Archive - 2010
March 5th
#ff #gov20ne
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 03/05/2010 - 18:23@deborah909 @shava23 @colinrhinesmith @sarahebourne @corbett3000 @gtremblay
Tomorrow morning, I will head up to Boston to attend #gov20ne, an unconference about using social media tools and Web 2.0 technologies to create a more effective, efficient and collaborative government.
It has been a long time since I put up a Follow Friday post, and I thought this might provide a good reason to do so. The way I do my Follow Friday posts is that I write it as a blog post, with the people I’m following in the first line. This then gets picked up by TwitterFeed and sent to Twitter, and from there to Facebook, FriendFeed and who knows where all else.
This week’s list is of people that have signed up for #gov20ne that I know already or seem particularly interesting.
I’m not sure exactly when I met @deborah909. I believe it was at some gathering of technologists interested in non-profits. She is an interesting person and I always enjoy seeing here.
I think the first time I met @shava23 face to face was at a Media Giraffe Project gathering. However, there is a good chance that we had met previously in Second Life and perhaps other places online. She also ranks high on my list of interesting people that it is fun to run into.
@colinrhinesmith and have been emailing back and forth about community media and citizen journalism. In a recent discussion we tried to figure out if we’ve actually met, and if so, where. I think we may have met at some of the Media Giraffe Project or New England News Forum gatherings. Not only do I look forward to seeing him at #gov20ne, but I am especially interested in what he is arranging for the Alliance for Community Media National Convention in Pittsburgh this July.
I don’t believe I’ve met @sarahebourne. She is the Mass.Gov Chief Technology Strategist for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. I believe she was involved in getting @Massgovernor on Twitter and I started following her through as a result of that. She may also be friends of some of my social media friends from Massachusetts, which may have been how I found out about @Massgovernor being on Twitter in the first place.
@corbett3000 is the CEO of iStrategy Labs. He has been involved with Apps for Democracy and #gov20dc. I don’t believe we’ve met but we may have crossed paths online.
@gtremblay works in the Commonwealth CTO's office. His name is really familiar to me, but I can’t place exactly why. The odds are we are on some mailing lists in common or something like that.
Of course, some of what is really interesting about unconferences is the unexpected encounters. It will be great to see Deborah, Shava and Colin again, as well as hearing what Peter and Glenn have to say. However, some of the most interesting discussions may just well come people who I don’t know yet.
Social Browsing Revisited
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 03/05/2010 - 11:42In October, 2008, I wrote a blog post about various Social Browsing tools. One of the tools I mentioned was Socialbrowse. It was an interesting idea, but didn’t really catch my attention.
Today I received an email about Qwisk, ‘the new Socialbrowse’. It looks pretty much like the old Socialbrowse with a couple interesting new features.
First, it now has groups. I’ve set up the Orient Lodge Readers Community on Qwisk. I would encourage blogging friends from EntreCard, Adgitize, CMF Ads, Blog Explosion and Blog Catalog to join the community and see what we can do with it.
In particular, Qwisk now supports widgets for the communities. Currently, I have the Qwisk widget in the first column a little bit below the Adgitize widget. When people join the community and share links, the five most recent links will show up in the widget here. If you find a post on any of the blogging communities I mentioned that you think others would be interested in, please share it.
Let’s see what we can do with the widget and the community.
March 4th
Juxtaposing Blog Posts and Museum Exhibitions: A Deconstruction of a Family Trip to the Whitney Biennial
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 03/04/2010 - 10:13”Yes, of course, if it’s fine tomorrow.” Said Mrs. Ramsay. “But you’ll have to be up with the lark,” she added.
Miranda is home from college for winter break. Not completely home, she’s staying at her mother’s house, and she has her own life now. She’s studying art and would rather spend time having lunch with gallery owners in New York than dinner with her dad and his family in Connecticut. Of course the best of all worlds might be if she could go museum hopping with Fiona, Kim and I in New York.
Kim had to work, but we decided to take Fiona out of school for the day. She has been longing to see her half-sister and a trip to the Whitney Biennial could be a great educational experience. Unlike Mrs. Ramsay in Virginia Woolf’s ‘To The Lighthouse’, I did not expect Miranda to be up with the lark, and we planned a late morning train.
What a lark! What a plunge! My thoughts shifted to Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway. Mrs. Dalloway said she would buy the flowers herself. I discovered Virginia Woolf in my college days and fell in love with her writing. She captures a world from a viewpoint so different than I had developed growing up on a small farm in Western Massachusetts and that diversity of viewpoints I found so intriguing. Slowly, I grew out of my fascination for the outsiders that Hermann Hesse portrayed to the crazy older men of other great literature. What did Mr. Ramsay struggle with as he tried to get beyond ‘R’? What opium induced visions did Augustus Carmichael see as he shuffled past Mrs. Ramsay, reminding her of the inadequacy of human relationships.
Some one had blundered.
As I thought of these characters, various idealists from Anton Chekhov’s plays came to mind. Marcel Proust joined the fray and the opening line, For a long time I used to go to bed early comes to mind. Fiona went to bed early before the great trip to the museum, and my thoughts mingled together into strange dreamlike sequences as I drifted off that night.
The train ride in was uneventful. Fiona was full of excitement about seeing her big sister. Miranda was full of excitement about seeing the Biennial. I settled into my role of the crazy old uncle. I had thought about titling my blog post something like, “Having a Crazy Uncle for a Dad”. As we talked, I asked Fiona what she thought ‘art’ was. I explained that it sounds like a very simple question, but really, it is very complicated. She admitted it was complicated and started talking about things that are painted. I asked if a painted house, car, or mailbox is art. As we talked, Fiona decided that everything was art and moved on to other topics.
Is this blog post art? How does it compare to the video of people talking about America projected on to the cracked windshield of a 1960s era ambulance? What is the purpose of art? Miranda was less interested in those installations that were making some sort of political statement. If she were older and more cynical, I could hear her deriding anything except art for art’s sake. Yet what is the ‘sake’ of ‘art’? Towards the end of the exhibit, we looked at a painting by Mark Rothko and Miranda talked about how he resisted his work being called abstract and berated using words like ‘juxtaposed’ to describe it. We joked about so many of those little write-ups on the walls using words like juxtaposed and deconstructed. I remember the old joke about people who can’t do, teach, and wandered if something similar applied to these art write-ups. Those who can’t do art, write little descriptions for the walls of museums.
At one point during the visit, I glanced out of one of the rare windows in the Whitney to the scene outside. I remembered the old homeless man that Miranda and I had seen dumpster diving at Grand Central. What is art? What is its purpose? What do we learn by juxtaposing the homeless man against the Whitney?
More immediately, what am I doing here, writing my blog post about going to the Whitney with two of my daughters? How do blogs fit into the greater picture? Where does other technology fit in?
For me, perhaps some of it comes back to the crazy old men who look at life a little bit different. Perhaps I’m becoming one of them. Perhaps, I might even cause someone else to stop, if even just for a moment, and look at life a little bit differently. I know that my experience at the Whitney has caused me to look around a little more closely, and I hope it has had a similar effect for my daughters, as well as for others that visit it.
March 3rd
Woodbridge Board of Finance Trims Another $107,000 From Proposed Town Budget
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 03/03/2010 - 09:22Tuesday evening, the Woodbridge Board of Finance gathered to review the proposed budget for the coming year. In these difficult times, revenues have fallen, as has the value of houses on the grand list. As a result, even a very lean budget would result in tax increases and an even greater increase in the mill rate when it is most challenging for residents to meet new expenses.