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Tuesday, 2 May 2006
Another Great Video- Fed Chief Parody
Now Playing: The Police - Parody Video on Fed Chair Ben Bernanke
Topic: Web 2.0
Go read everything that you know about user-generated video exploding online, including the section in the new issue of WIRED, and when when you strat thinking that it's all a bunch of garbage, watch the video below:


Posted by cph19 at 2:22 AM EDT
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Media and Marketing
Now Playing: Rob Dickinson - My Name is Love
Topic: Web 2.0
Man I get really excited about this stuff, so much so that here I am posting at 12:55am (now 1:41am EST- damn PC) in the morning, screaming at my crappy quasi-broadband EDVO connection over my smartphone. Or maybe it's my almost 4-year old Dell Notebook ready to crap the bed as my Uncle Ed would say. Regardless, here's why the future is bright for media and technology and everything in-between; a quick hodge-podge of good finds from the last couple of days.

1) Forwarded this to Zeldman and BoingBoing, let's see if we can spread the web design/CSS geekiness joy of this love song about web standards.

2) Reddit linked to Advertising Age's article on How to Be a Master of the Digital Domain. I don't read the magazine but my colleagues do at the MarComm/Ad Roundtable so I gave it a glance. Lucky me, though the article itself wasn't too eye opening, it did mention my oft-referenced blogger guru Fred Wilson and even a small photo too. Here's Fred's take on the Magazine Publishers of America's second "Magazine 24/7" conference in New York.

3) Discovering the debut of the Marketing Voices Podcast from Podtech.net, with an interview with Steve King, Senior Advisor at the Institute for the Future.

[I had heard somewhere through the grapevine that in addition to Adam Curry's Podshow venture receiving a bunch of VC money, John Furrier of Podtech had also received a bunch of money as well.

I've enjoyed most of John's podcasts, found a few quite thought provoking and few quite dreadful (probably the interviewee more than anything), and have listened on and off since he first started. He has a distinct style of interviewing that often involves acronym-ridden summaries like "so what really you're saying is XXX is like XXX..." But generally, John knew what was going on and I highly enjoyed the caliber of his guests, including the VCs, and even the last question, making a five-year forecast into the future, slowly grew on me. Just glancing at the new site, it does look like they've received some money. The old website wasn't bad but this new one has the look and feel of professional media company. That's a compliment.]

Jennifer Jones' interview with Steve King was good, echoing a lot of the sentiments that I took away from Scoble's book. It's late so I'll post tomorrow comparing notes from Scoble and this interview, a few common themes arose as I listened to the podcast. And I hope Jennifer or someone at Podtech reads this or my comment on their site (nevermind, my cookie handling is giving the Wordpress login heart palipatios, I'll comment later) because, though I understand the need to reduce comment spam, having to register & log in to comment was a small but slightly annoying chore.

4) Upcoming D.C. shows:
  • This Sat. night Phoenix (music overview & samples here) is playing 9:30 Club, $15 tickets. They had a song playing during the karaoke scene in Lost in Translation.
  • Eric Hilton of Thievery Corporation is playing May 13th at 18th Street Lounge (ESL) and it's going to be a killer show. Music overview & samples here, quick blurb on the show below:
    "For those of you in Washington, DC, Eric Hilton will again man the
    decks at the Eighteenth Street Lounge on Saturday May 13th for what is
    sure to be a memorable night. Expect to go on a musical journey with
    forays into the finest dub, Brazilian, reggae, and other outernational
    sounds"
  • "Third Annual Testicle Festival, brought to you by the good people of the state of Montana" is this Saturday night in Arlington. Thanks to DCist for the juicy details.

    Oh yes, a great two weeks it's going to be.

    Currently Playing: Rob Dickinson - My Name is Love

    Posted by cph19 at 1:30 AM EDT
    Updated: Tuesday, 2 May 2006 1:56 AM EDT
  • America's Backbone Shows its Spine
    Now Playing: Marketing Voices Debut Podcast- Podtech.net
    Topic: Personal or Reflective
    I don't often watch the national news at night but I hit the gym for the first time since mid-Feb. and was amazed at the images from the May 1st economic strike. I don't want to delve into the what we call them, though I agree illegal immigrants is loaded term, but America's backbone, immigrants who work extremely hard everyday to keep this country running, showed the rest of America that they are a powerful force.

    If the rallies of a couple weeks ago weren't enough, today was a powerful message to all those who think non-citizen immigrants are a silent majority. I think Brian Williams or a fellow reporter mentioned perhaps half a million in L.A. or NYC or Chicago (can't remember exactly which one), truly amazing. Just to mobilize that many people is a tremendous feat in and of itself. Although the 7pm national news didn't yet have a figure for the economic impact of today's marches, that number is coming and I'd guess it will be substantial.


    (Thanks to Same Felder and Flickr for the photo)



    To update yesterday's post about Colbert's ballsy move at the Corespondent's's Dinner here in D.C. last Saturday night, Boing Boing now has the story and yes, now's there's a torrent link. That's the tell-tale sign of any potential video going big on the internet: if it only has a WMV or QuickTime link, then it's not going tot takeoff but oncer's's there's a torrent file, that a sign of credibility that there's good content and good buzz surrounding the video. Torrents, not YouTube or OurMedia (at least for now), are the best indicators for viral success.

    Posted by cph19 at 12:49 AM EDT
    Updated: Tuesday, 2 May 2006 12:53 AM EDT
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    Sunday, 30 April 2006
    MySpace Killer: Mp3 Sharing
    Now Playing: White House Correspondents video w/ Colbert
    Topic: Web 2.0
    I've been on a small MySpace bent the last couple of days after finally getting to this design tutorial from Mike Davidson on making well-designed MySpace pages. I've hated their crude layout and design tools so I was relieved (and impressed with Mike's clean design) that someone had found a way to realyl get under the design hood of MySpace.

    But getting back onto the site kept reminding how popular the MySpace platform has become on the internet. It's traffic is approaching Google's page views per day and they've gotten so much press coverage these days that everyone seems to know about MySpace. Of course, that means that everyone is talking about the ultimate MySpace killer, whether is be Facebook or some other social networking site.

    Remember, it's the type of users and now the network size that has made MySpace so popular and the site started originally as a way to share music. With that in mind and padding this article on downloading the streamed version of any posted mp3, there's the seed of a real MySpace killer.

    No, it's not another social networking site but it's a way that brings down MySpace under it's own popularity and based on it's original music roots. Can we create a porgram that automates the XML trick described in the article? A small, simple yet elegant app that could take a MySpace address where streaming mps are located and automatically list the mp3s and download the files as well. This isn't revolutionary, but think about what it would do to MySpace, an app that would spread like wildfire around the community and really leverage the network for music sharing.

    Granted, there are lots of issues around this, not least among them that MySpace could change the way it loads the streaming mp3s so that the XML trick wouldn't work anymore, but an app like this would make huge ripples. Someone out there, can we do this?


    Posted by cph19 at 10:50 PM EDT
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    Is Colbert's Performance the Next Big Viral Hit?
    Now Playing: WETA 90.9 FM
    I just read about Stephen Colbert's performance last night at The White House Correspondents' Association Dinner.

    It sounds like it was an amazing performance and though it doesn't look like it's quite taken off yet (b/c I don't see any torrents posted yet), I'm predicting that this video is going to spread like wildfire and even surpass the popularity/downloads of the Jon Stewart on Crossfire episode. The Jon Stewart video showed the power of viral online videos because more people watched the video after the fact that even watched the original Crossfire episode.

    Let's see what happens with this one. As of 4/30/06 @ 9:50pm EST, Technorati is showing 525 hits for "Colbert Correspondents". Let's see what happens when the story and video hit the MSM on Monday and check in on the Technorati hits in a week.

    Technorati Chart


    Currently Listening: WETA 90.9 FM

    Posted by cph19 at 9:48 PM EDT
    Updated: Tuesday, 2 May 2006 12:18 AM EDT
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    Thursday, 27 April 2006
    PBR + Music + NPR
    Now Playing: KCRW streaming via iTunes
    Topic: Personal or Reflective
    Three good things in life all wrapped up together: PBR + Music + NPR




    After enjoying a good brew and good music, go watch Dave Winer's interviews on Rocketboom (especially his take on the future of advertising) and follow it by reading the latest issue of WIRED for the article on online video.

    Finally, take your new insights and call me in the morning, you owe me one.

    Posted by cph19 at 12:11 AM EDT
    Updated: Thursday, 27 April 2006 12:21 AM EDT
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    Wednesday, 26 April 2006
    One of My Most Famous (Infamous) Stories...
    Now Playing: Wilco - Jesus, Etc.
    ...but you'll have to ask me in person for the details. Thanks to JK for joining me on the original trip and to him and Trevor for our recent ski trip, it was a lot of fun.

    famous_wc




    Posted by cph19 at 12:10 AM EDT
    Updated: Wednesday, 26 April 2006 12:16 AM EDT
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    Monday, 24 April 2006
    Survey on New Media
    Now Playing: Economist Podcast - Survey of New Media w/ Chris Anderson
    Topic: Web 2.0
    I'm spreading the word as I'm sure that many others as well, about The Economist's recent issue that includes a survey on New Media. Great thoughts and conversations, including a podcast w/ Chris Anderson of WIRED and one with Dave Sifry of Technorati.

    Highlights from the Chris Anderson (aka Mr. Long Tail guy) interview:

    1) There will still be the superstar performers/artists, but the gap between their sales and the average folk will diminish
    2) Rather than people coming together over mainstream content that was pushed because of broadcasting scarcity (media monopoly of the airwaves or means of distribution), people will come together based on the stronger bonds of actually shared interest in content (because we will all be content creators, in the very basic sense since our playlists will be tracked and shared with the network). Imagine that, coming together over actual shared interest rather than over tenuous links of geography/location.
    3) New Media companies (and if Old Media companies can make the transition) will have to unbundle content into microchuncks, one-to-one broadcasting, but in a smart, rebundled manner (sounds like what Umair pointed out was missing from the recent Disney deal to offer some limited content online for free).
    4) Your collective memory and learning will now be accessible and probably value to yourself and others (exactly what I was thinking about a year ago).

    Especially with theme #4, check out the David Sifry podcast, which discusses this idea of your collective learning/ah-hah moment engine. I'm reading The Virtual Handshake by David Teten and Scott Allen on my smartphone and here's Cory's Doctorow's perfect quote on this concept:

    "Author Cory Doctorow calls his blog his 'outboard brain:' the place where he archives information that he needs. Your files, and better yet your blog, are a powerful way to organize your own accumulated learning." (pg. 180 of the PDF)

    Fred, Umair, or Jeff, any thoughts on this, I assume you guys will read the survey and maybe listen to the audio interviews.

    Posted by cph19 at 12:31 AM EDT
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    Sunday, 23 April 2006
    NY Times Redesign and Mobile Browsing
    Now Playing: David Gray - Babylon
    Topic: Web 2.0
    It's old news now that the NY Times redesigned their website and I do compliment them for the increased XHTML/CSS design; it's clean, simple, and seems fast-loading. It's nice to see a top-tier web destination redesign with these standards and style. I can barley remember what it looked like before their last redesign (check out the Wayback Machine to see previous designs).

    What's disappointing is no longer being able to view the site from my smartphone, which I could do before relatively easily before the redesign. Yes, the pages were a little awkward with the graphics and ads, causing lots of scrolling or choosing the printer-friendly versions to get full screen-width flow of text, I was willing to do that for their content.

    Now, as soon as I click on an article from the main page, Internet Explorer immediately crashes and I have to start all over again. So it means no more NY Times during my downtimes during the day. While I'd rather hit NY Times over CNN or Goggle News, I'm having to choose these second-best options for now. Can the NY Times fix this, which I attribute to some CMS or javascript error, so that I can continue reading the NY Times son my mobile device?

    I've been meaning to post since the NY Times redesigned back on April 01 (02?), but I've been busy with work. It wasn't until Fred's Union Square Ventures blog.

    I barely read his original post on web services after seeing a MIT Sloan Management review article on the same subject and immediately posted about the article because it seemed relevant. Well, it was that exact article that did indeed prompt Fred's post. So I apologize: lesson learned-- read the entire post before jumping in to make a comment that's already discussed in the post.

    Currently Listening: David Gray - Babylon

    Posted by cph19 at 11:41 PM EDT
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    Wednesday, 12 April 2006
    Me and You and Everyone We Know
    Now Playing: Engadget Podcast 04/04/06
    Topic: Personal or Reflective
    Thanks JK for the recommendation. Delightfully weird, I laughed out loud in my apartment while watching this late at night, I can only imagine what the neighbors thought. Great scenes of awkwardness, not like the awkward make-you-squirm kind of scenes from The Office (BBC version, not the NBC stateside version) but more like how did someone come up with a scene so seemingly strange yet realistic too. So many great moments to list but the scene at the park, on the park bench where the young boy meets his older online flame, funny.


    Posted by cph19 at 12:28 AM EDT
    Updated: Sunday, 16 April 2006 7:13 PM EDT
    Post Comment | View Comments (1) | Permalink
    Tuesday, 11 April 2006
    Back for Now, But My Attention is Scarce
    Now Playing: Coldplay - Talk (Junkie XL remix)
    Topic: Web 2.0
    sunset Thanks to Justin for posting a comment, chiding me on the recent dearth of posts, been busy at work and although a lot of good ideas have stemmed from my most recent reading, I just haven't had the time for even any basic analysis.

    The attention economy, focusing on our increasing scarcity of time as information keeps overhwelming our inboxes and eyeballs on a daily basis. The general idea has come up a lot over the last year or so, spanning the various reading/podcasting that I do to keep on the convergence of technology, the internet, media, and culture.

    Between Fred Wilson, Adam Curry's podcasts (including his recent golden ticket idea), Bubblegeneration (and Umair just responded to the Disney news today as well) and linking concepts from Battelle's Google book and Scoble's blogging book, the legitimacy of the Attention Economy concept is cementing in my mind.

    I don't have the time to write up much on the idea but saw this post on an Eric Schmidt talk that mentions the idea and that finally sparked me to post on the subject. So do yourself a favor and start reading Fred and Umair if you're interested in the future of new media, advertising, and the internet and technology, because these guys (among the many out there) are talking about it a high level. I wish that I could stand on the shoulders of these giants to see what they see so reading their analysis gets me as close as I can for now.

    Now, if only I can subtlety hint to my colleagues, who work at a sister Council, that they should be reading this stuff...

    Currently Listening: Coldplay - Talk (Junkie XL remix)

    Posted by cph19 at 12:17 AM EDT
    Updated: Tuesday, 11 April 2006 12:45 AM EDT
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    Monday, 27 March 2006
    Back from Vacation...Temporarily
    Now Playing: Tapes 'n Tapes - Cowbell
    Topic: Personal or Reflective

    breck_windows


    Back from vacation...until this Thu., then it's off to FL w/ Tyler and Stacie for a long weekend. Tyler promised kite-boarding and that was enough for me. So it was snow and gnar last weekend and it should be sun and water this weekend.

    I have a lot of blogging to catch up on, especially as it relates to new technology/Web2.0/blogging ideas (thanks to Scoble's new book, which I finished during the Breck vacation. Hopefully I'll write and read a whole bunch over this weekend.

    Currently Playing: Tapes 'n Tapes - Cowbell

    Posted by cph19 at 2:07 AM EST
    Updated: Monday, 27 March 2006 2:10 AM EST
    Post Comment | View Comments (2) | Permalink
    Saturday, 18 March 2006
    On Vacation, Shredding in CO
    Now Playing: Coldpaly - Talk (Junkie XL remix)
    Topic: Personal or Reflective

    abasin_06-2001


    Posted by cph19 at 3:30 AM EST
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    Tuesday, 14 March 2006
    Brazilian Girls 03/03/06 Review
    Now Playing: The Brazilian Girls - Don't Stop
    Topic: Music
    white deer (but it's not albino)The doors to 9:30 Club opened at 9:00pm and The Brazilian Girls, scheduled for 11pm were closer to 11:30pm before taking the stage. It was a little empty at 9pm and remained so until closer to 11pm; I'd hoped it would fill up b/c I love their music and wanted to see the place packed. So after a beer and a couple G&Ts, which were quite expensive as DCist pointed out (luckily the bartender was pouring strong), I kept thinking they better put on a damn good show for all this standing around and consuming of $6 drinks. The lights started to change a little and the fans upfront kept looking stage right and then, yes, BZ took the stage. All I can say is unbelievable, they delivered a truly kick ass show that kept you enthralled for the entire set. Sabina, I don’t what she was wearing but you couldn't take your eyes off of her (or the outfit); she kept getting drinks and even taking a few from the crowd.

    Below is my live note-taking (moblogging was working, sorry, I'm not that hardcore) during the show, so excuse the incompleteness:

    Track #1-- was new, not sure what it was
    Track #2-- in French w/ a good beat
    Track #3—Lazy Lover (and Sabina grabs a tequila from a friend offstage, drinks it, and tosses it over her head and keeps going)
    -- The lighting on this song was amazing, white to red
    Track #4-- Sabina grabs the video camera and pans across the entire crowd. Featured an amazing trombone solo that would have made my cousin Will (a professional bass trombone player) really proud. The trombonist was playing at crack speed, literally.
    Track #5-- slowed down song
    Track #6-- not sure, “On China…”
    Track #7-- “Homme Me Gusta”
    Track #8-- “Don’t Stop”—perhaps the highlight of the night, it got everybody so pumped up, awesome
    Track #9-- not sure, had an airy sound
    Track #10-- some new song in French, good beat
    Track #11- the classic, “P*ssy,” which the trombone player killed and the band played for an extended time
    BZ leaves and then…encore…
    Track #12-- new song?
    Track #13-- Dance Till the Morning Sun, played for a long time and Sabina had the crowd join the m on stage

    An amazing show, I can still feel it and my head is still moving from that Friday night, now a full two weeks ago. "Don’t Stop" has become my new walking to work song; there’s no better way to start the day.

    I found two Flickr photos (is that all there is D.C.?) or any blog reviews from the show. The best I could find was this review from their last show at 9:30. Feist had photos and even Jon Stewart back in Roch. had photos, but alas, D.C. isn't representing.

    Posted by cph19 at 12:49 AM EST
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    Friday, 10 March 2006
    Moblogging Flickr
    Now Playing: Corinne Bailey Rae - Like a Star
    Topic: Web 2.0
    1.jpgcherbert's Last.fm Weekly Artists Chart

    Posted by cph19 at 12:32 AM EST
    Updated: Tuesday, 14 March 2006 12:14 AM EST
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    Tuesday, 7 March 2006
    Happy B-Day Benny (a little old, sorry)
    Now Playing: Daily Source Code - #348
    Topic: Personal or Reflective

    ben_bb_mtn
    Happy 24th Benny


    ...and interesting links just for my Dad, particulary the last two (thanks BoingBoing):

    1) In eastern Turkey, where one family's children, due to a genetic abnormality, walk on all fours.

    2) How to make a railroad bike.

    3) Boiling Water Thrown Into Freezing Air (this video shows what happens).

    My quick review of The Brazilian Girls show at 9:30 Club last Fri. night is coming, nothing profound but a damn amazing show like that deserves some mention.

    Posted by cph19 at 11:20 PM EST
    Updated: Wednesday, 8 March 2006 11:23 PM EST
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    Wednesday, 1 March 2006
    Protest Un-Smart Net Filters
    Now Playing: Corinne Bailey Rae - Like a Star (again)
    Topic: Web 2.0



    From BoingBoing, net filter company SmartFilter is blocking BB for unfounded, un-"smart" reasons that only prove how net filters, great (like the Great Firewall of China) or small (Net Nanny) will always fail. Here's how to get around internet filter.

    Currently Listening: Corinne Bailey Rae - Like a Star

    ** BONUS mp3 ** In anticipation of The Brazilian Girls (eat your heart out JK) this Fri. night at 9:30 Club, their "Don't Stop" single. Here's what happened last time they came to D.C.

    Posted by cph19 at 12:36 AM EST
    Updated: Wednesday, 1 March 2006 12:41 AM EST
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    Sunday, 26 February 2006
    Great Hometown Story
    Now Playing: Corinne Bailey Rae - Like a Star
    Topic: Personal or Reflective


    Sunday NYT Magazine reading:
    1) Broken Social Scene (who I've talked about a few times, go get their music)
    2) The Freshman (fomer Taliban spokeman starts at Yale)

    Currently Listening: Corinne Bailey Rae - Like a Star (Myspace link)

    Posted by cph19 at 6:53 PM EST
    Updated: Sunday, 26 February 2006 7:01 PM EST
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    Saturday, 25 February 2006
    The Daily Standard Article on Web2.0: It's Worthless!
    Now Playing: The Roots - Star; Public Enemy- He Got Game
    Topic: Web 2.0
    Haven't posted in a while and given that its late right now, I don't want to try analyzing The Daily Standard's article on Web2.0 that Zeldman pointed out. Rest assured, there are some controversial points in there and ranking high among the misconceptions is this choice quote:

    "Meanwhile, digital piracy, enabled by Silicon Valley hardware and justified by Silicon Valley intellectual property communists such as Larry Lessig, is draining revenue from established artists, movie studios, newspapers, record labels, and song writers."

    Exactly, it's either a black or white world on copyright according to the average pundit, politician, or MSM journalist like this article's author, Andrew Keen. If you've ever read any bit of Lessig, then you'd know that he's against illegal music downloading that doens't compensate creators. Questioning the world's current copyright balance is much different than being called an "intellectual property communist." It's an unimaginative and pathetic label that Lessig has heard a million times before from less vigirous MSM journalists. Congrats Mr. Keen for jumping on the communist copyright bandwagon.

    Posted by cph19 at 2:33 AM EST
    Updated: Sunday, 26 February 2006 7:02 PM EST
    Post Comment | Permalink
    Saturday, 11 February 2006
    More Tomkat
    Now Playing: Live 360 on NPR



    More TomKat t-shirts are finally here


    Posted by cph19 at 4:35 PM EST

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