I created a new category for my blog: Untitled, unfinished, incomplete.
That’s all.
I created a new category for my blog: Untitled, unfinished, incomplete.
That’s all.
Now that I’m back and jet lagged from Bangalore (where Barcamp kicked mighty ass and with three more in the country to come) I’m realizing that I have a tonne of stuff to blog about, not the least of which concerns things that I’ve personally instigated and have an obligation to report on.
The problem, however, is how to be involved with everything, actually execute and still have time to blog about it. Admittedly I end up being a tad verbose at times, so cutting my Average Word Count Per Entry down would help — as might treating my blog more like a public email repository… returning back that “Four Readers” focus that encouraged informality and brevity over details and loquaciousness.
Anyway, the matter remains that I’m countless blog posts behind and barely able to keep up with the off-topic rants I’d like to get to, not to mention follow all the threads going on meanwhile.
So wouldn’t it be great if we put all those soon-to-be-displaced journalists to work as personal blog assistants? I mean, a PBA could have multiple simultaneous clients — indeed, they could cover a local sector of a given topic (like beat journalists — beat bloggers?). Or, perhaps they could be “topic writers for hire”… For example, how cool would it be to have someone that the community endorses to attend events and report back for them? I’d love to have a Barcamp or Mash Pit PBA go out and attend each event, providing specialized reports that matter to, oh, say, 2,500 people worldwide.
I mean, when Tara reports that “The World is Mega Uber Bloody Flat” she reveals a whole new realm of reportage that the MSM will simply never see as economically viable (or perhaps even interesting) (even though, historically, that’s where local papers made their bread and butter).
And yet the experiences and people involved in these worldwide camps are extremely interesting to me — as I’m sure they are to many others in our community. But, as it is with blogs, they are fairly poor at really capturing what went on, at least in comparison to the way a dedicated journalist who sees the continuous threads of the story might… and indeed, those threads of continuity are what make the Barcamp story so compelling.
So what I’m proposing is this: blogs are a great mechanism for communities to talk amongst themselves or for independent voices to gain an audience, but they are not entirely a substitute for a unified perspective that can connect the pieces and reassemble a complete story. The role journalists traditionally played was to tell stories that interwove diverse and contradicting views in the interest of keeping the public informed. Of course, this was before the advent of subliminal product placement and expressing everything in terms of stock prices and market valuations.
But as usual, I digress.
…which a PBA would not — or at least not without good reason and good measure. Anyway, I’m not going to stop blogging for myself… it just would be highly interesting to have someone follow the topics that are interesting to me and report back about them. The way that only a human can. The way that journalists are supposed to.
Chris Pirillo has posted the Love Two Point Oh interview that he and Ponzi conducted at SXSW of Tara and me.
Meanwhile, Brian Oberkirch posted two interviews of me for his Weblogs WorkNotes where I discuss independents, Barcamp, Mash Pit, and WineCamp and then separately about microformats.
If things are getting out of control, reduce power. A system can tear itself apart if there’s too much power being applied. If you notice shaking / yelling / vibrations, you probably should reduce power, then gently figure out what’s wrong. Don’t add power in a panic.
— wisdom from Mr Weekly
Oh, and WineCamp got a website (thanks João Antunes!), I started a Practical Microformats wiki for all you designers out there (now help me build it!) and Tara and I leave for Barcamp Bangalore on Sunday for 8 days.
…and Barcamp San Francisco is happening June 20. Want to help? Good — because we need it!
Or perhaps where I’ll be at… specifically, tomorrow night. Namely, at Net Squared‘s Net Tuesday event at Varnish Fine Arts. And who will be speaking? Well, my PiC for one… and my ex-boss Zack Rosen of CivicSpace and Adam Frey of Wikispaces (whom I’ve not met but heard great things about).
Not sure about the others, but Tara says she’ll be speaking about:
[convincing] non-profits to Go Pink(o) at Varnish Fine Arts. I’m going to go through some of what you’ve already read here and on the wiki and then apply the theory to non-profit marketing. Personally, I think it’s even more applicable for a not for profit campaign. When you already have an engaged sponsor-base and an enthusiastic army of volunteers, all sorts of beautiful Pinko community messaging can and will happen.
So there ya go. Your Tuesday is now apportioned!
…it’d likely be this new diesel-powered 2006 Honda Civic Si. I mean, voice recognition, a button to turn on the car and 55MPG?! Oh yes. I’ll take one. Via i.never.nu.
Or maybe this one.
So yeah, in case you missed it, I’m out on my own now, doing the indie consulting thing, which, incidently, is what I came out to San Francisco to do in the first place. It’s just that now I’ve actually got clients who are… hrmm… local. Weird.
Anyway, what am I up to? Well, I’ll tell you.
Besides finding entertainment options with my PiC, I’ve got a coupla new gigs.
The first one, where I was at the beginning of this week, is a wireless/SMS startup called Mozes, which, interestingly enough, is located in the old Flock World HQ. Imagine that! Back in the old garage again. For them I’m doing some design, concepting, planning… websiting…(?) Et cetera.
The middle of the week had me at France Telecom‘s offices to check out the Mash Pit venue (photos coming soon!). And then a WineCamp planning meeting.
And yesterday and today was spent at one of my other big and interesting clients, Adaptive Path. I’ll be working on a new venture with Lane and Rachel temporarily deemed “Adventure Capital” — as they’ll be taking on new projects and getting paid in equity. (Okay, it’s really called “New Ventures“).
Whatever the case, I’ll be helping out with design and brainstorming and messing with assumptions and all that jazz. And yes, it’s very exciting, but, sadly, I can’t say much more than that.
Oh, and in the meantime, I hope to find time for Weblogs Work, PBWiki, Our Media, Word Press, Drupal… and the usual open source world liberation bits. More? Maybe. A few. But I do need to learn to say no. Or to take on some help.
Speaking of… any design-slash-code monkeys out there looking for some work? Fer real — I’ve got plenty of work to go around if you can manage your time, your work and like Basecamp. Any takers?

A number of us met up last night to discuss our plans for WineCamp. With less than 60 days to go, we haven’t got much time to get everything in place. But we have a crack-team of folks who are dedicated to making this a reality.
Let me say something about what I’m hoping to see result from this event: connections. It’s not everyday that you get geeks and technologists rounded up in some foreign land with non-profits and NGO-types. It’s designed that way on purpose. Hey, get people out of their natural surroundings — remove the wifi, the laptops, the power (yes, really) — and some interesting interactions are sure to emerge. Especially when you’ve got a good dose of mountain air and an supple supply of wine flowing.
And those connections? Hopefully lasting ones. Hopefully collaboration will spring up. Ideally a few sustaining solutions will be thunk up.
So last night we spec’d out the schedule for the event, what we need to make it happen, how much we’re going to charge for the event (free isn’t really an option if we’re providing food so we’re a small fee for the weekend) and what else need to be done.
And there’s lots.
But listen, here’s the thing so you understand where this is coming from. The goal of the weekend is to start conversations. To bring together folks from two fields who desparately need each other (open source and non-profits) but haven’t had a neutral ground in which to talk freely or constructively.
Here’s how it’ll work, since I’ve been lazy about writing this up:
Friday night, people arrive in Calaveras. People make their way to the Ferriere Vineyard and set up camp from 6-9pm. Something like that. Accommodations in local hotels will be available for those not wanting to brave the wide open eastern California spring air. We’re just not gunna book it for you — that’ll be up to those who want to stay in hotels. Ok, so meanwhile people break out the acoustics and bongos around the campfire, have a chill serenade until folks mosey off to sleep.
Day 2, Saturday morning. Cowboy brunch with all the fixin’s… griddle pancakes, maple syrup, coffee, bacon (for meat eaters).. the whole works. We take this to sometime around 11am, making sure folks driving the 3 hours or so east of San Francisco get there (ideally folks arrive Friday night, but undoubtedly some will come on Saturday).
Around 11:15am we have the kick off. Some brave soul will face the crowd, tell them what WineCamp’s all about, and what the heck we’re doing. Yeah, that’s likely going to be me. The day’s loose schedule will be reviewed and then we’ll break out into small group pow-wows, with all the ad hoc trappings of Barcamp, but without wifi, without power, without PowerPoint or any other digital or powered accoutrements. Seriously. Day 2 is a day for gathering, for conversing, for just being with other people outside — outside talking about the things that really get them excited to wake up every morning — but that all also rile them up around midday when the technology they have gets in their way.
The point is to talk about where we’re at, what we love and what we can make better.
We’ll go into the evening, have a big dinner cookout BBQ fit for Matty Matt. The works, y’know? Ribs or whatever you carnivores like. Plenty of veggies and corn and — yes — salad or something. Drinks, dessert. Y’know. A big cookout!
Oh, and did I mention the pure flow of wine all day long? Yeah, that’ll help tide people over who are off their digital fix for the day.
So we go until whenever Saturday night, I dunno, we’ll figure it out.
Sunday the junkies can have their toys back because on Saturday, in the afternoon, they would have planned out what they wanted to do the next day in small teams of creators, thinkers, implementers, users and reality-checkers. These small teams will determine what happens where on Sunday — whether it means going back into the town of Murphy’s where we will have power and wifi for your hacking needs or whether you stay at the vineyard and keep thinking big thoughts that will change your organization (or the world) upon your return.
Look, it’ll all make sense and work out when we get there. We’re all smart people with something to contribute; I’m not going to worry about it!
Things we do need to work out? Getting meals like lunch and dinner sponsored. Getting a port-a-potty on site (I think Andrew has this one covered). Buying firewood. Water. T-shirts! Provisioning a conference-center space on Sunday for hacking and creating (though we seem to have a sponsor that will take care of this!). There are plenty of things to do. There are few of us. There seem to be many people interested in attending. And I’m totally jazzed about what this event will mean for the open source and non-profit communities.
So I guess I’m asking now — in the spirit of open sourcing this event — to start turning this into your event. Tara and I leave for Bangalore in a week and will be gone for about that long (for Barcamp Bangalore). We’ve got lots of things going on. And already, we’ve had a great outpouring of support from folks like Chris Heuer, Jen Myronyk, Andrew Ferriere and great folks at Tech Soup/Compumentor/Net Squared like Billy Bicket, Greg Beuthin, John Lorance, and Marnie Webb.
This is all a big experiment and hey, the more folks who really own a piece of making this event a success, well, the more a success it will be.
So if you can contribute and help organize, join up on the mailing list, drop on the wiki or let us know how you can help. And yes, we have a sign up page too… it’s not quite as simple as registering on Upcoming — we’re actually collecting money to cover the cost of food this time — and any extra money we have left over will be donated to Net Squared. So get in early if you’re really planning
on going — spaces are limited to 150.
Was reading through Earplug #65 and noticed that one of the music labels has a name that sounds… very familiar. While I’m sure there’s no intentional overlap, it was nevertheless somewhat alarming to see something so close to the name I use everywhere show up randomly.
Something about that word pairing must be artful though, since the FactoryCity dot com address is owned by a Canadian art colective. Go figure.