Although Karim is named on YouTube’s site as a co-founder, Chad and Steve have promoted a highly simplified history of the company’s founding that largely excludes him. In the stripped-down version—repeated in dozens of news accounts—Chad and Steve got the idea in the winter of 2005, after they had trouble sharing videos online that had been shot at a dinner party at Steve’s San Francisco apartment. Karim says the dinner party never happened and that the seed idea of video sharing was his—although he is quick to say its realization in YouTube required “the equal efforts of all three of us.” Chad and Steve both say that the party did occur but that Karim wasn’t there. “Chad and I are pretty modest, and Jawed has tried to seize every opportunity to take credit,” Steve told me. But he also acknowledged that the notion that YouTube was founded after a dinner “was probably very strengthened by marketing ideas around creating a story that was very digestible.
✖ Via TIME: “The Gurus of YouTube” by John Cloud, Dec. 16, 2006

We have no problem understanding how our actions shape representations, narratives, ideas. It’s some time more difficult to understand how those constructs shape us in return. Here’s a good example of a narrative elaborated in order to shape the behavior of future adopters (toward the innovation that is YouTube). As a marketing tool, the story about the party is supposed to give users a basic idea about how to behave with YouTube.



• Jun 12, 2010 link notes tagged: technology  communication  art  representation  fiction  idea  action  community  organization  innovation  users  marketing  YouTube  story 

We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.
✖ Via The Story of Philosophy: The Lives and Opinions of the World’s Greatest Philosophers by Will Durant, 1926, Ch. II: Aristotle and Greek Science; part VII: Ethics and the Nature of Happiness [Simon & Schuster/Pocket Books, 1991, p. 76]

The quote is MISATTRIBUTED to Aristotle:

“Excellence is an art won by training and habituation: we do not act rightly because we have virtue or excellence, but we rather have these because we have acted rightly; ‘these virtues are formed in man by his doing the actions’; we are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit: ‘the good of man is a working of the soul in the way of excellence in a complete life… for as it is not one swallow or one fine day that makes a spring, so it is not one day or a short time that makes a man blessed and happy’”.

The quoted phrases within the quotation are from the Nicomachean Ethics, Book II, 4; Book I, 7. The misattribution is from taking Durant’s summation of Aristotle’s ideas as being the words of Aristotle himself. (Wikiquote)

The Story of Philosophy by Will Durant on Google Books (no preview available) and on Amazon.

Spotted in Tumblr’s Radar. It was reblogged from Tomorrow Museum.



• May 26, 2010 link notes tagged: philosophy  self  identity  action  repetition  Aristotle  book  author 

The knowledge kills action, for action requires a state of being in which we are covered with the veil of illusion
✖ Via The Birth of Tragedy by Friedrich Nietzsche, 1872, § 7 (tr. by Ian Johnston, 2009)

Compare with a similar observation by Paul Valery.



• Feb 02, 2010 link notes  [via] tagged: philosophy  book  action  knowledge  ignorance 

Que de choses il faut ignorer pour « agir » !
✖ Via Paul Valéry, Choses tues, Gallimard, Paris, 1932.

• Aug 30, 2009 link notes tagged: author  book  philosophy  action  reflexion  revolution  critic 

skandalon


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