My Fallen Griffin Case (7/11/08 – 3/6/2010)

March 8, 2010

At the conclusion of this year’s Podcamp Nashville, a tragic accident occurred. The Griffin protective shield that covered my iPhone cracked as a result of me clumsily letting the phone slip out of my pocket. When I saw what had happen, it felt like the skin had been ripped from one of my limbs.

After the initial shock, I sought out Griffin’s head of social media Dave Delaney who consoled me with several seconds of heart felt words like “Dude that’s one of the early ones” while sipping tasty Yazoo beer and (probably) holding back tears.

My Griffin Wave case had been with me since the very beginning — a year and 8 months to be more precise. On a daily basis it went to war with a ruthless bitch named gravity where it battled hard surfaces that showed no mercy. Now that it’s fallen, I felt I was ready to give it the proper send off…

Please listen to this beautiful excerpt and hold your own Griffin cases tight. They’re all just 9.81m/sec² plus a floor away from certain destruction.


Best Experiences Of 2009 (Part 1)

December 30, 2009

Let me apologize for doing a “top 10″ post about why 2009 was personally quite amazing. Each experience listed below should have been represented as a short post on my blog at the time it was happening. As it stands, life got in the way and I got behind. I’m also writing this post to satisfy a recent suggestion by Nick Holland to document everything I’ve done — no matter how large or small — into a CV file for the sake of reference. I felt like I could do more (or at least go beyond a regular list of factoids) by ranking 10 most valuable experiences I’ve had in 2009.

10. Seeing Journalism I Funded Get Produced (spot.us)

Spot.us is a non-profit organization that provides a platform for local journalists to pitch stories to the community and be paid a predetermined rate for their efforts through crowd-funding. People in the community will fund the pitches they think are important and when the set rate is reached, the journalist goes out on assignment. [Read more about spot.us...]

Over the past year I helped fund three different articles (1, 2, and 3) that actually got produced and published. You have no idea how satisfying that is to a journalist like myself who started his reporting career at the very end of print media’s era. Although Spot.us is focused on two localities at the moment (SF Bay Area and Los Angeles), the potential for an organization like this to be duplicated across the country is exciting. No longer would I have to be disgusted by the local headlines that regurgitate national news and wonder why they don’t cover more “insert-under-reported-subject-here”. Instead, I could either pitch the idea or fund someone else to make it happen. Incredible.

9. Working on PodCamp Nashville

Let me say that I dove into planning PodCamp Nashville, the “un” conference about interactive technology, with zero knowledge of podcasting. Of course, that isn’t a prerequisite for participating in PodCamp, but I did want to learn the fundamentals of producing a basic web cast.  Initially that was my motivation for getting involved, but I soon discovered that the event was more akin to the penny dishes found on the side of retail store cash registers. If you need a penny, take one. If your change produces pennies, leave a few for the other customers. Replace “pennies” with “knowledge” that’s essentially the jest of PodCamp.

I knew about social media and journalism so I pulled together a speaker session outlining the value of staying connected to local communication channels while news gathering. In return, others shared their knowledge of producing web shows and podcasts.  Overall it was a great experience that I’d describe as two-parts instructional, one-part philosophy. Oh, and it’s free.

8. Guest Hosting Cinegeek’s Web Cast

Considering how often Editor of CineGeek Stephen Lackey has invited me on his web publication’s weekly geek news podcast, it seems like I should have specifically mentioned the CultureSmash show before now. I’ve joined Stephen, along with Con-Trek Co-Host Alan Smith, Niko Qualls and Clovis Chitwood nearly a dozen times as a guest host since they first asked me onto the show this past summer. Every time I’m there I thoroughly enjoy myself and wonder why their listeners tolerate me.

In all seriousness, it’s easy to forget there are other geeks of this caliber when living in the south. It’s not that they don’t exist, but compared to a giant metropolitan city like NYC you run into them less often. So it’s great seeing the CineGeek staffer covering a lot of the same conventions and fan-events that I’m at and then be able to discuss them at length via the podcast.

7. Creating The Journolution Subreddit

I get most of my news by reading online news blogs, but for almost half the decade I’ve relied on a link aggregation site to point me somewhere in the direction I’d like to go. Gradually my attention shifted this year from the social link sharing site digg to the much smaller Condé Nast owned competitor Reddit. There are several reasons for this but one of the largest is due to Reddit’s ability to create custom categories that act as their own individual link sharing aggregators (‘sub’ reddits). I immediately created a subreddit called Journolution to discuss the science and ethics of news. Technological advancement has wrecked havoc on the traditional code of ethics used to deliver the news and as a result there are thousands of Journalists discussing the science of news and then writing about it… reporting about it… all for the purpose of improving the quality of news gathering.

The core problem with writing and discussing the science of news is that there is no unity among its many “news scientists” and as a result, meaningful data cannot be extrapolated to reach greater, more complete conclusions. It’s as if every scientist was trying to nail down a conclusive theory for gravity even though such a theory exists and such theory is sound.

The Journolution subreddit could essential solve the problem described in the paragraph above by getting everyone to look in the same place as they tested their theories. It’s an effortless process of reading a thoughtful article about the state of news (or the News Industry, media trends, etc.),  clicking a button to submit that article’s URL, writing a meaningful headline and allowing the public to vote it up or down (and comment).

As of this post, there are 27 subscribers (Woot!) to the Journolution subreddit. Many of them are pretty active so there’s enough to read week to week.

6. A Full Year Of Convention Coverage

I covered five different conventions in 2009, including both New York and San Diego Comic-Cons and Dragon*Con. Maybe this is sort of given since the bulk of my freelance work has to do with the geek genre, but I have never been happier than the time I spent in giant crowded convention centers covering panels as a journalist. I would have more to say about it if I hadn’t already written extensively about each and every voyage. I will say working these events were the highlight of my entire year.

See Best Experiences of 2009 (Part 2) for 1 – 5…


BarCamp 2009 Picks: Content & Marketing

October 7, 2009

After several slaving hours and sending tweeting (and oh yes, retweets) about BarCamp Nashville 2009, it is almost upon us — Saturday Oct. 17 at the Cadillac Ranch. I am ridiculously excited to see so many great pitches for speaker sessions. However, for anyone who is attending BarCamp for the first time, I did want to recommend a few. Below are my picks for speaker sessions about content and marketing.

Content

TV 2.0 Producing New Media for the XBOX 360Stephen Lackey

2009-04-01_con_trek-150x150Many people are missing out on the innovations that Microsoft & Crew have been brewing with the community they’ve garnered from XBOX Live. My theory for this is simple: in our close-knit crew of new age techies we like to ignore Microsoft on all fronts even if we enjoy playing video games. This is, of course, extremely detrimental — especially so if you ever want to produce your own webisode (short episodic videos available over an internet connection). Why? This is a NEW market place ripe for innovation and with a huge-ass company facilitating to anything that’s generating any sort of buzz. If you want to make it as an entertainment producer, you really owe it to yourself to sit in on Stephen Lackey’s session that will walk you though the process of producing such a XBOX show. And he ought to know, having done nearly an entire season of Con Trek, a series that covers fan conventions across the country (and exclusively produced for XBOX Live) — not to mention producing original content for his geek reviews and news site Cinegeek.

We’re all going to DIE!!!Dave Delaney

daves-eyes-blue_biggerI feel like anything I could say about this session would ultimately cheapen it — much in the same way a 12-year-old boy would ruin the real life experience of seeing his first set of dirty pillows by telling his adolescent friends about it. [Honestly, if your lost with that analogy, disregard it and remember it has nothing to do with MR TECHNOLOGY] No matter how awesome it might be, I’m not going to be able to adequately describe it. With that said you should just visit the BarCamp Session link or go to Dave’s site, davemadethat.

Marketing

Social Media ROI: Take Your Conversation And Shove It (Into A Spreadsheet)Bill Seaver

2009-1008-micro-logoWe’re entering into a new age of marketing — no not the web, that’s old news. By that I mean everyone at least knows that they *need* some sort of web marketing but don’t exactly know how to do it. The same is becoming true for Social Media, which up until now has only cost a person time and energy. Soon the cost will turn into dollar signs and you’re going to need to understand how to calculate the worth of your social media efforts when it comes to your business. Bill Seaver is good at that because he’s the first person I met that started exploring the new realm of social media marketing. Albeit I was very skeptical at first, but Bill has more than proven that he’s willing to seek out the new and different forms of social marketing on the internet. I recommend sitting down for his BarCamp session to anyone who has a business and wants to learn about how to make sense of the social web’s data.

Evolution, not Revolution: Why Optimizing Beats RedesigningKate O’Neill

excuse_meI’m not attending Kate O’Neill’s session at this year’s BarCamp, but I have good reason for that — You do not.

I’m not going to attend because I’ve spoken to Kate about the principles of form and function, optimization over redesigning. I’m going to go ahead and predict that I’d agree with everything she states in her session and at some point in the near future we’ll probably end up discussing this subject because that’s how I roll. With that said, I’ll likely hear this session’s content (or some version of it) in the near future and you won’t. Check out part of the session quoted below…

Redesigning a web site without data and testing is like cooking in the dark. Someone is probably going to end up burned, and it’s likely to be you.

How do you keep the CEO from designing the site him or herself? How do you hold back the committee of people who want home page real estate for their pet projects? And if the answer is through analytics, how do you make good aesthetic decisions while paying attention to data?

More Session picks on the way…


An Evening With Kevin Smith At The Ryman?

August 17, 2009

twitterWriter/director Kevin Smith (Clerks, Dogma) said he’d love to do one of his famous “An Evening With…” Q&A’s in Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium. The venue is perhaps best known as the home of the Grand Ole Opry for more than three decades. It now serves as a popular spot for smaller music shows and comedians.

The fact that it used to be a church located firmly in the bible belt usually makes it an eventual target for a lot of  “R-rated” performers. I love seeing folks like Jon Stewart and even the late great George Carlin play this venue because they can’t help but make reference to the pews and church-like seating arrangement.

Kevin Smith would be eternally quotable in such a setting. I think I speak for all fans when I say he’d be more than welcome in our fair city if not just for the novelty alone.  Check out a screenshot of the actual tweet below…

2009-0817-KS_tweet


GpsAssassin Launch Party – Killing Beers and Neighbors

June 7, 2009

Anyone following the progress of home-grown iPhone game gpsAssassin knows the time and effort spent to get it pushed out into the app store. Perhaps the most grueling portion of this process was waiting for confirmation from apple that it indeed had been approved. They don’t indicate how long it’ll take — so planning a launch party is equally difficult.

2009-0607-beerassassins

So without further ado, I’m happy to announce the “Kill Your Neighbor While You Kill Your Beer” gpsAssassin Launch Party hosted by Nicholas Holland and Jackson Miller of Side Hobby June 16 from 5:30 – 7:30 at Castle Centre{source} [click here for a map].

Bring your iPhone or iPod Touch to celebrate the text-based violence and mayhem that is gpsAssassin. Wearing a costume or steath assassin attire is encouraged as is taking pictures/screenshots for your Flickr account. I have no doubt that there will be some kind of exclusive launch party weapon/item/thing to entice you to pick people off as they casually sip beer. And if you aren’t yet smitten by Apple handhelds, there will be plenty of people at the party available to give you a demo (and by that I mean text-death/humiliation).

As For the Beer Killing…

Like I said in a previous post, the app is currently priced at $4.99, but will likely get cheaper (or free) in the near future. All the money made on the app between now and June 16 will be used to buy a Yazoo Keg for the launch party. So the five duckets you spent to show support for local developers is also beer money.

That my fellow geeks is a truly awesome way to give back to the community.


Anode Shows Off Slick Digital Signage Software

June 7, 2009

2009-0607-AnodefiresignFew things can match the effectiveness of a well placed sign and lots of foot traffic. When you factor in the cost and energy that goes into coordinating other attention grabbing tactics — television commercials, event sponsorship, product placement in films — good signage is kind of still the leader.

So when Chris Lee of Anode first told me the basic concept for FireSign Digital Signage, it immediately made perfect sense. Their digital, interactive, signage takes the best parts of the current technology and combines it with the unyielding effectiveness of foot traffic.

Never was this made more apparent than during 2008 BarCamp Nashville which featured digital signs in front of each presenter room. These signs scrolled twitter messages with BarCamp hashtags. Mind you, this was prior to the twitter-app revolution and at that time, an early, severely limited version of Twitterific was the *best* iPhone Twitter client. So yes, these digital signs were extremely helpful in determining which room had the most interesting discussion going on.

But, the BarCamp demonstration was really the tip of the iceberg in terms of what the FireSign software is capable of doing.

2009-0607-anode2Anode recently launched a site to show off the extent of those capabilities with three unique uses of the FireSign software: an event finder, A digital scrapbook and an interactive time line. Rather than trying to explain them in this post (and probably either over or under simplify things), check out the web site and watch the videos.

[And on a side note, I would really love to see what these guys can come up with for the iPhone. It seems like their natural habitat.]


App Store: gpsAssassin For The iPhone Gets Approval

June 4, 2009

2009-0605-gpsassasin2Although you guys probably heard it from Jackson Miller earlier tonight via Twitter, Apple has approved Side Hobby’s first iPhone application gpsAssassin, a location-based role playing game that lets you kill your neighbors with weapons made of words.

First let me clarify the official spelling of the app so that people can (hopefully) follow suit when (hopefully) spreading the word in the future. Previously I had incorrectly listed it as GPS assassins, which again is completely wrong. You won’t find it in the app store unless you spell it gpsAssassin. I’m also going to go a step further and provide a link to the iTunes download.

As for cost, the app is currently priced at $4.99, however Jackson said “we are still exploring the pricing and it will likely change.”

Sadly I’m going to refrain from speaking about the specifics of the game. This time I’m holding back because Jackson and Nicholas Holland (the other half of Side Hobby) asked me if I’d be interested in helping run a media blitz, which I of course said yes to.

Now that the app is published, what I will say is there are lots of things to do over the next week. I’m so excited my head feels like it may explode [or implode... which ever is more mighty and/or awesome]. They still haven’t nailed down most of the official communication, but I’m pretty sure there will be a beta tester appreciation launch party about a week from now. Also, there are other head exploding ideas I’ve suggested and I hope end up happening. Either way check back for new developments, as I’ll be gathering the discussion on this site as it comes along.

In the meantime, go to the iTunes Store’s gpsAssassin page and inflict some murderous review love if you’ve enjoyed playing the game. If you aren’t the reviewing type, then just marvel at the fishwreck screen shot (or else).