Image

Archive for technology – Page 2

Internet as Conduit II

Cyberspace_data_2
I got this image on Flickr (click it for a full size view). Here is the description:

"A single bit of data speeding though cyberspace leaves streams of
internet entropic turbulence in its wake."

Seth Godin

I listened to a Skypecast sponsored by Typepad today, with Seth Godin. I knew him briefly in my days working with Fast Company, read most of his books and have always liked him. He didn’t disappoint me this time either, declining to pitch his new book Small is the New Big by saying if we were interested we would go to his blog and buy or download it. But what he did say warmed my heart.

His message was simple. He talked about blogging being a force for authenticity in the world,
citing the fact that one couldn’t really lie consistently day after
day, and eventually the real ‘you’ would be known. And once we let
ourselves be known, people begin to relax and others can’t help but tend to love us.

In answer to someone’s question about the best, fastest way to build a massive readership, he said that it didn’t really matter. If we were telling the truth to 5 people, it was far better and more effective than talking crap to 50,000. He gave a big boost to all the small bloggers who were there, and prioritized the sharing of what is real and true in our lives rather than slavish devotion to some supposedly effective business strategy.

You can listen to it yourself here.

BlogHer Beauty

I’m at BlogHer (a conference for women bloggers)… and let me tell you – Beauty is everywhere!

I’m at BlogHer (a conference for women bloggers)… and it’s pretty amazing on a lot of levels. I look around and there is a sea of women – radiant & connected both literally & figuratively.

The tables are packed with people talking to each other. They are
young and old, and with an astounding variety of color even for a tech conference (well, sort of a tech conference… most of those assembled are not techies, but regular people who happen to blog).

Still, in a
miracle of multi-tasking, almost every one of us has a sleek laptop
plugged in (sporting some outstandingly beautiful screensavers, I might
add) to a wireless connection, and a digital camera ready to capture
the excitement electronically
.

Many are speed-typing their experience directly into their
blogs, making this a ‘live’ event for the 1000s of women that are unable to be
here in person. This ‘culture of generosity’ (or ‘culture of love’ as
some of my friends began to call it after the first cocktail party) was
the dominant note sustained throughout the whole conference.

While waiting for my first workshop (Primping Your Blog) to start, a beautiful woman wandered by my table looking confused. She was disoriented having come in late, so I invited her to join us. After she sat down I read her name tag & saw she was Susie Bright! She didn’t stay long, since the wireless connection sucked at that table (like everywhere else as it turned out), but before she left she gave me one of her ‘clits up!’ buttons, which was very cool.

I’m loving the lunch keynote which is on Web 2.0. Because this conversation is part of BlogHer, we’re talking about Web 2.0 through the eyes of women and how our particular sensibilities, values and concerns have contributed to and continue to impact this latest iteration of technological development.

Listening to Caterina Fake who was part of the original team that created Flikr (now acquired by Yahoo), and Meg Hourihan  who helped start Blogger (now part of the Google empire) talk about the role they played in their companies, as women, was awesome. I felt an incredible pride and connection to them (& by extension all the ‘girl geeks’ in the room), hearing about how their passions and commitment to a more ‘personal’ atmosphere, to promoting individual ‘voice’ & creative expression, creating connection & community was central to the success of these seminal enterprises.

My celebration of them is a celebration of myself, and of what we as women bring to the world of technology and to everything we do. We have a contribution that makes a real difference, that has real value, and seeing it expressed this clearly all around me is hugely stimulating and empowering.

Why Beauty Dialogues?

We have dialogues about war, about societal decay and spousal abuse, landfills, collapsed morals & the lack of universal health coverage… I think it’s time to start a dialogue about Beauty.

We have dialogues about war, about societal decay and spousal abuse, landfills, collapsed morals & the lack of universal health coverage… I think it’s time to start talking about Beauty.

What is Beautiful to you? What commands your attention and attracts your sense of awe?

What do you hold so precious that it is always beautiful to you, no matter how it might appear to others?

What does it mean to ‘Walk in Beauty’?

One of the people I most admire in the world always talks about the importance of holding ‘Beauty in the Center’ and I dedicate this conversation to a deeper collective understanding and embodiment of that reality.

I want to use this space to talk about all those things I find beautiful, and explore why I find them so. About how important it is to me to keep Beauty in the conversation, and not relegate her to a shelf of something that ‘would be nice, but isn’t essential’, because she IS essential, in my life, and I believe Beauty is essential in all our lives and in the world today. It seems to me that we need her presence now more than ever, so I want to call her into being & illuminate her as best I can through word and color, image and sound.

As a designer of online communications like websites and blogs, e-zines, online conferences, etc., I’m always fascinated by how far I can go within the limits of my medium, and I don’t believe anyone has yet touched the boundaries of this connective ether-web we share here in cyberspace… This is my pleasure and my passion, dancing simultaneously at the center & on the edges, so I would like to explore Beauty from this perspective, both in this conversation and in my work as it continues to evolve and develop.

From a more personal perspective, I notice that my life is an interwoven play between my art, my career and work in the world, my feelings and thoughts, my current passions and the myriad personal and professional relationships that sustain me. I want to illuminate that interconnection between all my parts here, and not pretend that my professional life is completely separate from my creative explorations or my personal joys and sadnesses.

If you are drawn to this dialogue and want to join me in the sacred play we’ve embarked upon here, I’d love that! Your collaboration is most welcome… and you are welcome to just dip in once in a while and read what others have to say. It’s all good.

Blessings upon you wherever you be,

Amy