Archive for the ‘SXSW2008’ Category

A while back I posted my concerns about how SXSW’s programming was a bit off this last year, to my taste. I definitely felt a lack of technical content, felt a lack of intellectual take-aways, etc. I expressed my concerns in the feedback and “Katie” replied thus:

i’m sorry to hear that you did not enjoy the panels overall. we feel like we spend a lot of time helping speakers to prepare for the event and certainly do not encourage the speakers to be “free form” and “spontaneous,” but rather well-prepared and focused. can you please give me more specifics on which panels that you went to and which speakers you felt were not sufficiently prepared? this helps us to know which speakers to invite back next year (and which not to invite).

we have talked a lot in recent years about organizing the panels around specific tracks, like you mentioned. the main reason we have not moved to this system is that we want to retain the flexibility to put what we think will be the most popular panels in the largest rooms. if we have tracks, we lose some of this flexibility. how do we determine which panels are likely to be the most popular? we pull this info from the survey that we send to pre-registered attendees in february. in the program book, each panel was given a rating based on the knowledge level - i.e. beginner to advanced. were you able to make use of these ratings to help better determine which panels you attended? if you have panel ideas, please submit to the online panel picker starting june 2.

My favorite SXSW presentations

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

I’ve subscribed to the SXSW RSS feed for podcasts, I’m hoping these 5 re-surface.

SXSW Podcast RSS feed

Last 2 days of SXSW Roundup

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

I just wanted to record my impressions from the last two days of SXSW before they got too dusty and to point out a few great presentations.

What I attended at SXSW, the last two days

Monday:

  • 10 (missed)
  • Web that wasn’t (!) _Very good, and content online!
  • Lunch
  • Browser Wars Panel: Nothing to Add
  • Client Side Code and Internationalization (!): Jon Wiley returns and is an incredibly funny presenter.
  • Notes
  • Portable Social Networks: Nothing to Add

Tuesday:

  • CMS roundup
  • Run to the Apple store! My machine stopped connecting joining Wireless networks
  • Bought Dance Shoes
  • JS libraries
  • Faster w/ open code
  • Wiimotes

Monday really didn’t provide me much of anything that is notable except for the “Web that wasn’t” and the “Internationalization” lectures. The former was a fascinating history of people who had tried to build hyper-rich data cross-referencing systems. My notes from this panel are after the jump.

The latter was a code-focused look at techniques for trying to figure out how to make a site render in local language. This is an incredibly hard problem and Jon Wiley gave a great presentation. The notes are linked above.

Tuesday gave occasion for a CMS roundup ( I’m still thinking Drupal, but Expression Engine looks very nice, for a price ). I had a hardware issue so we ran to the mall for an appointment at the Genius Bar, we then bought some dance shoes for our Lindy class, grabbed a burger, and made it back in time for the “Secrets of Javascript Libraries” session. This was one of the most packed panels I’d attended and I really have to agree with author John Resig that we want more technical content at SXSW ( thus the “Gotta Change” ) article.

The panel was excellent….but it just barely had time to start getting really, really good before our time was up. Sadness.

We then attended a lecture detailing how open source licenses can help you cut down product launch. Were I not already so embedded in this thought I might have more to say, but it was intimate, direct, and the speaker, Jack Moffitt, was very sharp.

The last panel of the day was very interesting because I’ve always been interested in e-Learning as a medium for education. The focus of the panel was on using Wiimotes in e-learning. I was surprised because during the panel I had some new interface ideas suggested to me by Chris Pittman’s preliminary work in tracking Xaxis and Yaxis tracking from the Wiimote.

I thought it’d be a great tool for helping use muscle memory to remember actions. Like…pretend you’re the catalyst and CHOP the vulnerable atom off of the molecule. I suspect some Wii-grade graphics ( not to heavy, but comical ) would be a great way to teach for retention. I also thought it was funny because this discussion was soooo similar to those that were being had around “The PowerGlove” years ago — curiously, both ideas are from Nintendo, hmmmm…

Powerglove

(more…)

[SXSW2008]: Something’s gotta change

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

One of my most bitter disappointments about SXSW2008 this year was the lack of tangible take-aways from the sessions. A quote that really inspired me before last year’s festival was this by John Gruber of Daring Fireball:

SXSW is the only conference I know where designers and developers hang out. Designers have design conferences. Developers have nerd conferences. http://daringfireball.net/2007/02/sxsw_2007_rands

True to this statement, I attended as a guy who knew a good bit of Ruby, knows a lot about Perl, and lives in a Unix-y environment. I left with a lot of great knowledge from disparate fields. That didn’t happen this year and I fear it may mark the shark-jump moment for SXSWi. I’ve written my concerns about the future of SXSWi and would appreciate any feedback. Please put comments in this entry.

Read The Full Summation

One the evening of day 1 while Mike and I were returning from a quick run to a convenience store, we approached the doorway of the Hilton. I grabbed the door and opened it. Mike, still talking to me took an eager step forward and noticed some non-SXSW elderly attempting to come out of the door. Mike then, stopped suddenly and a gentleman coming off of the sidewalk behind him had to stop suddenly causing him to visibly grimace in exasperation.

Said I: “Yeah, it’s called being mannerly.”

So, let me state this.

  1. When you approach a door, open it, if someone is directly behind you, let them go through the door ( if she is a cute female, you will see the reason this attitude was generated )
  2. When you step through a door or someone holds one open for you, pay note, is someone on the inside coming out? If so, let them come out. If the way is free, please enter.
  3. If someone holds the door open for you, it’ appropriate to thank them

I’m sorry your parents didn’t teach you these things, or you lived in a place that de-sensitized you from how to be a civil ( derived from civis meaning citizen, meaning a person of the city, there’s a reason manners and dense living go hand-in-hand ), but ‘round here in Texas, we’ve not let that be eradicated.

Update: And yet again. As we entered the packed session on wireframing, as we entered and tried to find a way not to step onto feet, some dude with his laptop bag and his portly frame basically barreled his way through the narrow door. As he walk passed, a certain individual typing this was heard to mutter “Nice manners!”.

Embarrassing. It’s a pity they don’t know that they should be embarrassed by their impropriety (see: Böll’s The Clown)

[SXSW2008]: Day 3

Sunday, March 9th, 2008

At the end of Day 2, we adjourned from the Convention center and then headed over to the park across from the facility where the drink company FUZE was offering FUZE-cocktails. The FUZE was moderately tasty, but the FUZE+Tito’s vodka was absolutely nasty.

Accordingly we headed out to the Avenue A | Razorfish party at SIX on 4th and Colorado AKA, the bar built into the Spaghetti Warehouse ( quelle bizarre ). The music was good and Lauren discovered that she likes whiskey sours ( with a Steven-added garnishing cherry ).

Our posse then travelled over to Iron Cactus on 6th where Lauren advised all present to enjoy their Acapulco plate which, true to her recommendation, is delicious. Afterwards the posse seemed interested in going out and hitting more parties, in particuar the 16-bit. For a second year in a row, Lauren and I bailed early on Saturday night, went home and rested while the out-of-town set were free to drink and wait in line as long as they cared to.

We also held reckoning with the fact that we would lose an hour. Good thing to remember.

After the jump find:

  • Notes from “Wireframing in a Web 2.0 World”
  • Textbooks of the Future: Free & Collaborative
  • Conference Room Fun
  • Data as Art: Musical, Visual Web APIs

    (more…)

[SXSW2008] Day 2

Sunday, March 9th, 2008

Well, as you may have guessed based on Day 1, we slept in and were simply unable to make it to the early morning sessions. We were able to, as such, te head down and show Mike the Whole Foods mothership at 5th and Lamar.

We grabbed lunch there ( the MoPac Sandwich with Tomatoes ) and then headed over to the Austin Convention Center. The first presentation we saw the keynote presentation with Henry Jenkins and Stephen Johnson. Their discussion was most enlightening as they discussed the communication and behavior patterns of “the kinds today”.

In an interesting bit of political dialogue, Jenkins noted that the Hillary linguistic dynamic is very much rooted in the old-world style model of political power.

“I would like to do for you.”

Pay attention to how many times she uses the word “I”

Which, to me, is a relic from the Catholic modality of intercessor. The notion that strongmen (and women) are needed to organize political pawer and resources on your behalf. Contrawise, that would make tho Obamian linguistic method of discussion some sort of Reformation-style assertion of “together we can”. In the Lutheran or Wesleyan mold, Obama doesn’t assert that he knows any better than the rest, but that he can be the symbol, the steward of a movement that is so much larger than anything that could be reined-in and channeled by any one individual. That is:

“Yes we can.”

I wonder if anyone has contacted the Obama campaign, perhaps a successful tactic would be to characterize Hillary as out -of-touch, as being a person who is into power per se, for the thrill of conducting the bolt of lightning like the magus in Tarot Card 1.

Read about what I heard from 37Signals after the jump.

(more…)

Yesterday was a day full of harried activity. Owing to the fact that I wouldn’t be in the office this week, I had a few things to take care at the office before I did le grande log-out before going into SXSW. I couldn’t quite figure out what to d, so my solution was to “sprint”. “Sprinting” is a term that I got from Merlin Mann over at 43Folders as being an incredibly important skill in productivity. The fact is this: some time you have to sit down, strap in, turn the fucking IM off, and work until you’re done.

So I did that, my power hours are definitely in the early morning when it’s oh so very quiet. I got up at 0400 and was at the office by 0430. From 0430 I finished off the commentary that was working on on a business requirement document. By 1000 I was done, I sent it off and then bolted out to the Texas Department of Transportation.

I had to go to TxDOT to get a replacement title. To my great surprise I went in, signed in, and then 5 minutes later I was out with a beautiful official looking copy of title. I’m so proud at how efficiently my state handles the transportation matters. California wasn’t as bad as you would think ( being at the most populous state of the union and all ), but Texas definitely does it mo’ righter.

With that I had to put myself into the Federal government’s hands. I had to get a replacement social security card. I don’t know where it is and, as a man in his third decade, you should damn well known where your card is. So, I headed down to the SS administration and I should have taken the parking lot situation as an ill omen.

It was completely full. I illegally parked in an adjacent lot and went in.

I now know what my ancestors must have thought when they arrived at Ellis Island. The poor, the screaming babies, the distracted parents, it was all there.

So I took my number and proceeded to sit. I was 51 numbers away, number 101, binary 5, I sat to wait. Being a bit of a nerd I actually started timing the average throughput. It was 2 numbers per 5 minutes, on average.

Somewhere around the 90th minute I noted that at 1 o’clock, prime time in the afternoon, there were, in fact, only two desks open.

Only the Feds. And the great hope for all of us is that these people are going to give us all health care. I’m sure the insider grifters are giddy with the prospect of exploiting the deltas.

I finished up around 2 and raced back to meet up with my guest Michael Liskin, who is staying with us during SXSWi. Mike’s in town from LA and I decided that he needed an introduction to something unique and special to the ATX experience: Freebird’s. We jetted over to the Tech Ridge / 35 location and had a some great burrito’s and a chance to talk. Mike is a friend of my girlfriend’s from way back and our time to get to talk to one another was really limited during our last get together in Long Beach thanks to the attentions of a gypsy and more pressing events that day.

Mike then took the next hour to clean up and to head over to the Texas Department of Public safety so that I could get a Texas Driver’s license. I am horribly past the acceptable acquisition date but owing to not having a Social Security card and having misplaced a title. Having bravely faced those sling and arrows, I was able, at last, finally to register to get a card.

I rushed back to meet up with Mike and we both headed downtown to catch up with Lauren. We then went down to the Austin Convention Center and got our badges and schwag bags.

Hungry, we then searched for a place to eat and chose Caramelo’s. Mike and I both ate lightly given our earlier tortilla-wrapped east. After this we rested a bit in the lobby of the beautiful Hilton before heading over to Emo’s to catch the musical act “What Made Milwaukee Famous”

A notable opener was Austin’s own “The Lemurs” whose presence and performance was very solid with a lot of thrumming noise churning in the background.

“Milwaukee” was an excellent set: great stage bresence and they got the traditionally sessile and hipper-than-thou austin crowd moving, it was really a great show.

Interestingly enough, at some point before the act I turned around and ran into a girl from my French class in 1999. I had decided to take that class after getting interested in French while living aux Pays-Bas. It was great to see the girl and see how she’d done in the last couple of years it just goes to show one of the funny things about Austin, given enough time spent downtown you’ll eventually run into all the people you know.

Also at the show I had the chance to make acquaintance with an LA-based friend of Mike and an Austin-based friend whose working on her MBA at my alma mater.

Lauren and I booked out around 2, leaving the show ahead of the rush.

I hate / love comedians

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

In this week leading up to SXSWi, The Austin Chronicle features comic Eugene Miriman on the cover.

I always get worried when I see comics associated with pretty much anything as an “opening act” or a keynote speaker. Honestly, most comics who believe that they appeal to “smart people” (or are marketed as such) either become so self-indulgent it hurts ( Best Week Ever ) or well, it’s a funny concept, but not really funny ( Andy Kaufman ).

In either case, I generally kinda sit there awkwardly as I’m predicting punch-lines and waiting until my feeling of embarrassment passes, usually concomitant with their leaving the stage.

Yet, to my great sadness, this feeling led me to miss ZeFrank at SXSW last year. I have since watched his media; he is a funny and insightful guy. The first video I ever saw of his was “it’s a bit more complicated than that” as linked by Raganwald and it was funny, smart, and hip.

The show I missed

So back to Mirman, I watched 3 of his videos and I definitely feel that “Kaufman mold” thing about him. If this is a representative sample, I don’t think I’m going to regret missing the web awards this year.