Bookmarked Considered Haste - Feeds by Simon Woods (Considered Haste)
Feeds on the web are useful for keeping up with posts to a blog, especially in lieu of checking each site you want to read on at least a semi-regular basis. It’s like subscribing or following…

What a feeds page should look like – it should instruct people who don’t know what feeds are and give recommendations of rss readers.

Quoted Dim Sum Thinking (dimsumthinking.com)

“We’re all the protagonists in our own narratives,” Bridget Kromhout (@bridgetkromhout) agreed.

Consider that everyone in your audience is the hero of their own stories and when you take the stage to speak at a conference …you need to realize that you “have a walk-on part in their[ story].”

Think about that as you try to move your audience or move them to action. You happen to be the character they are encountering in the current scene.

Bridget reminds us that, “Any actions they take, after listening to me, will be what move[s] their story forward.”

You must contribute to their story or you[‘re] a scene that can be cut in post.

I don’t think this just applies for conference speaking…

A pretty, sparkly, blue acrylic fountain pen held in the palm of someone's hand

I’d actually forgotten that I’d placed an order for this until it arrived at my office this afternoon. I thought I’d managed to be good for once, oops 🖋️💸😛

A pretty, sparkly, blue acrylic fountain pen laid out on display on a woollen jumper.

A pretty, sparkly, blue acrylic fountain pen held in the palm of someone's hand

Replied to 'Orwellian nonsense': China retaliates after US slams territory warning to international airlines — ABC News (apple.news)

Ugh, talk about being a bully. 😑

I actually prefer websites that still list Hong Kong as a separate entity.

People who’ve watched the recent Australian Open might have noticed something similar. Where all other athletes have their national flag next to their names on tv, Taiwan athletes don’t have that.