Archive for October, 2005

31st Oct 2005

Now That’s Just Wrong

urinal-art-small.jpg

No idea on the original source. Mailed from a friend.

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23rd Oct 2005

Absolute Corruption

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From 2 Political Junkies via Mark.

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18th Oct 2005

BlogOn NYC, Day II

So, my opinion of the BlogOn conference has definitely improved. The networking is great. The mixer last night was fun. The sponsors are helping fund nice meals and facilities.

Got here late today again and missed Dave Weinberger’s 9am keynote, which is a shame, because I’ve heard him present before, and he’s hilarious and really insightful. Hopefully BlogOn will provide video to conference attendees, as I see they’re taping everything. I did catch most of the panel that followed, moderated by my buddy Steve Hall and with another buddy, Joe Jaffe, along with Mark Kingdon, CEO of Organic and David Rubin, brand development director at Unilever.

The quality of the conversation is improving throughout the conference, as the earlier panelists already got the basics out of the way, the later speakers are delving deeper into more interesting stuff.

And, I hate to even admit this, but one of the most interesting presentations of the conference so far was one of the sponsors [NOTE: got that wrong; not a sponsor; see comments below] giving a pitch, Dick Hardt, CEO of SXIP Identity. His presentation style was original and compelling — 500+ slides in 20 minutes, where virtually the entire script of his well-practiced presentation was written out slide by slide, but the delivery was funny, thoughtful and effective. The content was also very interesting — solving the problem of identity online with a distinctly 2.0 approach. A video copy the basic presentation is available here.

Lots of ideas percolating. Gotta get back to the show. More later.

UPDATE
Mike Sigal, conference organizer, confirms that they will have video clips of the presentations on the site in a few days.

Also, Pictures!!

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17th Oct 2005

BlogOn 2005, NYC

So, it’s now 11:45am or so on Monday, and I’ve just sat through the morning’s sessions at BlogOn 2005 here in NYC. So far, I’m underwhelmed. [NOTE: the conference got better as it went; read more below and Day II coverage.]

Attendance is great. The legendary NY night club, the Copacabana, turns out to be a reasonably good venue for a conference (right across from the Javitz Center, ironically). Eyeballing the crowd in the main nightclub auditorium, there have to be 400 or more people here. Lots of business attire and folks in their 30s and 40s, not blogger sterotypes or gristly-bearded old-timers; but that’s not surprising, considering attandance for both days cost around $1,500.

Attendance is so big it’s actually a problem: I was kicked out of a vendor table where I originally set up when I arrived 15 minutes late and found all the designated audience seats taken. Other folks where standing and sitting in the back of the ballroom.

But aside from turnout, the content has been a disappointment for the first day. I got here halfway into Seth Godin’s keynote. Even though he said explicitly near the end it wasn’t a sales pitch, “because I’m not selling anything,” it was pretty much a sales pitch for his new Squidoo thing, which has a revenue model so of course he’s selling. The woman sitting next to me said the same thing, unprompted.

The panel on after Godin, “What You Don’t Hear Can Hurt You: Listening to the Blogosphere,” was no great shakes. It was interesting to hear the perspective of Randall McAdory, manager of “brand intelligence” at DaimlerChrysler, and Jackie Huba of Church of the Customer is always interesting, but no breakthru insights in general.

Then came, guess what, a product pitch. Like, no ambiguity — it was just a conference sponsor, Cymphony, standing up there pitching from the stage. Then, first thing after a break before noon, another product pitch for another sponsor, Shadows.com.

I go to a lot of conferences, and the first rule is “don’t sell from the stage.” I would think bloggers would be the worst audience for that kind of blatant hawking, yet BlogOn apparently isn’t worried about pandering to the worst fears of the commercialization of the blogosphere.

Gotta go now, finally a decent panel line up: Jeff Jarvis, Bill Schreiner and Peter Friedman.

UPDATE:
I had lunch and am happier now. Food was decent for a conference buffet. At least it wasn’t brown bag. Content seems to have gotten somewhat more on track this afternoon. Unfortunately, I missed Steve Wilson, Sr. Dir. of Global Web Communications at McDonald’s. Then came more product pitching from Pheedo. Now I’m watching a good panel moderated by the ever-charming Steve Rubel, a PR guru, Shel Israel, co-author with Robert Scoble of the forthcoming book Naked Conversations, Deborah Schultz, marketing eirector and Six Apart and Vicki Warker VP of product marketing and Sprint and the company’s “only sanctioned blogger.”. Lots of the usual “the market is a conversation” stuff, but the level of conversations to have improved somewhat from this morning. Or maybe it’s just because I’m sated from lunch.

ANOTHER UPDATE:
So, I just chatted for 20 minutes or so with Mike Sigal, CEO of Guidwewire Group, the conference company that hosts BlogOn. The same company also hosts DEMO, the years-old conference for showcasing the coolest new companies on the Internet. In light of that (which I suppose I should have understood already), I at least better understand what they’re trying to do with these sponsored presentations. I’m still not sure the model has been completely successful at BlogOn, where it’s a combination of basic education for those not so exposed to the blogosphere and bloggers, who already know who Pheedo and Feedster are.

Regardless, it’s good networking, lots of folks here interested in making this new medium something real, so I’ll suspend my morning grouchiness and focus on the value of this event.

(I have to say, it does feel weird to attend an event like this as a fully-paid attendee, as I normally am a speaker at industry events like this and therefore don’t spend a lot of time in the sessions. So maybe I’m nitpicking because I’m not used to sitting in the audience all day.)

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13th Oct 2005

Running Faster Than Beauty

I found a scrap of paper in my files a few months ago that has me intrigued. I don’t know when I wrote it down — a few years ago, I believe. It says this:

“You have to run faster than beauty, so it looks like you’re turning your back on it.”
—Picasso

Great, huh? I’m not even sure I totally understand what it means, but it’s brilliant. And it sure sounds like something Picasso would have said. But I can find no verification that he actually did say it. Can anyone out there help corroborate it, so I can add it to my list?

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05th Oct 2005

Random Inspirational Quotes

Shout out to Paul Frankenstein for helping me figure out the javascript to generate my growing list of quasi-inspirational quotes (that sounds so lame) one at a time on a randomized basis. Lots of back and forth to get it right. But hell-yeah is it worth it. Check out the left margin between the two photos (of me with rubber teeth and my little slice of heaven). Then reload the page and prepare to be amazed.

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02nd Oct 2005

Devil Eyes

Sometimes a photo is worth 10,000 words, but they’ll never be written down.

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