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James Cridland's blog

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Honesty

Posted on Sunday, February 10th, 2008 at 8:41pm. #

I’ve been wondering why I watch comparatively little video online. And I think I’ve hit on the answer.

From a recent blog from Robert Scoble:

What was really fun was having raclette cheese dinner with famous author Bruce Sterling. Of course I intruded on the dinner with my cell phone camera. It’s a 40 minute video … it doesn’t get interesting until about 13 minutes when Bruce tells us the difference between a blogger and a novelist.

I note Scoble’s joining Fast Company, which apparently (from their metadata) “covers the new economy and workplace for people who believe in fusing tough-minded performance with human values.” I hope one of the tough-minded performance issues that Scoble sorts is his expectation that people will willingly sit through 13 minutes of dull, badly-shot video before anything “interesting” happens.

He comes across on TWIT as a nice guy - but since he believes editing is just too-cool-for-school, I’m sure he won’t mind that I’ve just edited him out of my Google Reader list. I’d rather read stuff from people that respect my time, and yours.

Photo: Finn Pröpper. Used under licence.

2 comments

Robert Scoble said at February 10th, 2008 at 9:27pm

Fastcompany.tv will be edited.

Qik videos are done with a cell phone and are impossible to edit. You won’t get video of that dinner any other way and I don’t think it was a waste of time at all. You can scrub to what I told you were the interesting points anyway.

Adrian said at February 10th, 2008 at 9:38pm

I’ve often said that the trouble with video is that it requires such a personal investment of time and attention that it is many times easier to feel you’re wasting your time than with audio, for example, where at least you can do something else at the same time. That’s why moderated channels such as we have on TV will evolve on the web as well to provide guidance, I suspect.

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