Posts Tagged ‘Internet’

Content, like water, flows downhill

Monday, December 7th, 2009

Here’s to post titles.  So obvious!  I’ve gone all tumblr-ish (still proudly wordpress powered) and switched up my site format. In the last two iterations of eleven3 I compartmentalized different types of content. Flickr photos went in one section, delicious links in another, articles in another, etc…

Officially, today, I am done with all of that. For so long, new content added to my blog meant me actually thinking about something compelling, writing it, then having the stones to hit publish. I published roughly three articles in 2009 – that’s terrible, my system is broken.

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SXSW ‘08 – Saturday

Sunday, March 9th, 2008

Just like most mornings, I woke up and checked my Twitter. The night before put us at the Gingerman where we drank a couple of pints of Lonestar and conversed with several geeks – doesn’t get much better. Dustin Diaz, of JavaScript and Google fame, brought his big camera, to which I proceeded to make obvious “your lense makes me feel inadequate” jokes. Yep, that’s me – taking the obvious one-liners and using them for personal gain. It may have garnered a chuckle, I’m not sure.

The Hampton Inn

Jeff and I got back to our room and I use the words “passed out” here, although it was somewhere between passing out and going to bed – do you know the difference? Anyhow, the alarm came quickly and we got up, showered, and headed down to the complimentary continental breakfast. We’re staying at the Hampton – shitty wi-fi, fantastic continental, take your pick. One more good thing about the Hampton is it attracts a lot of the industry “rockstars.” Shit, Jeff and I were there, and we’re pretty important. I jest, but the highly talented Shaun Inman was there and I did get to pick up the size medium American Apparel Mint T-shirts he brought. Thank you Shaun – it was an awkward moment, but it was never dull – my name is George.

After all this we made our way to the conference, what follows are my notes from the different panels/presentations, enjoy. (more…)

WTM Reblog – Building Carefully

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

It’s difficult to tackle any web project and avoid attempting to, “shoot the moon.” Ideas are plentiful and examples even more so. I rep We The Media – that is my sole position. Finding work and finding talent are what I do by day, by night I design, code, and fight crime. I get to wear many hats, which is both burdensome and rewarding. Variety is the spice of life – and a busy life goes speeding by.

Speed is a trait of the entrepreneur, we make things happen quickly, we all think “I can do this or that.” It’s what makes us quit our jobs, it’s what makes us just start things for no reason other than our own thoughts, it’s also, as time goes by, a huge weakness. It’s super tough to rely on anyone else, but it is also absolutely necessary. Often times we think up a strategy and execute without consulting those who have proven valuable. Often times a knee-jerk reaction comes across as a painful execution and an even more painful blunder.

With the WTM website – I could have just designed and built the whole thing. But I know someone who can do it better – and without his help, WTM wouldn’t be where it’s at. It’s been a very slow rewarding process building out wtmworldwide.com piece by piece. We have more that we would like to do – but we are not rushing it. Well, maybe I am pushing it, but have realized a slow marinade is just what the site needs.

Why the entry then? We have carefully launched the We The Blog. WTB, I guess, is an aggregate of all We The Media member blogs. I’m already feeling the pressure because Nick Onken blogs way more than me – I need to keep up! It is just one more channel for us to spread our message of love for the creative souls out there.
We The Blog Screen
Check it out.

Transparency and the Old Guard

Sunday, December 16th, 2007

Wired wrote about it, but even before that it was in our hearts and on our minds. If trade-secrets ruled the day in the 20th century – transparency will rule the day in the 21st. The words competition and secrecy will be exchanged with collaboration and openness. Companies that fail to see this will find it harder and harder to gain the devotion of us, the “e” generation.

The “e” means we are empowered. As consumers, as professionals, as social networkers, as voters, and as evangelists. Believe me, you want us on your side. What we lack in numbers we make up for in determination and knowledge. Leveraging the internet to make real changes is second nature – and it will happen. We can’t be bought or sold by a television network – we really aren’t into TV, it’s too – linear, too “photoshopped,” or too fake. Our real news media has become satirical and our satirical news media has become real, and we recognize that.

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What is MySpace doing?

Wednesday, April 11th, 2007

Sometime last night, MySpace decided to shutout certain types of content from Photobucket. With this whole new web thing, we’ll call it web 2, much of it is predicated upon services building onto services. The mashup! One could even think of MySpace pages as a mashup of YouTube Videos, Photobucket slideshows, and whatever else may be. This is a big part of the reason MySpace has been successful. So what did they do? Pulled the plug on Photobucket.

There are many reasons why this is akin to shooting oneself in the foot. First off, if a user has a couple hundred pictures on Photobucket, they’re not going to suddenly upload all of those to MySpace. What they will do is get irritated with MySpace, and remember it.
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The Threshold of a Good User Experience

Monday, January 22nd, 2007

I belong to a few communities and with all of them there seems to be a fine line between a good or bad user experience. To a certain extent, a system in my opinion, can only stay stable for so long, before a variety of factors kick in and a user no longer is enjoying the service they receive.

What makes a good user experience good? What makes a bad user experience bad? Why is it that websites seem to go in and out like trends. Will people soon be too cool for a MySpace page? Or is MySpace here to stay? All of these are questions we can ask, however the answers to all of these questions becomes null if a user is not enjoying their time on a site.
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Splog, Splam, Splat!

Sunday, December 10th, 2006

Recently two things, out of the ordinary, have been happening. I’m not quite sure why, but they both lead me to the dark corner of the internet that I wish weren’t so. The exploiters, the profit reapers, those who don’t care about the internet and it’s wellfare. Those who exploit others internet experience for their own benefits.

The worst occurences I have heard are from older folks who write the internet off as a bad place. It’s not! I tell them. There are a lot of good things about it, and with any system, there are the good and the bad. Usually they stay unconvinced, but we’re talking about the same people that believe in the FSM.

So what happened?
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community strength

Sunday, October 29th, 2006

Over the last six months or so I have found myself using IRC more and more. For those who do not know, IRC is a place where like minded people can create a channel, login, and talk to each other about the decided topic amongst other things.

On my Mac I am using Colloquy (which I have no ideas how to pronounce). As with most Mac apps, it’s a very pretty application and I am very pleased with it. On a PC I am running IRC through Trillian, my IM client.

What is driving me to writing this post is something I have noticed. It seems the strenth of an idea or product or a community is directly related to the activity in the IRC room. Geeks use IRC, geeks fuel successful communities.

Recently I started dabbling in Wordpress cause I have begun to feel like Movable Type is a sinking ship. Like another content management system I use, CMS Made Simple, the WordPress community in their IRC channel is huge. There is constant activity and questions get answered relatively quickly. The same can be said for the Rails community.
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9Rules Submission

Tuesday, October 24th, 2006

I have been itching to be on the 9rules network since I caught the tail end of their last submission round. When I first started seeing the bug appear I thought it was some exclusive club I couldn’t be a part of. I saw it on all of the really good sites.

When I finally went looking I saw I had to wait for the next submission round. So like any diligent pot of gold seeker, I subscribed to the 9rules blog to see when submissions would start. In the process of checking I ended up reading their blog…a lot.

So here we are about 8 minutes into Round 5 and I am freshly submitted. Yes I am going into a fairly saturated blogging category, yes I only have a few months blogging experience, and yes I don’t post daily. However, I do post what I think, and I hope that counts for something.

Either love me or leave me alone.

Communication and the Web

Friday, July 7th, 2006

I had a very interesting conversation last night with a friend who is an engineer by trade. We were discussing the quality of communication on the web. He kind of fell out of love with the internet over the “dotbomb” when chat, instant messenging, and forums were the de facto forms of communication on the internet.

His underlying point was the quality of communication has degraded with the advent of the internet. He’s a brilliant individual and brought up many valid points. But, being a geek, I really couldn’t agree with him. It would unravel my whole world.

This is a bit of a long windy one, read on if you dare.
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