Social Networks
Fear and Loathing at #IWNY #CMSUMMIT #MashableSummit #DIGIDAY #promise etc
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 06/05/2010 - 21:34It is a hot and humid Saturday evening in Woodbridge, CT. We were going to go camping this evening, but there are thunderstorms. Instead, I sit in my office and try to write my long overdue daily blog post. Last week was Personal Democracy Forum in New York and Journalism that Matters in Detroit. On Monday, Internet Week starts in New York City and America’s Future Now starts in Washington. This year, I’ll try to catch a few days of Internet Week and miss America’s Future Now.
I’ve been looking over the schedule for Internet Week and trying to decide which events to cover. Unlike other writers, I don’t have an editor or assignment desk to tell me what to cover. At times, I’ve asked my readers about their recommendations, so if there is anything in the Internet Week schedule that jumps out at you, let me know.
A while ago, I wrote about blogging inspirations, and I mentioned E.B.White. I’ve always enjoyed the way he combined the personal and the political in his essays. Another writer I’ve greatly admired for perhaps very similar reasons and very different reasons is Hunter S. Thompson. As I read through the Internet Week schedule, I felt a little Thompson coming over me, or perhaps a little J.D. Salinger.
One of the events for Internet Week is CM Summit, “Marketing in Real Time”. They’ve lined up some interesting speakers. Fifteen minutes for Dennis Crowley of Foursqaure, and another fifteen minutes for “The Buzz on Buzz” with Bradley Horowitz from Google.
Yet the big blocks of time are set aside for “a fireside chat between John Hayes, CMO for American Express, and John Battelle, CEO of Federated Media” and “A Conversation with Arthur Sulzberger, Jr., Chairman, The New York Times Company”. To balance out Sulzberger’s talk, on the second day they will have “A Conversation with Arianna Huffington, Co-founder & Editor-in-Chief, The Huffington Post”. One of the cocktail receptions will be sponsored by Facebook and the other by Adobe. What would Hunter S. Thompson have to say about the event, or perhaps Holden Caulfield?
It seems like a lot of Internet Week might benefit from some good Hunter S. Thompson style coverage. Perhaps the event that comes closest to the appropriate level of skepticism and irreverence is “Don't Believe the Hype Day” sponsored by Aquent.
On Tuesday, Dennis Crowley of Foursquare gets a full half hour with Adam Ostrow of Mashable at Mashable’s Media Summit. They also have Duncan Watts, Principal Research Scientist at Yahoo! speaking for fifteen minutes. Another interesting session they have is with Alec Ross, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s Senior Advisor for Innovation. They fill out a bit of the rest of the time with folks in entertainment and were only charging half what CMSummit was charging. Perhaps that is why they are sold out. Of course they are only one day, instead of CMSummit’s two days.
The big event on Wednesday is Digiday:Target. I’ve covered a lot of Digiday conferences and have put up posts on Digiday:Daily in the past. They run good conferences with interesting speakers and I look forward to Digiday:Target, especially since digital targeting has my attention for a bunch of other reasons.
Thursday, ThinkSocial and the Paley Center for Media, in conjunction with PepsiCo, are hosting a one day conference called The #Promise at Internet Week's HQ. This is a conference my literary guides could be incredibly cynical about. GE, Pepsi and Nokia talking about “making socially responsible commitments”. Is it too late for BP to try and get a spot on the agenda?
That said, I have friends working at GE and I know there are some good people that really do want to make a difference through helping corporations be more responsible. Likewise, I really like my Nokia N900 phone and was pleased to read about their Bicycle Charger Kit, which they recently introduced in Kenya. Likewise, I am glad to hear that according to Greenpeace, Nokia is currently the greenest electronics manufacturer.
The rain has come now. It is cooling off outside. I’ve been spending too much time reviewing the schedule and trying to put together this blog post. So, I’ll post it without reading it over as closely as I do other posts. Hopefully, I’ll have more energy tomorrow. In the meantime, if you’re going to Internet Week, or simply have read the schedule, and have thoughts about different sessions, please let me know.
#FF #twittercounter
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 06/04/2010 - 09:02@PragueBob @cornyman @ahardrain @MomStart @PYNTK @tonyknuckles @jegan414 @titan7585 @bluecrystaldude @Mariuca @mariamichelle
Know your audience. It seems like a recommendation that just about everyone shares. The question is, how do you do that? To the greatest extent possible, the best approach is to get to know people individually. Respond to their emails. Visit their websites. Follow them on Twitter. If you write with a local twist, meet them face to face. Yet how do you find who has been visiting your blog?
MyBlogLog was the granddaddy of ‘Recent Reader’ tools. They were acquired by Yahoo! and last winter there were reports that Yahoo! would be shutting them down. Well, they are still up and running, but getting lots of competition from BlogCatalog, as well as newcomer BlogFrog. Often these communities over lap substantially.
In addition, there is EntreCard which gives users the ability to drop a card when they visit. Since dropping a card is rewarded behavior it pretty much indicates a visit and not much else. Elsewhere, I’ve written about using Google Analytics on EntreCard visits.
This week, I revisited TwitterCounter’s widget. They track visitors by their Twitter handle and provide interesting information about recent visitors. For example,
PragueBob shows up as the visitor with the most followers. He is following and being followed by around 68,000 different users. The problem is any of my messages are likely to get lost by him. Coming in second in terms of the most followers is my old friend from EntreCard and related sites, @cornyman. Third is another good friend from the same circles, @ahardrain. Also on the list is another EntreCarder that I don’t know quite as well, @MomStart. @PYNTK, and @tonyknuckles round out the list.
Yet what is more important to me than the number of followers is the number of visits. Toping this list is @jegan414 whose sites I regularly visit. Other frequent visitors include @titan7585, @bluecrystaldude, @Mariuca and @mariamichelle.
For me, TwitterCounter has proven a valuable tool in connecting with some of my regular readers.
Wordless Wednesday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 06/02/2010 - 08:12#IPv6 on the Nokia #N900 and #Facebook
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 05/29/2010 - 11:22After a bunch of political blog posts, I’m on a roll of technology blog posts. Perhaps it is just part of my way of decompressing. Anyway, today I am writing about IPv6. IPv6 is Version 6 of the Internet Protocol. Currently, most people use Version 4 of the Internet Protocol.
The way this works is each device on the Internet is assigned a special number. Often these number are represented as four numbers between 0 and 255 and there are special rules about what numbers can be used which way. Essentially this limits the number of devices that can connect to the Internet to around four billion. While four billion might sound like a lot, keep in mind that every year more and more cellphones get connected to the Internet and in 2007 over a billion cellphones were sold. Unless something is done, we will soon run out of internet addresses.
Wordless Wednesday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 05/26/2010 - 08:51Every Wednesday, I try to participate in 'Wordless Wednesday'. People around the Internet post pictures that they like, typically without any words to describe the picture.
Today, I am not completely wordless. Yesterday, I wrote about animal control issues in New Britain, CT. This picture from the Durham Pet Fair provides a stark contrast. The City of East Haven, which currently is dealing with various issues with its police department, impounds 30% more dogs than New Britain each year, and kills 70% less.
How do they do this? In part by working very closely with animal rescue groups and even by attending events like to Durham Pet Fair to try and get pets adopted.