Out of Towner Meetup III: Scott Kveton

Scott KvetonThis is getting to be a regular thing!

So check this out. Scott Kveton of the Open Source Lab at Oregon State University is streaming in from Oregon to spread open source cheer and good will! Come join us Monday, January 9th, 8pm at Thirsty Bear Brewing Co. in San Francisco for a beer or three with one of the guys who makes sure that you can download or hack Firefox, Gnome, and a slew of other open source staples whenever and wherever you want!

And yes, who’s also one of my heros. Awww….

Self-superempowerment

FactoryCity Gonzo Rage FistSo, to kick off the New Year, I’ve accomplished two things only a blogwankbuzz type hound could be proud of:

No, you might not think it much, but considering where I was just a year ago (read: sans blog until February ’05!), these are some pretty incoyable milestones.

So how about this? Yeah, at one time I kind of saw myself living the proverbial “American Dream“. Yeah yeah, hard work + courage + determination – sleep + caffeine = prosperity. Or some bollocks like that.

But I’m not so sure that that’s what this is anymore. It’s not just American, that fer shur. And it’s not just another Two Dot Oh thing, where we’re meagerly incrementing the former version with a few shiny features. Nope, this is entirely different.

How so, you ask?

Well, borrowing from my buddy Thomas Friedman, we have indeed entered the era of the superempowered individual. Am I an SEI? No. But I am empowered. Do I want to become one? Yes.

So I will.

Judging by quantitative achievements this past year, It’s only a matter of time.

Out of Towner Meetup: Kent Bye, Echo Chamber Project

Kent Bye

So the truth is, Kent Bye is a radical badass mofo. And he deserves, nay, demands, your respect and attention.

You just might not know that if you bumped into him in a supermarket, causing him to drop the peanut butter and fumble the newspaper his nose was buried in.

Yet, Kent is a revolutionary of the here and now, creating a documentary that will hopefully, once and for all, set the record straight on how the media hog-tied us into submission on going to war in Iraq in an echolalic orgy of repetition and fake news (naw, I ain’t biased or nuthin’). Pulling from, gosh, 60-80 hours of news footage from the days and weeks leading up the war as well as 76 interviews, he’s using open source methodologies and software to transcribe, tag and splice this content into usable and reusable chunks of video and metadata that will eventually be used for feature-length documentary.

So, anyone who gives a lick about open source media, vlogging, democracy, babies crying in puddles, Radiohead or coffee needs to show up tonight at 8pm at Ritual Roasters in San Francisco.

Kent flew all the way in with his wonderful wife from Portland, Maine. Don’t stand him up!

And yes, full disclosure, he also interviewed me at length about my plans for open source world domination when I visited him in Maine this past Thanksgiving. It’s only fitting that I return the favor and buy him a latte.

Mash Pit: Micro-Mashup Camp, renamed!

Mash Pit Logo

To avoid confusion and any potential trademark issues, I’ve decided to redub my previously monikered Mashup Camp as Mash Pit (naming honors go to the original Bar Camp chaperon himself Ross Mayfield).

This decision was made after a discussion I had today with David Berlind of ZDNet, who is planning the real-deal Mashup Camp sometime later this spring. Details will be forthcoming on his blog.

Anyway, our events are different enough to warrant the name change anyway. Whereas my event is more of a one-day micro-hackathon, David wants there to be many more participants (on the order of 25 times as many!) as well as host a number of mashup based contests with cool prizes and whatnot. So hey, I say, the more the merrier. No one can own the camp meme, so the more it spreads and gives regular folks the opportunity to get involved with all this new fangled techie stuff, the better!

If you’re interested in the Mash Pit, drop me an email at barcamp at gmail dot com or give me a couple days to get a wiki setup. Or feel free to start something on barcamp.org. Whatever floats your ship.

Selling my soul… err, shirts!

Hippie 2.0
So yes, finally, thanks to the good folks at GoodStorm, I’ve set up a store and will be selling my shirts for the low low low price of $12.94ea + corkage.

Get this — I make 70% of the difference after cost on these bad boys. Seventy. What? What’s that Mr. Zazzle? What? You only offer 10%? Yeah? You only thought Puff was a boy’s magical dragon?

And oh yeah, GoodStorm runs on open source… CivicSpace and Drupal specifically so you can finally put your money where your code is!

And yeah, this wouldn’t be complete without some shameless plugs for some worthy causes since I’m thinking that any money I make off these shirts, I’ll put towards orgs that support open media, open culture and open thinking.

The fine art of mashing potatoes at camp

Not surprisingly, my proposed event has some precedents, notably in architecture, called charettes (“a charette is an intense effort to solve any architectural problem within a limited time.”) (via Brad):

There are two main advantages to working in the context of a charette. The first is that a charette operates in a highly collaborative atmosphere. Instead of an architect taking ideas and plans and going away to develop them on his or her own, a charette allows for the participation of everyone involved with the project, resulting in a highly charged and creative atmosphere. The inclusion of many points of view results in well-rounded and realistic proposals, with everyone satisfied that they were able to contribute. Secondly, Charettes are fast, and relatively inexpensive. In the intital stages of a project, the venture is necessarily highly speculative. It is important to keep costs at bay, while also moving forward quickly to take advantage of changing situations and often prohibitory deadlines. Charettes offer the opportunity to work safely and effectively within both of these boundaries.

Not only that, other people have thought hard about this kind of event before (also via Brad):

So it’s clear that we’re tapping into a model that’s already well established. It’s just futzing with the details that makes what we’re doing remotely unique. It brings me back to my ultra geeky days in high school when I was helping to build robots for FIRST: we’d get a bucket of parts, an interdisciplinary team with mentors from local companies and for a couple months we’d get our team prepped for the real competition by building robots collaboratively.

And what was significant about the design of the program were the contraints imposed upon us; we had a box of random metal gadgets and that was it. And yet every year, bigger, badder and more creative solutions would emerge in spite of those limitations. Nay, I daresay, because of them.

And so that’s why I want to limit the coworking event. Yeah, I could get a bigger space, but it wouldn’t be the same. And in the original ethos of creating these events to be repeatable, low-cost and sustainable, I want other people the world over to run their own mashup days…. With their own backchannels. With different communities and projects being represented and brought into the mix. C’mon, the Bay Area chapter of the Brat Pack 2.0 is cool and all, but these events are relevant the world over and we all need more reasons to travel for work. 😉

Whether you’ve got three people or three hundred, you can make an event like this happen. Seriously. And there plenty of people and a litany of historical resources out there ready to help get you started.

Remember the one thing that’s essential to the ongoing life and success of these things (just a little Canterian didacticism): anarchy still reins supreme in the valley of camps.

I Represent Me

Executive summary: In considering Boris Mann’s recent presentation on “Personal Brand Development”, I suggest that individuals represent themselves first as people and second as employees, if at all. Furthermore, that corporations are increasingly only a figment of law that will eventually become less relevant as individuals decide to work on loosely joined, distributed, collaborative projects. Give it 20 years, you’ll see.

Open Source World DominationConversations swirling lately, mostly about not-a-whole-lot, but then there are kernels of wisdom, little things that prove that the earth is moving underneath you, that the ants haven’t stopped marching, that invisible forces continue to act unabated.

Boris presented on something called “Personal Brand Development”, giving credit to Jame and Kris for sourcing the meme.

While I shudder at the sound of the phrase, the concept is worth investigating, mostly because, as with most things of import, I had similar serendipitous conversations lately about the same concept, not suprisingly with a subtly different thrust. Let me lay out a few quotes to set up my thoughts on this:

A respected, well-known employee is a credit to their employer, just as working for a high-profile company reflects well on the employee. Forward thinking companies should encourage and reward personal brand development.

Web 2.0 and Personal Brand Development Presentation | Bryght

and

Neville Hobson, Tom Foremski and Mitch Ratcliffe are dispensing advice you should run, not walk, to heed immediately if you work in an organization.

The message: Guard your identity and don’t mix it up with your company’s identity. Otherwise, you risk being “disappeared” if you leave your job or get fired.

Allan Jenkins’ Desirable Roasted Coffee

So now here’s where I diverge.

After the Mena vs Ben deathmatch at Les Blogs (an historic moment for civility online), Ben received some interesting feedback from someone who worked for a rather large software company (no, not Macrosoft, the other one). We’ll call him Mr Cog (I won’t name names since I honestly forget who it was that talked to him). Paraphrased, Mr Cog’s point was this: You’d better shuddup because what you say and how you behave represents your employer.

Since Ben does work for a rather large media organization in the UK, this was rather disheartening to hear. Out of a fear that his words might insult someone who would attribute it to his employer and consequently risk his livelihood, he should go mum? What an awful way to ruin a person, let alone an employee!

Sure, it’s not unprecedented for employees to get fired over their after-hours activities. Given that, Mr Cog has a case. Just maybe he was looking out for Ben’s well being. Conventionally, what each of us does, in some small measure, reflects on our employers. Yeah, duh? Ok ok, but given serious reflection, one begins to realize how disempowering and debilitating this attitude — and the resultant fear — really is.

So you want my take? No, probably not. But I’ll tell you anyway. Here’s the punchline: I don’t represent my employer, who I choose to work for represents me.

Catch that?

Ok, let me explain, because it sure sounds more dangerously egocentric than it needs to: I represent me. I represent me in the work I do, in the thoughts I write down and publish, in the conversations I have with other people, in the mistakes I make, in the Flickr photos I post. Though I’m commonly referred to as “a Flock guy”, that’s only relevant because it’s one of the projects that I choose to spend my time on (and yes, they also happen to pay my rent).

But because I choose to work on Flock, how good it is represents me since it’s my work and my intelligence (or lack thereof) that show through in the final result. And so fundamentally I’m responsible for how good or how bad it is, now and over time.

This statement is true for each one of us who works at Flock. There are no weak links. If Flock does indeed suck, it’s up to the individuals who are collectively represented by this group project to collaboratively remedy it (ideally with the support of our community). We each have providence over our own work to a fundamental level: working in open source guarentees a paper trail in the commit log. And so what we each put in is documented, recorded, added to the collective, public record.

So let’s get down to it. Whatever you want to call it (I’ll pass on “Personal Brand Development” thank you very much — I’m a person and don’t need to be branded, but to each their own), the old command and conquer hierarchy is changing and dissolving. The playing field is not just being pulverized, it’s being opened up to the fans to come and participate, much to the dismay of the coaches and referrees. In a worldwide Cluetrainian orgy, it’s now the employees who speak first for themselves and second for their employer. Even better, first for themselves, second for their friends and social network, third for their employers.

Here it is: I have a voice (have always had a voice, figuring it out how to really use it recently) that I should never be afraid to exert. I speak for me and I’m the only one that I can rely on to speak for me and to authentically represent me. My employer understands that my silence would reflect more seriously upon them and the culture they’re creating than anything I might eventually say. Yes, it’s a big messy and wonderful catastrophe, but in the words of dotBen, That’s life.

CocoaRadio interview posted

Factory Rockstar I’ve got another interview out in the wild, this time at Blake Burris’ CocoaRadio.

The interview was conducted at my favorite San Francisco cafe, Ritual Roasters, so there’s a bit of a din in the background. It also took place over a month ago, which makes some of the information obsolete (I wrote about cloning APIs here). On the other hand, I do talk fairly expansively about the vision for Flock… how microformats will help, what it’s like developing a cross-platform Mozilla app and where we’re in general going with Flock.

I think it’s probably the best real-world articulation of what Flock’s all about so far, so if Flock still doesn’t make much coherent sense to you, definitely take a listen and let me know what you think.

Downhill Battle folks launch Explorer Destroyer and Kill Bill’s Browser

kill bills browser

There’s a big chance right now to switch people to Firefox and it might not last very long — Microsoft has a new version of Internet Exlporer on the way and lord knows what they’ll be doing in Vista to force people to use it. Firefox has to get a big foothold right now.

If you have a blog or website and are pissed off having to deal with IE6 users or if you just care about open-source and the public interest, now is the time to really take the internet back.

Mozilla built us a wonderful tool. Google gave us a carrot. Now take the stick and beat IE’s ass.

Explorer Destroyer – Switch to Firefox

Yeah, this is cool. And I love that my friends from Downhill Battle are behind it. They’re such badasses.

And props to Firefox on turning one years old!

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