Exit Interview with Scoble
capt turnpike writes "It's no secret that Windows technology evangelist Robert Scoble (of Scobelizer blogging fame) is leaving Microsoft for a startup, but Microsoft Watch's Mary Jo Foley has the first exit interview with Scoble. Topics range from what Microsoft could have done to keep him spreading the word and building out MS's Channel 9 community site, where he sees MS going and more. From the article: 'There were times when I knew I was taking risks. I didn't know what would happen when I told Steve Ballmer that his leadership on the gay rights bill wasn't good.'"
FTA: "...but I want to do the startup life for a few years while I have the ability to take on a good amount of risk."
So in other words, this guy is rich and he can afford to work on a startup and that work is probably more exciting the working for Microsoft.
Isn't this guy only famous because he was hired by Microsoft to blog?
Now he is just a nobody again, right?
blogosphere drama, how fascinating.
there is no need to sign your posts. this isn't usenet. your username is right there above your post. stop it.
FTA:
Q: What was your biggest surprise about working at Microsoft?
A: That they'd really just let me walk around with a camcorder without having a PR person or a lawyer along. Even after quitting I have the entire run of the place. That's not typical even in the technology world. At Apple my brother-in-law's badge only works in his building.
Sooo... they're taking the same lax attitude about computing security and applying it to physical security as well?
Not everyone should have admin, and not everyone should have all-building access.
The closest definition I could find for 'shill' on Google said, "In some cases, the members of an organization or the employees of a company may monitor and/or participate in public discussions and groups. Such people are not shills, since they don't attempt to mislead others."
As far as I can tell, Scoble did no misleading. He made no attempts to hide the fact that he worked for MS, and he did nothing that made his blogs or videos appear untrustworthy. For example, it is painfully obvious that his videos have no PR person directing them or even editing them. He just walked into peoples' offices with a video camera, hit REC, and started talking.
He may have put a human face on MS by letting us all see inside the belly of the beast, but I don't understand what's wrong with that. What's wrong with giving some insight into how things work and why certain decisions were made? Transparency is supposed to be one of the great things about Open Source, so what's wrong when it applies to MS?
dom
Let me tell you about another group to which your words can be applied verbatim. In Soviet Russia they had newspapers, radio, and TV, and reporters who:
1) interviewed many high high and middle level party officials
2) had a job involving walking the halls of various official institutions to try to figure out what was going on
3) challenged their audience daily with their findings
4) thought daily about politics and the Soviet Union's role in the future
5) publically spoke out against (mild and pre-approved) various shortcomings.
And yet we already know that they published lies and propaganda anyway, and put an artifficial kind face on something that was a failure both economically and as human rights go. The party officially recognized that one little bit of truth makes people more eager to swallow the big lie, so, yes, number 5 happened pretty routinely too. So, yes, it's nothing new that a propaganda shill would "dare" "bravely" confront Ballmer about such utterly irrelevant issues as his opinions of gay rights, which frankly bear no relevance to MS's products or monopolistic stance... to seem independent enough so you'll swallow the bigger lies that do bear relevance.
But, anyway, let's resume mis-using your words in that context. You don't believe them? It seems to me you're implying that
1) A journalist from Pravda was stupid,
2) He was a liar,
3) His employment was one big consipiracy where 49999 Soviet citizens put on an act every time he was in the room and he was the one person who was not in on the big joke
And, blimey, yes, you'd be right. It was number 2. He who pays the orchestra gets to choose the music, and he who pays your salary to write about the company gets to choose what positive spin he wants you to put on it. And, yes, a bit of number 3 too: people are good at putting on an act when the CEO's PR lackey comes asking questions.
A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.