Aaron Grill :: Friends blog

May 17, 2007

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/117316001/the-real-truth

For the past few years I have been educating students, teachers, administrators and parents about the “realities” of online social networks (Facebook, MySpace, Bebo, etc). For the past few years, I have been wrong. Well, somewhat wrong, anyway. At the encouragement of law enforcement, the media, and other responsible adults, I have feared for the safety of the young women I educate. I was concerned that the details they were sharing online put them at risk for predation and victimization. My main concern was never really their physical safety, as that was such a minute possibility. I was mainly concerned about their futures, their college admissions, their job opportunities, but mainly, the possible humiliation they faced by the wrong people viewing their profiles. In that way, I was right.



Last week, before Congress, the four foremost experts in the country testified to the reality of online youth victimization. Every law enforcement person I’ve heard, and most educators I’ve heard have been wrong. The truth, according to the experts: 1) teens who post information online are no more likely to be victims of sex crimes than those who don’t 2) of all the statuatory rape in the U.S. last year, 7% of victims met the perpetrators online, the rest offline 3) parent education does not work.



There are many more important facts pointed out, so watch the hour and twenty minute testimony. It is the most important professional development I have had in the last few years. I can’t recommend it any more strongly. Original video here, transcript here, or YouTube video below. A post to follow will be on what type of education we need to do for/with our students. Your suggestions would be much appreciated.





technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

May 13, 2007

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/116410136/9th-graders-di

After reading Seeing No Progress, Some Schools Drop Laptops in the New York Times on May 4th, I decided to use it as a discussion piece with my technology classes. I teach in a K-12 girls school in New York City with a 1:1 laptop program in grades 8-12. I wanted the students to respond to the article using their own experiences as students in a laptop school. A colleague at another school, Bill Campbell, suggested I record this discussion. The audio below is 1 class of my 9th grade answering a series of questions from me. As you will hear, I did not suggest any particular answers, but asked them to speak freely.







If you wish to use this audio, please let me know. Since it is a broadcast of a school class, I would like to let me school know where it is being used. Contact me at arvind [at] 21apples.org.



technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

May 10, 2007

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/115484525/dropping-lapto

The New York Times article Seeing No Progress, Some Schools Drop Laptops has been getting a lot of attention in the EdTech blogosphere. I have been using the article as a discussion starter with students. Both sections of my 9th grade tech class, and the one 8th grade section I teach have had lively discussions on the article.



We started by identifying the main reasons cited for dropping laptop programs: cost, bad behavior using the laptops, technical support difficulties, and no proven educational benefit.



Then students were asked to critique the rationale reported on in the article. Most students argued that there were many holes in the arguments. Mainly they used their own experiences as students in a 1:1 laptop school to counter the reasoning. The one that seemed to frustrate them most was the lack of proven educational benefits. Almost every student said the laptop has helped them in their student lives, and had testimony as backup.



The students could actually barely finish reading the short article because they were so incensed by the writing. They immediately wanted to counter each sentence they came upon. Afterwards, they explained that their urgency was because they were afraid we would listen to The Times and get rid of our laptop program.



I am an ed tech evangelist much of the time, but when I think about it, it is rarely to/for students. It is for teachers, for administrators and for parents. It was quite a breath of fresh air to hear students voicing why they want laptops in their school.



One student: “They make it seem like walls are crashing down in laptop schools. Why don’t they come see our school to see how well it can work? I think we use laptops perfectly.”



In related news, this week we interview Lorrie Jackson from the Laptop Institute on 21st Century Learning. Tune in to EdTechTalk.com to listen to the episode.



technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

April 26, 2007

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/112282358/girls-and-comp

Right now, right this second as I post this, I am Skype-connected to Concord Academy in Concord Massachusets where they are hosting a Girls and Computers meeting with about 20-30 educators. At the same time, my other laptop is taking the audio of the call and pushing it out live to EdTechTalk.com where people are listening live.



I also just called in to a teacher in Pittsburgh and connected her to the Concord meeting. She is talking about the computer programming world Alice which she has found appeals to a lot of the young women at the Winchester Thurston School.



Some great resources being talked about in terms of attracting girls and young women to computers, technology and programming. Podcast will hopefully be up soon at EdTechTalk/21cl.



technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

April 07, 2007

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/107363746/live-from-podc

I am liveblogging from PodcampNYC. Jeff Lebow and Jennifer Madrell are here running the Worldbridges Broadcasting Studio (pictures on Flickr later tonight). It is great to meet them in person! I am also Twittering, so you can track me there. Oh my, so many ways to be involved. Tune in to Worldbridges to listen to the stream (Jeff just interviewed the Podcast Pickle! Wait till you see those pics). If you don’t have access to a computer but want to join in, call in to 1-712-451-6100, pin code 999374#.



Podcamp by the way is an unconference. No big name speakers, if you want to run a workshop, you just run one. Amazing!



technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/107367766/live-from-podc

I am liveblogging from PodcampNYC. Jeff Lebow and Jennifer Madrell are here running the Worldbridges Broadcasting Studio (pictures on Flickr later tonight). It is great to meet them in person! I am also Twittering, so you can track me there. Oh my, so many ways to be involved. Tune in to Worldbridges to listen to the stream (Jeff just interviewed the Podcast Pickle! Wait till you see those pics). If you don’t have access to a computer but want to join in, call in to 1-712-451-6100, pin code 999374#.



Podcamp by the way is an unconference. No big name speakers, if you want to run a workshop, you just run one. Amazing!



technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

March 13, 2007

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/102408394/sxswi-bruce-st

Bruce Sterling’s SXSW Rant

Bruce Sterling, Visionary in Residence, Wired.com

Bruce’s blog

My thoughts before the text: A great rant. Do catch this podcast. Open, honest critique of problems with the Internet as well as celebration of potential.



Video is the stupidest medium. TV is the wasteland.



Viacom sued Google today for $1 billion. It’s old media vs. new media. We’ll see how this plays out.



I remember when people were saying the Internet would grow up and be more like TV. That is not it, broadband has beaten everything, it is just so much more.



The Internet Generation cares nothing about proprietary media. Time is not on the side of the giants.



Jokai Benkler, Henry Jenikns are some of the big thinkers right now. (I wrote on them yesterday)



Lev ManovichSoft Cinema



These three guys are coming from three angles at this and they are like the acceptable face of Richard Stallman. Stallman is radical and you can’t introduce to mass media. Benkler, Manovich and Jenkins have the diction to spread the right messages into the establishment.



I was using Google and I realized that information was free. Information wants to be free. This device was delivering a torrent of the most arcane stuff imaginable for no cost. You put Google and YouTube together and it is game over for the 80’s. It is done, there is no area of struggle.



We have the first world: the global market – build it in China, ship it to Utah

Second world: governments – local, UN, state

Third world: common space peer production

Fourth world: disorder – parts of the world where they don’t have any of this



In 10 years this might be quite a bit more obvious



Journalists worry about things like Craigslist. If Craig were a mogul people would understand that. He isn’t trying to be that. He just wanted 200 million friends. He gutted major media outlets and isn’t making any money. We have more readership than ever but no classifieds means no money.



There are downsides to this. The golden opportunity is oversold. It is a new world of laptop gypsies instead of solid professionals. Jenkins is enamored by fandom, I think a lot of fandom stuff is crap – repurposing Harry Potter characters because you don’t have the literary creativity to come up something is ridiculously.



Mashups are novelty music. They won’t be around in 10 years. To pretend like that is creative work is wrong. It is powerful, but not good. It isn’t good music.



In a contemporary Hollywood product every frame is touched by a compositor it means that everyone who can afford the machine (and it is getting cheaper) everyone will be able to create that type of product.



Yes, the broadband is growing. Things are getting faster all the time. That doesn’t mean that we are becoming better artists.



If you have a CusinArt you think everything should go through the chopper blades. Because we have new media products we think everything should be presented that way. The mere fact that it is technically possible doesn’t mean it is better.



DeviantArt is not great. Electronic Art isn’t great. It is interesting, some of it, but no great art there. DeviantArt isn’t even that deviant. It is folk culture. I am not an elitist, but folk culture is for hicks. Hicks are fine, they are there and are good.



We need to eliminate film studies, media studies and we need to come up with ways of analyzing new realities. We need real academics. To valorize them because they are shiny is the electronic hick. It is cool and I couldn’t do it before so it must be good. No.



55 million blogs, so some must be good. Well no, some must be good blogs, but we don’t even know what blogs are yet. I doubt in 10 years if anyone will even use that term. t is hard to find a blog that will make you cry or has the effect of fine art. Now embedded video, words, Flickr set, Digg this: we don’t have a vocabulary for describing this yet. Sort f magazine analysis: nice writing, good typeface, good photo, etc, but that doesn’t express it. We don’t have web analysis skills yet.



I am very suspicious of any internet item that is about turning on the information factory and leaving the room. It is not a mode of self expression, it is machine expression.



95% of the net is spam. Imagine if you turned on the TV and immediately someone tried to rob you or you go to the movie theater and they pick your pocket.



Reed Hundt (his blog),former head of FCC, has this weary look on his face. To say he is disenchanted doesn’t begin to express it. He was involved in spectrum auction. He came up with mad scheme to sell 700mHz spectrum to coalition of police, emergency service providers. He wants to take a couple channels from broadcast TV. Broadcast TV debases even the poverty-stricken people who watch it. It was bad before American Idol. Broadcast television is an archaism. You can take that spectrum and put the Internet on them. Put the Internet over TV and saturate TV areas with broadband. Should that happen, so many borders between media would erase. Phone or TV or Internet would all just use what was there. Look at his website. It is paralyzingly dull, but it is important. Go give him some Neem social networking crap, I don’t care. Give us some damn broadband. Pry it out of the hands of the aging, useless broadcasters.



Benkler – how do you build the third type of thing with collective intelligence. You don’t just open a website to comments. You have to engineer it with thought and care. Socially-motivated, commons-based peer production, here’s how:



First, divvy up the work (you’re not paying and you can’t draft). It has to be granular, modular and integrateable. Even if I do it for 5 minutes I will do it good. 5 minutes or 500 minutes both move it positive direction (granular). Modular – has to be broken up into small pieces. Integrateable – has to have broad social impact, has to be useful.



Self-selected: people are choosing to join you. You have to have a selection process. Then you need an in or out mechanism. In or out membrane of participation.



Communication: need to have platform to talk but not kill each other



Humanization: I don’t believe in this so not covering it



Trust construction: teach people how to trust each other



Norm creation: assembling all these people, they are trying to figure out how to fit in. People have to be acculturated into the space. What’s normal behavior here?



Transparency: how do you stay transparent. When it is small it is obvious. When it is hundreds of thousands of people it becomes an organizational problem.



Monitoring: you actually need a police force (Benkler doesn’t say this). Someone has to watch it all the time. Then who monitors the monitor. State has this problem, common space has this problem. A human difficulty.



Peer review: the people in the group need to know who is good at it.



Discipline: when it is not coming down from powers on high, this is a tough one.



Fairness: Marxist analysts are upset about web 2.0. radically upset about MySpace. A giant machine for teaching false consciousness, teeneagers are roped in and forced to work for nothing and forward Rupert Murdoch’s right wing war against the world.



I don’t think this is a blip. Former professional are being erased by things on the net. Nice, put-your-kids-through-college jobs are melting.



Institutional sustainability: I don’t know how long things like Slashdot can exist. Digg, Redditt and others are eating their lunch. They threw it out there like chum and saw what happened. There was no future plan, no board of directors. I don’t know what sustainability looks like here, and I don’t think anyone else does either.



Al Qaeda is the #1 socially-motivated, commons-based peer production has solved almost all of this. Sustainability? You can’t kill them, more just come up in their place. They are existence proof of this form of organization. KKK, 4th generation warfare groups are good examples.



Benkler: in order to make this work we need to understand the computers are platforms for self-expression rather than well-behaved appliances. Computers stink as appliances: they are hard to use, they change a lot, painful to use, steep learning curve, highly innovative. When you see an appliance it probably kills commons-based peer production. When something barely works (like Ubuntu) it is probably a place for self-expression and peer production.



Benkler put his PDF all over the web, don’t have to pay for it. Then he opened a wiki to explore all the legal, ethical, etc implications. There is nobody there. It is easy to open a wiki and easy to post, but it is not easy to be as smart as Yokai Benkler. He feels like there must be thousands of people to advance his brilliant forward thinking concepts and there just isn’t. Go into any left wing blog and see thousands of people agreeing and saying stuff. There may be two or three people in this room that might be able to help this guy. I can’t engage in a conversation that might help this guy – he is out of my league. If you are in his league you ought to go help him.



Eastern European poet: Cheslav Milosh, Polish communist dissident who got chased out of Poland. He really paid some dues. He wrote it in Berkely because Californians offered him shelter, then became a prof, married a California. A poem about serenity and a sense of fulfillment.

“Gift” – I didn’t transcribe the poem, and I can’t find it online, but in my humble opinion, it wasn’t that central to his talk. Catch it on the podcast. Oh yeah, and I couldn’t find it on Google.

technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/101508686/sxswi-bruce-st

Bruce Sterling’s SXSW Rant

Bruce Sterling, Visionary in Residence, Wired.com

Bruce’s blog

My thoughts before the text: A great rant. Do catch this podcast. Open, honest critique of problems with the Internet as well as celebration of potential.



Video is the stupidest medium. TV is the wasteland.



Viacom sued Google today for $1 billion. It’s old media vs. new media. We’ll see how this plays out.



I remember when people were saying the Internet would grow up and be more like TV. That is not it, broadband has beaten everything, it is just so much more.



The Internet Generation cares nothing about proprietary media. Time is not on the side of the giants.



Jokai Benkler, Henry Jenikns are some of the big thinkers right now. (I wrote on them yesterday)



Lev ManovichSoft Cinema



These three guys are coming from three angles at this and they are like the acceptable face of Richard Stallman. Stallman is radical and you can’t introduce to mass media. Benkler, Manovich and Jenkins have the diction to spread the right messages into the establishment.



I was using Google and I realized that information was free. Information wants to be free. This device was delivering a torrent of the most arcane stuff imaginable for no cost. You put Google and YouTube together and it is game over for the 80’s. It is done, there is no area of struggle.



We have the first world: the global market – build it in China, ship it to Utah

Second world: governments – local, UN, state

Third world: common space peer production

Fourth world: disorder – parts of the world where they don’t have any of this



In 10 years this might be quite a bit more obvious



Journalists worry about things like Craigslist. If Craig were a mogul people would understand that. He isn’t trying to be that. He just wanted 200 million friends. He gutted major media outlets and isn’t making any money. We have more readership than ever but no classifieds means no money.



There are downsides to this. The golden opportunity is oversold. It is a new world of laptop gypsies instead of solid professionals. Jenkins is enamored by fandom, I think a lot of fandom stuff is crap – repurposing Harry Potter characters because you don’t have the literary creativity to come up something is ridiculously.



Mashups are novelty music. They won’t be around in 10 years. To pretend like that is creative work is wrong. It is powerful, but not good. It isn’t good music.



In a contemporary Hollywood product every frame is touched by a compositor it means that everyone who can afford the machine (and it is getting cheaper) everyone will be able to create that type of product.



Yes, the broadband is growing. Things are getting faster all the time. That doesn’t mean that we are becoming better artists.



If you have a CusinArt you think everything should go through the chopper blades. Because we have new media products we think everything should be presented that way. The mere fact that it is technically possible doesn’t mean it is better.



DeviantArt is not great. Electronic Art isn’t great. It is interesting, some of it, but no great art there. DeviantArt isn’t even that deviant. It is folk culture. I am not an elitist, but folk culture is for hicks. Hicks are fine, they are there and are good.



We need to eliminate film studies, media studies and we need to come up with ways of analyzing new realities. We need real academics. To valorize them because they are shiny is the electronic hick. It is cool and I couldn’t do it before so it must be good. No.



55 million blogs, so some must be good. Well no, some must be good blogs, but we don’t even know what blogs are yet. I doubt in 10 years if anyone will even use that term. t is hard to find a blog that will make you cry or has the effect of fine art. Now embedded video, words, Flickr set, Digg this: we don’t have a vocabulary for describing this yet. Sort f magazine analysis: nice writing, good typeface, good photo, etc, but that doesn’t express it. We don’t have web analysis skills yet.



I am very suspicious of any internet item that is about turning on the information factory and leaving the room. It is not a mode of self expression, it is machine expression.



95% of the net is spam. Imagine if you turned on the TV and immediately someone tried to rob you or you go to the movie theater and they pick your pocket.



Reed Hundt (his blog),former head of FCC, has this weary look on his face. To say he is disenchanted doesn’t begin to express it. He was involved in spectrum auction. He came up with mad scheme to sell 700mHz spectrum to coalition of police, emergency service providers. He wants to take a couple channels from broadcast TV. Broadcast TV debases even the poverty-stricken people who watch it. It was bad before American Idol. Broadcast television is an archaism. You can take that spectrum and put the Internet on them. Put the Internet over TV and saturate TV areas with broadband. Should that happen, so many borders between media would erase. Phone or TV or Internet would all just use what was there. Look at his website. It is paralyzingly dull, but it is important. Go give him some Neem social networking crap, I don’t care. Give us some damn broadband. Pry it out of the hands of the aging, useless broadcasters.



Benkler – how do you build the third type of thing with collective intelligence. You don’t just open a website to comments. You have to engineer it with thought and care. Socially-motivated, commons-based peer production, here’s how:



First, divvy up the work (you’re not paying and you can’t draft). It has to be granular, modular and integrateable. Even if I do it for 5 minutes I will do it good. 5 minutes or 500 minutes both move it positive direction (granular). Modular – has to be broken up into small pieces. Integrateable – has to have broad social impact, has to be useful.



Self-selected: people are choosing to join you. You have to have a selection process. Then you need an in or out mechanism. In or out membrane of participation.



Communication: need to have platform to talk but not kill each other



Humanization: I don’t believe in this so not covering it



Trust construction: teach people how to trust each other



Norm creation: assembling all these people, they are trying to figure out how to fit in. People have to be acculturated into the space. What’s normal behavior here?



Transparency: how do you stay transparent. When it is small it is obvious. When it is hundreds of thousands of people it becomes an organizational problem.



Monitoring: you actually need a police force (Benkler doesn’t say this). Someone has to watch it all the time. Then who monitors the monitor. State has this problem, common space has this problem. A human difficulty.



Peer review: the people in the group need to know who is good at it.



Discipline: when it is not coming down from powers on high, this is a tough one.



Fairness: Marxist analysts are upset about web 2.0. radically upset about MySpace. A giant machine for teaching false consciousness, teeneagers are roped in and forced to work for nothing and forward Rupert Murdoch’s right wing war against the world.



I don’t think this is a blip. Former professional are being erased by things on the net. Nice, put-your-kids-through-college jobs are melting.



Institutional sustainability: I don’t know how long things like Slashdot can exist. Digg, Redditt and others are eating their lunch. They threw it out there like chum and saw what happened. There was no future plan, no board of directors. I don’t know what sustainability looks like here, and I don’t think anyone else does either.



Al Qaeda is the #1 socially-motivated, commons-based peer production has solved almost all of this. Sustainability? You can’t kill them, more just come up in their place. They are existence proof of this form of organization. KKK, 4th generation warfare groups are good examples.



Benkler: in order to make this work we need to understand the computers are platforms for self-expression rather than well-behaved appliances. Computers stink as appliances: they are hard to use, they change a lot, painful to use, steep learning curve, highly innovative. When you see an appliance it probably kills commons-based peer production. When something barely works (like Ubuntu) it is probably a place for self-expression and peer production.



Benkler put his PDF all over the web, don’t have to pay for it. Then he opened a wiki to explore all the legal, ethical, etc implications. There is nobody there. It is easy to open a wiki and easy to post, but it is not easy to be as smart as Yokai Benkler. He feels like there must be thousands of people to advance his brilliant forward thinking concepts and there just isn’t. Go into any left wing blog and see thousands of people agreeing and saying stuff. There may be two or three people in this room that might be able to help this guy. I can’t engage in a conversation that might help this guy – he is out of my league. If you are in his league you ought to go help him.



Eastern European poet: Cheslav Milosh, Polish communist dissident who got chased out of Poland. He really paid some dues. He wrote it in Berkely because Californians offered him shelter, then became a prof, married a California. A poem about serenity and a sense of fulfillment.

“Gift” – I didn’t transcribe the poem, and I can’t find it online, but in my humble opinion, it wasn’t that central to his talk. Catch it on the podcast. Oh yeah, and I couldn’t find it on Google.

technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/101494338/sxswi-bruce-st

Bruce Sterling’s SXSW Rant

Bruce Sterling, Visionary in Residence, Wired.com

Bruce’s blog

My thoughts before the text: A great rant. Do catch this podcast. Open, honest critique of problems with the Internet as well as celebration of potential.



Video is the stupidest medium. TV is the wasteland.



Viacom sued Google today for $1 billion. It’s old media vs. new media. We’ll see how this plays out.



I remember when people were saying the Internet would grow up and be more like TV. That is not it, broadband has beaten everything, it is just so much more.



The Internet Generation cares nothing about proprietary media. Time is not on the side of the giants.



Jokai Benkler, Henry Jenikns are some of the big thinkers right now. (I wrote on them yesterday)



Lev ManovichSoft Cinema



These three guys are coming from three angles at this and they are like the acceptable face of Richard Stallman. Stallman is radical and you can’t introduce to mass media. Benkler, Manovich and Jenkins have the diction to spread the right messages into the establishment.



I was using Google and I realized that information was free. Information wants to be free. This device was delivering a torrent of the most arcane stuff imaginable for no cost. You put Google and YouTube together and it is game over for the 80’s. It is done, there is no area of struggle.



We have the first world: the global market – build it in China, ship it to Utah

Second world: governments – local, UN, state

Third world: common space peer production

Fourth world: disorder – parts of the world where they don’t have any of this



In 10 years this might be quite a bit more obvious



Journalists worry about things like Craigslist. If Craig were a mogul people would understand that. He isn’t trying to be that. He just wanted 200 million friends. He gutted major media outlets and isn’t making any money. We have more readership than ever but no classifieds means no money.



There are downsides to this. The golden opportunity is oversold. It is a new world of laptop gypsies instead of solid professionals. Jenkins is enamored by fandom, I think a lot of fandom stuff is crap – repurposing Harry Potter characters because you don’t have the literary creativity to come up something is ridiculously.



Mashups are novelty music. They won’t be around in 10 years. To pretend like that is creative work is wrong. It is powerful, but not good. It isn’t good music.



In a contemporary Hollywood product every frame is touched by a compositor it means that everyone who can afford the machine (and it is getting cheaper) everyone will be able to create that type of product.



Yes, the broadband is growing. Things are getting faster all the time. That doesn’t mean that we are becoming better artists.



If you have a CusinArt you think everything should go through the chopper blades. Because we have new media products we think everything should be presented that way. The mere fact that it is technically possible doesn’t mean it is better.



DeviantArt is not great. Electronic Art isn’t great. It is interesting, some of it, but no great art there. DeviantArt isn’t even that deviant. It is folk culture. I am not an elitist, but folk culture is for hicks. Hicks are fine, they are there and are good.



We need to eliminate film studies, media studies and we need to come up with ways of analyzing new realities. We need real academics. To valorize them because they are shiny is the electronic hick. It is cool and I couldn’t do it before so it must be good. No.



55 million blogs, so some must be good. Well no, some must be good blogs, but we don’t even know what blogs are yet. I doubt in 10 years if anyone will even use that term. t is hard to find a blog that will make you cry or has the effect of fine art. Now embedded video, words, Flickr set, Digg this: we don’t have a vocabulary for describing this yet. Sort f magazine analysis: nice writing, good typeface, good photo, etc, but that doesn’t express it. We don’t have web analysis skills yet.



I am very suspicious of any internet item that is about turning on the information factory and leaving the room. It is not a mode of self expression, it is machine expression.



95% of the net is spam. Imagine if you turned on the TV and immediately someone tried to rob you or you go to the movie theater and they pick your pocket.



Reed Hundt (his blog),former head of FCC, has this weary look on his face. To say he is disenchanted doesn’t begin to express it. He was involved in spectrum auction. He came up with mad scheme to sell 700mHz spectrum to coalition of police, emergency service providers. He wants to take a couple channels from broadcast TV. Broadcast TV debases even the poverty-stricken people who watch it. It was bad before American Idol. Broadcast television is an archaism. You can take that spectrum and put the Internet on them. Put the Internet over TV and saturate TV areas with broadband. Should that happen, so many borders between media would erase. Phone or TV or Internet would all just use what was there. Look at his website. It is paralyzingly dull, but it is important. Go give him some Neem social networking crap, I don’t care. Give us some damn broadband. Pry it out of the hands of the aging, useless broadcasters.



Benkler – how do you build the third type of thing with collective intelligence. You don’t just open a website to comments. You have to engineer it with thought and care. Socially-motivated, commons-based peer production, here’s how:



First, divvy up the work (you’re not paying and you can’t draft). It has to be granular, modular and integrateable. Even if I do it for 5 minutes I will do it good. 5 minutes or 500 minutes both move it positive direction (granular). Modular – has to be broken up into small pieces. Integrateable – has to have broad social impact, has to be useful.



Self-selected: people are choosing to join you. You have to have a selection process. Then you need an in or out mechanism. In or out membrane of participation.



Communication: need to have platform to talk but not kill each other



Humanization: I don’t believe in this so not covering it



Trust construction: teach people how to trust each other



Norm creation: assembling all these people, they are trying to figure out how to fit in. People have to be acculturated into the space. What’s normal behavior here?



Transparency: how do you stay transparent. When it is small it is obvious. When it is hundreds of thousands of people it becomes an organizational problem.



Monitoring: you actually need a police force (Benkler doesn’t say this). Someone has to watch it all the time. Then who monitors the monitor. State has this problem, common space has this problem. A human difficulty.



Peer review: the people in the group need to know who is good at it.



Discipline: when it is not coming down from powers on high, this is a tough one.



Fairness: Marxist analysts are upset about web 2.0. radically upset about MySpace. A giant machine for teaching false consciousness, teeneagers are roped in and forced to work for nothing and forward Rupert Murdoch’s right wing war against the world.



I don’t think this is a blip. Former professional are being erased by things on the net. Nice, put-your-kids-through-college jobs are melting.



Institutional sustainability: I don’t know how long things like Slashdot can exist. Digg, Redditt and others are eating their lunch. They threw it out there like chum and saw what happened. There was no future plan, no board of directors. I don’t know what sustainability looks like here, and I don’t think anyone else does either.



Al Qaeda is the #1 socially-motivated, commons-based peer production has solved almost all of this. Sustainability? You can’t kill them, more just come up in their place. They are existence proof of this form of organization. KKK, 4th generation warfare groups are good examples.



Benkler: in order to make this work we need to understand the computers are platforms for self-expression rather than well-behaved appliances. Computers stink as appliances: they are hard to use, they change a lot, painful to use, steep learning curve, highly innovative. When you see an appliance it probably kills commons-based peer production. When something barely works (like Ubuntu) it is probably a place for self-expression and peer production.



Benkler put his PDF all over the web, don’t have to pay for it. Then he opened a wiki to explore all the legal, ethical, etc implications. There is nobody there. It is easy to open a wiki and easy to post, but it is not easy to be as smart as Yokai Benkler. He feels like there must be thousands of people to advance his brilliant forward thinking concepts and there just isn’t. Go into any left wing blog and see thousands of people agreeing and saying stuff. There may be two or three people in this room that might be able to help this guy. I can’t engage in a conversation that might help this guy – he is out of my league. If you are in his league you ought to go help him.



Eastern European poet: Cheslav Milosh, Polish communist dissident who got chased out of Poland. He really paid some dues. He wrote it in Berkely because Californians offered him shelter, then became a prof, married a California. A poem about serenity and a sense of fulfillment.

“Gift” – I didn’t transcribe the poem, and I can’t find it online, but in my humble opinion, it wasn’t that central to his talk. Catch it on the podcast. Oh yeah, and I couldn’t find it on Google.

technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/102408395/sxswi-five-tip

Five Tips to Make Your Lame Podcast Listenable

Steve Mack, Principal, LUX Media

Jose Castillo, thinkjose



Mack: book out on streaming media, book out on webcasting, been doing this for a long time. most podcasts are lame, but they don’t have to be



Castillo: owned commercial recording studio, been in the audio business. Into the social “stuff” and new media.



5 tips + 1 bonus tip on how not to suck



Tip 1: Know your audience

Home Brewing Podcast – targeted at home brewers.



Make sure you spend time on the tools for how listeners can interact with you – comments, wikis, e-mail, Twitter

Example: Ze Frank puts user-submitted video into his posts, encourages interaction



Let people leave voice messages and include them, then those people tell all their friends, it spreads.



Tip 2: good equipment is cool

$99 – no reason why you can’t produce broadcast quality audio. Dynamic mics and condenser mics. Condenser has bigger capsule, used in professional radio shows.



You can destroy dynamic mic and it won’t stop working, but when it is loud, you can push it into your face to only get you. You have to have dynamic mic for loud spaces – less sensitive to handling noise and you have to be close.



Condenser mic pics up everything in the room but has to be on spring-loaded holder. Picks up every single thing in the room.



Showing different audio qualities from different mics, very helpful to hear the differences. Showing plug in mic for iPods or M-Audio devices. Ok quality from these.



Interviewing someone? Show them how to hold it or better yet, use a lavalier mic.



The Shure SM7 is the broadcast standard microphone – Broadcast Supply sells them for $400



buy a good mic pre (pre-amplify)

- Built in soundcards will give you noise, they are not built for recording

- if you do the amplification inside the laptop you will lose quality

- a mic pre fits in your laptop bag, costs you $100.

- FocusRite for more money is even higher quality

- some mixers have pre’s built in



firewire and USB rock

- if you buy a microphone with USB it sends the bits directly into a microphone

- for more than one mic it becomes a problem without a mixing desk



3. stop the pop

- get a popper stopper (foam that goes over the mic)

- mic coming from above rather than below gives less popTip 3: be prepared

- panty house and a coat hanger makes a fine pop stopper




- some of you will need a script

- you don’t have to be an expert but it helps

- practice practice practice

- do your homework

- don’t be Chris Farley: ask leading questions, don’t not ask questions

- ask the question then get out of the way and shut up. Lob up a softball and let them hit it out of the park

- passion is key



4. um, like…edit

- be kind to your guests, make them seem like geniuses

- edit for flow

- tell the story (beginning, middle, end)

- lean & mean

- always leave them wanting more



Tip 5: do like the pros do

- the casting in podcasting has been around for 100 years

- theme songs rock (start and end)

- don’t steal music

- podsafe music

- go to MySpace and find a band, I will announce it on my podcast

- intro/outro – who you are, tell them what it is about, may be the first time they have heard it

- pre-announce, “coming up…” but then start where you are and get to that

- wrap it up – thank them for coming, announce next week,

- compression (audio)

- Mack doesn’t like the Levelator

technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/101508687/sxswi-five-tip

Five Tips to Make Your Lame Podcast Listenable

Steve Mack, Principal, LUX Media

Jose Castillo, thinkjose



Mack: book out on streaming media, book out on webcasting, been doing this for a long time. most podcasts are lame, but they don’t have to be



Castillo: owned commercial recording studio, been in the audio business. Into the social “stuff” and new media.



5 tips + 1 bonus tip on how not to suck



Tip 1: Know your audience

Home Brewing Podcast – targeted at home brewers.



Make sure you spend time on the tools for how listeners can interact with you – comments, wikis, e-mail, Twitter

Example: Ze Frank puts user-submitted video into his posts, encourages interaction



Let people leave voice messages and include them, then those people tell all their friends, it spreads.



Tip 2: good equipment is cool

$99 – no reason why you can’t produce broadcast quality audio. Dynamic mics and condenser mics. Condenser has bigger capsule, used in professional radio shows.



You can destroy dynamic mic and it won’t stop working, but when it is loud, you can push it into your face to only get you. You have to have dynamic mic for loud spaces – less sensitive to handling noise and you have to be close.



Condenser mic pics up everything in the room but has to be on spring-loaded holder. Picks up every single thing in the room.



Showing different audio qualities from different mics, very helpful to hear the differences. Showing plug in mic for iPods or M-Audio devices. Ok quality from these.



Interviewing someone? Show them how to hold it or better yet, use a lavalier mic.



The Shure SM7 is the broadcast standard microphone – Broadcast Supply sells them for $400



buy a good mic pre (pre-amplify)

- Built in soundcards will give you noise, they are not built for recording

- if you do the amplification inside the laptop you will lose quality

- a mic pre fits in your laptop bag, costs you $100.

- FocusRite for more money is even higher quality

- some mixers have pre’s built in



firewire and USB rock

- if you buy a microphone with USB it sends the bits directly into a microphone

- for more than one mic it becomes a problem without a mixing desk



3. stop the pop

- get a popper stopper (foam that goes over the mic)

- mic coming from above rather than below gives less popTip 3: be prepared

- panty house and a coat hanger makes a fine pop stopper




- some of you will need a script

- you don’t have to be an expert but it helps

- practice practice practice

- do your homework

- don’t be Chris Farley: ask leading questions, don’t not ask questions

- ask the question then get out of the way and shut up. Lob up a softball and let them hit it out of the park

- passion is key



4. um, like…edit

- be kind to your guests, make them seem like geniuses

- edit for flow

- tell the story (beginning, middle, end)

- lean & mean

- always leave them wanting more



Tip 5: do like the pros do

- the casting in podcasting has been around for 100 years

- theme songs rock (start and end)

- don’t steal music

- podsafe music

- go to MySpace and find a band, I will announce it on my podcast

- intro/outro – who you are, tell them what it is about, may be the first time they have heard it

- pre-announce, “coming up…” but then start where you are and get to that

- wrap it up – thank them for coming, announce next week,

- compression (audio)

- Mack doesn’t like the Levelator

technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/101494339/sxswi-five-tip

Five Tips to Make Your Lame Podcast Listenable

Steve Mack, Principal, LUX Media

Jose Castillo, thinkjose



Mack: book out on streaming media, book out on webcasting, been doing this for a long time. most podcasts are lame, but they don’t have to be



Castillo: owned commercial recording studio, been in the audio business. Into the social “stuff” and new media.



5 tips + 1 bonus tip on how not to suck



Tip 1: Know your audience

Home Brewing Podcast – targeted at home brewers.



Make sure you spend time on the tools for how listeners can interact with you – comments, wikis, e-mail, Twitter

Example: Ze Frank puts user-submitted video into his posts, encourages interaction



Let people leave voice messages and include them, then those people tell all their friends, it spreads.



Tip 2: good equipment is cool

$99 – no reason why you can’t produce broadcast quality audio. Dynamic mics and condenser mics. Condenser has bigger capsule, used in professional radio shows.



You can destroy dynamic mic and it won’t stop working, but when it is loud, you can push it into your face to only get you. You have to have dynamic mic for loud spaces – less sensitive to handling noise and you have to be close.



Condenser mic pics up everything in the room but has to be on spring-loaded holder. Picks up every single thing in the room.



Showing different audio qualities from different mics, very helpful to hear the differences. Showing plug in mic for iPods or M-Audio devices. Ok quality from these.



Interviewing someone? Show them how to hold it or better yet, use a lavalier mic.



The Shure SM7 is the broadcast standard microphone – Broadcast Supply sells them for $400



buy a good mic pre (pre-amplify)

- Built in soundcards will give you noise, they are not built for recording

- if you do the amplification inside the laptop you will lose quality

- a mic pre fits in your laptop bag, costs you $100.

- FocusRite for more money is even higher quality

- some mixers have pre’s built in



firewire and USB rock

- if you buy a microphone with USB it sends the bits directly into a microphone

- for more than one mic it becomes a problem without a mixing desk



3. stop the pop

- get a popper stopper (foam that goes over the mic)

- mic coming from above rather than below gives less popTip 3: be prepared

- panty house and a coat hanger makes a fine pop stopper




- some of you will need a script

- you don’t have to be an expert but it helps

- practice practice practice

- do your homework

- don’t be Chris Farley: ask leading questions, don’t not ask questions

- ask the question then get out of the way and shut up. Lob up a softball and let them hit it out of the park

- passion is key



4. um, like…edit

- be kind to your guests, make them seem like geniuses

- edit for flow

- tell the story (beginning, middle, end)

- lean & mean

- always leave them wanting more



Tip 5: do like the pros do

- the casting in podcasting has been around for 100 years

- theme songs rock (start and end)

- don’t steal music

- podsafe music

- go to MySpace and find a band, I will announce it on my podcast

- intro/outro – who you are, tell them what it is about, may be the first time they have heard it

- pre-announce, “coming up…” but then start where you are and get to that

- wrap it up – thank them for coming, announce next week,

- compression (audio)

- Mack doesn’t like the Levelator

technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/102408396/sxswi-instruct

Instructional Online Video – The Next Big Thing

Jan Kabili PhotoshopOnline.TV

Alex Lindsay Founder, Pixel Corps



Kabili: creator, producer of Photoshop Online video podcast; also a trainer, writers. Offer free video podcasts on my blog



Linday: worked at Lucas film doing visual effects, done blue-screen training. Founder of a guild for media creators called Pixel Corps. We create about an hour of instructional video a week.



Kabili: I hate saying instructional video, sounds boring, sounds like something you have to do in school. (my comment: hey!)



Showing a mashup of instructional video on software training including clips from National Association of Photoshop Professionals (I can’t believe there is such a thing!)



Kabili: this is not limited to software training. This is a huge area. Expert Village shows educational videos or how-to videos. Learn how to skateboard, horseback ride, cook, play an instrument, build a home recording studio, quilt, work out and more. Make site shows you how to make other kids of things with online video.



Methods to create videos:

- get a video camera and film yourself

- you can use video camera for the screen too, but have to be careful

- videotaped me showing a photographer Photoshop online

- screen capture software



How to present:

- you can make a video podcast

- RSS feed so it comes to them

- gain subscribers

- add to iTunes

- post to website

- brightcove hosts video, has ad-sharing

- blip.tv

- Revver

- Lynda video training library – buys your video and givea you royalties. They handle the editing, etc.



Lindsay: PixelCopr does inside training by video and external work. You can watch Macbreak, Media Tech and Inside the Black Box on iTunes podcast



If the content is compelling enough the high-end video stuff is not that important. Our most popular shows are some of our most technically simple.



On Networks (launching tomorrow) will pay up front for broadcast quality, 3-8 minute instructional videos



People will watch less than 10 minute videos, but will listen to 1-2 hour audio podcasts



Using Apple Motion to add graphics to video podcasts



With Quicktime video you can embed links inside the video – link to a webpage, automatically link to a webpage or link to another movie. LiveStage Pro is the program we use, but it is awful, but lets you do it.



Your competitive advantage to TV is the interactivity. You can go for a niche market.



Key Points:

- short segment

- be clear

- be entertaining



Right now anyone can put something out and be watched because there is not a lot out there right now. That will change soon.



OnNetworks, Pondango, iTunes/AppleTV, Sony (PS3), Microsoft (XBox), Zudeo, Joost, ATT, Comcast, Verizon are all in this.



Every magazine topic is 5 potential shows, there is lot of room to build programming.



Video stacks tracking: Libsyn – they give us stats that are pretty good



People are looking to pay $1500-2500/show. We won’t do shows if we can’t do 10 at a time. It is all about efficiency of scale right now.



My thoughts: this session was all about commercial uses for instructional video. No focus on the actual instruction. Oh well, I am planning to use it more. I know Alex creates a lot of screencasts at his school and Atomic Learning is an amazingly affordable resource to provide to teachers, students and families in your school – it trains you how to use just about any software out there.



technorati tags:, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blogged with Flock


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/101476995/sxswi-instruct

Instructional Online Video – The Next Big Thing

Jan Kabili PhotoshopOnline.TV

Alex Lindsay Founder, Pixel Corps



Kabili: creator, producer of Photoshop Online video podcast; also a trainer, writers. Offer free video podcasts on my blog



Linday: worked at Lucas film doing visual effects, done blue-screen training. Founder of a guild for media creators called Pixel Corps. We create about an hour of instructional video a week.



Kabili: I hate saying instructional video, sounds boring, sounds like something you have to do in school. (my comment: hey!)



Showing a mashup of instructional video on software training including clips from National Association of Photoshop Professionals (I can’t believe there is such a thing!)



Kabili: this is not limited to software training. This is a huge area. Expert Village shows educational videos or how-to videos. Learn how to skateboard, horseback ride, cook, play an instrument, build a home recording studio, quilt, work out and more. Make site shows you how to make other kids of things with online video.



Methods to create videos:

- get a video camera and film yourself

- you can use video camera for the screen too, but have to be careful

- videotaped me showing a photographer Photoshop online

- screen capture software



How to present:

- you can make a video podcast

- RSS feed so it comes to them

- gain subscribers

- add to iTunes

- post to website

- brightcove hosts video, has ad-sharing

- blip.tv

- Revver

- Lynda video training library – buys your video and givea you royalties. They handle the editing, etc.



Lindsay: PixelCopr does inside training by video and external work. You can watch Macbreak, Media Tech and Inside the Black Box on iTunes podcast



If the content is compelling enough the high-end video stuff is not that important. Our most popular shows are some of our most technically simple.



On Networks (launching tomorrow) will pay up front for broadcast quality, 3-8 minute instructional videos



People will watch less than 10 minute videos, but will listen to 1-2 hour audio podcasts



Using Apple Motion to add graphics to video podcasts



With Quicktime video you can embed links inside the video – link to a webpage, automatically link to a webpage or link to another movie. LiveStage Pro is the program we use, but it is awful, but lets you do it.



Your competitive advantage to TV is the interactivity. You can go for a niche market.



Key Points:

- short segment

- be clear

- be entertaining



Right now anyone can put something out and be watched because there is not a lot out there right now. That will change soon.



OnNetworks, Pondango, iTunes/AppleTV, Sony (PS3), Microsoft (XBox), Zudeo, Joost, ATT, Comcast, Verizon are all in this.



Every magazine topic is 5 potential shows, there is lot of room to build programming.



Video stacks tracking: Libsyn – they give us stats that are pretty good



People are looking to pay $1500-2500/show. We won’t do shows if we can’t do 10 at a time. It is all about efficiency of scale right now.



My thoughts: this session was all about commercial uses for instructional video. No focus on the actual instruction. Oh well, I am planning to use