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7 September, 2008

Twitter made me (not) do it  Comments 

It’s been a whole month since I wrote anything in my blog? What happened? (Or rather, what did not happen?)

Well, let’s just blame it on Twitter. Or on the new iPhone. Or on two clients wanting 70-hour weeks from me all month. Or on processing 4 hours of teacher training videos.

Nah, let’s just blame it on Twitter.

Twitter seems to have taken a big bite out of my blogging energy lately.

Twitterrific on an iPhoneI primarily use Twitteriffic on my iPhone to both follow and to create new tweets, but I also love Twitterfox (a plug-in for the FIreFox browser) if I’m at a computer (it just pops up a little panel showing the most recents, and lets me quickly twipe a new tweet whenever I feel the need.

But why do I even bother with Twitter? - because I get stoked with a dozen new ideas every day! In the old days, “kids” used Twitter to vacuously and narcissistically communicate “I’m having breakfast” or “I’m on the bus” or “I’m at the coffee shop.” But somehow a large number of busy people realized that not only was this a waste of a good communication medium, but something better could actually be done with it - and now what we do is communicate concepts, places, activities and ideas of interest to our group. Someone might be experiencing writer’s block and need inspiration and put out a call for help that explains the concept she’s working on, and get back a half dozen interesting tangential ideas! Another might have returned from a trip and posted photos - and will put up a tweet pointing to the photos. Someone else will be at a conference and will tweet about each speaker’s primary concept.

You have to carefully pick who you “follow” (whose tweets you subscribe to) on Twitter, but once you have your list tuned well, you have constructed a channel that lets you really stay in touch with the ideas and activities that will surface as blog posts and news in the next 24 to 48 hours. And you get a real boost from knowing what your friends and colleagues are working on and thinking about.

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28 May, 2008

George Patterson - rode across the Himalayas in 1949  Comments 

Filed under: People, Tibet — Sky @ 1:27 am

In an article on MountEverest.net (”by climbers”), you can read about George Patterson, who rode in the Himalayas in 1949, and met the Dalai Lama, and continues at age 90 to be a prominent Tibet supporter.

Rather than try to excerpt here, I will simply direct you to the original article. He rode across the Himalayas in the winter of 1949: George Patterson’s final contribution to the people of Tibet. This is an extensive and interesting article. Read it!

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2 April, 2008

Jane Bay’s day job  Comments 

Filed under: Audio interviews, Entertainment, Media, People — Sky @ 12:55 am

I don’t generally engage in hero-worship. But I do sometimes get wound up in interesting people and stories.

And speaking of such, George Lucas is one of the people I’ve only “gotten close to meeting.” So when a group of our Project Happiness students from Mount Madonna School were able to interview him last year (for the Project Happiness movie), I really enjoyed it.

Well, the “next best thing” to time with George was also really interesting. George’s assistant, Jane Bay, has been with him since just after the first Star Wars film was released. She and I both waited in line to see the film at the Coronet Theater on Geary Blvd. in San Francisco - though a couple of weeks apart. She got a job with George shortly thereafter, and I did not - I remained an academic for a couple more years and then started DesignWare (an edutainment software company), which ended up being my eventual reason for a few visits to Skywalker Ranch. (Continue for the audio interview…) (more…)

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25 January, 2008

Videoblogging in real time  Comments 

Filed under: Media, Our networked world, People, Video — Sky @ 12:31 am

QIK logoI don’t know how I ran across this thing that Robert Scoble is now doing - but here he is interviewing people at Davos using a cellphone camera (actually two at the same time) - and questions coming in in real-time. I’ll just point you at his interview of Danah Boyd on QIK.COM (more about her later because she’s important to what I do in real life). Check Danah at her blog “Apophenia :: making connections where none existed before.”

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