Future Now
The IFTF Blog
The Blackberry UI defense
I noticed in this morning's Talking Points Memo a twist in the "he said, she said" swirling around the U.S. Attorney firings / resignations/ replacements. One of the elements of the controversy involves the use of a little-known provision allowing the Attorney General to appoint interim attorneys without Congressional approval, and whether the firings were intended as a test of that new power.
Alberto Gonzales' chief of staff Kyle Sampson was advising the use of the AG's newfound power to appoint replacements indefinitely -- without the trouble of Senate confirmation.... The emails show that Sampson wasn't shy about the scheme. He discussed it freely with members of the White House counsel office, including Harriet Miers. In October of 2006, he forwarded one of these discussions to Michael Elston, [Deputy Attorney General Paul] McNulty's chief of staff.
McNulty has maintained that he knew nothing about this, and that the AG's office always planned to send the nominations up to Capitol Hill.
But if his chief of staff was sent an e-mail about it, how could McNulty not have heard? The culprit is technology:
“Either Elston did not scroll down on his BlackBerry to read the last section [of the e-mail] or it made no impression on him, because he knew that it did not reflect the department’s plan for replacing the U.S. attorneys who would be asked to resign,†says spokesman Brian Roehrkasse.
This instantly reminded me of a problem John Hagel wrote about, "Berrybite" blowback:
Both JSB and I have had experiences where documents we sent were read by people on a Blackberry or Treo. They weren’t long documents