? Cease and desist? Nice letter asking her to give up the name? Combine forces and have two offices of Novel Ideas?

I don't know. Send me your suggestions.

Right now I'm on a writing sabbatical, but still have some billing through both Jeff Cutler and Novel Ideas. So the company isn't on hiatus and isn't going away.

It begs the question of intellectual property in this age of fast-moving people and concerns.

Keep reading...I'll let you know how it all turns out.