Einstein’s Corner – Must Read

Einstein’s Corner is the blog of New Media pro, conference speaker and writer Jeff Einstein.

Einstein’s Corner explores the spiritual, emotional, physical, and social effects of our obsessions with and addictions to technology and media on the quality of our lives and work in the Great Age of Addiction.

Some of the dotcom refugees in the NYC scene may remeber Jeff from the NY Times Magazine cover story about the unemployed new media types. Jeff has been writing a lot in the last year about media addiction, both on his blog and at mediapost.com. It dovetails with some of the recent discussions in the blogosphere about attention (thanks Steve Gillmore and Scoble) and the discussions Ace and I have had about information overload (unsubscribing from blogs, who you read, how much you read).

Are we addicted to the media? I might be. I follow over 100 blogs per day. 4 or 5 magazines a week. 3-4 books a week. I watch pretty much just the news, or a few select shows (Lost, the Office, Curb Your Enthusiasm, House). I am definitely addicted to consuming media. I dont like quiet time, unless I need to think about something.

In the interest of full disclosure, Jeff was partners with J. Sandom (my old boss at OgilvyInteractive) in the first interactive agency Einstein and Sandom. He most recently worked at Rapp Digital with Jamie Corl (one of my favorite people in the world, and a kick-ass producer).


Einstein’s corner
is definitely worth a look.

MythTV How-To

Thanks to PVRblog (which is a killer resource for that space) for a pointer to Systm’s how-to on MythTV – an open source TiVo
Build a Myth box video from Systm | PVRblog

Systm is a production from two TechTV Screensavers alumni, Kevin and Dan who are doing more in-depth segments on technology. The first two posts of their vlog (video blog) can be found at the link above.

This is a great example of niche-casting.

    They are writing their own content (very specific target audience)
    They are shooting it themselves (with pro quality sound and video)
    They are editing it themselves (with some nice motion graphics)
    They are distributing it via bittorrent! (saving on bandwidth, distributing the weight)

Kevin also does a group podcast with Leo Laporte, Patrick and a few other members of the Screensavers alumni club at this week in tech.

Google Maps – media hacking defined

CNN.com – Google tinkerers make data come alive – Jun 9, 2005

Love it. Love it. Love it.

Google is a company that is getting hit left and right with accolades and bronx cheers. Innovation is one of the thing they do REAL well.

They create google maps.
They put it out there (leaving some of the doors open).
And they watch what their users do with it.

This is another killer example of user generated content/media hacking/audience participation. Google saw a way to provide a service (maps) users would like. Instead of locking the doors and keeping the users from ‘playing in the sandbox’, Google opened it up. Gave users a platform to… do anything their imaginations can come up with.

Violate the EULA? YES. Fun for the mediahackers tweakin and changing and using googlemaps to do things the devs couldnt imagine? YES.

Fun for the users? YES YES YES YES YES

Seth’s Blog: On being alert

From Seth Godin’s blog:
Seth’s Blog: On being alert

1. Seth writes a successful ebook(find it here)
2. BRANDPLAY writes a followup to Seth’s book
3. Seth announces it (being alert post above)
4. Seth has the biggest singe day of sales for KnockKnock EVER!
5. Rinse, Repeat

Seth’s mention of BRANDPLAYS book drives sales of his own, original work?
Cool.

The fact that someone wrote a followup to Seth’s book?
Priceless.

Media Hacking

Dave Winer posted yesterday about how he is a media hacker. Gareth Branwyn (of cooltools and streettech which were the ancestors of engadget and gizmodo) defines media hacking as:

Media Hacking is a term I use in Jamming the Media to refer to amateurs who produce various forms of media, making use of available technologies and resources and trying to overcome limitations, in much the same way that computer hackers do. Early hackers preached a “question authority” and “yield to the hands-on imperative” philosophy that’s shared by most DIY media-makers. Media hacking is any form of do-it-yourself media manipulation done with little money, lots of passion, and heaping doses of good ol’ Yankee ingenuity.

This is what I have been interested in for the last couple of years. The tools are becoming a commodity. The platforms are becoming more accessible. ‘Regula Folks’ are getting more involved. What used to be called “audience participation’ is sometimes more interesting than the show itself. Mmmm… Participation.

Blogs
WordPress, Bubbler, Mambo – 7-8 years ago these kinds of content management systems were nonexistent. You could write it from scratch (in ASP or PERL), or use Vignette, or Cold Fusion. We didnt know how bad life sucked back then, but after I set seanbohan.com up in 15 minutes… oh man did life suck back then. It was a pain in the ass to make and keep up a personal website. People didnt suddenly realize they had something to say when these tools were released into the ‘wild’. A barrier to entry was removed. It became easier.

Advertising
Some of the best ads I have seen in the last year were part of the MoveOn.org competition during the last election cycle. Sure some were created by Pros. But so many more were created by people with passion. They now have access to the pro, or prosumer tools (cameras and software) they could only imagine a few years ago. They didnt have an Avid in the basement. They didnt have to rent a camera for thousands of dollars.

Secondly, look at a lot of the virals and “non sanctioned” ads out there (links to come). These are being created by people who are creative and want to show off their stuff, or who are passionate about a company. What happens when they get pissed at a company and start using these tools against them like the MoveOn campaign???

Podcasting
Holy crap. What blogs did for citizen journalism and comment, Podcasting has done the same for citizen radio. Put the tools out there and see what happens. Drop the barriers to entry, write the software to make it easy (thanks Dave) to transport your content and then the real challenge is on the part of the user… do you have something to say?

NetNet – media hackers are putting the tools the big boys use into the hands of the little guys, stepping back and watching the fun, the chaos, the signal and the noise. This innovation isn’t under NDA or the threat of a cease and desist. It isnt locked down by platform or by operating system or language or how you access the net (AOL has blogs!). These guys are innovating and watching how their innovations change, mutate, grow, expand and fork.

We need to add ‘participation’ to the definition of media hacker. Guys like Dave and Adam and others are hacking these platforms and structures and are giving the rest of us opportunities to participate.

Cool.

Gnomedex SOLD OUT

Chris Pirillo (Lockergnome) is reporting that Gnomedex is sold out this year. Glad I bought in a month ago.

I will be taking some vacation in 2 weeks to head out to Seattle to see what all the buzz is about. Dave Winer and Adam Curry will be keynoting, and a ton of other people who I have been following for the last few years are going to be there and I am really excited to see how it all plays out. This is another reason why I am ‘eating the dogfood’.

It will be interesting to see how Dave and Adam’s interaction works out. No doubt they will both be total professionals, but I am interested in seeing how their very different views are recieved by the crowd.

Check out Gnomedex here for the details.