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Marc's Voice
Home LANs + Broadband + Devices

Saturday, July 19, 2003

Yes I used to be a cab driver.  Now I drive a Checker Marathon.   Here's Robert Scoble, Phil Wolff and me.

Had a great time tonight.  Here's (starting top left - going left....) Don Park, Robert Scoble, Scott Mace, (next row) Dave Winer, Phil Wolff, Raines Cohen (Lisa Canter in background.)

Marc Canter is having the same problem with Technorati that I did. [Scott Mace's Radio Weblog]

Hey Scott - problem fixed.  Now we're rocking.  See my blogroll column to the left.  Technorati's got digital identities.  BTW great to see you tonight.

Speaking of the elite, old guard, gave us the dot com era, sold high, and are now complaining that things aren't like they used to be - set - Tony Perkin's Always On conference happened last week.  It's great that they now recognize this 'new era' as what happens when our connections are always on - as I would just HATE IT if they called that broadband!

Anyway Ross Mayfield was there - and a bunch dialed in remotely - or shall I say 'jacked in'.  I wonder if they respect Joi more or less - now that's he's been seen in his underwear?

AO Reflections.

Settling in after some very intense days at the Always On Innovation Summit.  It was a great experience, excellent networking and a different use of Social Software for events.  Socialtext provided an integrated video/chat/wiki conference support system. 

During the first day, wifi was frustratingly spotty, so the bulk of its use was from remote participants.  High quality video streaming allowed people to listen, the BackChat allowed people to interact and the wiki to annotate.  Unfortunately the lack of in-room connectivity led to less wiki collaboration and public blog posting right at the time when it usually engenders wider participation.

But the real dynamic took hold on the second day, wifi enabled, where it became part of the program.  The Remote Posse and the people Blogging Always On really had an impact.  The BackChat was particularly vibrant, with in-room and remote participants (from as far away as Tokyo and the Netherlands) exchanging commentary.  A big font version of the chat program was projected on to the big screen, the feedback loop was complete: 

  • BackChat participants kept the discussion relatively high brow.  They fact checked, posed questions, had side discussions that were pertainent and in general participate without denegrating into vulgarities or
  • Moderators fielded questions from the chat, particularly with the open source panel
  • Panel members interjected requests to respond to things on the chat and in general were kept in check from being to commercial, not revealing bias or ducking questions.
  • One member of a panel noticed that people were paying more attention to the BackChat screen than the panel itself.

The golden moment was at the end of the show, when I had them project JoiTV.  We caught Joi in his underwear and the heckler became the hecklee.  Joi waved, we all waved back.  Some folks told me that was when something clicked with them about how large the room really was.  And many of the remote posse enjoyed a richer participation experience than they have had before.

You have to hand it to Tony for having the vision to run with an untested mix of video with our conference system.  You also have to hand it to him for having the grace to extend blogging passes.  I hope he has set a precedent for other events.

A bit on some of the folks there.   Chris took great photos.  Scott posted beyond the limits of connectivity. Jason had his camera phone (took a nice snapshot of me, Pete & Adina).  Ev wore a blogger shirtDave left shortly to do other things.  Adina kept it real.  Esther is community.   Ramana gets information flow.  Richard gets biology.  Zack was fully on.  Edward is still settling in.  Keith is into real-time people.  Eric, Larry & Sergey still don't have a blog but that's okay.  Dan is our hero.

Chat with Google Founders (photo by Chris Gulker)

And remote posse awards go to Greg, Ed, Kevin & Joi.

[Ross Mayfield's Weblog]

One cool thing that us 'Ross Mayfield' stalkers will notice - is that Ross is now including screen shots and nice photos, with text wrapping around those images.  Next thing you know - Ross will be moblogging.

A second post from Seb Paquet this morning. This time he's talking about something Alf Eaton has done.

Reference linking now within reach of open-access journals.

This innovation allows readers to navigate back and forth smoothly between scholarly articles that cite one another. Interestingly, Hubmed is leading commercial publishers here.

Alf Eaton, who put it together:

BioMed Central links. Now here's a real benefit of publishing your paper in an open-access journal. BioMed Central made the full text of all their published articles available for download as XML files, which means that all the sections are marked up and machine-readable, including the author names, titles, PubMed ID numbers and bibliographies. Running a small Perl script through these files, sending Trackbacks from one article to another, lets HubMed now display the full list of references for each article - in both directions. [...] This is a great resource, previously only partially available through a costly subscription (and gnarly interface) to ISI's Web of Knowledge, and a lead which I hope commercial, paid-access publishers will begin to follow as soon as possible. Update: I should have added... [HubLog]

Open Access News:

This is a break-through development. [...] Until now, reference linking was an "inessential" that seemed too expensive to provide for open-access texts. BMC's willingness to provide free XML files as data, and Alf Eaton's programming skill, have changed this and put reference linking within the reach of open-access journals and archives.

As Alf again shows, brains and know-how can sometimes prove an effectively substitute for money. Great job!

[Seb's Open Research]

Ross 'social software' Mayfield brings up a really good point.....

Bob Marley had a song called Exodus - we used to play during our Passover seder.  It's about the movement of people..... 

Whether it's the diaspora, African slavery or on-line social networks - people move around.  They're not going to stay in one place - if there's no development and constant movement there.

The Mac in the 80's gave us that movement - but that dried up in the 90's.  The browser and the web gave us that movement - in the late 90's.  So the question is: "Will Friendster deliver anything more than just 'meeting people'?"

Making Friendsters in High Places.

Good article by Leander Kahney in Wired News on Social Networking.  And I'm not just saying that because danah and I are in it. 

Friendster has hit viral level of exponental growth which is drawing new interest into the space. 

And as danah points out, people are starting to sell their networks on eBay.  One measure of value to users, where connections are the virtual economy.

What we haven't seen yet, but see in virtual worlds, is exodus.  As users become invested in social ties, if the software doesn't continue to evolve to meet their needs, the colony will seek a new hive.  Perhaps that's because we still see the value of these social networks in ties alone, rather than the flow they support.

[Ross Mayfield's Weblog]
Uploaded photos from 1IMC.

I just scanned and uploaded to TypePad, my photos from the First International Moblogging Conference.

Photos taken with a Hasselblad 503CW with a CFE 80/2.8 lense and a Hasselblad D-flash 40 on Fujicolor New Pro400 negative film. Images were scanned with a Nikon Super Coolscan 8000.

By Joichi Ito jito@neoteny.com. [Joi Ito's Web]

Adriaan 

Scott, Mimi and Pete eat bento

Justin Hall

Adam Greenfield and Molly Wright Steenson

If this was a moblogging conference, then how come all of Joi's photos are from an old fashioned analog camera?  Even if it is a 'kick-ass' system, isn't there some irony here?  To me the Nokia 3650 creates great photos (as opposed to the Danger Hip Top.)  Maybe by the 2nd International moblogging conference  we'll see images this crisp and detailed - coming out of cam phones.

A rap from the man - Dave Sifry.

RSS as Infrastructure.

With the announcement yesterday of the assignment of the RSS 2.0 specification to Harvard University, along with a Creative Commons license and a new 3 person steering committee, RSS 2.0 has become more firmly cemented as an infrastructural element in the web publishing world. 

This is a good thing.  It will help wary organizations to feel more comfortable using a syndication standard with the assurances that it is not going to be changed on a whim or hijacked by someone with a hidden agenda.  RSS 2.0 isn't perfect, and that's one of its best qualities.  It was designed with a "worse is better" mentality, what I like to call POGE - the Principle of Good Enough. 

That means it is simple, easy to understand and to code.  It means that it doesn't have a lot of bells and whistles, and it isn't a format for all things or all purposes.  It has a history, which means it has some bumps and warts, but IMHO, it does a pretty good job of doing what it sets out to do: Be a format for the syndication of published content. 

This is not a knock on other efforts that attempt to achieve other goals.  My perspective is to use the best tool for the job at hand, and it is OK for different people to have different opinions on what that is. Kudos to Dave Winer, the folks at Berkman, and the Advisory Board for taking this positive step.... [Sifry's Alerts]

Let's just hope that either a) RSS 2.0 can get the extensions we need to publish and subscribe other forms of micro-content: reviews, conversations, media and the ultimate micro-content data type PEOPLE or b) (n)Echo/Atom does.

Marc Canter Is A Very Silly Man. This is right before Ben Hammersley's Talk At Etech 2003.... [On Lisa Rein's Radar]

 OK - I admit it.  I have fun with life. 

There was a time in my life when I had the choice of joining the 'country club' set - the slimeball corporate types who exploit workers, suck up to power brokers and in general - prop up the cult of CEOs.  Or not.

Guess which choice I made?

And guess what task I'm finding it increasingly hard to do?  Fund our company.  I wonder why?

'Their' excuse keeps rotating through the usual litany of reasons: "get a business partner", "there's no money in tools", "it's not enterprise".  But you know what?

I heard that all before - in the 80's.  And guess who succeeded?  Yes - I know it's not the 80's anymore.  But we beat Microsoft and Apple back then and nobody has ever lost any money investing in me.  I love it when they spew out the propoganda: "it's about the people".  'Cause last I looked the type of people they install as CEOs are the ones who fuck up, sell out and grab the money and run.

Old fashioned entreprenuers like me - stick with it - till the end.  Or we're kicked out.  Or had our companies stolen from us.  But we're gonna have fun doing it - and help change the world - again.

What scares the VCs most about me - is when I tell them I don't wake up in the morning trying to figure out how to make money.  That's a by-product of the real reason I'm alive.  It's REALLY about the revolutionary power of software - which (IMHO) is the only real means of effective change today.

Seb Paquet is back -and he's one blogger that makes a difference.  From his perch up in Nova Scotia Seb is able to bring us the coolest, cutting edge insights, ideas and fuel to feed the fire of innovation.  Thanks Seb and welcome back!

Publish to the future. Norman Walsh (via Bubba):

I have a possibly odd RSS application: I use RSS to keep track of my schedule. I have an “RSS feed” that shows me my todo items, upcoming calendar events, and some other stuff.

I have a feeling that using RSS for this is either a really clever idea or a really stupid one, but I'm not sure which. Anyway, it's working for me. It means that everytime I peek at my RSS viewer, I see my schedule.

I lean towards the former. This sounds brilliant. I use RemindMe to remember the important events to come. Right now it sends me emails. Wouldn't it be great if it could provide an RSS feed that features the important events of a day, on the day before they happen?

[Seb's Open Research]

This is another clear example of using RSS for something OTHER than blogs.  The fork in the road is clear.  Either the new RSS advisory board will approve and help new uses of RSS (eg. ENT) or not.  If they don't guess what new standard will?


Updated: 9/17/2003; 12:25:07 PM.