Social Networks
Tweetup
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 12/28/2008 - 11:09The light warm rain fell on the hard cold snow, producing an eerie mist rising from the ground. @ahynes1 maneuvered his old hybrid into a diagonal parking spot on Main Street in Middletown, CT. He looked at the dilapidated awnings of local stores where young men loitered. He glanced at the pile of junk in his car. Anything of value was sufficiently buried in the clutter of the front seat.
He grabbed an unmarked brown bottle from the pile. If he had had more time, he would have labeled it “@ahynes1’s highly tweeted hard cider”. He had documented many aspects of brewing and bottling his hard cider; key talking points being about buying local produce, like the sweet cider he had used, and about handcrafting.
As he walked down the street, a young man approached him. “You going to the Tweetup?” the young man asked.
“Yeah, are you @dacort?” @ahynes1 responded. They had never met face to face but they knew of each other from their online writings. @dacort nodded. “I’m @ahynes1,” the older man said, reaching out to shake @dacort’s hand.
The walked into Pho Mai, a small Vietnamese restaurant on Main Street. The restaurant had about six tables. Two or three tables had couples sitting at them enjoying their lunch. One table, sitting closest to the kitchen had an unattended laptop, and two other tables had been pushed together, making room for four people to eat together. At these tables, @joecascio and @juliedarling were sitting.
They greeted @ahynes1 and @dacort as they entered the restaurant. As with @dacort, @ahynes1 felt that he knew both @joecascio and @juliedarling from their online writing. In addition, he had met both of them at a bar in Chester a month or two earlier.
@juliedarling was a regular at Pho Mai and @ahynes1 had been to Pho Mai once before with his wife, @khynes2000 when they were returning from Hartford after @ahynes1 had liveblogged the Citizens Election Program hearing.
@dacort wrote various programs to analyze social networks on Twitter. It seemed a logical outgrowth of his work on data security, and the discussion revolved around first followers, data visualization and other geeky topics.
There was a brief digression into steam punk which got @ahynes1 thinking. The small restaurant with some of the best Vietnamese food in Connecticut, the bottles of local hard cider, and the discussions about using emerging technology to foster communications, instead of relying on trusted names in broadcast media telling everyone what they needed to know, interspersed with ads for large multinationals serving up homogenized culture, almost felt like the backdrop to a dysutopian science fiction story.
These tweeters were part of an alternative culture, using emerging technology to find local niches of good food and other quality products. Yet there wasn’t the aspect of the sinister overlord trying to thwart these heroes. Instead, the dominant culture seemed mostly blissfully unaware of tweetups like these and at most, a few educators tried to keep stories about such gatherings from minors out of an uninformed fear about possible sexual predators that lurk online.
With the meal over, our intrepid tweeters headed back to their families with good food in their bellies and friendships renewed.
A Christmas Twitter Story
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 12/24/2008 - 13:47CaesarAgustus: Everyone: Go to your own city to be taxed.
Joseph: Anyone know of rooms available in Bethlehem? priceline.com doesn’t have any
Mary: @Elizabeth I hope @joseph can find an inn in Bethlehem, I feel like I’m going to burst any minute
innkeeper: @joseph We’re all booked, but you could crash in our barn.
Jospeh: k, thx
…
joseph: It’s a boy! Check out my pix on Flickr
angeloflord: Don’t be afraid. Good News. Great Joy. #ChristtheLord is born
heavenlyhost1: Glory to God in the Highest #ChristtheLord
heavenlyhost2: Peace to everyone! #ChristtheLord
shepherd1: going to Bethlehem. #ChristtheLord
…
simeon: My eyes have seen salvation. #ChristtheLord
simeon: A light for revelation to the Gentiles. #ChristtheLord
simeon: Plus, glory to Israeli People. #ChristtheLoard
simeon: @mary Jesus is destined to cause the falling and rising of many in Israel
…
Wiseman1: Following #yonderstar
Wiseman2: RT @wiseman1 Following #yonderstar
Wiseman3: Bringing gifts with @wiseman1 and @wiseman2 #yonderstar for #ChristtheLord
…
Christmas Friendfeed Story
Commentator1: Notice how breaking news, #ChristtheLord appears on Twitter first
Commentator2: Hyperlocal site bethlehem.globe.com has great aggregation of #ChristtheLord story
Commentator1: Herod.com is suing Jerusalem Globe for aggregating their coverage of #ChristtheLord
Commentator2: Herod.com slaughtering innocent citizen journalists.
Woodbridge CT Snow Cam - UStream Version
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 12/19/2008 - 13:39The snow has finally started here in Woodbridge, CT. I sent a message out on Twitter to see if people wanted a snow cam, and if so, what format.
@sheilamc7 suggested UStream, so here it is as an embedded stream (Hopefully):
@AlanGayandStr suggested veodia.com, and I may try that next.
Update:
After streaming for a while, I cleaned the window and adjusted the settings, so the video got a little better later in the day. It is now dark outside, so I've stopped streaming, although if it is snowing in the morning, I may try to restart the stream below.
Above the fold, I replaced the live stream with one of the videos that I captured.
Updated 2:
In the evening, I switched over to Fire Cam, using the Adobe Flash Media Encoder. Now that it is day time and snowing again outside, I've restarted Snow Cam.
Here is a clip from Fire Cam
Road Trip
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 12/11/2008 - 16:00It is a gray rainy day in Connecticut. By December standards it is warm but by any other standard it is cold and dreary. I rest on the couch. In a few hours, I will drive down to Virginia to pick up my two older daughters from college. Before that, I will go to the technology committee meeting at my local school. Our large orange Maine Coon Cat curls up next me, seemingly approving of my decision to nap during the day.
Road trips can be fun, seeing new things on a leisurely drive, but this trip will be done in the dark and won’t be particularly leisurely. The trip back is likely to be much more fun as my daughters and I catch up.
I expect my time online will be fairly sparse for the next couple of days, but I still hope to get a little content up each day.
With that, it seems like a good opportunity to post an email that I had sent to a mailing list of educators that use Second Life for education. One person had started compiling a list of blogs about Second Life, and another person suggested there must be a more Web 2.0-ish way of gathering the list, something like tags in delicious, a wiki, etc. I wrote my response, which was well received, and I’ve been meaning to add it to my blog for sometime. Since the content is sparse right now, and the email fits nicely with some discussions about the technology committee, here is my snarky response:
With a more technologically savvy group there might be a more 2.0-ish way. But even with that you would probably need lots of communication ahead of time to deterime which tag to use. Then, to reach out to people, would probably need to explain what del.icio.us is, how to sign up, how to tag your own blog, or other resources you find valuable.
Then the discussion would drift to how to use the feed from del.icio.us, how to add it as a blog roll on one's on blog, how to important into various blog reader software, like bloglines or Google Reader. A side discussion explaining what RSS is and how feed readers work would evolve. Someone would ask for a feed reader in Second Life and a minor religous war between BlogLines users and Google Reader users would ensue.
This would probably start a discussion about OPML, which would need further explanations and start off yet another minor religious war over protocols and open source. Someone would be bound to point out hacks to get del.icio.us feeds available as OPML. Others would point out that ma.gnolia.com already supports exporting OPML and uses OpenID and hence would be a much better solution than del.icio.us. Others would then complain about OpenID being too complicated and not widely adopted. Others would point out that Yahoo, Google, Microsoft and AIM among others are starting to support OpenID. OpenID purists would point out that Microsoft's OpenID is only in testing right now, and that Google is running weird modifications to OpenID that makes it not really true OpenID and probably unlikely to work with ma.gnolia
A side discussion would evolve about OpenID, Second Life and OpenSim. A hard core geek would point out a hack to make Second Life and/or OpenSim appear as an OpenID provider. Then there would be a discussion about services working as an OpenId provider and not an OpenID consumer. Someone would set up an Away message and the thread would get diverted once again.
Somewhere in the middle of this, someone would say that they've already built a pretty good list, and if people would just email their URLs they would add it to the list and be done with all of it. This would lead into a discussion about using email to accomplish a task versus using more 2.0-ish ways. A meta discussion would ensue....
RINSE, REPEAT
Enjoy! More when I get back.
General Updates
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 12/07/2008 - 17:52It is a quiet snowy, second Sunday of Advent as I sit at home and try to catch up from one busy week as I prepare for the next. I have a few different blog posts I need to write, but for now, I’m writing a general update. This morning, I read @professorkim’s tweets from Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. I couldn’t get the live stream to work, so I relied on her tweets and tweeted a little bit about it.
At the same time, various people were tweeting about the Boston Media Makers gathering. I also picked up a little bit of it on Steve Garfield’s QIK stream. They talked a little bit about the Manfrotto 585 ModoSteady 3-in-1 Camera/Camcorder Stabilizer and Support System, which seems like a neat little device. I’m not sure how well it would work with my cameras, since I’ve got pretty low end equipment, and the stabilizer is probably more expensive than the camera I usually use.
They also spoke about gcast which I had signed up for back in August, tested once, forgotten, and never gone back to. However, it does seem to be the site that I was trying to think of for a person who was interested in getting started with podcasting. I should play around with it a little more.
Another system that they mentioned was ooVoo. It is for having video conversations with up to six people at the same time. It requires a download which is currently available for Windows and in beta for the Mac. I suspect that is why I didn’t try it last time I stumbled across it. It is all very similar to CUSeeMe from years ago as well as stuff I was working on with GroupIntervisual.
In other news, I’ve uploaded pictures of Papa and Nana’s new puppy, the snow we got here, and a chocolate pecan pie my wife made. I went with Kim and Fiona to the barn and am now hunkered down in the office for what sounds like a cold evening. In a little while, I’ll start preparing for this evenings episode of Fiona’s Radio Show.
Updated:
Forgot to mention that I added Google Friend Connect, check it out in my sidebar. I've set up ooVoo. So far nothing all that interesting. And, I want to note omeka.org as another site that got mentioned.
In terms of power.com, one person joined me, another friend is already there, and a third asked why to use it. In theory, it should be a nice aggregator of various other social networks. So far, I'm not impressed.