8 posts tagged “sxsw 2007”
There's still more to talk about about SxSW but, for now, let's link to some things we've discussed before:
I love twitter, but this is some nerdy shit:
Interest in the messaging service Twitter is clearly on the rise (see this Wall Street Journal article if you’re not already familiar with it), and while most people are figuring out how to use Twitter for its intended purpose–social networking–I’d like to share a few notes on my more prosaic experiment of using it as part of my home automation system.
- Twittering Your Home by Gordon Mayer, O'Reilly MacDevCenter Blog, 03.16.17
That we're not playing by the same rules (like these) is why I like namespaces/content places like VOX:
I won’t engage with persons that post inflammatory off-topic messages. I alone am responsible for wasting my time. Besides, I could be encouraging the continued posting of said comments.
-NETIQUETTE (jt. - although, damn, can't we turn the caps lock off?), Dead Men Don't Rape, 02.17.07
I am fiending for Samhita's discussion of this panel as this, Rachel Kramer Bussel's wonderful participation notwithstanding, was both the worst and most enjoyable panel experience I had as an audience member at SXSW.
The scene: Room 10AB on the third floor of the convention center, 5 women (all white), all claiming to be bloggers (I think I'd only put RKB in that category), all paid sex columnists (again, RKB's experience puts her on a different playing field), all not very connected to this wired/interactive world and me sitting next to a fuming poorly compensated brown feminist whose head nearly exploded with each panelist comment. About halfway through the panel, I couldn't even look at Sam. I would just put my hand out and whisper, "Be easy" and try my best to stifle my guffaws and chortles.
Now let me preface this by saying that I have no quarrel with the concept. There is a long history of sex being an important part of SXSW. My first year here, I spent a good amount of time at parties with Halcyon and Tassy. The Sex and Computational Technology panel the day before was one of the most academic experiences I've ever had. I also see value in hearing from bloggers who are paid for their craft and am quite curious about how relationship dynamics get played out when you throw our online identities into the mix. In fact, I've been thinking a lot about that as a couple I know has been dealing quite publicly with a tough time in their relationship. I've also seen blog nerds here talk about how they met online via blogs and are married now or in a committed relationship.
Hell, I'm pretty sure MJ and Jason's wedding will be liveblogged or twittered.
The problem here is that this was a nuts and bolts conversation about how traditional media sex writers are navigating their traditional media forays into the digital space. RKB snuck in an anecdote or two about same sex relationships but this was an entirely white hetero, traditional relationship kind of situation with people not talking very much about "interactive" issues. There was the bold and inaccurate statement that men aren't blogging about dating and sex (and when did those two words become synonymous?) which completely ignores gay bloggers (I can name 5 gay bloggers [of color] off the top of my head who have very publicly talked life and love...in fact, with sexuality as a key identity factor for them in their online spaces, those topics are maybe the crux of their blogs), spiritual bloggers (for whom romantic love, sex, etc. are significant factors in their faith based lives and online identities), teens who might have entirely online romantic relationships in spaces like myspace, facebook and livejournal, and on and on.
To put it plainly, I was mortified.
And I didn't even go into the panel looking for that kind of commentary but for it to be so blatantly unacknowledged and innacurately portrayed blew my mind.
I wanted more discussion of relationship dynamics in the online world. I've written occasionally about relationship stuff (both in the courtship and erotic senses) over the years and I know of situations where people have battled online about their love. Is this helpful or harmful? Are there any thoughts about how the online world effects intimacy? Does writing about sex and love online change the power dynamics in a relationship? If you're a better writer than your blog love partner, do you win more arguments, get resented, unfairly have an advantage? Does online writing about sex and relationships allow for more cross-cultural understanding in inter-(pick your term) relationships?
Discussions of editorial battles, statements like "women are bitches" and generalizations about this creature known as man earn you no kudos here. Let's get deeper.
Please.
Before Sam's head explodes.
I'll come back to a lot of the things I'm going to touch on here more deeply later (particularly twitter, the digital ethnorati panel, and the new "online identity" conversations) but here's what my very tired brain is thinking about:
Twitter:
- How did I stay connected to people at SXSW before twitter?
- I do have unlimited text on my phone, right?
- Twitter is not for your personal conversation. Let's try a one interaction AB conversation (and use the @username convention) and not AB AB AB AB AB AB where I don't know if you're talking to me or not. Remember we don't all have the same friends. We do still have IM and Direct Message and E-Mail for that.
- It is not rude to stop following someone.
- Samhita and Erica are some of my new favorites. Get Familiar.
- Laina and Ms Jen are now officially part of my sxsw inner circle
- I'm awfully excited I finally got to meet Rox and RKB in person
- It's nice being able to talk work stuff with work friends like Amy and Cruftbox at SXSW
- George, Lynne, Tiffany, Lainie, and Tracy are all my ace #1 peoples but you know this
Panels:
Business Side of Web Design
- I really need to come up with the "Agency Constitution" for my production team
- I really need to form a production philosophy that we'll adhere to. A mantra, if you will (and not negative ones like "No more phases" and "Not a production issue").
- I don't have any design/agency/business role models. I should get some.
- Summary thought: Now that people have developed online identity, they are now seeking a sense of place and that often means at points where online and offline worlds intersect.
- We really need to stop thinking about offline and online as separate.
- public vs. private is still a huge (and unsolved) issue.
- SF nerds name-check plazes all the time but I don't think it has much average user application (or provides a service that people are clamoring for)
- New etiquette rules really need to be established for online and mobile communication
- Reputation, Identity, Presence, Nameplaces - these are my kinds of buzzwords
- How does the desire for someone like me who wants a persistent online identity exist at the same time that many people (particularly young people) like the concept of disposable identity? Are their tools and applications that can make the web better for both types of folks?
- What about those who want no online identity but still wants the tools that are increasingly requiring identity creation?
- Short form/online content creators are mostly thinking about how to navigate big media negotiation instead of thinking much about the new challenges they face as their content gets monetized (unions, guilds, talent, production value)
- I don't know enough about the VLOG community
- This requires it's own post.
- Do we get to self define ourselves as the "Ethnorati"?
- When unexpected communities begin using a tool in unexpected ways, is there a kind of "byte flight" where the intended/existing community leaves for other options? (See Orkut, see fotolog, See even Friendster)
- I'm not sure I subscribe to the assumption that online access is for all (at least not in the "a laptop in every living room, a broadband connection in every wall" kind of way it was discussed here)
- Are there companies thinking about technology tools from ethnic/geographic perspective? Who are they? Who is running them?
- Aren't the tools being created from a commerce perspective different from the ones that academia and/or socially progressive organizations need in the communities they service?
- Does perception matter in this case?
- snooze
@sxsw. Wish you were here.
I haven't seen many notes online yet about the panel but I think it went well. I met my goals of talking about socials tools that I like (vox, twitter) and why I like them (gating, persistent ID, groups, access levels, moderation). I didn't spill any work secrets but still got to talk about how community apps get thought about or not thought about when they are being developed, the role of setting rules, the difference between how news editors might deal with content and moderation vs. what a blog editor might or might not care about.
Samhita, Lynne and Laina were, of course, amazing and I think we accomplished what we wanted. I got nods of appreciation from Lisa Stone and that's enough for me.
If you were there, I'd love feedback. Via vox, IM, email or twitter.
unrelated: Twitter is THE thing to talk about this year.
Y'all know how to find me: Twitter, Dodgeball, IM, the Hideout, the Onion, where ever my boy DJ Mel is.
Here's what my daytime schedule looks like I think:
Friday, March 9th
5:00 pm •
How to Rawk SXSW
Saturday, March 10th
10:00 am • Better than 1,000 Words: Video on the Web or 10:00 am • Emerging Social and Technology Trends
11:30 am • Bridging the Online Cultural Divide (see me speak)
2:00 pm •
Games + Entertainment Brands: Five Top Trends In 2007
5:00 pm • Production Companies 2.0: Taking Online Video to the Next Level
Sunday, March 11th
10:00 am • Every Breath You Take: Identity, Attention, Presence and Reputation
11:30 am • Lonelygirl15 Case Study
2:00 pm •
Everything You Always Wanted to Know About the Mobile Web...but Were Afraid to Ask
3:30 pm • Deadlines, Clients and Cashflow: The Business Side of Web Design
4:05 pm • Moving Large Corporations Towards Accessibility
5:00 pm • People-Powered Products
Monday, March 12th
10:00 am • User Generated Content and Original Editorial: Friend or Foe
11:30 am •
The Digital Ethnorati
2:00 pm • Dan Rather Keynote Interview
5:00 pm • Do You Blog on the First Date?
Tuesday, March 13th
11:30 am • 12 Values Shaping Technology's Future
The night time then will be left to wherever I can get into the most trouble.
Somehow, I've become a panelist again.
I'm joining the "Bridging the Online Cultural Divide" panel on Saturday's schedule. Sorry, folks, no Blogging While Black Revolutions this year. The topic is very interesting, though, and I'll get into it more as we move towards the conference as well as point you to the excellent company I'll be in on the dais.
I submitted my long and short bios for the site and program today. Here they are:
Short Bio: Jason Toney was once a B-Level blogebrity and respected identity blogger. He currently caters to his community of neighbors, friends, and family on VOX and makes websites for Disney Online.
Now, excuse me, Grey's Anatomy is on the Tivo and it be callin' me...Long Bio: You may know Jason Toney from past SXSW panel classics as Blogging While Black and Blogging While Black Reloaded. He blogged at negroplease.com from 2002 til early 2007 but now keeps his thoughts and his community close to the vest on VOX. This is his third time at SXSW and third time as a panelist. It's also the third time he's come with a different job. First, he was working for Bunim/Murray Productions as The Real World ran roughshod through Austin and the conference. Last year, he was here with amp'd mobile launching a now defunct social network that nobody cared about. He quit one week later. Now, he manages teams who make websites at Disney Online. In 2008, he hopes to return to Austin employed by NASA as a Space Cowboy.
