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« March 2006 | Main | May 2006 »

April 29, 2006

Decisions

You don't get to choose how you're going to die. Or when.
You can only decide how you're going to live. Now.
--Joan Baez

April 29, 2006 in On Spirituality, Reflections | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

April 28, 2006

RSS Dinner

Last night, I went to a great RSS dinner, co-sponsored by Pheedo. Rebecca Lieb of ClickZ writes about the event here, starting with "What a good idea."

She describes accurately - no speeches, no real agenda, just good old fashioned brainstorming from about 40 people involved in RSS from every conceivable angle. Both clients KnowNow and VideoEgg were part of the discussion - to be continued at Syndicate in NYC next month.

April 28, 2006 in Events, On Blogging, On RSS, On Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

BloggerCon 2006

Today, Dave Winer talks about the next BloggerCon at the end of June (there hasn't been one in awhile and a bunch of us have been wondering).

On the agenda are digital lifestyle aggregators, and speakers from BlogHer, which I'm involved with and am thinking how different it will be with so much female energy at a conference that had perhaps three or four women the first year I attended at Harvard.

More and more women are blogging and its a great thing to see.

He also plans to have a Vloggercon discussion, which I plan to attend (my VideoEgg guys are on a panel or two).

I may be walking on fire that weekend, so may not be able to engage in the discussion, but plan to keep tabs on the outcome.

April 28, 2006 in Conference Highlights, Events, On Blogging, On Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

Singularity in BoingBoing

BoingBoing writes about the upcoming Singularity Summit at Stanford, where client Ray Kurzweil and other illuminaries are speaking on Saturday, May 13.

April 28, 2006 in Client Media Kudos, Events, On Science, On Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

April 27, 2006

Naked on Sharpcast

Shel Israel writes about his experiences so far with client Sharpcast.

He says:
"I think they have some technology that will help anyone who wants all their stuff to be always current whether they are online or off and whichever device they are using.

Sharpcast makes it irrelevant whether you are online or off. Any change you make to your photo collection on your home desktop will be immediately and automatically updated to your online photo collection(s); your handheld device, your workplace computer and your laptop--or whichever combination of these you use.

You never have to synchronize devices again. You never have to delete that stupid photo of you going shirtless at a party from multiple collections. Delete once and its gone from everyone not armed with a video recorder."

April 27, 2006 in Client Media Kudos, On Blogging, On Mobile & Wireless, On Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

April 26, 2006

EFT Seminar Near Atlanta

There's an EFT seminar just outside Atlanta from May 16-19. For those unfamiliar with EFT, its kind of like acupuncture without the needles.

EFT allows you to stimulate well established energy meridian points on your body by tapping them with your fingertips. The process is easy to memorize and is portable so you can do it anywhere. Their goal is focus on the energetic and emotional causes that most Western healing practices have largely ignored.

April 26, 2006 in On Health, On Spirituality | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack

XBox 360 Uncloaked

Dean Takahashi's new book, The Xbox 360 Uncloaked, will launch on May 9.

It's a fascinating insider's look at the evolution of the Xbox 360 and Microsoft's ambitious gamble to become a leading force in the multi-billion-dollar video game industry. Check out Dean's comprehensive story of the Xbox through the eyes of the Xbox 360 engineers who designed it.

April 26, 2006 in Books, On Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

On Characters, On Friends....

Have you ever wanted to be a character in a movie or in a book for a moment, an hour, longer? Wallace Stegner is taking me away – how did thou not knoweth about him until now?

Then again, while he has received a significant number of acclaimed kudos over the years, I wonder am I alone? Surely not – with words that are able to sweep one away, even if its brief sweep, how can you feel alone?

My taste often falls into mixed categories, where a passage that makes me jump for joy leaves another blank. Most notably Sinclair Lewis, Andre Brink, Mario Puzo (I really dug The Family, so much so that I read straight through a three day snow storm one year and missed it entirely), Hemingway (Ah, yes his fabulous Feast). I could go on for pages with things I’ve read where I’ve rejoiced in silence.

Literature, like art, is so damn personal. No urban dwellers in my book group ever gravitated to Richard Russo for example, for why would they?

Stegner made me rethink of the definition of friendship; that growing penetration towards someone, as you feel a connection so strong, that you have no choice but to move towards…….a deepening of movement forward, where you suddenly wake up and feel warmer somehow, and often without explanation. Perhaps the no explanation is what makes it so grand.

He writes:

‘We felt their friendship as freezing travelers feel a dry room and a fire. Crowded in, rubbing our hands with satisfaction, and were never the same thereafter. Thought better of ourselves, thought better of the world….’

It begs the question, what is the basis of friendship?

He asks, “Do we respond only to people who seem to find us interesting? Is friendship born out of simple gratitude to someone who has the kindness to call? Was I that avid for praise, to feel so warm towards them both because they professed to like my story? Do we all buzz or light up when people press our vanity buttons and only then? Can I think of anyone in my whole life whom I have liked without his first showing signs of liking me?”

Wallace Stegner once said about his writing, "In fiction I think we should have no agenda but to tell the truth."

Maybe this why he tears me open so beautifully, page after page. I love his ability to quietly examine and gracefully convey the essence of the most valuable things in life.

April 26, 2006 in Books, On People & Life, On Poems, Literature & Stuff, Reflections | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

April 25, 2006

KnowNow's RSS Solution Used in Rape Abuse Incest National Network

Client KnowNow RSS Service Connects Victims to the Rape, Abuse, Incest National Network (RAINN).

RAINN is integrating KnowNow eLerts for communication & notification and will be used in their newly announced secure online hotline. (National Sexual Assault Online Hotline).

Using KnowNow eLerts RSS solution, RAINN will be able to connect a victim with an available trained volunteer as soon as they need one. To ensure protection of each individual who has a query or a need to talk to a counselor immediately, the request is connected to one of RAINN’s trained volunteers quickly, securely and anonymously.

RAINN will launch the National Sexual Assault Online Hotline in the fall, which will be the web's first secure hotline service, offering live help 24 hours a day.

Given that calls to the national telephone hotline continue to increase (the free hotline helped up to 137,039 people in 2005, up 44% in the last three years), research and observation are finding an increased reluctance among young people to use the phone.

Since 80% of rape victims fall under age 30, adding an online way to communicate is a critical component to making the program a success.

The user's screen will be as clear and intuitive as instant messaging, so there's no learning curve. Sessions cannot be traced back to a user. No record of the session or user remains after a chat reinforcing privacy and confidentiality, so victims know that when they reach out, it remains anonymous.

The pilot launch of the Online Hotline will begin in May, with a national launch expected in September.

April 25, 2006 in Client Announcements, On RSS, On Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack

April 24, 2006

Video Goes Digital

Tonight, I wound up at the Churchill Club's monthly event on the future of video on the web. There's a podcast of the event if you later want to consume the audio.

It was a top notch group of panelists including Microsoft's General Manager for MSN Entertainment and Video Services Rob Bennett, Google's Director of Video Jennifer Feikin (hey, at least they had one woman on the panel :-), Sling Media's Founder & CEO Blake Krikorian, John Papenek, Senior VP and Editorial Director at ESPN New Media and Ben White, VP of Digital Media at MTV. So yeah, all the big boys.

P4230001

And I found former Google's head of corporate communications Raymond Nasr at the head table, who apparently also wears the hat of President of the Churchill Club. Who knew? He hasn't lost his touch and is still wearing his fabulously colored bow ties.

P4240012

Wired writer Frank Rose moderated the panel, who apparently has an extensive background covering the digital entertainment business -- mostly the giants, such as Sony, Time Warner and Universal.

Video is taking off now because it 'can,' meaning that broadband has reached 65% of all households, DRM mechanisms are reliable enough that companies are putting video online and storage costs have dropped.

But what will it do to television? Even more so, what has it already started doing to television? While clearly it is getting disruptive, a thread I heard over and over again throughout the evening was that it was 'additive and evolutionary,' meaning we're expanding what we already have. It's not revolutionary or disruptive? It's a bit of all four I think; it has certainly been disruptive in the same way blogs have been disruptive to print.

Some just may not want to admit it too loudly because networks are still in a huff over TiVo and don't want to get hit again.

P4230002

I'm so used to going to digital video panels, where my client VideoEgg is often asked to sit, and the conversation revolves around user-generated content and mixing. The latter wasn't brought up once, but the former was.....a bit. In the context, that YouTube has made some waves, but its not where these guys are really focused or what they care about. Why? MONEY of course.

Papanek was great - wished I had time to grab him one-on-one after the talk....he said, "I just want to see the advertisers get it right......if they don't sort it out and find out what models are going to work for online video, there won't be any profit."

No profit gang, no sustainable industry.

So, what are these players seeing out there?

Jennifer from Google separated it out between paid content and free streaming content. They're seeing video content in three main areas....

--short form user submitted comedy
--educational content, such as archives
--user submitted testimonials, some of which could pass for a vendor advertisement

Her point about the latter: because there is no money exchanging hangs (yet), people are trusting these testimonials because they think the pitch is genuine - what's in it for them? There's definitely a purity about what's happening now that precedes monetization.

Says Rob Bennett of MSN, "We want to make our ads as non-intrusive as possible....the content cannot be overly monetized. We only put one ad for every 3-4 clips, which we think is pretty good."

Hmmmmm. TiVo for online video please? (yet I still don't own one because no one has convinced me why I NEED it).

Frank Rose asks whether online video will change TV the way that TV changed radio? Different medium. It's about sitting back and watching in the comfort of a big plush chair on a big screen versus information that you want immediately, like news in real time or sports scores.

There's also the issue of generation. The 15-25 year old generation is quite happy to be simultaneously IMing, watching a digital clip and do homework all at the same time.

They also pointed to the trend towards using a laptop while watching TV in your living room. UGGGGH. That was me a week ago and I have to admit, it can be addictive. (and I'm not 15 or 25).

Americans are all about the now, the immediacy of everything and its getting worse. Did I mention during the email event I went to last week that 80% of the row in front of me were looking down at their mobile devices during the panel. Was it that boring or do Americans now think they need information faster than they've ever needed it before.

Now for my questions:

If a date pulls out a blackberry in the middle of romantic dinner, how should I handle that? Accept it like everyone else does?

If kids are encouraged to use these devices and have no concept of protocols around them, what will happen to their social skills? Will it become habit to constantly look down at their miniature screens every few minutes for fear they're missing something, anything? Now its email and photos, but in a year, it will be video and then do we have any hope in having them fall in love with the written word or the value of REAL eye contact? (something I rarely see anymore btw).

And what about video in the mobile world? Targeted to each generation? It will clearly be different and advertisers will have to figure it out here too.

Enuf wandering. Back to the panel.

All relevant though, don't you think? If not, think again.

In some ways, yes, its taking storytelling to the next level. But let's not forget about the art of storytelling.

P4230004

Some things remain predictable. I could pick out the two New Yorkers on stage in a matter of minutes and MTV's Ben White was by far the best dresser. He wore funky sneakers that blended well with his funky tie. Thanks for adding color to the stage Ben.

On business models, White remarks, "Everyone is crazy about user generated video right now, but I don't think its a model that is going to work across the board. Audio and video are naturals but we have a growing generation of kids who are so sophisticated with this stuff, they'll be pushing us to deliver more. Ultimately the consumer will decide and dictate what they want."

Blake from Sling Media pipes in, "There is a lot of experimentation going on; basically a lot of press releases. We're in the early stages of this evolution. I'm also fascinated with the disruption that is happening right now with the local affiliates, which is a whole new level of disruption."

The panel seems to agree. Jennifer from Google raises the fact that we haven't talked about the impact on social dialogue. Hmmm, that was the direction I was heading. A woman's perspective and perception perhaps?

"What will social dialogue and social commentary be like 1-2 years from now? You may lose sight that video is there.....its expanding the way people verbally communicate in the same way email has expanded written communication."

I'll interject here. While I agree, because of email, I now communicate with more people than I ever have in the past, including to people across America's borders, what can the quality possibly be like as the numbers of access points and people (in and out) continue to expand?

Steve - enter your Attention Trust discussion here please....I can't keep up.

And on aggregation? Yes, it came up but not extensively. Jennifer from Google asks, "What is aggregation really? Is it finding it in one place or is it a means to finding the content. For Google, its a means...." I guess I want both. Damn high maintenance consumers. We want it all, when we want it, where we want it and in our preferred format."

What about the barriers, asks someone from the audience? RIGHTS, RIGHTS, RIGHTS. Could it have been clear enough? Issues over rights are a main issue that will prohibit further distribution. There is also a desire to see a series of successes around the current experimentation.

I think the industry really needs to see those successes right now, including the VCs. What should be monetized, what should be sponsored, ad supported and what should be given away for free?

See video clips in next post.

April 24, 2006 in Events, On Technology, On Video, San Francisco | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack

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