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Archive for Technology – Page 10

Oscar

This year the Oscars seemed to radiate a new, fresh energy. It was exciting to see Al Gore(‘s film crew) and Melissa Etheridge take Oscars for An Inconvenient Truth, and (even though she glowed on the day in jewel-encrusted chiffon), I found it refreshing to read Helen Mirren’s pre-Oscar disdain for the prevailing culture of Oscar Couture critique.

I really wanted  Peter O’Toole to win best actor, because I loved him in Venus (I even reviewed it here when I first saw it) and because it would feel good to send an actor of his caliber off stage with an Oscar, but then when Forest Whitaker took it, I had to change my mind. Even the swiftly-controlled moment of disappointment and resignation on O’Toole’s face did not eclipse my joy hearing Forest’s acceptance speech.

Apparently Whitaker has received a lot of criticism for his lack of verbal polish in the past, but this simple honest moment touched a vibrant chord in me. For those who missed it, the gist of what he said is that the reason he became an actor was because even as a child he believed every person has a light inside them, and he wanted the chance to connect with that light in all of us. Uttering that kind of simplicity and beauty before a billion viewers takes courage, and my heart swelled in pride for him.

Perhaps we’ve turned a corner, and our collective spirit is starting to open up in optimism for a new day. It certainly felt like that to me on Sunday night.

VisionHolder

Another amazing VisionHolder conversation last night – these are the free phone sessions with some of the most exciting voices of our times that Heartland Circle produces every month. This time the visionary was Brian Johnson, founder and CEO of Zaadz.

This call was already going to be exciting for me, since I am a big Zaadz fan, but it exceeded all expectations. I felt like Brian had entered my dream, or more accurately perhaps it’s a collective dream we’ve both tapped into, but it felt remarkably synchronistic especially when he started talking about beauty. The words he used could have been coming out of my own mouth, and I have to tell you I don’t meet all that many people who know what I’m talking about, so this was unusual and almost swooning-level exciting for a number of reasons.

To hear this perspective being spoken by another who is first of all a man (the percentage of men who really know what I’m talking about in this area is very small), second a successful businessman, and to put the cherry on top, a successful businessman in my field who has taken the passionate dream I have for a transcendent technology and given it form, was absolute Heaven.

And it feels like the conversation has just begun…

Social Media Club

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Last night I had the pleasure of being part of the first San Francisco Social Media Club, which was produced by Chris Heuer and Kristie Wells and is part of a wave taking place in cities all over the world. Chris had asked the World Café to partner with him in creating an atmosphere of collaborative dialogue, and the result was subtly different than any other techie-oriented event I’ve ever attended.

People came from all over – there was a music blogger there from Alberta who’d flown in especially for the evening, a PR representative for Earthlink from Atlanta who just happened to be in town making a pitch to manage the new wireless SF, Andrea from Washington DC, who I believe was reporting on the group’s activities, a woman from Israel (who said she actually lived ‘online’) – but the crowd was mostly home grown, and it was very cool meeting so many vibrantly interesting new people in my field.

Jimmy Wales (co-founder of Wikipedia) was there from his new business, Wikia, (informally, but it turned out they sponsored the event at the last minute  by generously throwing in some money when the numbers rose steeply and Chris needed help buying pretzels & beer for the crowd). He started the conversation off by sharing some of the core values that hold the Wikipedia community together. He said the three things that had really mattered to them as their community developed were "Assume Good Faith", practice "Intentional Vulnerability", and promote "Accountability rather than Gatekeeping". These values are remarkably in keeping with the World Café principles, so Jimmy’s words got us off to a great start.

Having the interaction center around values, in World Café parlance, "Conversations that Matter", gave a very different flavor to this gathering, and the exchange got deeper as the evening progressed. Even though no one at any of my tables had heard of Zaadz or seemed to have any kind of spiritual orientation at all, it became clear very soon that we all share the social values which are more and more visible at the core of the web 2.2 or social media movement: fairness, transparency, open-heartedness, collaboration, generosity, collectivity.  I’m excited about what’s in store for us as we begin to weave the connections and develop the enterprises that will bring these values to the forefront of the larger culture.

MacWorld

The fun for me at MacWorld this year wasn’t really the cool new tools – although there were some pretty cool new tools being shown, notably the new iPhone, Leopard and Adobe’s Creative Suite3 (none of which are being shipped for months, which I’m afraid kind of takes the edge off the excitement factor for me. Also, the new iPhone is only 8G – what are they THINKING?!!!).

I did get a big kick out of the extraordinarily complete array of
Canon lenses, all laid out in the case like a row of jewels ready for
me to try on in turn, and of course I did, effortlessly adding 3-4 to
my ‘covet madly must have now’ list. I always enjoy looking in on the free workshops, and
as usual I learned several things I didn’t know just in passing eavesdrop mode.

I couldn’t help but notice the convention-wide attention placed on
laptop chic. There were literally dozens of companies dedicated to computer charisma, including some absolutely gorgeous Italian-leather custom laptop covers from a company called case-mate, and so many varieties of bags it was hard to keep track of them.

But the most fun for me was in people-watching – the mix of ages, sizes, tech-ability and interests all sharing a mind-space like this is really inspiring. I stopped in to check
out a digital photography session where the majority of eager
students sitting in front of their shiny new 24" flat screen
monitors were 65 years of age and upwards. I couldn’t help being touched, by both the patience and
kindness of the much younger instructor-geek and the eager innocence of
the retiree-students in their enthusiasm for learning this new life-enhancing skill.