Hm, let’s take a look around the Internet and see what the Thoughtwrestling ka-tet has been up to this week:
Bill Wren: Bill’s Piddleville website celebrated its 10th anniversary recently and he reflected upon this and other things in Anniversaries, vocabularies and why.
Scott Marshall: Scott continues to build out the Omakase Design site bit by bit; check out his review of ReWork, the book by the founders of 37signals.
Kat French: In Message in a Bottle, Kat writes about birth certificates, proof of birth, and general fun times with paperwork. If you’re a LOST fan, check out her blog for her thoughts on the (soon the end) mega TV series.
Susan Murphy: @suzemuse has a good piece on Taking Back Community this week that’s worth checking out.
Ian M Rountree: Ian tells us What Fight Club Can Tell Us About Presence Media in another sharp and tasty morsel of analysis about things social and digital.
Rebecca Leaman: Rebecca continues to hold down the fort at Wild Apricot, a great blog and company that helps out non-profits. Among other things, this week she wrote about CanadaHelps: Online Giving, about online charitable giving, with some really interesting stats.
Steve Spalding: this piece is actually one week old, but Steve is his usual eloquent self talking about Inventing The Wheel, Over and Over Again. I like the idea of the triangular unicycle, Steve.
As for me, Mark Dykeman, most of my work has been at Thoughtwrestling this week, with the exception of some book reviews at Broadcasting Brain, where I talk about Malcolm Gladwell, a new book called Click, and another new book called The Invisible Gorilla.
Check ‘em all out if you get a chance, won’t you?
Related posts:

To be honest, this thoughtwrestler has been out of the ring for a good part of the week with work. And weather, the kind that insists I take care of lawns and such.
Nonetheless, Bill, congrats on 10 years of Piddleville!