Archive - Jul 2010

July 6th

Technologists and Entrepreneurs Meetup at #swct

“How do we use the social web to help developers and entrepreneurs help each other?” That is the question that frames the Technologists and Entrepreneurs Meetup which will be taking place during Social Web Week here in Connecticut.

The meetup will borrow from barcamps in format. We will start off with introductions and suggestions for topics to cover. One thing we’ll do a little differently from other barcamps is the introductions. When developers introduce themselves they will give a very brief overview of their favorite development platform if no one has already spoken about that platform. Currently, we’re looking at people talking about Drupal, Joomla, dotnet, Wordpress, Django, Ruby on Rails, Cold Fusion and Java. If you want to talk briefly about these, or other platforms, please contact me directly. These descriptions should be five minutes or less each.

As entrepreneurs introduce themselves, they will be asked to speak about topics that they hope we can explore during the meetup. Different ideas for topics might be “How do I find good developers in Connecticut?” “Should I use open source or a proprietary platform?” “Which platform should I use?” “How do I use technology to develop community?” “How should I organize my development effort?” Friends are reaching out to various entrepreneur’s networking groups and hopefully additional ideas will be brought in.

Once all the introductions are completed, we will break into different groups to network, find out more about different technology platforms and address various topics that came up during the introductions. To find out more about the meetup, including time and location please check the Technologists and Entrepreneurs Meetup Page on the Social Web Week website. I hope to see lots of people there.

July 5th

What If It’s Not All Just Slogans?

Those of us who grew up in the Pepsi Generation, who were encouraged to reach out and touch someone and who wanted to teach the world to sing, may find it all too easy to be cynical. We may too quickly dismiss words as mere slogans, but what if it’s not all just slogans?

Sunday morning, I sat in Christ Church in Tarrytown, NY. The priest was a friend from my early days in New York City. Many of us were getting together to remember when we all went to Grace Church in Manhattan. As we waited for the service to begin, Kim asked another long time friend of mine what was Grace Church really all about? Why did so many young people flock to it in the 1980s?

Kirk spoke about a Priest there who struggled hard with transforming an aging blue book relic into a community that really believed in its name, Grace.

What if God really does love us that much? What if it isn’t just words that we mouth on Sunday morning, but something that we believed to the very core of our being? What if we really are forgiven for all those things that we did and shouldn’t have done, and for all those things that we should have done that we just never did get around to doing? What if we really could find a way to love our enemies?

After September 11th, it seems to have gotten much harder to love our enemies. As oil continues to spread across the Gulf of Mexico and the heat soars, it seems harder to believe that there is a God that can clean up our messes and still show us love. As talking heads spew their venom on cable news shows, it becomes nearly impossible to imagine that someone could love President Obama, Sen. Reid, Speaker Pelosi, Rush Limbaugh, and Glenn Beck at the same time.

Yet in those wonderful days of Grace, we did believe that God actually did love us, not as some greeting card slogan but in a life changing manner. Friends became priest and missionaries. They took God’s love with them to their daily lives. They talked about Grace Church at the water coolers and people flooded in.

The decades have passed. We have celebrated each other’s weddings and the births of children. We have comforted each other as marriages ended in divorce and as loved ones have lost battles with horrible diseases. We have had successes and failures. Yet through all of this, the questions remains, what if it’s not all just slogans? What if God really does love us that much?

So, we gathered in Tarrytown and saw old friends. We caught up with one another. We talked about needing to stay more in touch with one another. Kate set up a Facebook group for us.

I’ve wondered what happens to Churches on Main Street as youth gather online instead on Main Street. I checked in at Christ Church Tarrytown on Foursquare, but few others have. I’ve wondered what happens when the discussions around the water cooler moves to discussions on Facebook. How do stories of radical grace get told today?

A key interest for me is telling our stories online. I’ve been interested in the history of revivalism in America. The Great Awakenings have led not only to great religious revivals, but also to major political and social changes. Will the twenty first century bring us a Great Digital Awakening? What might that look like? As people start looking for greater authenticity in their online interactions, especially their interaction with commercial brands, and as people start looking for greater transparency, especially from their governments, will this also affect their religious interactions online? And will these interactions further affect people’s interactions with brands and governments online?

Can our words of faith along with other words online be more than just slogans?

July 4th

When in the Course…

Centuries ago, my ancestors fled ‘the old world’ in search of a better life, often in flight of religious persecution. Many settled in the Massachusetts Bay Colony or around New Amsterdam. Some were Huguenots fleeing France, others were Congregationalists. They sought to practice their religion without facing pressures by the government. They suffered many hardships, including one woman who was taken captive during the French Indian wars and later rescued.

Many years later, their colony was torn by political conflict. Was the Government of England still exerting too much influence over their lives? This was not as simple a question as some today like to portray it and the colony was divided. Some of my ancestors fought on the side of the colonists. Others fought on the side of the crown.

Even our Declaration of Independence talks a little of this.

Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.

With this began our long, and mostly successful experiment with democracy. Yet even today there are people that speak of “Second Amendment Remedies”. The Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is the one that talks about the rights and responsibilities of bearing arms. Throughout most of our history, people who talk about using arms to change our government would be arrested for sedition or terrorism. Yet we do have a tolerant Government, a government that our great leaders throughout the ages have spoken about as being “we, the people” and “of by and for the people”.

When some members of our country speak against the government, they need to remember that they are speaking against all of us, against we the people, indeed, against themselves.

Today, I will celebrate our countries independence in traditional ways. I will gather with friends from Church and eat potato salad. Later, I will watch fireworks with immigrants and offspring of immigrants, both recent and ancient. I will demonstrate my patriotism in the wise words of Erma Bombeck:

“You have to love a nation that celebrates its independence every July 4, not with a parade of guns, tanks, and soldiers who file by the White House in a show of strength and muscle, but with family picnics where kids throw Frisbees, the potato salad gets iffy, and the flies die from happiness. You may think you have overeaten, but it is patriotism.”

Happy Independence Day, everyone.

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July 3rd

Understanding Unconferences - #pcct #swct

Podcamp is coming to Connecticut! What’s a podcamp? Well, it’s an unconference and you can look up podcamps and unconferences on Google or Wikipedia.

A better way to understand a podcamp is to experience one, so coming to Podcamp CT may be the best way to understand them, or visiting Podcamp Boston shortly before Podcamp CT would be a good experience.

As a writer, however, I like to explore metaphors and on the podcamp planning list, Joe Cascio provided a great metaphor. Podcamp is like s pot luck conference. Everyone brings something to share. I might add a little bit of Forrest Gump to that and suggest that many people bring boxes of chocolates and you never know what you’ll get inside. I think another useful metaphor is a giant brainstorming session.

People have often wondered how many future Einsteins are languishing undiscovered in some underperforming school. How many great ideas are lost to the world because students aren’t given an opportunity to reach their potential as future Einsteins. Unconferences are a chance for undiscovered great minds to shine forth.

I think Dan Gillmor captures another aspect of this. Dan is a noted journalist who has often commented about his audience knowing more about the subject matter he is writing about than he does. He talks about the importance of journalists listening to their audiences. Unconferences are a great opportunity to listen to the audience.

For me, conferences provide another great example of great minds being untapped. How often have you been to a conference where you sit in the audience listening to four experts on a panel and think, I know more about this topic than they do? Often the experts are chosen not because of their expertise, but because they are well known personalities. I’ve often listened during the last ten minutes of a panel when a real expert gets up to offer fresh ideas in what I call conference jeopardy.

Conference jeopardy is a common game. The panel speaks for forty minutes and it is followed by a ten minute period of question and answers. The real experts who have been sitting in the audience must now find some way of sharing an important insight in the form of a question. They questions often have the greatest insight. Unconferences focus on these questions instead of on the long winded presentations by peoples whose real expertise is being a noted personality.

Unconferences change all of this. At an unconference, everyone is a rockstar. Everyone is expected to share their ideas. What is really great about this is when the brainstorming takes place. Groups are often much more than the sum of all their parts and unconferences are a great example of this. When one person shares a thought it can spawn new unexplored thoughts in others, and these newly emerged thoughts can be the real valuable chocolates from Joe’s pot luck.

A final thought about unconferences for right now: Good unconferences provide an opportunity to pull together some of the best emergent thoughts of the unconference as everyone asks, where do we go from here. Typically, they take the best ideas back into their daily lives and look forward to another pot luck brainstorming session. One podcamp begets another just as the plans for Podcamp CT started forming at Podcamp Western Mass.

The Podcamp CT planning energy also quickly became mashed up with the planning for Social Web Week CT. Social Web Week CT, which seeks “to bring people together in CT to explore how best to use the social web to improve our quality of life”, will include some traditional panels as well as some great events which will be much closer to unconference format. There should be a little bit of something for everyone, and I encourage traditional conference goers to experiment a little bit and try some unconference fare. It will be another great lead up to Podcamp CT. Will you be there?

July 2nd

#FF using @klout

@ckieff @jcnork @edwebb @bensawyer @lastchancect @ctnewsjunkie @sweetbitters @mad1421 @americanforum @jonathanpelto

Klout is an interesting website. They measure people’s influence on Twitter. Recently, I checked my Klout score, and it listed the people above as people that either influence me or that I influence. I found it an interesting list and decided to use it for this week’s Follow Friday blog post.

Seeing @ckieff, @jcnork, and @lastchancect at the top of the list was no surprise to me. They often tweet things I like to retweet. @ckieff and I run into each other a lot at online marketing related events. @jcnork and I are working together on things like GoogleHaven and Social Web Week. @lastchancect posts lots of important messages about dogs needing to find a home which I like to retweet.

@edwebb and @bensawyer came as a bit of a surprise, since I only vaguely recognize their names.

For people that I influence, I was glad to see @ctnewsjunkie and @jonathanpelto. They are friends involved in different aspects of the political scene in Connecticut and I have a lot of respect for what both of them write.

@sweetbitters @mad1421 and @americanforum also came as surprises to me and it is interesting to look at their tweetstreams.

With that, I decided to explore things a little bit further. Who influences the people that influence me? Who is influenced by people that I influence? I did a little cutting and pasting and used GraphViz to create a graphic of this. As a future step, I may try to build something using the Klout API to create even more interesting graphs.



Klout Graph, originally uploaded by Aldon.

Note: This graph is as of data from July 2, 2010. Given the dynamic nature of the data, it is likely to look much different next time it is generated.

Klout Powered