Supernova 2005 blogcast
Grok Headline matches for Supernova 2005 blogcast
Supernova 2005
Supernova 2005
06/22/2005 02:43 AM
Supernova 2005 starts today
in San Francisco. I can't wait.
To the extent I blog during the next few days, it will be on the Supernova 2005 Weblog.
And we'll have lots of other great user-generated content on our Community
Connection. If you're not attending Supernova in person, that's a
great way to follow some of the action happening here at the
conference.
Supernova 2005 Website
Supernova 2005 Website
02/05/2005 10:16 PMWe've just launched the new Website for Supernova 2005. Go check it
out! Registration, speaking info, and more details are coming soon.
I'm really excited about bringing together deep technology insights
and amazing people with Wharton's high-level business visibility. I
hope you can join us in San Francisco, June 20-22.
Supernova 2005 bl0g
Supernova 2005 bl0g
03/22/2005 03:33 PMI'm pleased to announce that the Supernova 2005 weblog is now
up and running. You can subscribe to the RSS feed here.
The blog is an integral part of Supernova, which is coming up
June 20-22 in San Francisco. Over the next three months, I'll split my
time posting here and on the conference blog. As Supernova
approaches, we'll be adding additional features and participants to
this blog, which is powered by our friends at SilkRoad. We'll also
unveil additional online community tools that enhance and extend the
physical event.
Frankly, I can't imagine doing a conference these days without a
blog. Yet I still see lots of events, even those focused on emerging
technologies, that want everything to be a hermetically sealed box
around the conference venue. The success of Supernova, along with
other "extended" events like ETech, SXSWi, and PC Forum, should be
pretty convincing.
amazon's early adopter bl0gcast
amazon's early adopter bl0gcast
07/30/2004 03:52 PMit's just sucking posts in from gadget blog
"OUTSIDE THE BELTWAY: SOTU 2004
BLOGCAST"
"OUTSIDE THE BELTWAY: SOTU 2004
BLOGCAST"
01/22/2004 08:51 AMHere comes Supernova
Here comes Supernova
06/22/2004 08:42 PMAs you all are probably well aware of - yet another industry event
(at least OUR industry) schmooze fest is coming up this week.
Kevin Werbach has assembled quite an array of pundits, practioners
and CEOs. The overall theme is decentralization, but some highlights
of this year's
agenda include:
- Syndication Nation - with Dave Sifry, Tim Bray, Scott
Rosenberg and Paul Boutin sounds like a winner. I'd love to hear what
Bray thinks about Technorati's model.
- my old college buddy Robert Poor will be there. Always a treat to see
him. He's the CTO and co-founder of Ember. Robert and I went to
school together - over 28 years ago.
- it'll be great to meet Niklas Zennstrom - I heard he couldn't enter the
country!
- I wonder what Doc's panel on Fighting the Distrbuted Wars
will be like?
- The concluding session on back channel loops with Dan Gillmor, Loic and Liz
Lawley sounds hot - but I gotta also check out Mr. Shawn Hardin (of
AOL Broadband) and see what he thinks he's doing. He's the guy who
decided NOT to hire us - after spending over two years trying to help
out AOL. I guess his success at NBCi gave him reason to ignore
us.
- I like the idea of concluding the conference with a backchannel
rap - as that's how the conference continues 24/7/365. That and an
on-going Wiki and mail list.
- and last but not least the Digital Identity panel
which I'm on should be fun - even though I'd LOVE to be
finding out how they're building 'the Matrix'. I get to find out
about sxip (which I still can't pronounce) and what
people think about FOAF and our FOAFnet efforts.
The whole scene kicks off with a pre-dinner tomorrow night - which has over 110
people signed up. And Joi gets all the credit and he's not even
showing up. Now THAT's what I call marketing.
David Weinberger is also not coming.
Supernova Three
Supernova Three
06/10/2004 12:49 PM Really looking forward to Supernova 2004 on June 24-25 in Santa
Clara. The first Supernova was where we decided to found Socialtext,
so its always dear to my heart. The last one introduced me to one of
my F500...
SuperNova '04
SuperNova '04
05/06/2004 01:38 AMSupernova
2004, June 24-25 in Silicon Valley. I usually dodge conferences,
but for Kevin Werbach and Supernova 2004, I'll make
an exception. In fact, I'll be moderating Kevin's Syndication Nation panel discussion on Thursday
morning. The central question for panelists: Is there more to
syndication than reading 300 blogs at once? [Paul Boutin]
I really hope I can make it to SuperNova.
SuperNova
SuperNova
06/02/2004 12:53 AM
Our Decentralized Future.
I'll be speaking later this month at Kevin Werbach's Supernova
conference in Silicon Valley. Looks like the usual intriguing event.
[Dan
Gillmor's eJournal]
Me too! Should be KEY - I'd recommend everyone to
come!
Sergey at Supernova
Sergey at Supernova
12/12/2002 02:36 AMGoogle co-founder spoke at the Supernova Conference this week. Doc
Searls blogged it live (scroll down to "Sergey Brin"). Some
interesting thoughts....
Techdirt At Supernova
Techdirt At Supernova
06/24/2004 11:40 AMTim Bishop and I are at Supernova for the next two days for Techdirt.
We're not going to be blogging it live (there are plenty of folks
already doing that on the
conference blog or the
"group metablog".) Instead,
we'll probably write up a summary of some of the more interesting
things that we hear at the conference as a kind of wrap up. In the
meantime, I'll still be posting regular stories on Techdirt.
Supernova 2004
Supernova 2004
06/25/2004 03:46 PMle blog officiel sponsoris/parrain .. supernova 2004 weblog .. IT
Conversations .. blogging
supernova.typepad.com
track this
site | 6 links
Critiquing SuperNova
Critiquing SuperNova
06/25/2004 08:30 PMThe peer-to-peer connections enabled by backchannel communications
is the way for conference attendees to get to know each other.
The virtualization of conferences means that we can engage
24/7/365.
Perhaps better speakers, better interaction and less lying would
create better experiences.
Another Super Supernova
Another Super Supernova
06/30/2004 05:48 PMI'm back and catching up after
Supernova,
which was spectacular this year. Other than the flaky WiFi
connection (grrrr...) and some other annoyances, it really went as
well
as I could have hoped. When a couple dozen people are still in
the room, talking, half an hour after the conference wraps up, you
know
you've made an impression.
Thanks to everyone who helped make Supernova 2004 a success. If
you weren't there, check out the
blog for notes and
analysis.
We'll be doing something slightly different next year. All I can
say right now is that will take all that's great about Supernova and
make it even better. Stay tuned for details.
[Supernova05] At Supernova
[Supernova05] At Supernova
06/22/2005 01:50 AMI'm at the Supernova conference from which I'll be doing video
blogging for C-NET and Knowledge@Wharton. C-NET's coverage is here.
The video bloggery is here. [Technorati tag: supernova05]...
Supernova live
Supernova live
06/22/2005 01:50 AMC-Net has put up its page where the Supernova videoblogcasts (and
more) will occur. I fly out there tonight and start vblogging tomorrow
morning... [Technorati tag: supernova2005]...
Blogging Supernova
Blogging Supernova
06/24/2004 09:16 PMSupernova has been a blast so far. Was taking dilligent notes until I
realized that the zen master was here. Here is Heath's transcript of
my panel. So I'm playing in the Eventspace and IRC...see you there....
Supernova Notes
Supernova Notes
06/24/2004 09:14 PMI’m spending the day at the
Supernova 2004 conference;
the main reason being a plenary panel on syndication with Dave Sifry,
Kevin Marks, and Scott Rosenberg. Some notes on the conference, and on
conferences...
FC Now: Schwartz Kicks off Supernova
FC Now: Schwartz Kicks off Supernova
06/22/2005 02:39 AMHere at the Supernova conference in San Francisco, Jonathan Schwartz
is making a case for executive blogging. Schwartz is the president and
COO of Sun Microsystems, and he's also probably the highest-profile
exec in the Fortune 500 to maintain a...
Supernova 2004 video
Supernova 2004 video
06/05/2005 10:58 PMJonathan Marks, who attended Supernova 2004 from the Netherlands
(and will be joining us again this year), put together a
fantastic short video with highlights from last year's conference.
The video gives you a bit of the flavor of the event. And the fact
that Jonathan put this together on his own gives you the flavor of the
kind of people who attend. I like to say, "There is no audience at
Supernova; only participants." This is a perfect example.
Check the video out here: (Quicktime
| Window
s Media)
The unofficial Supernova.org closure FAQ
The unofficial Supernova.org closure FAQ
12/24/2004 12:46 PMLot's of people are now on the search for torrent sites after
several of the most popular and well publicized sites were shutdown.
It is understandable why as the heat had been turned up by the MPAA. I
find it sad that they did not stand up and fight though.
It's tough to stare down the end of a gun barrel that has a 100
lawyers behind it ready to litigate you into financial ruin. I am sure
at some point we will get a site willing to fight and find out the
legal standing of torrent sites.
The FAQ contains a list of alternative sites and information on the
closure. [www.silentdragz.net]
ProNet: Supernova workshops
ProNet: Supernova workshops
06/22/2005 01:55 AMCongrats to Kevin Werbach on organizing yet another successful
Supernova. Having been lucky enough to attend the first two West Coast
editions, it's great to see the gathering getting stronger by the
year... Yesterday I was part of the workshops...
Supernova: Social Spreadsheets
Supernova: Social Spreadsheets
06/28/2004 03:12 AMPhil Windler has a report from
an interesting panel at Supernova....
These are some comments and thoughts from a panel called "The
Network is People." Esther Dyson, Ray Ozzie, Mena Trott, and
Christopher Allen were the panelists.
Spreadsheets were amazing because they sit in the middle, between
calculators and the corporate accounting system. They let people not
just change the numbers, but to change the models and to build new
models. The power of the spreadsheet is the power to persuade people
(some might say "beat them into submission"). Spreadsheets are as much
about group interaction as presentation software is.
Social networks have a problem in that they let you record
relationships, but they don't give you power to control interactions.
They provide too many opportunities for "friend inflation." They don't
accurately reflect people's real social networks. What we need is a
"wiki for transactions." We need a way for users to manage their
workflow in a flexible way--a spreadsheet for social interactions.
Would you rather have ten networks with 700,000 people in them or
700,000 networks with ten people in them? This is an interesting
question. Linked-In is the first. Blogs are the second.
[Phil
Windley]
Esther's idea for a social software spreadsheet are right on. She
wants someone to be able to author their own sequence of events to
'script' their own social software actions. Sort of like roll your
own LinkedIn.
She said this right after folks were attacking the entire premise
of explicit social networking - saying that it was too artificial for
expressing real-life relationships.
But I say that without explcit social networking - we'll never be
abel to deliver Esther's social software spreadsheet.
Supernova pre-conference bl0gs
Supernova pre-conference bl0gs
06/15/2004 11:50 AM Kevin Werbach's Supernova Conference has set up blogs for the panels.
(Disclosure: I am consulting to one of the conference's sponsors.)...
supernova 2004 webl0g
supernova 2004 webl0g
06/22/2004 09:57 PMbe sure to check out the typepad moblog, too, where you can send your
pictures
Stealth Disco attack at Supernova
Stealth Disco attack at Supernova
06/25/2004 03:35 PM
Lois Le Meur (zat crazeee Frenchman) has just
gone up to the stage to photograph James Seng (zat creazee guy from
Singapore) stealth discoing...
The backchannel is happening now that bandwidth is working. Come
on in at IRC Freenode #supernova.
Move coverage of this disruptive event.

Save the date -- Supernova 2004
Save the date -- Supernova 2004
01/07/2004 05:24 PMSupernova 2004, my
conference on the decentralization of software, communications, and
media, will be held
June 24-25
in the San Francisco Bay Area. The first two Supernovas were
incredibly successful, and this one should be the best yet. Stay
tuned for more details.
Headed back to Supernova again next week
Headed back to Supernova again next week
06/18/2004 03:42 AM I had told myself no more geek and/or digerati conferences this year.
Too much money spent (and too little coming in) already. Also, I
sometimes find being at the conferences difficult because, unlike so
many other people there, I don't have anything to sell. I don't have
an idea or product that I am trying to promote. I just like to learn.
In addition, I'm pretty shy -- I've sat next to Esther Dyson, sat
behind John Gilmore, and had lunch sitting next to David Weinberger,
all people I admire tremendously, and barely exchanged a word with
them. However, when the opportunity to do a little work for Mike
Masnick of Techdirt at Supernova 2004 came up, I jumped at the chance.
Reporting is a role I am very comfortable with, and something I enjoy
doing. Plus, Supernova 2002 was the first tech future conference I
ever went to, and it was one of the best. Kevin Werbach has a pretty
good finger on the pulse of technology, and he is very well connected.
In the depths of the tech recession, he brought together a lot of very
smart and interesting people to talk about the future of technology,
and there were some great moments. Certainly a lot of the themes that
were discussed at that first conference have blossomed since -
decentralization, citizen journalism, (lousy, IMHO) social software,
and a world of pervasive connection to the internet (it was the first
conference that I went to besides the Wireless Planet conference that
had Wi-Fi, or 802.11b as we called it back then). Supernova was also
the place where for the first time I got to see in person a lot of the
people whose writing I had been reading for years, which was fun. It
was where, in spite of my shyness, I made friends with two of the
nicest journalists in technology, Mike Masnick and Glenn Fleishman,
and met one of the most prominent journalists, if not the cheeriest,
Dan Gillmor. It looks like this time Kevin has assembled another
interesting group of smart people as speakers, and looking at the
wiki, I imagine that Supernova 2004 will be a reunion of sorts, as
well as an opportunity to see and hear a bunch of new people. I'm
looking forward to it, to seeing some of you again, and to learning
and reporting back on what I...
I guess Meg's not coming to Supernova
I guess Meg's not coming to Supernova
06/21/2004 02:56 AMWord
s that I don't care about*
In Technology
RSS, Atom, Typepad, Movable Type, Blogger, blogs, weblogs, XHTML,
software, Google, feed, any number like "2.0" etc., and computer.
* Right now, with the caveat that maybe in the future I will care
about them again but maybe not.
[Megn
ut]
I was thinking of doing a bunch of "micro-content" dinners
on my roadshow at the end of the summer.
No one would be allowed to talk about status quo bloggy kind of
issues. We'd only allow discussions of FOAF, OpenReviews, OpenEvents,
Openmedia, OpenReputations, OpenListings, PeoplesDNS,
PeopleAggregator, DLA kind of issues.
New kinds of everything, but not blogging.
Supernova Imaged by Hubble Telescope
Supernova Imaged by Hubble Telescope
09/05/2004 10:26 PMSupernova '05: "Perspective: Jonathan
Schwartz"
Supernova '05: "Perspective: Jonathan
Schwartz"
06/24/2005 09:23 PMSince yesterday morning I've been hanging around at Supernova and I've been
taking some fairly intensive notes, but I've not yet had the
opportunity to write any of it up. Over the next hour or so, I hope to
put up some of my reactions from the last day and a half of the
conference. I'm a little unclear as yet whether I'll be posting the
full notes that I've been making for each part of the conference. I
guess we'll see. They're not always of the most enormous value.
For people who don't know, the core idea behind Supernova and the
concept of the conference i decentralisation and the effects of
network. I guess the metaphor is of the aftermath of the exploded
centre, where top-down governance and control gives up its power (by
choice or by force) to the new many-to-many network where power and
agency operates at the edges. The conference takes that fundamental
concept and looks at its application across a whole range of different
subject areas - from social software and personal publishing, search,
telecoms, gaming, business, media as well as around meta-areas like
how individuals deal with this radically different vision of the
world. I think by necessity this creates a kind of weirdly diverse
conference that attracts radically different types of people whose
relationship to each other isn't always easy. So you've got the
business people, the alpha geeks, the legislators, the military, the
policy people and the academics talking about things from very
different angles. Which means that any individual part of the audience
is likely to be frustrated at some points, bored at other points and
insanely fascinated for the rest of the time.
I'm going to start with a brief bit of coverage of a discussion
between Jonathan Schwartz of Sun Microsystems and Kevin Werbach of
Supernova. The two major areas of this discussion were really about
about whether or not Web 2.0 was a reality (the answers to
which were relatively anodyne) and a much more interesting discussion
about future business communication with weblogs.
I kind of take my life in my hands a bit every time I go off on a
discussion about weblogs after six years of writing this site, but
sometimes it really does seem that there genuinely still more that can
still be said around the edges. Here are a few really telling quotes
(probably mistranscribed) from Schwartz that I noted down during his
piece:
I've learned a lot of things. If you think about what a
leader does, you're fundamentally a communicator. You have to be able
to communicate to the marketplace to the people who report to you -
there is no efficient way of doing that than using the network - using
the internet. If you want to be a leader, I can't see you surviving
without a blog. It's like being a leader without having e-mail or a
mobile phone. You still find them very occasionally, but it's moving
away. It's very rare.
Authenticity is absolutely paramount. Getting poeple to
write your blogs is ridiculous. It's like hiring people to read your
e-mail. You might be able to get away with it, but it's kind of
like pushing a rock up a hill...
When I first heard Schwartz talking in these directions, I
genuinely didn't know what I thought about it. In my experience
weblogs inside organisations don't tend to be terribly interesting or
useful and only a limited number of people participate with them. I
was going ready to treat his comments with a similar scepticism
(particularly given some of his earlier comments about authentication
and the future of the web which were pretty banal), but he blew my
suspions out of the water with some of his later comments. When
challenged about whether he was only talking about communicating with
the company internally or doing it in full view of the public, he said
something really interesting.
For a start, he said that in the near future he wanted to start
doing all his communications via his weblog. Then he moved on to
addressing this internal / external dichotomy. He mentioned a
particular case where particularly good employees had their names and
photos put up on an intranet celebrating their achievements. Instead
of this he suggested that it should be done completely in public. He
said that some people had suggested that this might mean that the
staff concerned would just be poached by other companies but he
responded that good people would always be open for poaching. And
here's the interesting bit - he said he had no interest in an
internal weblog, that he wants it to be completely
transparent and that while he was aware that this approach and
celebrating his employees achievements in public might to his
competitors knowing what he was doing, it also meant that their
employees could see it too - and they can then use that to decide
if he's a more attractive leader with better policies and a vetter
vision of the future.
This is a view of the world that I really like - it doesn't limit
your ability to have particular specific projects operating under the
radar, but it's an acceptance that large-scale strategy and
communications about your company as a whole is never secret.
And rather than treating that as a weakness or as a problem, it turns
and faces it directly. It let's people see the way you run your
company and encourages people to question and interrogate it -
creating a virtuous circle of improvement and self-awareness inside
organisations that raises the whole level of the debate. For
everything else you might say about Sun, this is a noble idealistic
and inspiring aspiration. Very cool.
[You can read my very rough notes on this interview as it happened
her
e.]
Guess Who's Coming to Supernova, Part I
Guess Who's Coming to Supernova, Part I
02/10/2004 02:47 AMOne of the best things about doing a conference like Supernova is the
opportunity to assemble some of the most fascinating, insightful
people
I know in one room. It makes me excited just to attend!
The
speakers for this year's
event are looking
particularly good.
He'll be
there. And
her. Oh, and
his dad (aka
this guy). And we're just
getting started....
Supernova early registration deadline
Supernova early registration deadline
05/11/2004 04:32 PM
Supernova 2004 is just six
weeks away. This Friday, May 14, is the deadline to save $300 on
registration, so
sign up
today!
I'm pretty excited about the lineup of
speakers,
including:
- Industry gurus such as Ray Ozzie, Esther Dyson and Clay Shirky.
- The new president (and heir-apparent) at
Sun.
- The Bush administration's top telecom policy
official.
- The elusive head of disruptive VOIP
startup Skype.
- Creators of amazing blogging,
syndication, and
collaboration tools.
- Leading visionaries in fields
like grid computing,
software-defined radio, and social
network analysis.
And frankly, the attendees are just as impressive -- and as important
to the Supernova community -- as the people on stage. Unlike some
conferences, Supernova is highly interactive: during, in between, and
after the official sessions. We use blogs and other social software
tools to create a parallel "virtual event," enhancing the experience
for those present and providing a window in for those who aren't.
OK, gotta get back to work nailing down the final pieces of the
program. Stay tuned for more info here and on the forthcoming
Supernova
2004 blog.
Supernova '05: "Apps. for a Mobile,
Connected World"
Supernova '05: "Apps. for a Mobile,
Connected World"
06/24/2005 09:22 PMHm. So I spent a good forty-five minutes yesterday writing the next
post in my series on Supernova '05, only to lose it catastrophically
when Safari collapsed under the weight of 150 open tabs. So this will
probably be a slightly shorter version of that post. It may also
benefit from having had more digestion time. Who knows.
The first panel of the day was "Applications for a Mobile,
Connected World" and featured Lili Cheng of Microsoft, Caterina Fake of Flickr, Amy Jo Kim of SocialDesigner.net, Mena Trott of Six Apart and Evan Williams of Odeo. The area that these people stake
out between them could probably be summarised as individual-focused
social software, weblogs/personal publishing and amateurised media
distribution. All these subjects are very close to my heart and
many of the people on the panel are my peers and friends. So again, I
should probably throw out a quick warning about perspective and
potential bias from the start.
Looking back on the panel, it basically fell into discussions about
three main areas: (1) The individual's creation of media, what it
means to them and how it can be supported; (2) The effects of taking
that personal creation and embedding it in a wider social context -
what new things become possible; (3) The role of human psychology,
trust and trusted networks in the whole enterprise.
Discussion about individual creation really started with some
comments from Ev - probably doubly appropriate because both his work
with Noah Glass at Odeo and his
previous life at Blogger confront
these issues head on. He started off the session by saying, "at Odeo
we're here to enable lots of the ideas that we saw with blogging and
to take them to a new medium". His starting point was the individual's
participation in media in general and their ability to create and
share media of their own. As an example of how that could be
immediately harnessed, he cited the work that Amazon undertook in enabling
participation and the enormously positive effect it had on their
business.
Between them, Caterina, Amy Jo, Mena and Lili focused more on the
individual's desire to express their identity online and to capture
memories. Caterina pointed towards Friendster as the moment when the
idea of creating a digital presence for yourself suddenly stopped
being strange, alien and geeky. She said, in a comment that I
personally found very resonant, that "When I first started weblogging,
people thought it was very strange".
Amy Jo picked up on this idea of expressing identity, saying that
user-generated content - specifically in her case focused on games -
was an incredibly important form of expression and that it was
appearing at a whole range of new and interesting registers from
overtly publishing in weblogs to the more tacit expression through
playlist sharing on services like iTunes.
Mena really brought memories to the fore. She stated that she
wished she had a record of everything that had happened in the
first twenty-seven yearas of her life like she has since she
first started weblogging. She revealed that she takes a picture of
herself every day as a hook to hang her memories around - saying that
she could see immediately her mood and her background and her
surroundings and very quickly get a sense of what she was feeling at
that precise moment, even years after the fact... Although there was a
bit of scepticism in the backchannel about this concept, Lili Cheng
supported it very rapidly by talking about how important she felt it
was to capture as much information about what you were doing as
possible (presumably connected to her work on Wallop and/or to Microsoft's stuff
around MyLifeBits). Her position was really interesting - saying that
it was very difficult to know which memories you were going to come to
cherish in the future and that having these records gave you a
structure to narrativise around.
Later, in the question and answer session, an audience member
expressed their anxiety that their weblog wouldn't be there in twenty
years time - that it would get lost somehow - and said that they would
find that 'devastating'. Mena answered that with a really interesting
characterisation of SixApart as a company that 'held memories' for
their users. She said they took that responsibility very
seriously.
In terms of the social dimension, the panel focused on two major
areas - the increasing desire to communicate in small groups of
real-life friends and the larger implications / possibilities of being
embedded in space where your actions became part of something larger
and more powerful. Caterina was particularly interesting. She talked
about how one of Flickr's major selling points was the sharing aspect
and that this is what differentiated it from the other
photo-publishing services online. She pointed out that 80% of all
photos on Flickr were public. And she moved on to say that many
technologies developed entirely new possibilities when connected to
social networks. Her prime example here was the folksonomic tagging
approach that Flickr and del.icio.us
have pioneered - and she pointed out that this was generating an
entirely new way of organising and categorising content online. This
wouldn't have been possible with the substrata of the social
networking functionality.
Mena and Lili were the particular evangelists of the power of
communication within small groups rather than to the world at large.
One quote from Mena rang particularly true:
"One of the biggest things that I've been able to see -
this whole idea of inward conversations - smaller audiences really
matter. I believe that this internal-facing weblog is really important
- the kind of conversaiton that you're goign to have with smaller
audiences is different to conversations you have in public. We really
realised this when we bought LiveJournal this year. An
audience of six people really matters to a lot of people.
Lili took this even further by talking about the qualities of the
conversations themselves, pointing towards a concept of 'energy' and
suggesting that this quality was something that she was now able to
move into the rest of Microsoft's work:
"Sometimes you want to find a critical mass in really
small circles. What's most important is whether I'm having a dialogue
with people which feels like it has energy?
At this point, Ev Williams came up with a point to balance this
discussion, talking a bit about his time at Blogger again:
"Of course there are a lot of people out there who
only write for strangers. We used to put everyone's name under
their posts and people used to really protest. They didn't want
people in their every day life seeing stuff they'd written
online.
But probably the biggest focus of the panel, and a recurring theme
of the conference as a whole was the concept of 'trust' and what it
meant. This was a more heavily contested area - related to the idea of
social networks and small groups but understood differently by
different people. Caterina made a particularly nice high-level and
inspiring comment about trust that I enjoyed:
"It's trust that enables us to go out in the world. It's
the thing that makes the internet possible."
A slightly more formally expressed and nuanced position (but
perhaps a less practical one to implement) came from Amy Jo:
"You don't build trust by 'throwing crap up on your
website', even though a lot of the work that people are doing is
foundational in building trust - personal control in who sees what.
Trust is contextual - I trust my husband to be a good man and a good
guy, but I don't trust him to get the right kind of bleach. it's
contextual, it's not global.
Finally - moving on from the concept of trust - one other
interesting comment came from Ev Williams when talking about the
future of podcasting. I'm not completely sure that I agree with it. It
was in response to a question from audience about the future of
podcasting. His response:
"The future of podcasting is not on the pod but on the
phone - and it takes these ideas not only to a new medium but to a
whole new audience".
I've heard this particular sentiment from a lot of people recently,
but as yet it seems to me entirely unproven. As I understand it,
radios on phones have - on the whole - not been an enormous success to
date - whether that's because of implementation or use cases is
unclear to me at the moment. But podcasting to phones also feels like
something whose time is further off, when the handset has been more
substantially abstracted from the concept of voice / data
connectivity. But that's all speculation, and probably a good point to
end this particular batch of notes.
[You can find my full notes from the session here]
Supernova Party in Santa Clara June 23
Supernova Party in Santa Clara June 23
06/19/2004 06:08 AMThis is a pre-dinner/party for Supernova 2004 at the Santa
Clara Westin June 24-25. (But you can come to the party if you're not
attending the conference!) Joi will be in Tokyo, but with us in spirit
-- and perhaps more directly....
Location and Time
Mayuri
2232 El Camino Real
Santa Clara, CA 95050
Tel: (408) 248-9747
Wednesday, June 23
Cocktails at 6:00pm; dinner starting at 7:00pm
See
the wiki for more details and to sign up. I can't
make it, but am trying to sort out a way to be there virtually.
;-)
Supernova Remnant Still Spewing Energy
After All These Years
Supernova Remnant Still Spewing Energy
After All These Years
06/17/2005 03:48 PMSupernova Summary Day 1: Distributed
Concepts Expand Beyond Technology
Supernova Summary Day 1: Distributed
Concepts Expand Beyond Technology
06/25/2004 03:42 AMSo, we
promis
ed a short summary of Supernova, and since there are plenty of
bloggers and sites covering the conference, we tried to pick through
everything and come up with a slightly different take on things.
Certainly, there was a
lot of things being talked about that
get discussed over and over (and over and over) again at every one of
these conferences and which shows up on the same old blogs with the
same old arguments. It would have been nice to cut out some of that
fat, but mixed in with all of this was an idea that not everyone seems
to be picking up on: the power of all of this "decentralization" isn't
just focused on the technology world, but expands well beyond that.
While many of the conversations were focused on technology, it's time
we started looking beyond the nuts and bolts of decentralization and
towards how it will actually impact real lives. Thomas Malone got
that process started with his
keynote talking about how decentralization
makes massive changes to the way humans organize, and how truly
powerful that concept really is. Unfortunately, instead of diving
more into those concepts, many of the discussions went back to the
nuts and bolts (and arguing over what shape the nuts and bolts should
be -- of if we really need nuts and bolts at all). Still, a few
conversations went beyond this issue and focused on more important
aspects of decentralization. The final panel of the day, on "fighting
distributed wars," (which was described by more than a few people as
"depressing") showed how terrorists now understand network theory, and
it's about time those who are fighting terrorists realize that they,
too, can learn from ways that technologists learn how to build
resilient, redundant networks in the fight against terrorism. That,
in many ways, is a powerful lesson of decentralization that looks at
how we can apply technology concepts to the broader world that really
impacts peoples' lives on a daily basis.
Help organize Joi Ito's pre-Supernova
dinner in Silicon Valley
Help organize Joi Ito's pre-Supernova
dinner in Silicon Valley
06/03/2004 01:36 PM'Japanese
Internet star' (according to the Associated Press) Joi Ito can't
be at Supernova in-person this
year, but he'll make his presence felt virtually.
Joi is organizing a pre-conference dinner/party in the Santa Clara
area
on Wednesday, June 23. Joi is one of the most networked people on
the planet, so it's going to be a blast. The dinner will be open
to non-attendees as well as Supernova participants.
To register your interest, or to help plan the dinner, sign up on
Joi's
wiki
page.
Braille Voyager and Supernova Combine to
Make a Winning Package
Braille Voyager and Supernova Combine to
Make a Winning Package
06/03/2004 02:00 AMIn the interest of extending the companies’ longstanding relationship
throughout the European market into the United States, Dolphin
Computer Access Inc., has teamed with Optelec, the North American
division of the Tieman Group, to offer blind and visually impaired
computer users fantastic deals on the Voyager series of Braille
displays. [PRWEB Jun 3, 2004]
Grok Description matches for Supernova 2005 blogcast
GrokA matches for Supernova 2005 blogcast
Supernova 2005 blogcast