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Entries tagged as ‘sxswi’

Thoughts on SXSWi 2010

March 17, 2010 · 6 Comments

Hallway crowds

I’m bad at remembering to write post-event reports. I get home, the exhaustion sets in, there’s work to catch up on, and by the time I get around to it all the interesting things have slipped my mind. So this time I’m forcing myself to get it done, tired or not.

The past breakout success of Twitter and other services at SXSW means that there’s often an anticipation that each year we’ll discover the next big new thing. I saw a bunch of commentary leading up the event trying to guess what that would be. But honestly? I think the current wave of social/mobile technology is in a middle stage of development now, where most of the groundbreaking has happened, the services are scaling out, and the surrounding environment hasn’t changed enough to cause substantially new things to emerge.

Twitter is still the clear winner for keeping in touch with people at this sort of event. I saw DMs used as a proxy for SMS, several friends CCing people to keep them in the loop, and frequent hashtagging for context (most entertaining hashtag activity: coming up with alternate, shorter hashtags for panels because the official ones were long and unwieldy).

Having to check into both Foursquare and Gowalla to find out where my friends are is not particularly efficient, but I’m not sure I want that kind of efficiency in a non-SXSW context.

I still like the gameplay in Foursquare best, of the location-tracking apps I’ve used in the last year. (But Gowalla won the party competition, with Diplo performing.)

There were a few new event-sharing sorts of things getting attention this year. I didn’t end up using Plancast at all in Austin, but I’d like to see how it could be used with Calagator for Portland events. Sitby.us had (by far) the best mobile schedule-browsing interface of the options I tried, but checking into a session room never led to a friend coming to find me and grab a seat in the same row. Again, I’m not sure there’s much new happening with these services, just different implementations trying out combinations of features, smoothing out the interface, finding out which parts are sticky enough to keep people coming back.

All this isn’t to say I didn’t see anything fun or interesting. The panel I was most looking forward to, on post-digital design, did not disappoint. I liked the session on recommendation engines (featuring wacky correlations from Hunch), and seeing crazy hackerspace projects, and Clay Shirky prodding people to think about why we share content, and what that means for those who create it.

I also had some fun music experiences, talked to people I haven’t seen in a while, met new people, and worked on ideas for a couple of new projects (keywords: party bus and “the fine line between creepy and fun”).

Oh yeah, and I took a few pictures. I’ll probably have more to say about that too.

Categories: events · travel · weekly report
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Heading to SXSW

March 11, 2010 · 1 Comment

Tomorrow morning I’ll be getting up stupidly early to catch a flight to Austin for SXSW Interactive. This is my second year attending. I have a few things bookmarked to attend, but as danah boyd commented, the best plan for an event like this is no plan. Show up and see what happens.

Because I like to Be Prepared, I will be showing up with two Polaroid cameras, chic sunglasses, and the all-essential pocket computer iPhone loaded with both Foursquare and Gowalla (to stalk my friends as efficiently as possible).

Ready to go

I hope I have enough film.

Categories: travel
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Travel: Ruby and Denver

March 12, 2009 · 1 Comment

Backstage Coffee

I’m in the middle of a 2-part trip right now. I’ve been in Denver since Sunday to attend the Pragmatic Studios Advanced Ruby workshop. After filling my brain with continuations, object models, and metaprogramming for three days, I have an open (well, work from hotel and coffeeshop) day here, then tomorrow I fly to Austin for SXSWi.

Yesterday was a good ego day. Dawn Foster did an interview with me about community event organizing for Web Worker Daily. Lizzy Caston gave a shout-out to my food cart map on her Portland Food Cart blog. And I think I actually understand how to use continuations.

It was a good day for Open Source Bridge, too. Slowly we’re getting the word out about what we’re doing. If you want to be part of the conference, don’t wait. Especially since we’re a first-time conference, we need your registration/sponsorship/proposal/volunteer support now so we can plan appropriately for June.

The other fabulous news yesterday is that the Portland City Council approved the MLS soccer plan. As a Timbers fan, I’m thrilled. I think moving up to the MLS level will be great for Portland in many ways (bringing attention, tourism, and income). I am crossing my fingers that all the details pan out.

Another bit of serendipity yesterday was finding out that Ignite Denver was happening, just a few blocks from my hotel. I got to meet a bunch of friendly Denverites, and talk to Chris Messina (who was there to speak about activity streams) and Luke Sontag (also visiting from Portland) about open web projects.

So, busy week. It’s only going to get busier. But I am excited to be attending SXSW this year. It should be a great time.

Categories: technology · travel
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