As reported under my user name of Pyrus in The Guardian

Apple Mac LCII c. 1992
In 1992 I bought a Mac LCII with an earth shattering 4Mb of RAM and a 40Mb hard drive. I was to be liberated to create graphics faster, better and right on the bleeding edge.
Formerly I had sketched with pencils, I had embellished with Magic Markers, I had crafted prototypes, meticulously created key lines with scalpel cut tramlines and fine point draughsman pens. I had stripped film and acetate in and out of things. I had done this patiently through amendment after amendment and 1992 was the year it was all going to change.
Armed with a creative brief and a fortnight to deliver I scoffed at the nay-sayers who predicted the death of ‘real’ design, plugged the LCII in and switched it on.
I loaded PhotoShop, and Quark. I opened up the software. It froze and crashed. Launch – crash – launch – crash. I phoned the shop they talked about RAM and other things. I said “I see” but what I meant was “uh???”. They told me to “Zap the P-RAM”. Realising, by now that I was technically brain-dead, they explained that this was the equivalent of “giving the machine a good kick in the bollocks”. With fingers contorted onto the Command, Option, P and R keys all at the same time, I got my girlfriend to press the ‘On’ button. Three sets of start-up chimes and back came the desktop, apparently chastened by the having it testiculars zapped.
I launched PhotoShop – Crash – launch – crash -launch – crash.
After a week of this and lots of phone calls, I told the bloke from the shop to come and sort it out. He turned up and regailed me with stories of virtual memory allowing me to get 8Mb of RAM out of it and then sold me RAM Doubler – giving me 16Mb of RAM out of the thing.
A new week started. I launched PhotoShop. Yippee. It opened. I started to create things – I played with the stunning array of twelve fonts and marveled at how easily I could switch from one to another. I spent all day putting the basics into the my project, with each key-stroke I became more skilled and even had a couple of Eureka moments.
Then at about 10pm, it crashed and I lost all of it. I zapped it’s P-RAM repeatedly, metaphorically hoofing its nads with relish. The rest of the week went on in a similar fashion. I developed a nervous twitch where my left thumb and middle finger would simulaneously press the Command and the S buttons every two or three minutes. Even this would cause it to crash at times and the data would disappear. I would shout at it “Nooo! DON’T PLEASE…. I’ll zap your PRAM if you dare… Oh you Bastard”.
By Friday afternoon of week two, I had learned zap the P-RAM nonchalently by putting the stapler on the Command and Option keys while holding the P and R keys with one hand and drinking coffee with the other. I wanted the machine to think I didn’t really care and it was pointless trying to piss me off.
I also had to revert to the Magic Markers with less than two hours to deliver the visuals. Ironically I was congratulated on the more edgey style of graphics.
I stuck with MAC and I’m glad I did. But it was in 1992 that I started using the phrase ‘Zap it’ for any technical thing that went wrong. Apple’s legacy to me from that era is this phrase, now hard coded into my vocabulary. My love for Macs happened much later. Certainly at that time I hated the bloody thing with a passion.
Trying this plugin to publish WordPress posts to Facebook. It is not behaving itself at all.
I’ll put this post on my blog and it will automatically appear on Facebook and probably Twitter as well
Sent this to @FiBendall on Twitter when she had writers block over an article she was working on. I don’t think she was so convinced. Anyway, seems a shame to waste it.
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You know how sometimes you’re out walking the dog when a bunch of alien interlopers abducts you. Before you know it, you’re warped off to the planet Q’Zog in the Fourth Quadrant, your brains picked clean en route, only to have other vile experiments visited upon your person on arrival.
Yeah I know, it happens all the time. So what’s new? Well this week, during one of these otherworldly episodes, my alien hosts subjected me to experiments based on research into web-based social media patterns on Earth. It turns out that a few millennia back they went through the same thing themselves and were interested to see if we were making a mess of it all yet.
Eventually, I cracked under pressure and told them about spontaneous uptake, web 2.0, multi-channel integration, SEO benefits, corporate blogging, Mobile blah, micro blah, digital blah and so on. They rubbed their chins, nodded sagely and did that thing with the sides of their mouths that universally means “If only they’d bothered to ask us, we’d have told them how to avoid getting everything wrong”.
So I did ask them. “Where did social media go wrong for you guys?” Quickly followed by “…and do you mind if I pick your brains for a change ask your advice”. It seemed to do the trick. The big alien, the one who usually does all the cross-species sexual experimentation (but that’s another story) picked up his MacBook Core DecaQuadro, running OSMXM Sabretooth and fired it up. He pressed a few keys and Hey Presto! They launched qzogblog.com and clicked onto the category entitled ‘Social Notworking’.
And they talked me through the tale of woe that once passed for social media on Q’Zog.
Once upon a time the ordinary aliens of QZog found it fun to keep in touch and cement friendships through social media sites. A load of them sprang up – TrouserBook (they use a different body-part for speech and visual recognition), Twaddle (like us, there are lots of them with nothing important to say and they like to say it a lot), Flockr (they like pictures of sheep) and so on. Eventually people thought they could make money out of these sites with PPC and other propositions. In time, corporates started to notice that they were being cut out of the loop. No one was going to their websites to find out about their products. The alien masses were asking each other and liberating their buying habits. So the corporates moved in to try and find a place in this great new SpaceBook. And for a while all was well on QZog. But it didn’t stay that way.
The first problem was all about money; isn’t it always? Social networking, it seems, was just too difficult to monetize. Strangely, back on Earth, this dynamic is now beginning to show its face also. Google has begun to make less than optimistic noises about it. Google Chief Financial Officer George Reyes has said. “We have found that social-networking inventory is not monetizing as well as expected”. Which is Earth-speak for “Oh Shit”.
My alien hosts went on to talk about too many players flooding the market. Particularly white labeled channels (i.e. a site full of pre made functions which can be branded so that people can create their own versions of e.g. Facebook). The more this happens, the more dispersed and fractured the user base becomes. And sure enough, free, open source and plentiful white label options have also made it to earth
It was noticeable that my extraterran hosts were pretty ticked off with corporate intervention in social media. Over commercialization was clearly a killer in the Fourth Quadrant. What started out as a one to many tool, became a corporation to consumer tool and all the people got fed up with being sold at and went somewhere else. I thought about this for a while. Surely as social communities form, Earth’s marketers would not dream of piling in, taking over and crapping all over the experience. Would we?
There was a problem as well with inaccurate member data on sites. This is less important to socialization so users didn’t care. Additionally, identity fraud in the fourth quadrant led to users purposely loading inaccurate data. From a commercial perspective, this began to create problems; CRM is only as good as the data validity. All that effort aimed at the wrong people! Strangely, on earth this seems to be happening. Some say as many as 33% of users load duff info into their profile.
Another issue over in the Fourth Quadrant was the difficulty in measuring the effectiveness of these social media strategies. As with earthly hosting, if you want to deploy a campaign via a social network, you can’t access the host’s server data and logs by automatic right. You can manually monitor the interaction on the site, or measure click through, but it is almost akin to redeploying slate and chalk as a core technology.
Data privacy also started to unravel the network. You may think that this could not happen on Earth, what with all the regulatory concern and cautionary tales. But then again, Facebook had already been caught tracking and releasing user habits back to developers and others involved in advertising initiatives. And what if your average Joe Alien wants to leave. Well have you noticed that no matter how often you opt out or don’t opt in, the level of spam keeps going up? You have to think that the data options are being somehow abused. Surely not on Earth? Well think again, it’s a bit like a religious cult. Once you’re in, they don’t let you leave. These are the very things that eventually dissuaded Q’Zogians from joining social media sites and led to their abandonment followed by collapse of the network platforms.
Here’s a new phrase for all of us on Earth: “Social Network Fatigue”. It started on QZog with people getting fed up with maintaining multiple spaces on multiple platforms. It further manifested itself with people just falling out of love with the whole thing because, like nostalgia, it just wasn’t what it used to be. It might not sound like we have that problem down here, but on closer inspection, there are people writing PhD theses about it.
The QZogians also started to experience a slow-down in the use of social media platforms. It peaked over a few years and then declined. Perhaps because of the tedium of the operation, or something else happened, but it stopped being the next best greatest thing. And, you guessed it …Earth is seeing the same pattern.
The Q’Zogian saga continued to get played to me out like a Greek tragedy. Networks had inconsistent performance, companies got fed up with employees cyber-sciving, so they started locking social media sites outside firewalls. The sites variously suffered: scaling issues; user overload leading to downtime; hacking and scandal. The social media moguls largely fiddled with their Geek-Up PowerPoint presentations while their empires burned.
“So”, I asked. “If you had your time again, how would you make sure that this didn’t happen?”
“Easy” they answered “We could have kept it all together, increased the marketing value to business, re-enfranchised the users and made a packet on the way. We’ll drop by next week, pick you up and tell you how you get this entire social media gig right.”
“Oh and by the way…” they said as they dropped me back by my still walking dog, “… Has anyone talked to HP about their pay-per-post digital camera social media campaign on YouTube. It really sucks”
Just downloaded WordPress for iPhone and making this test post
Hello… crackle…come in… is anyone there…. calling Earth…
I am Dave from a plant called Realitus. We are our own planet very much at the centre of our own universe. You my friends, are just a distant dot in the night sky. You may have burnt out long ago – frankly we don’t care.
On Realitus we are a race of communicators (web, WordPress, Print design and so on). The most sacred thing on our planet, the Holy Grail of communication, is knowing what to say to people at just the right time and in just the right way to be genuinely helpful to them.
To this end, three of our commandments are as follows:
In short, you need to show that you understand my situation and problems; demonstrate that you can supply something of value to me; do it concisely and with impact.
We do a lot of business with the people of Earth. They are very egocentric. The first line of their constitution is
“Enough about me. Let’s talk about you. What do you think about me?”.
They are also constantly short of time and culturally they are all selling something and buying nothing. It is interesting that 71% of businesses on Earth fail within a decade of starting up. Our hypothesis is that they are so obsessed with trying sell their own ideas, that they don’t take the time to learn what people want to buy.
So what is the point of all this. Can all these bloody self-appointed coaches, experts and others stop sending me emails that tell me how bloody great they are. Instead could we have emails from people who can understand that we need money, customers, sales and aspirins and we need them right now. Could those people tell us where we find these things and explain how we do it and show why we can afford to pay them and where the return on that investment will be. And for the love of JC, can they do it in less than 5000 words of self-aggrandising bollocks.
Thank you. As the song goes, “Back to Life, back to Realitus”
reading though the Google article on Realitus, it occurs to me what a task we have set ourselves. Having returned from WordCamp UK and deciding to establish a dedicated WordPress proposition, I am now at that strange crossroads. So far we have a name, Realitus. We have a proposition, WordPress Consultancy.
We understand the value of that: WordPress is easier, better, lighter nicer, under continual development, flexible, more secure and so on, than anything else out there. WordPress was about blogging, but now it is about web and optimisation and communication and giving greater control to website owners. The cross fertilisation of this technology is, at core, its making.
The story of the post-it note is a good parallel. Someone at 3M was tryin to make a glue for a completely different purpose. the paper test swatches he made while doing this were used by the secretaries to make notes on documents because they could be removed …yadda yadda yadda the rest is history.
The story of WordPress is the same. It has emerged from a niche area of the web, blogging, but is about to become known for underpinning most websites in the world, in a way where everyone should win.
We realise that the subtlety is going to mean somewhere between nothing and complete confusion to many website owners out there. But we also know that people are beginning to realise that something is changing in the web landscape and many are wondering how to engage in that and what the benefits are going to be.
We are able to design and develop existing themes as well as create our own. We are able to translate the potency and potential of WordPress into English, through a business case and make it happen. We are part of the WordPress community. We are well connected with the best developers in the UK, with the the owners of WordPress and with the free and shared resources available through engaging with the WordPress Community.
But what now? We need a customer.
Stage 1. We need to get some of the right people into a room and talk to them about this.
Stage 2. Work with them to develop their Strategy.
Stage 3. Implement the solution.
I have a pen, a telephone and a piece of paper. Who the hell should I call to make this happen?
Tags: communication, new website, potential, Realitus, web site, website builders, website developers, WordCamp, WordPress
I spent a very fruitful time, professionally, at WordCamp UK last weekend. Amongst other things I learnt that my marketing company, Creative Thing was probably one of the first to launch a commercial non blog deployment of WordPress. (ACIDnews). We also learnt that there is currently a demand for these skills and the market area is growing.
In response. We felt we needed a more dedicated WordPress proposition. As such we have split our cbusiness in two. Creative Thing will focus on Marketing, graphic design and print, while the new name, Realitus will focus on web design and WordPress. We feel that while we are able to design and deploy WordPress, our expertise in marketing and our contacts within the WordPress community makes it better for us to operate in the consultancy hole, defining objectives, scoping requirements, designing solutions and either building or sourcing the appropriate supplier to do so.
This means we need to sort out the two brands websites to better focus and define the message. The Realitus website has been constructed quite quickly over a few days (the power of WordPress). We are really happy with it as far as it goes (needs more content). The new Creative Thing website is close to being finished . Again no content, but structurally it is looking good.
Take a look and let us know what you think: ct.trialzone.co.uk
Tags: ACIDnews, blog, consultancy, Creative Thing, marketing, print, Realitus, web, WordCamp
I have been running my marketing and design company, Creative Thing for some years now and we have just decided to split the company in two – retaining Creative Thing for graphic design and traditional media marketing.
The new off-shoot is Realitus. It exists because among our successes was realising very early on that WordPress could be so much more that a blogging tool. We thought if you just forget about blogging completely, and look at the way WordPress does things and what it both can do and potentially could do, you realise that it is not a blog – it is a great deal more.
In 2005/2006 we started to think around this and came up with a concept called Newsengine. We were able to deliver our first important WordPress website in the form of ACIDnews an online newsdesk and communications hub between the members, the organisation, html email communications and promotions. It was created for the Anti Copying In Design organisation (ACID is a membership, lobbying and commercial rights organisation operating in the UK and Eu. ACID has been in Desaign Week’s top 50 most influential organisations in Design for the lest five years).
Some years later we realise that this type of work requires a dedicated vehicle all of its own. And that is Realitus.
Realitus are UK web experts and
WordPress consultants.
Our big idea can be simply put: Good ideas don’t just happen, you have to make them happen. And certainly one of the best ideas for a decade is happening right under everyone’s noses in the shape of WordPress. Businesses large and small from Tamworth to Tasmania have been waking up to the potency and effectiveness of WordPress and bringing the Realitus WordPress Consultants in to make it happen for them.
We stand out because before we did what we do now, we did what you did. We managed and ran businesses, big plc businesses and little struggling businesses. So we know where you’re coming from. We’ve been down the same road.
We have nailed our colours to an open source approach to the web - these days that is almost exclusivelyWordPress. And if you haven’t heard what is going on with WordPress, you should really give us a call.
Let’s make some good ideas happen.