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15
Dr Ron’s 10 Favourite YouTube Clips of All Time
5 Comments · Posted by Dr Ron in Attempted Humour, Blogging, Social Networking, Web 2.0
Like many of you in cyberspace, I’ve spent hours… days… weeks… even months of my life, wilfing on YouTube.
There’s the occasional smirk-worthy video, there’s the all-too-common blatant copyright ripoff, and there’s a heap of garbage which you BACK or NEXT after the first few seconds. I’m certain that I’m guilty of posting each of these types of material at various times.
On rare occasions, you actually find something on YouTube that’s worth adding as a Favourite. Sometimes you even hit Play Again. Occasionally, you literally LOL, and you’re compelled to share a YouTube link on Twitter or Facebook.
Here, then, are ten YouTube videos that I consider worthy of sharing. I hope you enjoy them as much as I have.
The Mummy / Daddy Song
Every parent’s worst nightmare. Watch until the 1st minute mark.
Be warned, the tune is strangely addictive.
VW commercial
This is hilarious. Darth Vader uses The Force, in his own inimitable fashion.
It’s only clocked-up a lazy 29 million hits.
Ford Sportka commercials
Cat lovers, ornithologists, look away now.
Were these really released by Ford? Yes and no. See what Snopes has to say.
The Man Cold
A short clip from the British TV comedy sketch show, Man Stroke Woman.
For women everywhere that don’t understand what it means for a man to have a cold. And for men everywhere, who know exactly what it means.
Torn
Mr Johann Lippowitz, an “interpretative mime”, performs Natalie Imbruglia’s hit “Torn”.
…and of course, with the great lady herself:
Toto’s Africa by Perpetuum Jazzile
Who needs foley artists when your choir is this talented?
Pomplamoose
The Pomplamoose channel has a heap of home-crafted cover songs, arranged and performed by talented musicians Nataly and Jack.
Their catchy, quirky, toe-tappin’ tunes will keep you amused for hours.
You mightn’t be a fan of Lady Gaga, but you’ll be sure to love this arrangement.
Eddie Izzard’s Death Star Canteen & Lego animation
(Audio not safe for work!)
With nearly 13 million hits, this is a YouTube classic.
A Lego animation of comedian Eddie Izzard talking about the ‘Death Star Canteen’.
Every Day … Telstra needs to Go Forward
Former Telstra CEO and oft-described Mexican Bandit Sol Trujilo says a very odd thing.
Notice what he said? He wants to make sure that ARPU sustains itself, or even grows.
The Honda Cog Commercial
And last but not least: this one has been around for a while, but it’s still very clever.
That is all. Now back to work.
facebook · funny · social media · Social Networking · telstra · Twitter · YouTube
3
Tech Talk’s Summer Series: 8 down, 1 to go!
No comments · Posted by Dr Ron in 3WBC, Blogging, Internet, On-air, Social Networking, TTR, Technical
Over the Christmas / New Year break, Tech Talk panelists are taking time away from the studio.
During this time, we’re running a “best of” series which showcases highlights from the last few years.
So far, we’ve heard from:
Georgia Simmons, representing the Telstra Foundation;
Graham Henley from GetData;
Michael Crimean, a professional audio engineer;
Adam Turner attending the launch of the HTC Magic in Sydney, as well as the launch of Apple’s iPad and the opening of Apple’s Bondi store in Sydney;
George Pongas, the COO of ISP Domain Central;
Dr James Chon, representing Swinburne University;
Alan Eade from St John Ambulance (Victoria);
Mark Mayer, retired QANTAS airline pilot;
Jeff Alexander and David Glover from Microsoft;
Closet Tech Geek Sally Cockburn (aka “Dr Feelgood“);
Sandrina Branton from BMC Software;
European Correspondent Matthew Robinson;
Gaming expert Leena van Deventer;
Luke Durham from Switch Media, and Adrian Britton from HostWorks;
Independent technology journalist Anthony Caruana;
…as well as select Panel discussions, websites, gadgets and Odd Spots, and entertaining and informative Views from the Couch.
Next week we’ll re-visit the last episode of 2010, and Tech Talk’s inaugural Outside Broadcast, which went to-air live from the Sofia Family Restaurant in December.
We’ll all be back live in the studio on the 14th of February. Rumours that former Tech Talk panelist Mark Diggins is back in the country are largely founded… stay tuned!
adam turner · apple · Microsoft · Outside Broadcast · social media · Social Networking · Summer Series · Tech Talk Radio · telstra · TTR · Twitter · windows 7
4
Mainstream vs Social Media. One gets it, the other one doesn’t.
No comments · Posted by Dr Ron in Blogging, Common Sense, On-air, Social Networking, TTR
Over the course of last week, long-time Tech Talk Radio contributor Adam Turner found himself in the middle of an “election-night social networking scandal” because of comments he posted on the popular micro-blogging service Twitter.
Or so the ABC’s Media Watch would have you believe.
In Episode 30, which broadcast on Monday the 30th of August, Adam received a lambasting from the programme’s host, Paul Barry, for making personal remarks about the Opposition Leader Tony Abbott. In the context of the Opposition Leader saying this:
“There should be no premature triumphalism tonight, there should simply be an appreciation that this has been a great night for the Australian people…”
…Adam duly described Tony Abbott as a “cocksucker”, and an “arsehole”.
Here’s the Media Watch segment in question.
Put simply, Adam made some comments which he now regrets.
Unfortunately for everyone, a Liberal Party supporter saw the comments. The same supporter also complained to Media Watch. Someone then complained to Fairfax, who Adam writes for.
The very same Liberal Party supporter then posted this on Twitter:
Hahahaha – I reported @adam_turner to media watch, and they’re playing it! #mediawatch
I think there are a number of issues at stake here:
- A journalist’s right to express a personal opinion;
- The issue of Media Watch running a story, driven by somebody’s political agenda;
- The issue of what is, and isn’t, newsworthy; and
- The hypocrisy of someone complaining to Media Watch about two offensive tweets, then gloating/tweeting like a child because they got someone in trouble.
It’s impossible for me to make an independent, objective comment about the situation, because I know Adam well, and he writes weekly for Tech Talk Radio. So anything I say won’t be independent, and probably won’t be objective.
What I will say is that it must have been a slow news week.
Also; that mainstream media clearly still doesn’t understand the function of social media, and its place in our lives. Just because someone writes independent product reviews, or publishes objective commentary for a living, doesn’t mean that they don’t have, or can’t have, personal opinions.

Here, then, are some independent websites and blogs which offer opinions about (what I think is) a storm-in-a-teacup:
- Woolly Days blog, by Derek Barry, blogger and journalist working for Queensland’s The Western Star;
- IT Wire blog: Twitter becomes the new oracle of the media by Stan Beer;
- Wolfcat’s Random Rants: when does a freelance tech journo’s point of view on politics matter;
- Machine Gun Keyboard: Portrait of a douchebag: how Media Watch got used to grind an axe;
…and I’m sure you’ll find more yourself, with some judicious Googling.
Yes, of course Adam will continue to contribute to Tech Talk Radio. His weekly opinions and insight are highly valued, by our audience and the rest of The Panel. He is an important member of the team.
I think a popular Melbourne Twitterer summed it up well with this 140-character insight:
One day mainstream news will understand the context of social media. That day is not today.
abc · adam turner · Media Watch · Paul Barry · Robert Candelori · social media · Social Networking · Tech Talk Radio · Twitter · View from the Couch
16
No Caller ID? No answer. Sorry.
No comments · Posted by Dr Ron in Blogging, Common Sense, Internet, Social Networking
I had a realization this week. I think I might be a “CLI snob”.
Every day I triage email; I key-ahead to delete voicemail without listening; and I multi-select text messages and hit “delete” without reading them.
Now this brutal yet effective time-management technique has started to influence the way I handle incoming phone calls. No Caller ID? No answer. Sorry.
Working in the I.T. industry fifteen years ago, the on-call techo from my department would start a mail client called “cc:Mail” twice daily, and connect to a Netware mail server. We’d check, optimistically (and naively optimistically in hindsight), to see if anyone had sent us any mail.
Nowadays, we’re bombarded with electronic messaging in every form, every minute of the day; especially I.T. people, who often receive automated alerts from monitoring systems and server scripts. And we’re expected to be available 24 x 7!
So this is what ends-up happening, and I’m sure I’m not the Lone Ranger here. I receive roughly 100 to 200 email messages daily, to my home and work accounts. I ‘triage’ these as they arrive, moving them into folders or just deleting them without reading. Some readers might find this to be normal practice, others might be appalled. If it took me just 30 seconds to open and read each of these messages I’d be spending an hour, maybe an hour and a half, each day just opening and reading emails. Not actually actioning them or doing anything productive, just opening and reading.
To manage time effectively you need to identify what’s relevant to you fast, and everything else can go on the back-burner.
If I’m in a meeting, and I have three missed calls from colleagues, and then three “missed call” text messages from voicemail, I’m not actually going to read any of those texts, or dial-in to voicemail and listen to people saying “Hi, ahhhh… looks like you’re busy… okay then, catchya later.” Delete, delete, delete. It’s what type-ahead was made for. I’m better-off ringing them back, or walking through the cube farm and saying, “Hey, sorry I missed your call, what’s up?”

Lately I’ve been ignoring calls from “private” numbers. Not because I don’t love antagonizing telemarketers, but rather, I’ve got a finite amount of time to get work done, and the telephone is a big distraction. At least if I know who’s calling, I can make an assessment as to the relevance of that call before I answer it.
If I “bounce” a call to voicemail, it’s for a good reason: not necessarily because the call is unwelcome, but that the interruption is unwelcome.
Similarly, if I call someone and I get “bounced” to voicemail (and yes, I do send my number on outgoing calls,) then I know the person at the other end is probably in the same position.
Someone called me a “CLI snob” the other day, because I bounced a private number to voicemail. Maybe I am, but for good reason. Time equals money. Show me some courtesy by identifying yourself in outgoing calls, and I’ll reciprocate by answering or returning the call when I can, and when I’m in a position to give you my undivided attention.
The telephone, like email, Twitter, voicemail, faxmail, text messages and everything else, is a communication tool for my convenience. It shouldn’t be a tool for someone else’s convenience to the detriment of my productivity. If it is, what’s the point in having it?
Oh, the private number caller didn’t leave a message either, by the way. I wondered, for a brief second, who it might have been.
But only just for a second.
ANI · Caller ID · CLI · email · faxmail · productivity · SMS · text message · time management · Twitter · voicemail
