Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Cre8 Day2: People I've Met

I wanted to do a series of interviews similar to a guy I admire, Studs Terkel (see my recent post about him). I essentially wanted to use the opportunity of the Cre8 conference to talk to people about their jobs, what they like about their work, and what drives them crazy. I had a great time interviewing a variety of people in the digital marketing, desktop publishing and graphic design industries today. The video from these interviews will be available on this blog soon.

Here are a few of the people I met:

Michael Jahn
Graphic Communications industry visionary, surfer, globe-trotting presenter/performer, trickster.



Lesa Snider King
Entrepreneur, presenter, author, radio personality, motorcycle enthusiast, Led Zeppelin fan.



Ken Reeser
Sales representative for one of the coolest products ever, the Wacom Cintiq. Native Floridian. Former Apple deal maker.



James Healy
Inventor, tinkerer, entrepreneur. Founded the handy and necessary service FormRouter. Woulda been a dirt bike rider had it not been for all this computer stuff.



Ed Krug
Consultant, leader, guy who knows the ins and outs of the creative agency business first hand. Optimizer and fixer.



Stay tuned for mini-documentaries about what it's like to work in creative services, digital marketing and content development jobs.

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Cre8 Day 2: Conference Music

Live and unLive music from the conference happenings. More peeks at Fred Gerantabee and band later (below, top).



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Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Cre8 Day1: Have a Magical Day

We shot straight from Seattle to Orlando in under 5 hours. Practically the longest flight you can take from Seattle and still be in the continental US of A.

Lots of folks arriving at the resort all night and partying with Mickey at the pirate-themed open bar social. We met folks from Illinois, New York, Texas and Redmond, WA. They are from companies like Wacom, Microsoft, Adobe, Quark and countless other design agencies.

We are fully in the belly of Disney World now. There is no turning back. There is something perverse about being in a fantasy land for a business trip. For example, the cable for my internet connection was damaged so I called for a new one. Moments later someone arrived at my door, handed me the cable and said, "Thank you sir. Have a magical day."

(The view outside my room at 12:15am EST.)

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Monday, April 28, 2008

Cre8 Conference for Creative Professionals

I'm off to Orlando, Florida for The Cre8 Conference. I'll post from the land of giant mice and plentiful oranges as I find wifi. Also I'll be capturing a lot of video and photos that will appear in the coming weeks on this blog after we sift it and edit it.

See and Hear Creative Leaders
"Come see Michael Eisner, former CEO of the Walt Disney Companies as he leads an all-star cast of creative, marketing, design, and communications professionals speaking at the 2008 Conference. You’ll discover useful information, including trends and tactics that you can take back to help improve the efficiency, creativity, and competitiveness of your organization."

I'll be staying in a fantasy land called the Disney Coronado Springs Resort. I love Seattle, but I need some sun.

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Wednesday, April 23, 2008

They Promised Us Convergence, part 4


The great plodding march toward complete convergence continues. TV and movies are merging with the digital world. This series on my blog tracks many of the companies, creators and video sites that have joined this quest for convergence. Below are links and quotes about many of the sites I didn't cover in parts 1, 2 and 3.

The goal of CastTV is "to index every video on the web (from YouTube to iTunes, and everything in between) and to help users find videos that matter to them."

"Viddler is a fresh, creative web application that lets you upload, enhance, and share digital video quickly and easily inside your web browser. Sharing your story. Making search results relevant. Bringing users together."

"LiveVideo is where you want to be to find original and exclusive content, weekly video contests, and great videos. Essentially, LiveVideo is your ultimate video destination on the web. We are a customizable video streaming community that allows users to watch, upload, search and share videos, allowing you to have a completely interactive video sharing experience!"

Stickam is "driving the next wave of business communications with rich media meetings that liberate users from time and geographical constraints." They provide "Web communication services... designed for the delivery of multimedia Web communications."

Qik lets you "stream live video fast to the world. Right from your phone."

MoveNetworks is calling themselves TV 2.0.

"WorldTV is an entirely new concept in the world of web video. More than 10 years in the planning, it realizes a long term vision to empower anyone, anywhere to become their own media mogul, and to create their own fabulous TV Channel."

Adobe Media Playerlaunched a media player that works great for finding, cataloging and watching your videos.

Also see my recent post about the DIY Video Summit.

Remember that the deadline for the mandatory shift to digital television draws ever closer. See my recent post T-Commerce, Digital TV and the Digitization of Content.

The set top box market continues to take in new players. "VUDU is the revolutionary new movie on-demand service that provides instant access to more than 6,000 movies and TV shows, with hundreds of titles in high-definition. Whether you're in the mood for a top Hollywood new release or an art-house classic, VUDU lets you rent or purchase and starts playing faster than you can grab the popcorn." FOXTEL has a pretty great box. And this month also saw a widly publicised rumor that Blockbuster Video is about to announce a set top box of their own and this rumor appears to be true.

Maven is "the power of internet TV" and was bought by Yahoo for $160M. "Introducing the first and only complete online video advertising solution to dramatically increase video advertising inventory and revenue via new ad formats, an intelligent and dynamic video ad insertion engine, and sophisticated video ad inventory management tools."

Live Universe, the latest venture from MySpace founder Brad Greenspan, bought Revver, in February 2008. LiveVideo.com is another project by Live Universe.

BuddyTV is "original and fresh coverage on TV Shows, TV News, TV Spoilers, Live TV Commentary, TV listings, Forums, and Community."

"MeeVee is the first destination to bring together traditional TV listings and online video from hundreds of sources in one place. Using innovative new technologies, MeeVee has changed the way viewers find TV programming and online video by enabling them to personalize their guides to surface new programming choices based on individual interests."

Beet TV continues to crank out great video coverage of many of these topics.

Mogulus is "giving users the power to create live, original television programming, all done on their own global broadcasting channel."

PermissionTV will give you the tools to monetize your video assets.

ViralVideos displays "the web's most shared viral videos."

YouTorrent, is a meta search engine that finds you bit torrents.

Stay tuned for more in this ongoing series. Check out the previous posts:
They Promised Us Convergence, part 3
They Promised Us Convergence, part 2
They Promised Us Convergence, part 1


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Thursday, April 17, 2008

Wired Science: Free Video for Geeks


"Take the DNA of WIRED Magazine, the first word on how science and technology are changing the world. Add the giant-robot might of PBS. Result: WIRED Science, a new weekly series that brings the magazine’s award-winning journalism, groundbreaking design and irreverent attitude to public television."

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Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Aggregators Pointing to Aggregators: Is Real Content Dead?


The last few years have seen a tremendous rise in aggregators, sites that link to top news and entertainment stories located on other sites. Numerous cries can be heard that true journalism and thoughtful commentary are dead because sites are linking to anything they can find, from blogs to wikis to amateur movies. Does this signal the end of content creation as we know it? Will we end up in a world where links only lead to more links, endlessly in circles, till the end of time?

In the video above Guy Kawasaki talks about his recent aggregation venture, AllTop, with Drue Kataoka of Valley Zen. He is experiencing great success automatically gathering and posting news based on topics such as celebrities, science and politics.

Of course, one of the grand-daddies of this approach is Thomas Marban and his outrageously popular PopURLs site. One page. A bazillion links.

The examples of this phenomenon are extremely numerous: Google News, Topix, Newser, TechMeme, Digg, BuzzFeed, or any of the hundreds of other aggregators.

AdAge has a great recent article about these subjects called It's Web 3.0, and Someone Else's Content Is King (Without Original Reporting, How Long Can the Aggregation Party Last?) They cover the doom and gloom side of the story well, but also point to the encouraging opportunities for aggregator sites and content creators. They also pull some great tidbits from The Pew Center's annual report on American journalism, The State of the News Media 2008. Both definitely worth the read.

I actually think all this is great news for modern digital content creators. As traditional publishing moves toward the digital platform, the market fragments. This separates the creators from the designers from the marketers from the distributors. Content developers are now on their own and this makes the content more valuable. When the giant content factories begin to focus on promotion and delivery, the individual writers and creators can shine. And they can charge top dollar for their product, whose value increases.

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Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Ray Kurzweil: Outrageous Inventor, Entrepreneur, Thinker and Doer



Filmed in 2005 "Prolific inventor and outrageous visionary Ray Kurzweil explains in abundant, grounded detail why -- by the 2020s -- we will have reverse-engineered the human brain, and nanobots will be operating your consciousness. Kurzweil draws on years of research to show the speed at which technology is evolving, and projects forward into an almost unthinkable future to outline the ways we'll use technology to augment our own capabilities, forever blurring the lines between human and machine." From TED.com.

On the list of contemporary creative thinkers I'd like to eat a sandwich with, Kurzweil is near the top. I appreciate and respect a person who can simultaneously dream fantastical notions and also perform practical technical feats. He not only thinks, he does. He thinks about the power of cell phone cameras years before the technology is mature. Then he does a project and works with the American Foundation for the Blind to create a working product that will speak the text of photos taken with a modern cell phone so that blind people can read pasta box labels and street signs and love letters.

Check out Kurzweil Technologies to learn about his numerous successful business ventures. He's been building and selling companies since he was a teenager. He's started music product companies, the FatKat Artificial Intelligence investment tool and educational technology companies.

I've always been curious about his thoughts on the coming technological singularity. This is a point in the (near?) future where technology will be accelerating at such a super fast rate that culture will reach an almost magical point. Our tools and combined intelligence will make almost anything possible, including (near) immortality.

A recent Wired article has a current look at the modern Kurzweil. He is making sure that, when the singularity arrives, he's good and healthy. He rides his bike, he's lost 30 pounds, he takes dozens of vitamins and supplements every day and he's on a strict diet. (Futurist Ray Kurzweil Pulls Out All the Stops (and Pills) to Live to Witness the Singularity)

Wikipedia says, "Raymond Kurzweil (pronounced /kɚzwaɪl/) (born February 12, 1948) is an inventor and futurist. He has been a pioneer in the fields of optical character recognition (OCR), text-to-speech synthesis, speech recognition technology, and electronic keyboard instruments. He is the author of several books on health, artificial intelligence, transhumanism, the technological singularity, and futurism."

See some of his books on Amazon.
Fantastic Voyage: Live Long Enough to Live Forever
The Age of Spiritual Machines
The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology

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Monday, April 14, 2008

The Convergence Culture Consortium

Ever since I was in high school in the 1980s, I've been hearing about the coming convergence of digital media, TV and online networks. I'm not talking about the Harmonic Convergence or the Convergence Goth Festival or even the Italian rock band. I'm talking about the merging of all media into a great blob of ones and zeros.

In 2008 we are closer than ever before. I feel it in the fiber of the web. This blog is dedicated to bringing you insight and commentary on digital culture and converging media. To that end, check out the links below for a great bunch of MIT gurus and their blogs, podcasts and conferences.

"The Convergence Culture Consortium (C3) explores the ways the business landscape is changing in response to the growing integration of content and brands across media platforms and the increasingly prominent roles that consumers are playing in shaping the flow of media. C3 connects researchers and thinkers from MIT's Comparative Media Studies program with companies looking to understand new strategies for doing business in a converging media environment."

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Sunday, April 13, 2008

On The Media Podcast: How to Fix Tech Policy



Check out the recent On The Media interview podcast (above) with Tim Wu, Columbia University law professor and co-author of Who Controls the Internet?: Illusions of a Borderless World.

He's written an article for Slate Magazine about Jump-Starting Our Tech Policy where he outlines his recommendations which include appointing a broadband czar.

Wu is also an advisor to Barack Obama who has a pretty progressive technology policy. The next president needs to devise a cohesive approach toward communications and media which will allow equal access and continued innovation.

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New Amazon Carousel Widget

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Adobe Media Player for Internet TV Content


Adobe is now in competition with iTunes, Windows Media Player and Real Player. Their new Adobe Media Player is a great digital media content player that helps you organize your favorites and find great video and audio.

Adobe has also teamed up with a bunch of participating content producers and suppliers such as CBS, Comedy Central, BlipTV, MTV and Universal.

Adobe has a great history of making universal, cross-platform apps that quickly become the standard. This Media Player has a chance to become the standard tool that allows digital content consumers to aggregate and control the incredible amount of audio and video that is sprouting anew every day on the web. Check out my previous three articles on the convergence of TV and the web.

"Adobe Media Player software provides control and flexibility to view what you want, when you want — whether online or offline. You can queue up and download your favorite Internet TV content, track and download new episodes automatically, and manage your personal video library for viewing at your convenience."

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Friday, April 4, 2008

DIY Video in the Age of Digital Media



Howard Rheingold has been one pixel ahead of most people for decades now. His writings and thoughts about new media, grassroots communications and virtual communities must be digested by any serious student of the digital age. Howard and I worked together at Whole Earth Catalog in the early 90s. He's the guy who came running into the office waving a floppy disc above his head screaming, "You've gotta see this." It was the first Mosaic browser and it blew our minds.

Check out the video above from the 24-7 DIY Video Summit. You'll see an intro by Howard and some video of Henry Jenkins, author of Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide. Thanks to Ulrike Reinhard for the video.

The DIY Video Summit is described below in their own words:

"We are in the early stages of a fundamental transformation in how we create, share and view dynamic visual media. This transformation is enabling a new media ecology that can support widespread amateur video creation, and peer-to-peer and many-to-many distribution to audiences both large and small. Although it is clear that there is tremendous demand for user-generated and bottom-up forms of digital video, it remains unclear how best to support these creative projects, what the implications are for artistic practice and how to build bridges between old and new media."

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Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Everything Is Miscellaneous: The Power of the New Digital Disorder

I hate folders. My files never fit perfectly into a folder structure. Many modern taxonomists are suggesting that we are seeing the demise of folders and the death of buckets. In other words, if all content can be tagged with keywords then why bother sticking it in any particular folder. How often have we all tried to file a document in a particular folder only to realize that it could actually be at home in multiple folders? With tagging, we don’t have to worry about this, just tag a document with a variety of keywords and you’ll be able to find it again one day.

David Weinberger talks about this in a much more eloquent fashion than I do. Check out his new book Everything Is Miscellaneous: The Power of the New Digital Disorder. I especially enjoy his humorous brushing aside of Melvil Dewey, inventor of the stunningly frustrating Dewey Decimal System. Check out the video below where he talks about (among many other things) how Dewey was a man obsessed with the number ten...so much so that he would arrange his travel dates so that he would arrive at his destination only on dates that were divisible by ten.


"Google Tech Talks May 10, 2007 David Weinberger's new book covers the breakdown of the established order of ordering. He explains how methods of categorization designed for physical objects fail when we can instead put things in multiple categories at once, and search them in many ways. This is no dry book on taxonomy, but has the insight and wit you'd expect from the author of The Cluetrain Manifesto, Small Pieces Loosely Joined, and a former writer for Woody Allen."

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Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Digital Media Products Store


I've launched a new Amazon Affiliate store featuring products of interest to digital media enthusiasts. Check out the new Exit Strategy News Store. I've included books, DVDs and software that I've found helpful, informative or just plain fun.

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