Gnomedex 2006 Baby

My favorite-conference-for-life is Gnomedex. Hands down, it is the best. Best speakers, best crowd (Lunatic Fringe), best topics, and I got to do some sightseeing in Seattle.

This week Chris and Ponzi opened up the idea of Gnomedex 2006, and floated the idea that there be 2 Gnomedexes. The response was, well, very gnomdexy. Everyone weighed in with suggestions as to where the next event should be held. Some were for the idea of 2 events, and others were against.

The fact that they would ask is the best part. Chris and Ponzi maintain the Gnomedex mailing list, keeping the tribe in touch. The gnomedex.com maintains the links and wiki still, 3 months after the conference. There is even a gnomedex participants blog that I read religiously.

My only regret is missing the first 4 gnomedexes

Seth Godin does it again – The Big Moo by The Group of 33

Today Seth announced his new book, The Big Moo by The Group of 33 on his blog:

Announcing this will be his last traditional book published (check out the remarkable Change This that he and his team launched last year) Seth has put a challenge to the movers and shakers of the blogosphere – get the galley copies (min order of 50 for $2 a pop) to share with your other early adopter/lunatic fringe/thought leader/maven friends – the kind of people who will share the book with their employees, clients, partners, vendors etc.

As usual, a brilliant idea from Seth that puts his faith in the market (he would rather take a chance on us) and at the same time tests his ideas about viral marketing, communication and business. When I was working at K2 Design in the mid 90’s Dave Centner gave every employee of the company Tom Peters In The Pursuit of WOW. At the time I thought it was incredible that a company would make any book required reading (other than Teach Yourself HTML in 21 Days).

Here is an excert from the 1800 CEO Read ordering page:

But how do you create a big moo—an insight so astounding that people can’t help but remark on it, like digital TV recording (TiVo) or overnight shipping (FedEx), or the world’s best vacuum cleaner (Dyson)? Godin worked with thirty-two of the world’s smartest thinkers to answer this critical question. And the team—with the likes of Tom Peters, Malcolm Gladwell, Guy Kawasaki, Mark Cuban, Robyn Waters, Dave Balter, Red Maxwell, and Randall Rothenberg on board— created an incredibly useful book that’s fun to read and perfect for groups to share, discuss, and apply.

I plan on taking up the challenge and ordering the galleys for my friends. I cant wait.

Four Docs from PSFK

http://www.psfk.com/2005/08/four_docs.html

Thanks to PSFK for the following:

Four Docs is launched today as a new opportunity and avenue for anyone to make and upload a four minute documentary. Hosted and run by Channel 4 (in the UK) the website also offers many guides for people planning on making their documentary.

FourDocs represents the democratisation of documentary film-making. Everyone can join in, not just those who are already making films.

This fits in with the citizen media ideas I have rolling thru my head and the really cool stuff Marc Canter and JD Lasica have been sharing on their blogs.

Jimmy Wales of Wikipedia Guest-blogging Lessig.org

http://www.lessig.org/blog/archives/003067.shtml

Jimmy Wales (who founded the wikipedia and my buddy Ace met at TED Global) is guest-blogging

I will be presenting the ten things over the next ten days, but I will let you in on a little secret. I haven’t finished the list. In true collaborative style, I want to invite you to participate in the finalization and formation of the list.

Watch this space.

Online Advertising 2005 – this November

Well, Jason Calcanis (formerly the guy behind Silicon Alley Reporter and now the guy behind Weblogs Inc) has just announced OnlineAdvertising 2005. I went to one of his Wireless Conferences in NYC years ago, and other than Gnomedex, it was easily one of the best that I have attended.

OnlineAdvertising 2005 seems pretty cool:
200+ attendees (nice and intimate like Gnomedex)
Invite only (like TED Global – which Ace says was outstanding this year)
In LA (a city I kinda like which has a bunch of my clients)

Seems pretty cool. Will be interesting if I make the cut.

Cool – AlwaysOn conference archive

There were three conferences I wanted to attend this year – Gnomedex, Reboot and AlwaysOn.

Gnomedex rocked (see my posts in June)
Reboot – missed it, but I am definitely going next year
AlwaysOn – missed it thanks to crushing amounts of new business (I know, a lot of companies wish for problems like that).

Check this out from AlwaysOn – http://www.alwayson-network.com/ao2005/

They have an archived webcast of the event. Now I would prefer it if they offered the whole event as a bittorrent download (once again, reinforcing the use of bt for something other than downloading pirated TV), but the fact that they put it out there is great.

In a similar vein, Doug Kaye from IT Conversations has recently talked about creating a non-profit archive of conference audio… check out the post here.

Apple’s Moves – curiouser and curiouser

PBS | I, Cringely . July 14, 2005 – More Shoes

As usual, Cringely lays out a completely plausible and clear theory on Steve Jobs moves with Apple, RE: Intel and Clickstar.

See, we’re back to Apple. As I have written in previous columns, Apple is working on its own movie download service (HD movies at that!), and I believe that service and ClickStar are one in the same.

Good pricing is not enough reward for Steve Jobs kicking IBM in the corporate groin at the behest of Intel. Let’s guess, then, that not only will ClickStar morph into ITMS, but that Intel’s “digital home entertainment devices” will be ITMS-compliant. No Microsoft, no Real, just H.264, FairPlay, and something behind Door Number Three, where we’ll find yet another shoe.

This third shoe is Apple’s closeout sale on the iPod Photo, which is suddenly and inexplicably $150-off all over town. Get ready for the Video iPod, which will presumably be available from more than just Apple. HP is already on board and these clues suggest Intel is likely there, too.

I am not a MAC fanatic, but Cringely makes it sound so realistic that I almost want it to happen.

Book Review – Darknet by JD Lasica

Darknet : Hollywood’s War Against the Digital Generation
JD Lasica

First heard of this book at Gnomedex2005. While there I watched JD speak on a panel about tomorrow’s media and talk about participatory culture, user generated content and how the smarts are with the audience, not with the people on the stage. He is so passionate about the subject, and was having such a great time talking about the personal media revolution that I picked up a copy of his book that night.

The only problem with this book, like a roller coaster when you are a kid, is that it ended too soon. 267 pages of fun, and interesting people and WTF? moments of corporate and legislative stupidity. JD isn’t pro-piracy. JD isn’t pro-RIAA/MPAA/MS. He lays out an excellent argument for why we need more moderation and common sense and why it is more important that we the people and our legislators have an understanding of historical record behind innovation and copyright and culture.

Lasica tells a cautionary tale about what might happen if we let the regulators (business, MSM, govt agencies) have their way without our say. They want control over their content, and more importantly, their sources of revenue.

He balances that with a strong warning to the big players: there are more pirates than there are lawyers, and they are fighting back against the limitations. Without being silly or sci fi, he takes the reader through a short tour of the darknets, giving the reader a peek into the people and motivation inside.

This book touches on copyright, free culture, software, file sharing, business, Hollywood, professionals and amateurs. Lasica’s writing style is fast and clean and very direct. It is a fun and fast read with a great set of footnotes at the end the user can follow up on.

Get the book here
Check out JD Lasica’s site http://www.darknet.com
Check out OurMedia at http://www.ourmedia.com

Students: Downloading not unethical:- – Business News – Webindia123.com

Students: Downloading not unethical:- – Business News – Webindia123.com

The link above, which is a UPI feed on WEBINDIA123.com shows that the BSA is framing the debate:

Downloading music is a gateway to downloading software, the survey found. Among students who say they would always download music or movies without paying for them, 27 percent said they regularly download software from a peer-to-peer network.

Generation Y has largely grown up using the Internet and the majority of this group is extremely comfortable with technology, said Diane Smiroldo, BSA’s vice president for public affairs. Unfortunately, this survey shows students who engage in these illegal behaviors are likely to continue after college and when they enter the business world.

The genie is out of the bottle. BSA/RIAA/MPAA are trying to plug holes in the dam with various appendages.

I believe artists should get paid for their work, as a matter of principle. There needs to be engagement on both sides, not just framing music downloading a “gateway” to downloading software (like marijuana is a gateway to harder drugs).

Patronizing isnt the answer.

hands off MY ATTENTION

Nick Bradbury: Microsoft, RSS and Attention

Above is a link from Nick Bradbury to a post about gnomedex/Microsoft/RSS and Attention. It is a great post and gives a brief glimpse into the long term power of RSS and the stakes involved.

My takeaway:
A. Gnomdex was great (hell yeah)
B. MS will get the benefit of the doubt on RSS, and an A for effort connecting to the community
C. RSS is critical in powering Attention architectures. What you read, what you subscribe to. Nick uses the Amazon analogy of recommendations WHICH IS PERFERCT.
D. Our attention belongs to us. Not MS, not Google, Not Yahoo!. We should determine who has access to our attention data. We should be able to share it with whoever we want. We should not be locked in to any one person or corporations attention architecture.

What do I think? Attention needs to have a framework that is tangible for the community to understand it. I dig it. Nick Bradbury digs it. We need something we can wrap our hands and heads around. But make no mistake. I OWN MY ATTENTION. I do not want to be locked in to any one viewpoint of how my data is used or shared.

My attention
On my terms
Through devices and architectures of my choice.