tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2460005.post7271067335069835749..comments2023-11-05T04:28:29.961-08:00Comments on Adventures in Capitalism: The value of a signal is inversely proportional to its frequencyChrishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00927628412285314176noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2460005.post-67507926465682251602012-11-20T14:31:18.336-08:002012-11-20T14:31:18.336-08:00The content curation "problem" is a funn...The content curation "problem" is a funny one. Most smart and educated people I meet have no issues finding great content and have a long backlog of books and articles they want to get to eventually. <br /><br />So why do smart motivated people think this is a problem? I think they project their motivation onto their peers whom they observe to be unmotivated. "Why isn't John reading lots of good stuff and instead sitting around all day playing video games? He must not know what to read! If only he could see how smart I am by all the things I am reading - he would read them too and be smart like me."<br /><br />Of course knowledge or access isn't the problem, it is motivation. And so the Lookmark "solution" is a top-down one that does not address the real core of the problem.Jeff Huberhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17472038365338307049noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2460005.post-75296417199053642362012-11-20T13:23:24.664-08:002012-11-20T13:23:24.664-08:00I enjoyed this post as this sort of information fi...I enjoyed this post as this sort of information filtering is quite necessary now. I also find it odd that Google seemingly does not innovate much on their Reader product.Andynoreply@blogger.com