View source for Robert Scoble
Jump to:
navigation
,
search
__NOTOC__ Robert Scoble is an American blogger, technical evangelist, and author. Scoble first came to prominence during his tenure as a technical evangelist at [[Microsoft]], due to his blog "Scobleizer." ==Early life and education== Scoble grew up in Silicon Valley. His father was an engineer at Ampex and Lockheed Martin. His mother worked for [[Apple Inc]] as a member of a group of women who built Apple IIs at home. Robert learned how to solder a motherboard together when he was 11, and helped his mother build several hundred Apple IIs. He studied journalism at West Valley Community College and San Jose State. In 1989 he persuaded [[Steve Wozniak]] to donate $40,000 worth of Macintoshes to the WVCC journalism department, and then took responsibility for setting them all up. At that time he was a Mac Evangelist, fond of installing beta software and performing weird hacks on other people's old Apple computers to improve their performance. ==Career== ===Before Microsoft=== After college Scoble worked for Fawcette Technical Publications and then for Winnov, a manufacturer of webcams. His job supporting webcam users led him to be active in Microsoft's NetMeeting support newsgroups, for which activity he was named a Microsoft MVP. He left Fawcette to join [[Dave Winer]]'s UserLand Software, a blogging software startup, as Director of Marketing, until the startup ran out of money. He found a job at NEC Mobile Solutions as Sales Support Manager for TabletPC, where he used a blog to provide tech support and listen to feedback from NEC customers. This blog was noticed by Vic Gundotra, then General Manager of Platform Evangelism at Microsoft, who invited Robert to work at Microsoft. ===Microsoft=== Scoble joined [[Microsoft]] in 2003 as part of the Channel 9 MSDN Video team, producing videos that showcased Microsoft employees and products. While promoting Microsoft products like Tablet PCs and Windows Vista, Scoble also frequently criticized his own employer and praised competitors. His blog offered an unusual level of access, including accepting comments from readers, and publishing his cell phone number inviting people to contact him directly with issues. He helped Microsoft appear less evil to the independent software developers that were his core audience. In February 2005 he was the first person to be called the newly-coined term "spokesblogger." ===Podtech and FastCompany=== In 2006 Scoble announced he was leaving Microsoft to join Podtech.net as vice president of media development. At Podtech he produced the [http://www.podtech.net/scobleshow Scoble Show]. In early 2008 he left PodTech and joined Fast Company, where he launched [http://www.fastcompany.tv/ FastCompany.tv], with two shows. The first was FastCompany Live, which was done totally on cell phones. The second, ScobleizerTV, was similar to his previous show on PodTech, only with better equipment and a camera operator. FastCompany laid Scoble off in March 2009. ===Rackspace and Building 43=== In March 2009 Scoble announced that he was joining [[Rackspace]]. As part of his work there he is developing [[Building 43]], a website that aims to build a community for people fanatical about the Internet. ==Other activities== ===Blogging and videoblogging=== Scoble originally gained notoriety as a blogger. He has repeatedly been called an "egoblogger," which [http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=egoblogger is defined as] a blogger who spends "as much time promoting themselves and trying to get famous as they do writing their blogs." In addition to maintaining his [http://scobleizer.com Wordpress blog], Scoble is a highly active [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Videoblog videoblogger]. ===Social networking=== Scoble's notoriety has further grown with his ubiquitous presence on [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_network_service social networks] such as [[Twitter]], [[Facebook]] and [[FriendFeed]]. In January 2008 Scoble's [[Facebook]] account was disabled after he used automatic scripts to download his 5,000 contacts (known as a social graph) from the site. Scoble annouced the ban first on Twitter and then [http://scobleizer.com/2008/01/03/ive-been-kicked-off-of-facebook on his blog]. The news quickly spread, with diverse reactions. For example, [http://uk.techcrunch.com/2008/01/03/facebook-blocks-scoble-for-downloading-his-contacts TechCrunch Europe] seemed to support Scoble, but then [[Michael Arrington]] of TechCrunch [http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/01/03/plaxo-flubs-it blamed] Plaxo for prompting Scoble to violate the Facebook Terms of Service. Scoble's Facebook account was [http://valleywag.gawker.com/340318/scoble-triumphantly-returns-to-facebook quickly reinstated] after he promised to stop scraping data from the site. While Scoble has a large number of followers on various social networks, he is particularly distinguished by the time he spends following others. In March 2008 he [http://scobleizer.com/2008/03/23/the-secret-to-twitter wrote on his blog] that "the secret to [[Twitter]] isn’t how many followers you have, but how many people you are following." In December 2008 [[Michael Arrington]] [http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/12/22/im-sorry-robert-but-its-time-for-a-friendfeed-intervention suggested on TechCrunch] that Scoble was addicted to [[Twitter]] and [[FriendFeed]]. Arrington reported that Scoble admitted to monitoring those services all day long, "hitting refresh over and over on both," and to spending at least seven hours a day, seven days a week, reading and responding on those services. Perhaps in response to Arrington's concerns, in June 2009 Scoble [http://scobleizer.com/2009/06/28/back-to-blogging-week-no-friendfeedtwitter-for-a-week/ announced] that he would pay more attention to his blog. And in August 2009 he used an automated script to [http://mashable.com/2009/08/06/twitter-purge/ unfollow 106,000 people] on Twitter. (Though as [[Loic Lemeur]] has [http://loiclemeur.com/english/2009/02/robert-scoble-is-fake-following.html pointed out], Scoble had only really been following about 150 people, following their social output as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aggregator aggregated] on FriendFeed.) However, by October 2009 [http://twitter.com/Scobleizer/status/4699311816 he revealed] that he was already back up to following 4000 people. http://scobleizer.posterous.com/why-twitter-is-underhyped-and-is-probably-wor ===Author=== Scoble is the co-author, with Shel Israel, of the book "Naked Conversations: How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers." ===Photography=== In January 2008 Scoble [http://scobleizer.com/2008/01/31/putting-photos-into-public-domain/ dedicated all his photos] to the public domain, which allows people to upload them to Wikipedia. His photos can be found [http://www.flickr.com/photos/scobleizer/ on Flickr] and [http://www.zooomr.com/people/scobleizer/insidephotos on Zooomr]. ===Other=== He supported [[Kathy Sierra]] when she was victim of hostile posts. ==Links== *Wikipedia page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Scoble *Building 43 website: http://www.building43.com *Scoble's Wordpress blog: http://scobleizer.com *Scoble's Posterous: http://scobleizer.posterous.com/ *Twitter: http://twitter.com/scobleizer *Friendfeed: http://friendfeed.com/scobleizer *Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/RobertScoble [[Category:People]] [[Category:Bloggers]]
Return to
Robert Scoble
.
Navigation menu
Personal tools
Log in
Namespaces
Article
Discussion
Variants
Views
Read
View source
View history
Actions
Search
Navigation
Main Page
Community portal
Current events
Recent changes
Random page
Help
Donations
Toolbox
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Page information