Blogs
Opening of Congress in Second Life
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 01/04/2007 - 13:23I'm sitting in Second Life taking pictures and videos of the opening of congress as it is viewed from Second Life.
Heavy.com and the dangers of social network investing
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 01/04/2007 - 04:26Wednesday’s Tri-State Tech Wire newsletter had an article about Heavy.com raising $12.8 million in its fifth round of venture capital. Over on Don’t’ Go South, they claim the number is $12.3 million and question the wisdom of the business model. “Working your ass off to run a content portal that does $10M in ad revenue and costs $11M to operate is not exactly the golden ticket to paradise.”
Yet there is a bigger problem for Heavy.com. Over on a mailing list of videobloggers, Casey McKinnon, Executive Producer of Galacticast writes, “We found out today that MyHeavy.com has been re-posting our videos with a huge pre-roll banner ad and a second huge ad surrounding the video when it plays (all without our permission or knowledge).”
Upcoming Events in Second Life
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 01/03/2007 - 13:46More and more, I’m getting invited to events in Second Life, and I thought I would highlight a few of them here. This afternoon, at 5 PM Eastern, Social Signal is opening their practice in Second Life at the TechSoup Space on Info Island. Friends have spoken highly to me about Social Signal, and so while the event sounds a little like the opening of a consulting firm, it seems like it is work checking out.
Then, tomorrow, at noon eastern time, Second Life Capital Hill will usher in the 110th congress. I hope to attend and perhaps blog and/or videoblog some of the event.
Later in the day, RootsCampSL will have their weekly meeting in SecondLife. I look forward to seeing several old friends there and talking about what progressives can do in SecondLife.
to help people find their voice
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 01/01/2007 - 11:32(Originally published at Gather)
I hadn’t really thought much about a New Year’s resolution until I worked on some of my thoughts for the Journalism That Matters conference in Memphis while flipping the channels to see different stations coverage of the New Year’s celebrations last night. The PBS broadcast was sponsored in part by resolutions.gather.com.
These days, New Year’s Resolutions can seem a bit daunting. Instead, I tend to think of simply making it through the next day and trying to find a way of making my interests financially sustainable.
Yet at the same time, I’m doing all kinds of things that make for good resolutions, especially around politics and media. I wondered if there was some unifying string theory of what I what to do.
It seems like the resolution that ties it all together is “to help people find their voice”. That is what my discussions with Gina about her class were all about. She was doing marvelous working helping her students find their voices. That is how I think Opportunity Rocks and citizen journalism around the Edwards campaign will be most effective, by helping people find their voice to talk about what is wrong in our country, and finding ways to fix it.
It is my hope that getting people involved in local politics will help them find their political voices and be heard by their local leaders. It is my hope that NewsTrust, as well as emerging regional news councils and hyperlocal journalism efforts will provide a platform for people to find their voices in a way to constructively analyze the media they encounter. It is my hope that the Journalism that Matters conference will help others find ways to enable people to find their voices.
I suspect that many of the people reading this have already found their voices online and hopefully in local and national politics as well. Hopefully you will take on some of this resolution for your own.
Journalism That Matters prep
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 01/01/2007 - 00:31The following is a message that I’ve sent to various friends, reformed into a blog post. I hope it will help all of you get a greater sense of where I hope to see citizen journalism going, as it relates to the Edwards campaign and beyond. It captures some of my thoughts about how we as OneCorp participants can help change our country through our writing.
I am participating in a Journalism That Matters conference in Memphis later in January. As part of the prep work, participants have been asked to interview each other. Below, you will find my answers to the questions asked. As you read through them, it will help give you context of some of my journey to where I am now in supporting Sen. Edwards. It will also help give more complete context to my blog post about the first blogger meet and greet I attended with Sen. Edwards back in October 2005. (Details of that are here).
With that, Happy New Year everyone. 2007 is going to be an exciting year.