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By Steve Spalding October 3rd, 2007
Under: Featured

No one really cares about what we do here.
If there is any lesson that you need to learn about the Internet that is it. Whether you are doing business, having debates, or starting feuds — it’s time to realize that out there in the real world, no one even notices.
On the Internet, Ron Paul is the third most popular candidate. On the Internet, Ubuntu is a meaningful word. On the Internet, AJAX is not an astringent. On the Internet, Kevin Rose is a celebrity. On the Internet, Robert Scoble is a bigger news icon than Dan Rather. On the Internet, Techcrunch holds more authority than the New York Times.
Do you see the problem?
What Real People Are Watching
What Real People Are Listening To
Soulja Boy Tell’em | Crank That (Soulja Boy)
Kanye West | Stronger
Timbaland Featuring Keri Hilson | The Way I Are
Fergie | Big Girls Don’t Cry
J. Holiday | Bed
Words That Are Meaningless To Real People
Web 2.0
Social Media
Social Graph
Digg
Blogging
Words That Hold Some Vague Relevance To Real People
YouTube
MySpace
Google (noun and verb)
Microsoft
Real World Celebrity

Oprah Winfrey
Al Gore
[Time 100]
Web 2.0 Roundup
The list goes on and on.
There is absolutely no way that you can hope to make products that real people will use, produce anything that scales to the mainstream, or even fully appreciate the wider uses of technology if you don’t understand that our tech bubble is a microcosm within a microcosm. Further, you might as well go ahead a realize that we have made out little world seem much more important than it actually is.
My challenge to you is to look at your next project from the standpoint of a “real” person. Get rid of all the crap that we sell to each other about the social media revolution, and try to produce something with real world value. Come back and think about what you have learned. If nothing else, maybe you won’t be so surprised next time that, “but it’s just like Pownce,” falls on deaf ears.
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